“READERS FORUM” OCTOBER 28, 2017
WHATS ON YOUR MIND TODAY?
EDITOR’S FOOTNOTE:  Any comments posted in this column do not represent the views or opinions of the City County Observer or our advertisers
Breaking News: High Court Traveling To Evansville On Monday
IL for www.theindianalawyer.com
The Indiana Supreme Court will travel south Monday to hear oral arguments in Vanderburgh County.
The justices will hear the case of B.A. v. State of Indiana, 49S02-1709-JV-00567, at the University of Southern Indiana Monday morning. The case involves a 13-year-old student who was questioned by school administrators in the presence of police officers about a bomb threat written on a wall at Decatur Middle School in Indianapolis.
Oral arguments in the case will begin at 10:30 a.m. Monday in USI’s Carter Hall, 8600 University Blvd., Evansville.
Mother Urges Participation In Drug Take Back Day
Mother urges participation in Drug Take Back Day
INDIANAPOLIS — Holding a brown, cylinder bottle, Shadonna Mills walks into the Indiana Government Center eager to get rid of what’s inside.
“Twenty-eight pills,†she said, shaking her head. “Twenty-eight pills and he only needed 13.â€
Mills’ son, Gerry, had his wisdom teeth removed — a surgery about 3.5 million people have a year, most who are prescribed pain killers. Gerry was prescribed Percocet, a painkiller that has high risk for addiction and dependence.
Drug Take Back Day is a two-day event which allows Hoosiers to drop unwanted pills off anonymously at no cost. The Indiana State Police gathered more than 1,200 pounds of pills in April at the first event of the year. Photo by Adrianna Pitrelli, TheStatehouseFile.com
Mills brought her son’s leftover pills to Drug Take Back Day. The event, taking place Friday and Saturday, allows Hoosiers to drop off unwanted medicine anonymously at no cost.
Gerry, 17, needed the medication for a few days after surgery, but his mom wondered why he was given so many pills when he only needed 13.
“He could have become another number,†Mills said Friday. “His little brother could have gotten ahold of them and maybe he would have become another number, another young person addicted.â€
The concern has been brought up by some doctors as well.
“The issue here is we need to prescribe drugs in a more intelligent manner,†said Dan Rusyniak, medical director at the Indiana Poison Center. “We need to educate people about what they’re being prescribed.â€
Thankfully, Mills said, she was up-to-date on the opioid issue. President Donald Trump declared the opioid crisis a public health emergency Thursday after saying it’s “the worst drug crisis in American history.†In 2016, 64,000 Americans died from opioid overdoses.
“It’s sad because I’m aware enough to know to hide them and to get rid of them as soon as he was done with them,†Mills said of the pills. “But the thing is, so many people will keep them in their cabinet and they’ll take them when they get a little bit of pain somewhere else or a family member can take them and that’s a problem.â€
Due to the opioid epidemic, Mills is even more adamant the drugs need to get off the streets, and thanks Drug Take Back Days for taking the first step.
“My son will be ok, thanks to this event,†she said. “But we have to find a way to get these off our streets so kids stop dying.â€
According to the Indiana Youth Institute, more Hoosier deaths are caused by prescription drugs than car crashes and gun homicides combined.
The Indiana State Police encourages Hoosiers to bring all narcotics to the event so they are taken off the street. The police follow a no questions asked policy and will take care of getting rid of the pills upon collection.
In Indiana alone, 757 people died in 2016 from opioid overdoses, according to the Center for Disease Control and Prevention. For every 100 people in the state, 84 of them have an opioid prescription.
The Take Back Day event, sponsored by the Drug Enforcement Agency in conjunction with the attorney general’s office, is held twice a year. In April, the Indiana State Police gathered 1,245 pounds of pills across the state. All locations can be found on the DEA’s website.
Throughout the rest of the year, Hoosiers can contact their local police department to find a drop off location near them.
“I want to stop flipping on the news to see another person slumped over in their car from an overdose,†Mills said. “So, please, take the time, clean out the cabinets and take the pills in.â€
FOOTNOTE: Adrianna Pitrelli is a reporter for TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.
County Coroner Speaks to Students About Opioid Crisis, Life Choices
Channel 44 News: Coroner Speaks to Students About Opioid Crisis, Life Choices
Lockyear says the numbers alone tell the story.
20 years ago, the county averaged 14 or 15 overdose deaths a year; now those numbers have increased 300 percent or more.
Those numbers, he says, are why we have to start now to help the next generation change that trend.
“We’re at all time numbers here in Vanderburgh County,†Lockyear said. “We’re at 57 (overdose deaths), we were at 50 last year and last year was our record year now we’re at 57 and we have two months to go.â€
For perspective, that number is half of the students who were in the room listening to Lockyear speak.
