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NKU Fall Classic coming up for UE men

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A quick trip north will see the University of Evansville men’s golf team travel to Batavia, Ohio for the Northern Kentucky University Fall Classic.

Elks Run Golf Club will be the host course for the tournament, which will see 36 holes of play open the event on Sunday at 8:30 a.m. ET with Monday’s last round starting at 9 a.m.  A par of 71 has been set with the yardage coming in at 6,845.

A competitive field includes: Northern Kentucky, Butler, Cal-Poly, DePaul, Detroit Mercy, Green Bay, Fort Wayne, Morehead State, Oakland, Robert Morris, Savannah State, Wright State and Youngstown State.

For the second time in three rounds this weekend, Tyler Gray finished with a sub-70 round as the Purple Aces wrapped up the EKU Intercollegiate at the University Club at Arlington last Sunday.

Gray opened the weekend with a 68 and finished with a 69 on Sunday.  His final total of 208 was good for a tie for 4th place.  Cameron Weyer kept up his solid weekend, notching his best score of the three rounds.  He notched a 72 in the final 18 to finish with a 221, tying for 58th.  Third for the Aces was Matthew Ladd.  His final day score checked in at a 75 as he posted a 225 for the three rounds.

Spencer Wagner had his best showing of the tournament.  After carding a 79 in Saturday’s opening round, Wagner lowered that to a 74 in round two before completing the final 18 with a 73.  He came home with a total score of 226.  Noah Reese was next up.  Reese totaled 76 strokes on Sunday, finishing the event with a 229.

As a team, UE remained in 15th place.  Sunday’s round was the best of the weekend for the squad as they registered a 289.  It was tied for the 6th-best team showing of the day.

Reversal: Women May Sue Evansville, Fort Wayne Over Police Sex Assaults

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Dave Stafford for www.theindianalawyer.com

Two women who were sexually assaulted in separate cases by on-duty police in Evansville and Fort Wayne prevailed on appeal in their civil lawsuits against the cities Friday after trial courts had ruled in favor of the municipalities.

The suits were combined before the Indiana Court of Appeals because they shared a common issue of law — whether the “common carrier” liability exception applied to police departments and municipalities in these cases. The appellate panel ruled it did, finding for the officers’ victims.

In the first case, Jennifer Cox sued Evansville over her 2009 assault by then Officer Martin Montgomery. He had responded to a domestic disturbance call involving Cox, who he took back to her apartment, followed her inside, and coerced her into sex, according to the record. He later was convicted of criminal deviate conduct and sentenced to 12 years in prison.

Cox’s suit initially was filed in federal court but later refiled in state court. Last August, her motion for partial summary judgment was denied on the non-delegable duty exception to respondeat superior liability — also known as the common carrier exception, prompting this interlocutory appeal.

“Officer Montgomery retained responsibility for Cox’s safety throughout their interaction. As for Cox’s abilities to control her environment and protect herself from harm, we note, first, that she was intoxicated — she had been drinking throughout the night, her girlfriend gave her car keys to Officer Montgomery, and the officer found it necessary to drive her home. And while it is true that she was in her residence and technically able to attempt to fight against a sexual assault, it is also true that Officer Montgomery was in full uniform, which included his badge and gun. And throughout the night, their interaction involved Officer Montgomery’s exercise of his official duties as an officer of the law,” Judge John Baker wrote for the panel.

“Under these circumstances, we find as a matter of law that Cox surrendered her autonomy and control to Officer Montgomery when he first responded to her girlfriend’s home. She did not reclaim her autonomy and control by the simple act of walking through her front door when he followed right behind her,” as Evansville argued. “Therefore, Evansville and EPD owed a non-delegable duty of care to Cox and the trial court erred by granting summary judgment in their favor on this issue and by denying Cox’s partial summary judgment motion. We reverse with instructions to grant Cox’s motion with respect to the duty element of her claim and remand for further proceedings.”

Baker wrote that Babi Beyer’s suit against Fort Wayne was more easily decided in her favor. After she was arrested for sitting behind the wheel of a car parked on a road while intoxicated, she was taken to a hospital where a blood draw revealed an alcohol level more than three times the legal limit. She was discharged, however, to the custody of then Officer Mark Rogers, who took her to a grassy area and raped her on a bench while armed and in uniform. Rogers pleaded guilty to charges of rape, sexual misconduct and official misconduct.

“Under these circumstances, we have little difficulty concluding that, at the time of the sexual assault, Beyer had surrendered her control and autonomy to Officer Rogers. Consequently, as a matter of law, Fort Wayne owed a non-delegable duty of care to Beyer. The trial court erred by granting Fort Wayne’s motion for summary judgment in this regard and we reverse that portion of its order and remand for further proceedings,” Baker wrote.

The panel also rejected Fort Wayne’s cross-appeal challenging the trial court’s denial of its motion for summary judgment on Beyer’s respondeat superior claim.

“While the ultimate acts of (Rogers’) sexual assault may have been for his own personal gratification, the context in which they occurred was made possible by the authorized duties of his employment as a police officer. Under these circumstances, whether he was acting within the scope of his employment when he sexually assaulted Beyer is a question of fact for a jury. Therefore, the trial court properly denied Fort Wayne’s summary judgment motion on this issue.”

The consolidated cases are Jennifer Cox v. Evansville Police Department and The City of Evansville; Babi E. Beyer v. The City of Fort Wayne, 82A01-1610-CT-2299.

 

Adopt A Pet

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Chester is a 6-year-old male Chihuahua. He and 12 other small dogs came from a backyard breeder in Boonville who passed away. All of the dogs lived outside, inter-breeding without limits, so they are not housetrained. Chester and his friends’ adoption fees are $120 each. He, Cadence, and Harley are the only ones left. This will include their spay or neuter, microchip, vaccines, and more. Contact Vanderburgh Humane at (812) 426-2563 for adoption details!

The American Sewing Guild Monthly Meeting

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The American Sewing Guild will meet at Mc Collough Branch Library’s Community Room on Washington Avenue.
The program will be a report from the  ASG National Conference in Orlando, Florida.  Members who attended will share what they learned in classes they attended.
Doors are open at 5:30  with the meeting from 6-7:45.  Visitors are always welcome.
For more information contact Evansville@asg.org    or call 812-568-2515.

Evansville Police Merit Commission Meeting Cancellation Notice

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The Evansville Police Merit Commission scheduled meeting for

Monday, September 25, 2017 has been cancelled.

The next scheduled meeting of the Police Merit Commission will be on

Monday, October 9, 2017, in Room 307 of the Civic Center Complex at 2:00pm.

Notice submitted by Sgt. Doug Schneider,

Liaison to the Evansville Police Merit Commission

Air Quality Forecast

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Air quality forecasts for Evansville and Vanderburgh County are provided as a public service.  They are best estimates of predicted pollution levels that can be used as a guide so people can modify their activities and reduce their exposure to air quality conditions that may affect their health.  The forecasts are routinely made available at least a day in advance, and are posted by 10:30 AM Evansville time on Monday (for Tuesday through Thursday) and Thursday (for Friday through Monday).  When atmospheric conditions are uncertain or favor pollution levels above the National Ambient Air Quality Standards, forecasts are made on a daily basis.

Ozone forecasts are available from mid-April through September 30th.  Fine particulate (PM2.5) forecasts are available year round.

Friday
September 22
Saturday
September 23
Sunday
September 24
Monday
September 25
Tuesday
September 26
Fine Particulate
(0-23 CST avg)
Air Quality Index
moderate moderate moderate moderate NA*
Ozone
Air Quality Index
moderate moderate moderate moderate NA*
Ozone
(peak 8-hr avg)
(expected)
NA* NA* NA* NA* NA*

* Not Available and/or Conditions Uncertain.

Air Quality Action Days

Ozone Alerts are issued by the Evansville EPA when maximum ozone readings averaged over a period of eight hours are forecasted to reach 71 parts per billion (ppb), or unhealthy for sensitive groups on the USEPA Air Quality Index scale.

Particulate Alerts are issued by the Evansville EPA when PM2.5 readings averaged over the period of midnight to midnight are forecasted to reach 35 micrograms per meter cubed (µg/m3).

Current conditions of OZONE and FINE PARTICULATE MATTER are available in near real-time on the Indiana Department of Environment Management’s website.

National and regional maps of current conditions are available through USEPA AIRNow.

BREAKING NEWS: 70,000 in Puerto Rico Urged To Evacuate Immediately As Dam Is In ‘Imminent’ Danger Of Failure

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70,000 in Puerto Rico Urged To Evacuate Immediately As Dam Is In ‘Imminent’ Danger Of Failure

September 22 at 8:25 PM

 

SAN JUAN, PUERTO RICO — Tens of thousands of residents in northwestern Puerto Rico were ordered to evacuate Friday amid fears that a dam holding back a large inland lake was in imminent danger of failing because of damage from Hurricane Maria’s floodwaters.

Officials worried that as many as 70,000 people could be in the path of a massive amount of rushing water in the event the Guajataca Dam releases into the Guajataca River, which flows north through low-lying coastal communities and empties into the ocean.

The dam suffered a “fissure,” Puerto Rico Gov. Ricardo Rosselló said in a news conference Friday afternoon. Residents in the municipalities of Quebradillas, Isabela and part of San Sebastian could be affected if the dam collapses, he said, and it could be a catastrophic event.

“To those citizens … who are listening: Please evacuate,” Rosselló said. Buses were sent to ferry residents out of harm’s way. “We want your life to be protected … Please, if you’re listening, the time to evacuate is now.”

The urgent situation Friday came more than 48 hours after Hurricane Maria slammed into Puerto Rico’s southeastern coast as the most powerful storm to strike the island in more than 80 years. It was a reminder that Maria’s impact on Puerto Rico is far from over; officials still have little sense of the scope of the damage the island sustained as a communications and power blackout continued to affect nearly everyone in the U.S. territory.

Authorities on Friday reported six deaths across the island. Three of the fatalities occurred in the municipality of Utuado as a result of mud slides, Puerto Rico’s public safety department said in a statement. Two others died in flooding in Toa Baja, and one other person died in Bayamón when a panel struck him in the head. More deaths are likely to be reported in coming days as search and rescue crews reach previously inaccessible areas, officials said.

“We are aware of other reports of fatalities that have transpired by unofficial means but we cannot confirm them,” said Héctor M. Pesquera, secretary of the public safety department.

Though damage assessments have been nearly impossible, early reports reveal an island ravaged by Maria’s high winds and torrential rains, with roofs peeled open like tin cans, neighborhoods waterlogged, and trees that were lush just days ago now completely stripped bare of leaves. The hurricane plowed through the entire 100-mile island, with the eye tracking diagonally from the southeast to the northwest.

Aerial view of the devastation at Palma Real Shopping Center in Humacao, a municipality on the east side of Puerto Rico. (Photo by Dennis M. Rivera Pichardo for The Washington Post)

“Every vulnerable house here made out of wood was completely or partially destroyed during the path of the eye of the hurricane,” Rossello said of an island where many homes are constructed of wood foundations and zinc roofs. “Puerto Rico has endured an horrific ordeal.”

The lack of communications has isolated rural areas of the island. Just 15 percent of the island’s communication towers are working, and some of the island’s transmission towers have collapsed. Up to 85 percent of its fiber cables are damaged.

Power remains completely out on the island, and just 25 percent of it has water service.

Shock has given way to frayed nerves as officials warned that it could be months before power is restored to some areas, and there is no indication of when communications infrastructure will be fixed. In the capital, streets were choked with traffic as people tried to find loved ones and spent hours waiting in line for gas.

Hurricane Maria caused widespread damage to Puerto Rico. Drone footage captured the scene in San Juan and Canóvanas on Sept. 21. (The Washington Post)

The De La Cruz family could not find fuel on Thursday. On Friday morning they waited in line for six hours at one of the open stations here, and there were still 20 cars in front of them. Gabriel De La Cruz and his wife, Luisa, took turns fanning their 1-year-old son, Ismael, who sat sweating in the hot car, wearing only a diaper.

“This is all we have,” De La Cruz, a 30-year-old restaurant cook, said of the car. They lost their home and all their belongings in the storm.

Residents searching for loved ones in remote areas met downed trees, power lines and other debris. News was particularly scarce from the southern and central parts of the island, as well the tiny island of Vieques to the east.

“Even worse than not having power or water, which we’ve unfortunately become accustomed to, a communications blackout was the real anxiety-inducing feature … we haven’t really dealt with it before,” said Miguel A. Soto-Class, president of the Center for a New Economy, a San Juan-based think tank. “Are people dead and suffering or are people like we are, bruised but fine? The not knowing part is just terrible.”

The line outside a supermarket in San Juan snakes around the building Friday morning as supplies were in high demand.

Soto-Class stood on the roof of his home, the only place where he could get a cellphone signal, as Coast Guard helicopters buzzed overhead. He has not been able to get in touch with family on the island’s west coast and considered driving to find them. He abandoned the plan after realizing he does not know the condition of the roads.

Puerto Rico, with 3.5 million U.S. citizens, also is facing a crisis because of its geography: It is an island dependent on air and sea for supplies and volunteers. The immediate response that occurred after Hurricane Harvey in Houston, where volunteers from Louisiana headed in during the storm, or during Hurricane Irma in Florida, where utility trucks were pre-positioned to turn on power, is impossible here.

“It’s not like you can just drive a tractor-trailer,” said Melissa Mark-Viverito, the Puerto Rican-born president of the New York City Council. “That adds a whole other layer of logistical challenge to it.”

New York Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo and U.S. Rep. Nydia M. Velázquez (D-N.Y.) flew here Friday, bringing 34,000 bottles of water and nearly 10,000 Meals Ready to Eat.

A building on a coastal luxury resort, once with enviable ocean views, is now partially floating over open air as rocks and mud crumbled under one corner and fell into the sea. Windmills broke and shattered, and solar panels shone like mirrors.

The enormity of what they had just been through — and what was yet to come — appeared to be sinking in for many people, including those who considered themselves hurricane-hardened.

“This storm was something,” said Geraldo Ramirez, 36, a resident of San Juan’s La Perla neighborhood. “I was here for Hurricane Georges back in ’98, and that was hard to believe, how badly it affected the island. But this, Maria, was something altogether different.”

Ramirez lives in a small three-story purple house near the waterfront on Calle San Miguel with his sister, her husband and their two children. His house, a sturdy cinder-block structure, was built 17 years ago and did not suffer much structural damage. But rain and ocean water managed to find its way into every room.

Asked when the power would likely return to his small neighborhood, he answered, without hesitating, “Three or four months, at least. Maybe six.”

“But it’s okay, we will make do,” he said. “We are used to it and it’s always the same. Georges, Hugo, we lose power and we lose water. But we know how to survive.”

Leaning against the wall of his carport in his light blue one-story home in coastal Loiza, Jorge Diaz, 72, had only one thing on his mind: his brothers and his sister, and how one day soon he would be with them in Orlando.

“There’s only one thing I’m waiting for,” he said. “The airport to open.”

 “I just heard on the radio, eight months without electricity and water?” Diaz said. “That’s unreasonable. You can’t live like this … It’s a dark time now. A dark time for Puerto Rico.”

One block down and across the street, Lizmarie Bultron, 39, trudged through calf-high water to exit her home, about a block away from the beach.

“Everything I had is gone. I lost my whole house, the only thing left is the floor,” Bultron said. She looked at her feet, still ankle-deep in water. “And this, this water won’t be gone for at least a month. All we can do is wait. Wait for help to come. That’s the only choice. But no one has come yet. Not FEMA, not anyone.”

Year-Long Drug Investigation Nets 37 Suspects, Several Suspects Still At-Large

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A year-long drug investigation by Indiana State Police and Washington Police resulted in 37 suspects being arrested early this morning during a multi-agency drug roundup. The drug investigation was launched in September 2016 to target individuals dealing in illegal narcotics in the Daviess and Knox County area.

At approximately 7 a.m. this morning, officers with the Indiana State Police, ATF, DEA, US Marshals service, Martin County Sheriff’s Department, Daviess County Sheriff’s Department, Knox County Sheriff’s Department, Odon Police and Vincennes Police responded to various locations throughout Knox and Daviess County to execute felony arrest warrants.  As of 3:00 this afternoon, six suspects are still at large.

Suspects Arrested in Daviess County:

  • Jeffrey Scheid, 55, Washington, IN
  1. 2 Counts of Dealing Schedule II Controlled Substance, Level 4 Felony
  • Gage Overton, 25, Washington, IN
  1. Dealing Meth, Level 5 Felony
  • James Fricke, 53, Washington, IN
  1. Dealing Meth, Level 5 Felony
  • Michael Hambrick, 35, Washington, IN
  1. 2 Counts of Dealing Meth, Level 5 Felony
  • Derrick Parker, 38, Washington, IN
  1. Conspiracy to Commit Dealing Meth, Level 5 Felony
  2. Dealing Cocaine, Level 5 Felony
  • Justin Williams, 28, Washington, IN
  1. 3 Counts of Dealing Meth, Level 5 Felony
  • Austin Collins, 23, Washington, IN
  1. Dealing Schedule II Drug, Level 4 Felony
  • Joshua Hambrick, 37, Washington, IN
  1. 2 Counts of Dealing Meth, Level 5 Felony
  • Jonathan Spaulding, 30, Washington, IN
  1. Dealing Schedule III Controlled Substance, Level 4 Felony
  • Kenneth Morning, 46, Washington, IN
  1. Dealing Schedule II Controlled Substance, Level 4 Felony
  • Tyler Nading, 25, Washington, IN
  1. Dealing Meth, Level 5 Felony
  • Robert Hambrick,  36, Washington, IN
  1. Dealing Meth, Level 5 Felony
  • Joshua Arnold, 31, Washington, IN
  1. Dealing Meth, Level 5 Felony
  • John Ward, 33, Washington, IN
  1. 2 Counts Dealing Meth, Level 5 Felony
  • Jordan Page, 23, Washington, IN
  1. Dealing Meth, Level 5 Felony
  • Drake Latham, 27, Washington, IN
  1. Dealing Meth, Level 5 Felony
  • James Booher, 30, Washington, IN
  1. 2 Counts of Dealing Meth, Level 5 Felony
  • Richard Shelton, 64, Washington, IN
  1. Dealing Meth, Level 5 Felony
  • Betty Edmondson, 40, Washington, IN
  1. Dealing Meth, Level 5 Felony
  • Justin Elenbaas, 19, Washington, IN
  1. Conspiracy to Commit Dealing Meth, Level 5 Felony
  • Steven Booher, 22, Washington, IN
  1. Dealing Meth, Level 5 Felony
  • Stacey Long, 48, Washington, IN
  1. 2 Counts of Dealing Meth, Level 5 Felony
  • Mervin Graber, 31, Washington, IN
  1. 2 Counts of Dealing Schedule II Controlled Substance, Level 4 Felony
  • Benjamin Leighty, 39, Washington, IN
  1. 2 Counts of Dealing Meth, Level 5 Felony
  • Ashley Bechtel, 34, Washington, IN
  1. Dealing Meth, Level 5 Felony
  • Miranda Merriman, 23, Bloomington, IN
  1. 2 Counts of Dealing Meth, Level 5 Felony
  • Benjamin Phillips, 19, Bloomington, IN
  1. 2 Counts of Conspiracy to Commit Dealing Meth, Level 5 Felony

 Suspects Arrested from Knox County:

  • Charles Thomas, 29, Wheatland, IN
  1. Dealing a Schedule I, Level 6 Felony
  • David Yoder, 52, Bruceville, IN
  1. Dealing Meth, Level 5 Felony
  • Jaimee Robinson, 41, Vincennes, IN
  1. Dealing Meth, Level 5 Felony
  • Heather Shofner, 32, Bruceville, IN
  1. Dealing Meth
  • George Weiss Jr, 34, Vincennes, IN
  1. Dealing Meth
  • Megan Potter, 25, Vincennes, IN
  1. Dealing Schedule IV, Level 6 Felony
  • Tiffany Emmons, 25, Vincennes, IN
  1. Dealing Meth
  • James Howard, 56, Vincennes, IN
  1. Dealing Schedule IV, Level 6 Felony
  • Charles Thomas, 29, Wheatland, IN
  1. Dealing Schedule IV, Level 6 Felony
  • Ashley Schutte, 24, Shoals, IN
  1. Dealing Schedule II Controlled Substance, Level 4 Felony

 This was a joint investigation conducted by Washington Police and Indiana State Police

University of Evansville swimming and diving teams begin their seasons this weekend

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The University of Evansville swimming and diving teams begin their seasons this weekend with a home meet against Southern Illinois.

On Friday at 4 p.m., the Purple Aces and Salukis will complete the diving portion of the meet.  The swimmers take their turn in the pool on Saturday at 11 a.m. and will be a relay format with events unique to the meet.

Last season, the women produced a successful season, breaking school records, earning MVC accolades, and taking top 8 finishes. Nearly every single swimmer achieved at least one lifetime best time.

The men held much of the same success; team improvements were led by newcomers to a MAC Championship with the most individual scorers in at least a decade. Additionally, all the men exceeded their own personal marks in at least one event.

The Aces have added seventeen newcomers to their ranks this season and look to improve even further in the 2017-2018 season.

Conference play begins for Aces’ Women’s Soccer

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The University of Evansville women’s soccer team sets its sights on Missouri Valley Conference action as the Aces open league play against Loyola on Friday night at 7 p.m. at Arad McCutchan Stadium.

Last weekend, the Aces wrapped up non-conference play against Saint Louis and Morehead State. To open the weekend, Evansville battled SLU, tying the match at the half, but eventually fell to the Billikens, 3-1. The Aces continued to show resiliency on Sunday against Middle Tennessee as UE battled back from a pair of one-goal deficits, but dropped the match, 3-2, on an overtime goal by the Blue Raiders.


UE vs. Loyola (Friday, 7 p.m.):  Live Stats  |  The Valley on ESPN3  |  Loyola Website | Game Notes


Entering the weekend, Loyola holds a 7-3 overall record and a 1-0 mark in MVC play. The Ramblers are currently on a four-match winning streak in which they have outscored their opponents 17-2. In the all-time series, Loyola holds a 4-1-3 advantage, but the Aces have proven to be a thorn in the side of the Ramblers. In two of the last three meetings, Evansville has earned penalty-kick victories over Loyola to advance in the MVC Tournament.