Supreme Court to hold argument at the University of Southern Indiana in Vanderburgh County | |
The Indiana Supreme Court will travel to southern Indiana on Monday, October 30. The Court will hold oral argument in Evansville in a juvenile delinquency case. The argument is in the case of B.A v. State of Indiana (49S02-1709-JV-567). Case materials can be foundonline.
The Court holds about 70 oral arguments at the State House in Indianapolis each year. Occasionally, it schedules arguments outside the capital to allow students, press, and public in other areas of the state an opportunity to see the work of the Court. This argument will take place in Carter Hall on the campus of the University of Southern Indiana, 8600 University Boulevard, Evansville, Indiana 47112 at 10:30 a.m. CDT. The 40-minute argument will be broadcast live and is open to schools, the public, and press. Educators interested in bringing student groups should contact Outreach Coordinator, Sarah Kidwell at sarah.kidwell@courts.in.gov. Press interested in attending must also contact Sarah Kidwell by October 23 at noon to learn decorum order rules. The argument will be webcast live by the University of Southern Indiana and uploaded to the Court’s website in coming weeks. Seating is on a first-come, first-served basis. Those interested in attending will be required to enter through the south doors of University Center West and go through security on the second floor. Carter Hall is accessible to those with disabilities. Reserved accessible parking is located just outside the south door of the University Center West. Individuals needing special accommodations should contact Sarah Kidwell. |
Supreme Court To Hold Argument At The University Of Southern Indiana in Vanderburgh County
VANDERBURGH COUNTY FELONY CHARGES
 Evansville, IN – Below are the felony cases to be filed by the Vanderburgh County Prosecutor’s Office today.
Elizabeth Marie John: Unlawful possession of syringe (Level 6 Felony)
Casondria Leeann Carter: Possession of methamphetamine (Level 6 Felony), Failure to appear (Level 6 Felony), Failure to appear (Level 6 Felony), Failure to appear (Level 6 Felony)
Marlon Lamont Jones: Domestic battery (Level 5 Felony)
Attorney General Curtis Hill Pens Op-Ed Regarding Controversy Over Kneeling During The National Anthem
Prompted by recent controversy over NFL players and others who have knelt during the national anthem, Attorney General Curtis Hill this week wrote an op-ed sharing his personal beliefs about honoring America and the freedoms promised to her people.
“I fully understand our nation’s history has been far from perfect,†Hill writes. “Race in America has been the persistent stumbling-block of our experiment in freedom. Birthing a new nation ‘conceived in liberty’ while still enslaving, dehumanizing and denigrating an entire race of fellow humans was a corrupting contradiction for which our Founders provided no adequate explanation nor remedy.â€
Nonetheless, Hill observes, America’s story is one of steady progres.
“The very republic that permitted these evils also, through it all, sustained a founding vision of equality that has provided a beacon of hope for that more perfect union,†Hill writes.
A downloadable photo of Attorney General Curtis Hill is here.
Any news outlet is welcome to publish Hill’s op-ed. As a courtesy, please inform Deputy Director of Communications Bill McCleery if your outlet intends to publish thi
WINNERS OF THE PAPPY AND GRAMMY’S POPCORN BIRTHDAY GIVEAWAY DRAWING
WINNERS OF THE PAPPY AND GRAMMY’S POPCORN Â BIRTHDAY GIVEAWAY DRAWING
City-County Observer is proud to announce that PAPPY AND GRAMMY’S POPCORN will be awarding 20 large bags of customize colors and flavors popcorn twice (2) a month to lucky winners chosen randomly from those whose birthdays appear on our site.
Please send in names and birthdays of your friends and family members to the city-countyobserver@livecom so they can have a chance to win. Winners will receive large bag of customized popcorn valued at $7.
Flavors of Kettle Corn available at PAPPY and GRAMMY’S are:
SWEET & SALTY
Original Kettle Corn
Carmel
Carmel Apple
Toffee
Chocolate
Chocolate Toffee
Chocolate Cherry
Chocolate Banana
Confetti (grape, cherry, blueberry, banana & green apple)
Chicago Style (carmel & yellow cheddar cheese)
Cinnamon (red hot candies)
NON-SWEET
Sour Cream & Chives
Yellow Cheddar Cheese
Spicy BBQ
Butter flavored Movie
Creamy Dill
Garlic Parmesan
5-Alarm Hot
5-Alarm Cheese
Chili Cheese
The following POPCORN BIRTHDAY WINNERS  should go to PAPPY AND GRAMMY’S POPCORN  located at 5 North Morton Ave, Evansville, ind and  show your identity and tell them you won a “Popcorn Giveaway” in the CCO. If you need directions please call Donna Fickey at 812-550-7100.
SEPTEMBER Â POPCORN BIRTHDAY GIVEAWAY WINNERS.
RALPH DARKEÂ SCHREIBER
BRAD ELLSWORTH
VICKI HUBIAK
RICK RINEY
MATT SCHREIBER
JERRY WIRTH
LARRY ULRICH
GINA GIBSON
JERRY PADDOCK
DAN KATZ
CONNIE RALPH
MICHAEL W SANDER
BARB WOODRUFF
JEREMY HEALTHÂ
PAUL NEIDIG
CHRIS DICKSON
MARK MILLER
TINA DENSLEY
JANE PRITCHETT
STEPHEN SCHWAMBACH
RALPH DARKE-SCHREIBER
FOOTNOTE: Â WINNERS HAVE ONE WEEK TO CLAIM THEIR PRIZE.
Thanks for reading the CCO.
