- The Vanderburgh County Sheriff’s Office graduated twelve (12) new confinement officers from the Indiana Law Enforcement Basic Jail Officers Course last Friday afternoon. Officers from Vanderburgh, Spencer, Gibson and Posey counties completed the Basic Jail Officer’s Course.
In 2006, the Indiana Law Enforcement Training Board approved the Vanderburgh County Sheriff’s Office as a regional training site for this forty (40) hour course, which is required of all newly hired jail officers during their first year. The new officers were instructed in subjects such as: ethics, tactical communication, report writing, jail operations, physical security, searches, evidence gathering, booking and admissions, blood borne pathogens, cultural awareness, suicide prevention, mental illness and legal issues.
The regional officers returned to their respective agencies this week in order to continue additional facility specific training. Vanderburgh County Sheriff’s Office confinement officers will spend the next two weeks attending additional classroom and practical training, which will include topics such as: housing unit supervision, gang identification, defensive and physical tactics, record keeping and practical scenarios. Upon completion of the classroom training, the new confinement officers will be assigned to a Field Training Officer (FTO) for an additional ten (10) weeks before being permitted to work alone.
At any given time the Sheriff’s Office houses over 500 inmates and nearly 100 work release participants within the confines of a 156,722 square foot facility. As an Indiana Law Enforcement Academy accredited provider, the Sheriff’s Office accepts applications from outside agencies to attend the Basic Jail Officers Course at our facility.
Pictured above: Jail Officers Course – Class 2017-272
VCSO Regional Jail Officers Course Graduates 12 New Officers
DO RIGHT WHILE WE HELP OURSELVES By Jim Redwine
Gavel Gamut By Jim Redwine
www.jamesmredwine.com
DO RIGHT WHILE WE HELP OURSELVES
If you read last week’s column (hey, I can dream can’t I), you know I am preparing to help the National Judicial College teach Rural Court Judges. Last week we talked about the theory that our law arises from our history and culture, our Volksgeist. Or as Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. (1841-1935) put it, “The life of the law has not been logic; it has been experienceâ€.
Posey County, Indiana has produced several influential thinkers on what our law should be and do, that is, what is the proper purpose of our legal system? Our most famous citizen was and still is Alvin P. Hovey (1821–1891). Hovey was an attorney, a Posey Circuit Court judge, a general and the only governor to ever come from Posey County (1889–1891). He also sat on the Indiana Supreme Court when it decided a poor person was entitled to the same protection of our laws as a rich person.
Another of our famous predecessors was the brilliant and courageous Frances (Mad Fanny) Wright (1795–1852) who gave her entire adult life to an effort to free slaves and secure equal rights for women. Unfortunately, her good deeds were often overshadowed by her lifestyle. Still she fought for those who could not fight for themselves.
Frances Wright’s companion and fellow traveler was former Congressman Robert Dale Owen (1801–1877). Owen knew Abraham Lincoln from having served in Congress in 1843–1847 while Lincoln served in Congress 1847–1849. Owen’s 1863 letter to Lincoln urging him to free the slaves is credited with influencing the President to issue the Emancipation Proclamation.
Robert Owen and Alvin Hovey were also Posey County’s delegates to the Indiana Constitutional Convention of 1850–1852 that produced our 1852 Constitution in which our legal system demands fair and equal treatment regardless of a person’s ability to pay. The Preamble sets forth the first principle of our government is to establish justice and, as set forth in Article I, “That all people are created equalâ€.
Article I, Section 12, guarantees equal justice to rich and poor alike:
“All courts shall be open and every person for injury done to him in his person, property, or reputation, shall have remedy by due course of law. Justice shall be administered freely, and without purchase; completely, and without denial; speedily, and without delay.â€
While there are many reasons we need justice from our legal system, I suggest the two most important areas concern whether our government wants to lock us up or take away our children. Of course, there are many wealthy people who are charged with crimes and even some wealthy people who the rest of us believe should lose their children to state care. However, it is simply a fact that most people who go to jail are poor as are most parents whose children are removed by the courts.
It is usually the poor and powerless who are caught up in the terrifying, confusing and expensive legal system. And frequently these poor people are not highly educated nor do they have friends in high places. They need help and both Indiana and federal law guarantee that help to them, including representation by an attorney. If the rest of us want to lock someone up or take away their children, the least we can do is follow the law ourselves and provide these people with legal assistance as our Constitutions demand. This is not only required by law, fair, just and reasonable, it is good for all of us. If the innocent are not locked up or the guilty are fairly sentenced or children are not removed when unnecessary or when necessary are removed carefully and with efforts to help the children and the parents, such justice is in our own self interest. In other words, not only is it right, it is smart and in the long run saves us money as it helps people recover so they may contribute to society. And it helps families remain united or reunite.
If we can spend trillions on matters beyond our borders, we should not be mean-spirited and self-destructive with our own citizens. Plus, it complies with the law, especially those state and federal Constitutions some of us are fond of saying we revere.
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Dream Car Museum Teaming Up With Evansville Police And Vanderburgh County Sheriff To host Todays Car Show For Kids
Dream Car Museum Teaming Up With Evansville Police And Vanderburgh County Sheriff To host Todays Car Show For Kids
The Dream Car Museum will be teaming up with the Evansville Police Department and the Vanderburgh County Sheriff’s Office on Sunday for the 1st ever Parking Garage Car Show. The event will be held at the 3rd St parking garage in downtown Evansville from 10:00am-6:00pm. The garage is at the corner of 3rd St and Locust.
The event will benefit the Cops Connecting With Kids Disney program and the Andrea Pedrigon Foundation. Andrea Pedrigon is the wife of 2 time funny car world champion, Tony Pedrigon.