Lockyear says President Trump’s declaration of the crisis as a public health emergency shows that the solution has to come from many different places
♪ ALL GOD’S JUDGES GOT ROBES ♪ By Jim Redwine
Gavel Gamut By Jim Redwine
♪ ALL GOD’S JUDGES GOT ROBES
www.jamesmredwine.com
Each fall for the past several years I have helped teach an Internet course on continuing education to judges. The National Judicial College located in Reno, Nevada organizes the six-week curriculum and selects members of the NJC faculty to teach judges from across America and even some foreign countries. Each weekly segment is led by one faculty member who is assisted by five others. My assigned area is Court Management. The course is supervised by two full-time staff members of the college who operate the complexities of the technology required by the participation of judges by computer and telephone from numerous far-flung locations. Joseph Sawyer and Danielle Harris of the NJC are in charge of the course and tasked with the “cat-herding†job of running both those judges who take the classes and we judges who teach it.
When I think about continuing education for judges I get an image of mothers from New York to Hawaii sending off their little judges dressed in black robes and equipped with new gavels embossed with the admonition: “Don’t Hit Anyoneâ€. Before I was an attorney and had to deal with judges and before I became a judge and had to deal with other judges I never gave a thought as to how judges learn to be judges. Until reality struck me, I just assumed judges knew what they were doing the moment they began to decide the fates of those who were brought to court by law and life. Oh, if that were so!
However, since that is definitely not so, we need places to teach judges how to judge the same as we need to teach electricians not to touch a hot 220 line. The National Judicial College where judges who have already made numerous errors can teach other judges how to avoid them is one such place. The NJC states its mission as “Pursuing education | innovation | advancing justice with the support of individuals and organizations dedicated to preserving and improving the rule of lawâ€.
In the teaching of Court Management I suggest a judge first think about what purposes she/he wants their court to accomplish; what is the desired mission? If a pioneer were going from St. Louis to Colorado he might paint a slogan (mission statement) on his wagon, “Pike’s Peak or Bust!â€. He really does not plan to live on Pike’s Peak but the mantra can help him stay focused when a wagon wheel comes off in Kansas.
About thirty years ago members of my staff gave a great deal of thought to our purposes as a court. We were not unhappy with the court’s direction back then but we wondered if there were better ways to manage the Posey Circuit Court. So my long-time Court Reporter, Katrina Mann, my Chief Probation Officer, Rodney Fetcher, another long-time Court Reporter, Kristie Hoffman, another long-time Probation Officer, Mark Funkhouser, my then Court Administrator, Sam Blankenship, and I brainstormed for weeks about what our goals should be and how we could accomplish them.
Short-term, mid-range and long-term elements of planning, strategy, operation, record keeping and innovation were considered. We sought and received important input from the attorneys and other office holders. What we concluded we wanted the Posey Circuit Court to do was to help make Posey County, Indiana a better place to live by helping to resolve instead of exacerbating problems between and among our citizens who needed the court’s services.
We slowly and incrementally instituted a system of resolving conflicts in which the most important actors are the people who are in conflict; say a divorcing couple with children. Our Mission Statement guides us but it is only a guide, not an immutable law. For now I will set forth the Mission Statement then in future columns discuss the “Devil in the Details†of how we actually strive to attain our goals.
Footnote: Mission Statement of the Posey Circuit Court
The mission of the Posey Circuit Court is to help create a community in which individuals, families, and entities are encouraged and facilitated to resolve legal problems among themselves and to provide a forum in which legal issues that are not privately disposed of are fairly and efficiently decided according to applicable law in an atmosphere of mutual respect and positive innovation.
Over the years there has been a great deal of tweaking of our approach as new staff members have supported the main goals of conflict resolution and helping Posey County citizens repair their relationships. You are already aware this is a work in progress. Perhaps next week we can begin to flesh out the bones of our theory.
For more Gavel Gamut articles go to:
**Presale Code** Rudolph The Red-Nosed Reindeer – The Musical
PRESALE TICKETS AVAILABLE FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27Â AT 10:00AM THROUGH THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 2Â ATÂ 10:00PM
USE PASSCODE: BROADWAY
Rudolph The Red-Nosed Reindeer – The Musical will be at the Old National Events Plaza on Friday, December 7 at 7:30pm!
Tickets go onsale to the general public on Friday, November 3Â at 10:00am |
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Holcomb Announces Judicial Appointments for Hamilton, Porter & Tippecanoe Counties
INDIANAPOLIS – Governor Eric J. Holcomb announced three judicial appointments. He has appointed David K. Najjar to the Hamilton County Superior Court No. 5, Jeffrey W. Clymer to the Porter County Superior Court No. 2, and Sean M. Persin to the Tippecanoe County Circuit Court.
About David K. Najjar
Mr. Najjar succeeds Judge Wayne A. Sturtevant, who retired in August 2017. Mr. Najjar was a deputy prosecuting attorney for Hamilton County between 1997 and 2005. In 2005, Mr. Najjar was appointed as a magistrate judge in Hamilton County, where he currently serves.
Mr. Najjar received his undergraduate degree from Indiana University and his law degree from Indiana University McKinney School of Law. Mr. Najjar, through his 12 years as a magistrate judge, has demonstrated that he will decide cases fairly, impartially, and with respect for those who come before him.
About Jeffrey W. Clymer
Mr. Clymer succeeds Judge William E. Alexa, who retired on October 3, 2017. Mr. Clymer began his legal career as a judicial law clerk in St. Joseph, Mich. After his clerkship, he worked in private practice in Valparaiso, handling a wide variety of cases, both civil and criminal. Mr. Clymer is an experienced mediator and has also been an adjunct law professor at Valparaiso Law School since 1999.
Mr. Clymer received his undergraduate degree from Kalamazoo College and his law degree from Valparaiso Law School. Mr. Clymer brings to the bench a deep understanding of a wide range of legal issues and skills to settle disputes in a fair and just manner.
About Sean M. Persin
Mr. Persin will succeed Judge Thomas H. Busch, who is retiring December 31, 2017. Mr. Persin has served as judge in Tippecanoe Superior Court No. 5 since his election to that office in 2015. Before that, he served for three years as a magistrate judge in Tippecanoe County. Mr. Persin was a deputy prosecuting attorney and was in private practice prior to becoming a judge. He was also an adjunct faculty member at Ivy Tech Community College in Lafayette for nearly 10 years.
Mr. Persin, while serving as a magistrate, oversaw the alcohol and drug program in Tippecanoe County and continued to do so after becoming a superior court judge. He continues to work to address addiction issues and promote problem-solving courts.
He received his undergraduate degree from Purdue University and his law degree from the University of Wyoming College of Law. Mr. Persin brings a wealth of experience, a keen sense of fairness, and compassion to the bench.
Judge Najjar, Mr. Clymer and Judge Persin will be sworn in on mutually agreeable dates to be determined.
OCTOBER-2017 BIRTHDAYS
RAY BROWN
DONITA WOLF
MELANIE ATWOOD
ANN WILLIAMS
PATRICIA TIZER
BRAIN SCHULZ
DAVID SCOTT COKER
RYAN O’BRYAN
KEVIN AXSOM
DUSTY WILHITE
HENRY GOBEN
DAN OATES
BEN SCHMITT
SARAH HUDSON
ANDREW MCNEIL
GERALD ROACH
FRANK PETERLIN
RON FARNEY
JENNIFER MCDANIEL
J D STROUTH
MIKE MEYER
JEFFERRY HARRIS
STEVE SANDERS
LISA CALVERT
STEVEN CRABTREE
J KENT ASHWORTH
GRETCHIN Â IRONS
JENNIFER SCALES
JUDITH POWERS
KELLI FREDRICK
MITCH EVITT
MIKE WOODS
MATT KELLY
MICHAEL PERRY
JOY TIMMON
DREW PLATT
LARRY FAULKENBURGH
BRAIN JACKSON
MARK ELLIOTT
STEVE HAMMER
RAY BROWN
JANET LEE SCHULTHEIS
J KENTÂ ASHWORTH
STEVE MARTIN
GREG LAMAR
JANE ANNE VAN ZANDT
BASHAR ESTAÂ
BECKY BLANCHARD
MARIE MEEK
ANDREA CHASE HALE
BOB TENBARGE
JOHN STUTSMAN
TAMMY FRANCE
                           ANDY DILLOW
SANDY BITTER
                           CLIFF FELSTEAD
Indiana State Trooper Performs Heimlich Maneuver on Chocking Woman
Vanderburgh County – This morning at approximately 9:30, Master Trooper Mike Lehmkuhler and Trooper Korey Mauck were enjoying a cup of coffee at Donut Bank on Diamond Avenue when they heard an elderly woman coughing at the table next to them. They overhead the woman’s daughter ask her mom if she was alright. Trooper Lehmkuhler approached the woman and asked her if she was chocking and she nodded yes. While the woman was still sitting down, Lehmkuhler performed the Heimlich maneuver and immediately cleared her airway. He received a hug from the woman’s daughter and was thanked for saving her mom’s life.
Trooper Mike Lehmkuhler is a 17 year veteran with the Indiana State Police and has been an active SWAT team member for the last 11 years.