HOT JOBS IN EVANSVILLE
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ISP Museum Open, Saturday 9/30 Museum will be open to the public from 12pm to 4pm
Looking for something to do this weekend? Head over to the Indiana State Police Museum, located on the east side of Indianapolis. The ISP Museum will be open from noon to 4pm and admission is free.Â
The museum houses several police cars for different decades, exhibits on crime scene investigation, radio communication, and the early years of the Indiana State Police, when gangsters like John Dillinger and Al Brady wreaked havoc on the nation. The Logo Store – a gift shop with ISP shirts, hats, mugs, and other memorabilia will also be open at this time.
Questions? Feel free to call the museum staff at 317.899.8293 or email us at ISPMuseum@isp.in.gov.Â
Death Penalty Sought In Indiana Officer’s Shooting Death
Death Penalty Sought In Indiana Officer’s Shooting Death
Il for www.theindianalawyer.com
Prosecutors are seeking the death penalty for the man charged in the fatal shooting of a police officer who had come to his aid after the suspect’s car overturned in a crash in Indianapolis.
The decision Thursday came about two months after authorities said Jason D. Brown shot Southport police Lt. Aaron Allan. Brown was dangling upside down by his seatbelt when Allan approached after the single-car crash, court documents said. Brown is charged with opening fire on Allan, who suffered 11 gunshot wounds and died a short time later.
“We do think it is very important that we send a message that we won’t tolerate, in any way, attacks upon our public safety officers,” Marion County Prosecutor Terry Curry said during a Thursday news conference, calling the July 27 shooting “a very senseless act.”
A passenger in Brown’s car told officers that he and Brown had just left a gas station when Brown inexplicably began driving at high speed, court documents said. Brown then wove around other cars but crossed a median, struck a curb and overturned in the front yard of a home.
The passenger was outside the overturned car, sitting on the grass, when the shooting occurred.
A nurse who stopped to help told officers she told Brown not to move because he could further injure himself. She said Brown “became very agitated and belligerent and began cussing” shortly before she heard several gunshots ring out.
Two other officers opened fire on Brown following Allan’s shooting. He was hospitalized for several days with what authorities said were gunshot wounds to his face, left arm and right clavicle.
Brown’s defense attorney, Denise Turner, said in a statement that she was disappointed with Curry’s decision and didn’t believe the death penalty was warranted. She said the case has “a lot of unanswered questions.”
“As the facts continue to come out, I believe it will become even more apparent that this isn’t a death penalty case,” Turner said without elaborating.
Curry said it is not yet clear why Brown shot Allan.
“We continue to seek additional information that might shed light on that question,” Curry said.
Allan, a 38-year-old married father of two sons, had been hired in January as a second full-time officer for Southport’s largely volunteer police force after about five years as a volunteer officer for the 2,000-person municipality on the south side of Indianapolis.
Brown’s only previous criminal conviction stems from a 2013 misdemeanor marijuana possession arrest in Hendricks County, just west of Indianapolis, for which he was sentenced to 30 days in jail, according to a statewide online courts database.
THE CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION AND CABLE NEWS By Jim Redwine
Gavel Gamut
By Jim Redwine
www.jamesmredwine.com
(Week of 02 October 2017)
THE CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION AND CABLE NEWS
The Constitutional Convention was held in Philadelphia in 1787. The delegates kept the proceedings secret to avoid, “licentious publications of their proceedings.†James Madison, the Father of the Constitution, stated that no Constitution would have ever been adopted if the debates had been public. Remarkably, for four months the secrecy was maintained.
Can you imagine the motives CNN, FOX and MSNBC would have projected upon George Washington, et. al.? No delegate would have escaped the allegations of lying or even treason to the Revolution.
But inside the Convention the fifty-five delegates, half of whom were lawyers, debated the most volatile issues of the day. Slavery, whether we would have one-man-one-vote or an electoral college, large states versus small states, foreign attachments, the establishment of courts, provision for national defense and many others. How did they do it?
Of course, I do not know. However, I am pretty sure no one was called a liar for stating his views and no one was ascribed venal motives. Most likely George Washington as the presiding officer of the Convention made sure each delegate had an opportunity to present his views and everyone else had an opportunity to respond.
Maybe it is because I am a judge and once practiced law but it seems likely to me the Constitutional Convention proceeded much as a court case. First an issue would be brought up, States’ Rights for example, then each delegate who wished to would state his position. Then, after extensive but civilized debate a vote would be taken.
This time honored approach to resolving controversies has served the legal system and America well for over two hundred years. First define the issues for resolution, a criminal trial for example, then allow each side to fully present their views without threats or name-calling.
I humbly suggest this same respectful approach will work in every conversation from government to individuals. Shouting down or using force to prevent those one disagrees with from speaking will not result in the kind of result we achieved in 1787.
As I was writing this column I received an email and an attachment from my friend Jerry Wade of New Harmony, Indiana who used to live in New York City and who still subscribes to the New York Times.
Jerry must have been really bored recently because he has obviously been following my columns about our country’s increasingly uncivil discourse. Jerry sent me an article by Bret Stephens that appeared as an opinion editorial in The Times. It contained an excellent analysis of the current climate surrounding “Freedom of Speechâ€, a.k.a., “If you don’t agree with me, you must be crazy!†I will share a small portion of Stephens’ article with you.
“We disagree about racial issues, bathroom policy, health care laws and, of course, the 45th president. We express our disagreements in radio and cable rants in ways that are increasingly virulent; street and campus protests that are increasingly violent; and personal conversations that are increasingly embittering.â€
Stephens does suggest a solution:
“… [T]o disagree well you must first understand well. You have to read deeply, listen carefully, watch closely. You need to grant your adversary moral respect; give him the intellectual benefit of doubt; have sympathy for his motives and participate empathically with his line of reasoning. And you need to allow for the possibility that you might yet be persuaded of what he has to say.â€
In other words, to have productive intellectual discourse we have to first concentrate on being civil.
For more Gavel Gamut articles go to: