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Vanderburgh County Commissioners August 22, 2017 Meeting Agenda

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AGENDA

Vanderburgh County

Board of Commissioners

August 22, 2017

3:00 pm, Room 301

  1. Call to Order
  2. Attendance
  3. Pledge of Allegiance
  4. Action Items
    1. Public Hearing and Final Reading of Vacation Ordinance CO.V-08-17-004
    2. Resolution CO.R-08-17-017: Concerning the Process to Consider the Waiver of Primary Plat Conditions
    3. Final Reading of Ordinance CO.08-17-015: As Amended Amending Ch.17.20.070 of Accessory Uses and Structures
    4. First Reading of Ordinance CO.09-17-020: Amending Section 17.26.020, 17.28.050 & Table 17.28.070 Electronic Message Signs
    5. First Reading of Ordinance CO.09-17-019: Amending Section 15.36 of Building Code Licensing
  5. Department Head Reports
  6. New Business
    1. Discussion of Site Review
  7. Old Business
    1. Evansville Industrial Foundation Appointment
  8. Public Comment
  9. Consent Items
    1. Contracts, Agreements and Leases
      1. Evansville Police Department: Memorandum of Understanding for the 2017 Local Justice Assistance Grant
      2. Superior Court: Home Verification Officer Agreement with Jason Ashworth
    2. Approval of August 8, 2017 Meeting Minutes
    3. Employment Changes
    4. Road Closure Request:
      1. Christian Fellowship Church, Hope for Uganda 5K
      2. Mead Johnson Nutrition Picnic
    5. Human Relations Commission: Request Room Fee Waiver at the Old National Events Plaza
    6. Surplus Requests:
      1. Sheriff’s Office Vehicle
      2. Burdette Park Vehicle
    7. County Clerk: July 2017 Monthly Report
    8. Weights and Measures: July 16- August 15, 2017 Monthly Report
    9. Burdette Park: Vanguard Alarm Services to Install Additional Video Camera at Aquatic Center
    10. County Commissioners: Mutual Release from Purchase Agreement for 1217 S Lombard Ave
    11. County Engineering:
      1. Department Head Report
      2. Pay Request #28 Highway 41 Expansion T.I.F for the sum of $4,750.00
      3. Waiver of Mineral Interest for Green River Road Phase 7: Parcel 2
    12. County Treasurer: July 2017 Monthly Report
  10. Adjournment

COA: 4-Year Delay In Trial Did Not Violate Speedy Trial Rights

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COA: 4-Year Delay In Trial Did Not Violate Speedy Trial Rights

Olivia Covington for www.theindianalawyer.com

The Indiana Court of Appeals has affirmed an Anderson man’s arson conviction after finding his actions contributed to a four-year delay in his trial, so his right to a speedy trial was not violated.

In Rodriques Lamar Johnson v. State of Indiana, 48A02-1611-CR-2580, Rodriques Johnson threw a brick through the kitchen window of the house he shared with his mother, which belonged to the Anderson Housing Authority. Johnson then lit pieces of paper on fire and threw them through the window, while two Anderson Housing Authority employees, Nathan Ballinger and Willie Beasley, were inside.

William Hofer, another Anderson Housing Authority Employee, tried to enter the house and extinguish the fire, but Johnson blocked him. Police and fire officials arrived a short time later, and after Ballinger, Beasley and Hofer gave statements, Johnson was arrested at the scene. Repairs to the home cost the Anderson Housing Authority $5,300.41.

Johnson was charged with Class D felony arson and Class A misdemeanor criminal mischief on May 22, 2012, and the date of his jury trial was rescheduled 10 times, partially due to court congestion and partially due to various motions filed by Johnson. Among those motions were two for competency evaluations, which were granted and found him competent to stand trial each time.

Johnson’s counsel also withdrew multiple times, and he was ultimately found guilty of Class B felony arson after a September 2016 trial. Johnson then appealed, arguing his right to a speedy trial had been violated, but the Indiana Court of Appeals rejected that argument Friday.

Using the analysis laid out in Barker v. Wingo, 407 U.S. 514, 530 (1972), Judge Margret Robb wrote that the four-year delay in Johnson’s trial weighed in his favor, but the fact that he caused at least six of the 10 delays weighed in favor of the state. Specifically, Robb pointed to Johnson’s multiple requests for competency evaluations and continuances, as well as a request for a dispositional hearing that yielded no agreement.

Further, Johnson failed to assert his right to a speedy trial in court, nor did he ever object on constitutional grounds to the setting of any of his trial dates, Robb said. Johnson’s actions, including requests for continuance and his lack of cooperation during the competency evaluations, also show he did not desire a speedy trial, she wrote.

Finally, the appellate panel determined Johnson failed to show he was prejudiced by the numerous delays in his trial, as there is no indication the delays “‘directly undermined or impaired the defense.’”

Indy-Based Wine & Canvas Loses Trademark Infringement Appeal

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Indy-Based Wine & Canvas Loses Trademark Infringement Appeal

Olivia Covington for www.theindianalwyer.com

The 7th Circuit Court of Appeals has affirmed the grant of summary judgment to a California wine and canvas company on a series of trademark infringement claims, finding the original Indiana parent company to the California business failed to prove any of its claims on appeal.

Indianapolis-based Wine & Canvas, owned by Anthony Scott and Tamara McCracken, has locations in Indiana and across the country. In 2008, Christopher Muylle and Theodore Weisser began discussing a franchise arrangement in which Muylle and Weisser would move from Indiana to San Francisco to open a Wine & Canvas operation. The two men signed a license agreement on behalf of their entity, which was known as YN Canvas CA, LLC, with Wine & Canvas.

Both Scott and McCracken were present at the August 2011 launch of the California business, and McCracken taught the first class. She also helped Muylle and Weisser approve the paintings to use at their “painting nights,” while she, Scott and Donald McCracken gave out company email address and advertised the San Francisco operation on the website for their company, Wine & Canvas.

However, disagreements arose about the amount of ownership the plaintiffs would have in the California company, so Muylle and Weisser decided to terminate the license agreement on Nov. 18, 2011, and renamed their business to Art Uncorked. Wine & Canvas and its owners filed a trademark infringement claim in November 2011, and Muylle filed trademark cancellation and abuse of process counterclaims.

During the proceedings, the plaintiffs in the case failed to serve written discovery responses by their due date and also failed to respond to a motion to compel. By the end of the case, the plaintiffs had been sanctioned three times for a total of $2,156. Also during the proceedings Weisser defaulted.

Meanwhile, the district court dismissed the California franchise law counterclaims, then granted Wine & Canvas’ motion for summary judgment on the trademark cancellation counterclaim. However, the abuse of process counterclaim survived, and the court granted summary judgment and partial summary judgment to Muylle on most of the plaintiffs’ claims.

Only Wine & Canvas’ trademark infringement and false designation of origin claims and Muylle’s abuse of process claim proceeded to trial. A jury found in favor of Muylle on all counts, and the court granted him $175,882.68 in fees. Wine & Canvas raised 14 issues on appeal, but the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals determined only five should be addressed in a Thursday opinion. The appellate court found in favor of Muylle on each of the five issues.

First, the 7th Circuit determined the district court did not abuse its discretion in imposing sanctions against Wine & Canvas in connection with its untimely discovery responses, as the company had missed multiple deadlines. The $2,156 in sanctions consisted only of the costs Muylle incurred related to the sanctions motion. The district court also did not err in admitting a statement that Scott made to Muylle during settlement discussions because the statement showed Scott’s “improper intent…in filing (the) the lawsuit,” Judge Gary Feinerman, sitting by designation from the Northern District of Illinois, wrote.

The appellate court also found that Muylle was entitled to summary judgment on the trademark infringement claim, as he established implied consent to use the Wine & Canvas trademark when the California company initially launched. Further, while the district court did err in determining Wine & Canvas failed to address the issue of confusion between the two company marks in its opposition brief, such error does not warrant reversal because the jury found for Muylle on the trademark infringement claim for the period after Nov. 18, 2011.

“It follows that there would be no point to reversing the grant of summary judgment on the unfair competition claim and remanding for trial,” Feinerman wrote.

Finally, the 7th Circuit affirmed the award of attorney fees to Muylle, noting that previous case law allows the grant of a motion for attorney fees even after a notice of appeal is filed.

The cases are Wine & Canvas Development, LLC, Anthony Scott, Tamara McCracken, and Donald McCracken v. Christopher Muylle, Theodore Weisser, YN Canvas LLC d/b/a Art Uncorked, Art Uncorked, LLC, and Weisser Management Group, LLC, 15-2088 and 15-3658.

Albaugh’s Dak Attack scores big in Ellis Park Juvenile

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‘He’s doing everything his namesake did. He’s a rookie like Dak was last year, yet he’s the star of our show,’ trainer Dale Romans says

Touchdown, Dak Attack!
Albaugh Family Stables’ 2-year-old colt Dak Attack poured it on down the stretch for a three-length victory over 81-1 shot Northern Trail, with Churchill Downs’ Grade 3 Bashford Manor winner Ten City another 1 3/4 lengths back in third in Sunday’s $75,000 Ellis Park Juvenile at Ellis Park.
“He went down there and did what he was supposed to do,” trainer Dale Romans said by phone from Saratoga Springs, N.Y. “That was a good field of horses he beat, and I think his future is bright.”
Like his namesake, Dallas Cowboys quarterback Dak Prescott, the 2-year-old colt Dak Attack performed error-free in running his record to 2 for 2. He was a golden boy in the paddock when other youngsters were boisterous, handled post 11 in a field of 11 with aplomb, swooping up from seventh to take charge in the final eighth-mile while covering seven-eighths of a mile in 1:22.96. He paid $6.20 to win as the second choice.
“I had a great trip,” said jockey Robby Albarado. “Historically you wouldn’t prefer the outside post, but circumstances with 2-year-olds, the second start, I was able to let the race unfold in front of me and I wasn’t committed to any spot on the track. I got my sights on Ten City. I got to draft next to him, pulling with him around there, matching strides and turning for home I tried to pull away from him. And he did.”
It all came after Dak Attack won his debut at Churchill Downs against only three rivals, albeit the runner-up, Sporting Chance, won his next start at Saratoga and will go in the Grade 1 Hopeful.
“He had to go wide, he got some dirt in his face. He did everything he’s supposed to do,” Romans said. “And he also ran fast, which is good. He’s doing everything his namesake did. He’s a rookie like Dak was last year, yet he’s the star of our show.”
Romans and Jason Loutsch, the co-owner and racing manager for the Albaugh stable, said Dak Attack probably will train up to Keeneland’s Grade 1 Breeders’ Futurity. The barn also has Saratoga’s Grade 3 Sanford runner-up Free Drop Billy going in Churchill Downs’ Grade 3 Iroquois and Saratoga Special runner-up Hollywood Star for Saratoga’s Grade 1 Hopeful.
“As soon as we got in the starting gate, boy, immediately the gates opened up,” said Dennis Albaugh, the stable patriarch and Loutsch’s father in law. “He wasn’t quite ready, so we didn’t get out perfect. But still not bad. Robby rode an unbelievable race. He just hung in there and poured it on. Man, we knew that horse was bred right, and he did the right things in the race. We were very happy with him. He’s a strong one coming into this next season.”
“We’re very proud of him; he ran hard,” Loutsch said. “All along we thought he was the most talented. We just took a little easier approach with him and brought him to Ellis. We had it in the plan book all along, and the plan came together and it’s working great. We’re coming off back to back second-place finishes at Saratoga, so I’m not taking anything away from our other two horses. But that was professional today. Breaking from the (11), sitting back there and eating dirt. And Robby asked him to go, he went.”
Northern Trail, who won a maiden turf sprint at Ellis after being well-beaten in two dirt starts, was the latest in a huge meet for Hall of Fame trainer Jack Van Berg. His stable is 9 for 26 at the meet, good for third place in the standings. Northern Trail, with Channing Hill in the saddle, put the most pressure on the pacesetting Make Noise, also trained by Van Berg, and kept going to take the lead in the stretch before Dak Attack’s surge.
“I’m proud of him,” said Van Berg, who said Northern Trail’s next start will be Kentucky Downs’ $350,000 Fasig-Tipton Turf Showcase Juvenile on grass. “He ran well. The other colt is a good colt, too,” he added of Make Noise, who weekend to fifth after establishing a fast pace.
Albarado had ridden the Kenny McPeek-trained Ten City to victory in a maiden win and the Bashford Manor. While he rides extensively for both Romans and McPeek, he was committed to Dak Attack in this race by the time McPeek decided to run. Jack Gilligan picked up the mount on Ten City, who went off the odds-on favorite at 7-10. While Ten City was a handful in the paddock, Gilligan said he was calm in the post parade.
“I had him where I wanted to be,” the 20-year-old Gilligan said of his mid-pack position “I wanted to give him a nice, clear trip. I wanted Robby to be a bit behind me on my outside, so I could control him a little bit.
“To be honest, he’s going to be great guns going two turns. He just didn’t have sprinters speed on the middle of the turn, where Robby was able to move up me. I had no horse to go with him. He just felt like a two-turn horse at that point of the race where I needed to be able to hold my position, to push up on Robby to keep him out.”
Dak Attack is a son of the Adena Springs stallion Ghostzapper, the 2004 Horse of the Year and Breeders’ Cup Classic winner, and out Indian Spell, a daughter of Kentucky Oaks winner Proud Spell. The $625,000 Keeneland yearling purchase was bred by Brereton Jones’ Airdrie Stud, with the Jones family staying in for a piece of the colt.
“Ten City is a very nice horse,” Albarado said. “He won the stakes last time out. I’m not going to take anything away from Dak Attack. He’s royally bred and was well prepared for today, as he was for his first start. “There are some talented babies in Kentucky. I’m excited for the fall. His talent is striking. But his demeanor, going to the track, coming off the track, walking to the winner’s circle. Nothing fazes the horse. He settles. He’s fast enough to be forwardly placed if they go too slow. He’s been perfect to this point.”
(Photos below: Robby Albarado guides Dak Attack to a three-length victory over Northern Trail in the Ellis Park Juvenile. Coady Photography)

ECLIPSE 2017

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BREAKING NEWS: Retired Evansville Police Detective Steve Bagbey And Former City Council Member Passed Away

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Retired Evansville Police Detective Steve Bagbey And Former City Member Passed Away

Steve Bagbey longtime Evansville Police Detective and Evansville City Councilman passed away last night.

This a developing story.

Segovia’s clutch hit helps Otters prevail in front of sellout crowd

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With the game tied in the eighth inning, Alejandro Segovia hit a two-run RBI single with two outs, helping the Evansville Otters beat the River City Rascals 4-2 in front of another sellout crowd of 5,455 at Bosse Field Saturday.

With Saturday’s standing room crowd, 11,592 fans have gone through the gates of the ballpark this weekend with the series finale set for Sunday.

Segovia’s heroics helped the second sellout crowd of the season go home happy after Ryan Long was tagged out at home trying to score on Jeff Gardner’s fielder’s choice two batters earlier in the inning.

The Rascals struck first in the second when Paul Kronenfeld hit a sacrifice fly to give River City a 1-0 lead.

In the bottom half of the inning, Evansville answered as Segovia hit his 13th home run of the season to tie the game at 1-1.

River City took back the lead in the third with a Jason Merjano RBI groundout, giving the Rascals a 2-1 advantage.

The Otters responded in the fourth as Gardner hit an RBI single, scoring Josh Allen to tie the game at 2-2.

The game remained tied until the eighth when Evansville got to River City’s Jonny Ortiz, tagging him for two earned runs off one hit and two walks in 2/3 of an inning. Ortiz took the loss, dropping to 2-1.

Segovia finished 2-4 with a home run and three RBIs.

Shane Weedman allowed two runs off two hits in 6 1/3 innings of work for Evansville as he took a no-decision.

River City’s Hector Hernandez went seven innings and got a no-decision, giving up two runs on four hits with 10 strikeouts.

Kyano Cummings earned the win to improve to 4-2 as he struck out one in 1 2/3 innings. Randy McCurry posted his 14th save of the season and he finished with two strikeouts.

The Otters and Rascals finish the series from Bosse Field on Sunday with first pitch scheduled for 5:05 p.m.

On Sunday, it’s Greg Jelks Number Retirement Day, Janet Gries & Host Family Recognition Day, Harry Potter Night and Courier & Press Family Fun Day. Fans can enjoy the famed book and movie series by taking pictures in a photo booth with props, get their face painted, participate in a costume contest and scavenger hunt and enjoy butter beer.

The Otters will also honor the late Greg Jelks by retiring his jersey number. Jelks was a manager for the Otters and he guided the franchise to the 2006 Frontier League championship. Sunday is also Family Fun Day, sponsored by Evansville Courier and Press with tickets for four $12 and select concession items $2.

Fans can listen live to the game on 91.5 FM WUEV and watch on the Otters Digital Network. Lucas Corley (play-by-play) and Bill McKeon (analysis) will provide coverage.

Tickets for Sunday are still available by going to evansvilleotters.com or calling 812-435-8686.

Sobriety Checkpoint Results for Friday

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The Evansville-Vanderburgh County Traffic Safety Partnership conducted a sobriety checkpoint on Friday, August 18, 2017 near the intersection of North Saint Joseph Avenue and Buchanan Road.

The Sheriff’s Office, Evansville Police Department and Indiana State Police participated. A total of 148 vehicles were diverted from North Saint Joseph Avenue into the checkpoint. The checkpoint ran from 11:00pm to 2:00am. A total of two (2) motorists were arrested for Operating a Motor Vehicle while Intoxicated, either after entering the checkpoint or after being stopped for a traffic violation before the checkpoint.

Additionally, four (4) motorists were taken off the road after testing higher than .06 BrAC (but less than the legal limit of .08) on a portable breath test. Those motorists were allowed to call a friend to pick them up or take a cab ride home.

Funding for local sobriety checkpoint operations is provided by the Indiana Criminal Justice Institute (ICJI) through a grant from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration(NHTSA).

Previously: DUI Checkpoint this Weekend in Support of Drive Sober or Get Pulled Over Blitz

ARRESTED:

Evan Allen Weinzapful (pictured above), 24, of Evansville. Operating a Motor Vehicle while Intoxicated as a Class A Misdemeanor (.175 BrAC) (Evansville Police Department)

John Alan Robertson (pictured above), 38, of Evansville. Operating a Motor Vehicle while Intoxicated as a Class A Misdemeanor (.178 BrAC) (Indiana State Police)

Presumption of Innocence Notice: The fact that a person has been arrested or charged with a crime is merely an accusation. The defendant is presumed innocent until and unless proven guilty in a court of law.

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