We are excited to feature Tony Pedrigon and his funny car at this year’s event. If you are a fan of drag racing, this is a great chance to meet one of the sport’s premier drivers.
The event will include numerous cars and trucks. There will be a Dyno Shootout, kid’s bounce house, a big wheel course, a DJ, law enforcement vehicles, and a variety of vendors. Mission BBQ will be on hand selling their amazing BBQ.
Cars, trucks, and motorcycles can be regist ered for the car show beginning at 10:00am. Entry fee is $10.
Entry to the event is $2 for adults. Kids are free. Parking will be available on city streets with no time limit. The city owned parking garage at Locust and 4th will be available for free parking during the fundraiser
COA Approves Permit For Traders Point-Area Gas Station
COA Approves Permit For Traders Point-Area Gas Station
IlL for www.theindianalawyer.com
An Indianapolis property developer can move forward with his plans to build a gas station and convenience story in the city after the Indiana Court of Appeals ruled Friday the developer was properly awarded a permit for his building project.
In March 2015, Gurpreet Singh, principal and registered agent of Three Mile Properties, Inc., filed an application for an Improvement Location Permit that sought permission to build a gas station and convenience story on a property on Lafayette Road near 86th Street in Indianapolis, which he had previously entered into a contract to purchase. However, while that application was pending, the Indianapolis City-County Council passed a moratorium ordinance which, pending an amendment to the county zoning code on June 1, 2016, would prohibit new permits for gas stations or convenience stores in C-3 zoning districts, the same zoning as the property Three Mile was seeking to build on.
Three Mile’s application was initially approved and permit ILP 15-00384 was issued. A group of local people and organizations, including Traders Point Association of Neighborhoods, Kenneth and Cherie Zahora, Michael Wiggington, Linda McElwrath, Traders Pointe Neighborhood Association, Inc., Marco A. Caccamo and Pike Township Schools, appealed that decision to the Metropolitan Board of Zoning Appeals, which affirmed the permit. The BZA specifically found that the C-3 zoning permitted a gas station at the time the application was filed, so Three Mile’s proposed plans met the applicable standards.
The appellants then took their case to the Marion Superior Court, which determined that neither Singh nor Michael Cope, who had signed Three Mile’s permit application and was an architect on the project, were considered owners or lessees of the property. The court further found the application was not complete when it was filed, so the moratorium ordinance applied.
Thus, the trial court reversed the issuance of ILP 15-00384, so Three Mile appealed, arguing that decision was erroneous. The Indiana Court of Appeals agreed Friday, with Judge Cale Bradford writing that the land contract made Three Mile the equitable owner of the property, so Singh, as Three Mile’s registered agent, was properly listed on the application as the owner of the Lafayette Road property.
If Singh and Three Mile are the equitable owners, then the application was complete when it was filed, Bradford continued. Thus, the moratorium ordinance could not apply to stop the issuance of ILP 15-00384, he said.
The appellate court, therefore, ordered the trial court to reinstate the BZA’s decision to affirm Three Mile’s permit in Metropolitan Board of Zoning Appeals Division III of Marion County, Indiana, and Three Mile Properties, Inc., (s/k/a Three Mile Properties – Gurpreet Singh) v. Traders Point Association of Neighborhoods, Kenneth F. Zahora (TRS), Cherie L. Zahora (TRS), Michael L. Wiggington, Linda McElwrath, Traders Pointe Neighborhood Association, Inc., Marco A. Caccamo, and Metropolitan School District of Pike Township, 49A04-1703-PL-554.
Treasurer Mitchell announces launch of statewide ABLE program in Evansville
Treasurer of State Kelly Mitchell, along with the rest of the Indiana ABLE Authority Board is pleased to announce the state’s ABLE plan, INvestABLE Indiana. Please join Treasurer Mitchell and advocates at The Arc of Evansville on Friday, August 11th at 10:00 AM CT for the announcement.
WHO: Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Treasurer of State Kelly Mitchell
WHERE: Â Â Â Â Â The Arc of Evansville
615 West Virginia Street
Evansville, IN 47710
WHAT: Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Announcement of the Indiana ABLE plan
WHEN: Â Â Â Â Â Â August 11, 2017, 10:00-10:30 am CT
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About ABLE:
The ABLE Act of 2014 allows for the creation of tax-advantaged savings accounts for individuals with disabilities. ABLE accounts, also known as 529A accounts, allow for individuals with disabilities to save for their future and pay for disability related expenses without jeopardizing access to public benefits. The intent of these accounts is to ease financial burdens on individuals with disabilities to allow for tax-free savings to cover qualified expenses such as, education, transportation, housing and medical needs. To learn more visit in.savewithable.com.
Luke Messer Launches U.S. Senate Campaign at Annual Family BBQ
Unemployment Rates Keep Dropping by Wendy McNamara
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County Commissioners, WorkOne Southwest to Host Job Fair
More than 150 job openings available; special hour for military veterans
The Vanderburgh County Commissioners, in coordination with WorkOne Southwest, will host a job fair on Aug. 23, 2017. Employers such as Berry Global, Warehouse Services Inc., Trilogy Healthcare Services, Vectren Corporation, Electronics Research Inc., Cintas Corporation, and Pittsburgh Glass Works have registered for the event. More than 150 job openings will be available through the participating employers.
The event will kick off with a Veterans-Only Hour from 1 p.m. to 2 p.m. for military veterans seeking employment.
The event will then open to the public from 2 p.m. – 4 p.m.
The job fair will take place at the C.K. Newsome Community Center, located at 100 E. Walnut Street in Evansville.
“We appreciate the support of the Vanderburgh County Commissioners in hosting this event,†said Jim Heck, Executive Director WorkOne Southwest. “We encourage all job seekers in Southwest Indiana who are seeking employment or looking to advance their careers to please attend.â€