Home Blog Page 4692

How Much to Tip Waiters Around the World

0

How Much to Tip Waiters Around the World

by editor@purewow.com 

CHANNEL 44 NEW#S: Owensboro Health Hands Out More Than $700,000 In Grants

0
Owensboro Health Hands Out More Than $700,000 In Grants
Owensboro Health is giving out nearly $700,000 in grants to organizations throughout the area. The goal of these grants is to help support projects involved in healthcare with improving healthcare locally as a priority.

The money is going to all kinds of groups that serve people of all ages.

One promising program brings kids from high schools in Daviess County into a special track that helps them prepare for future careers in medicine from doctors and surgeons to nurses and dentists.

This year, the grants went to support more than 38 projects throughout the area.

For more information, visit Owensboro Health.

totaling $696,866

COA: Transgender Individuals Don’t Have To Publish Intent To Change Gender Marker

0

COA: Transgender Individuals Don’t Have To Publish Intent To Change Gender Marker

Olivia Covington for www.theindianalawyer.com

Transgender individuals in Indiana seeking to change their gender markers on their birth certificates are not required under Indiana law to publish notice of their intent to change, as there is currently no statutory authority requiring such notice, the Indiana Court of Appeals ruled Thursday.

That decision stems from an appeal filed by A.L. and L.S., transgender men who are working with counselors and medical professionals as they transition from female to male. A.L. has been living as a man for two years and has had related medical procedures, while L.S. has been living as a man for most of his life, but full time for the last four years.

In May 2016, A.L. filed a petition for a name change, published his intent to change his name in a newspaper, and was then granted the ability to change his name. He also requested to change the gender marker on his birth certificate, but the Tippecanoe Circuit Court told him to also publish that intent in a newspaper.

A.L. filed a motion to correct error, arguing the requirement for him to publish notice of his intent to change his gender marker was contrary to Indiana law. The trial court, however, denied his petition unless he would provide proof of publication.

Specifically, the trial court found that not requiring a notice for a legal gender marker change could increase the number of individuals seeking multiple gender changes in order to avoid creditors or “other aggrieved parties.” Thus, the protocol for obtaining a gender marker change should follow that of obtaining a name change, the court held.

Similarly, L.S. filed a petition for change of name and gender in September 2016 and requested a waiver of publication and a sealed record, as well as an exclusion of confidential information pursuant to Indiana Administrative Rule 9(G)(5). The trial court denied the motion to proceed under Administrative Rule 9 and instead ordered L.S. to publish his intent to change name and gender marker in a newspaper, repeating much of the same logic used in A.L.’s case.

In regard to L.S.’s Administrative Rule 9 argument, the court found he had not presented evidence to show that he would be subject to a greater risk or violence or harassment if the case proceeded publicly. However, the court noted that both L.S. and A.L.’s petitions were made in good faith and not for fraudulent or unlawful purposes, which was the standard laid out in the case of In re Petition for Change of Birth Certificate, 22 N.E.3d 707 (Ind. Ct. App. 2014).

The trial court did not rule on L.S.’s petition, so he filed for interlocutory appeal. A.L. also appealed, and both cases were consolidated into In re the Name Change of A.L. and In re the Name Change of L.S., 79A02-1703-MI-473.

In a Thursday opinion, Indiana Court of Appeals Judge John Baker first noted there is no statutory requirement for publication of an intent to change a gender marker, so it was erroneous for the trial court to impose the same standards for a name change on a gender marker change petition.

“Unless and until the General Assembly crafts specific requirements regarding gender marker changes, this Court’s common sense standard in Birth Certificate is the bar that must be met,” Baker wrote. “Thus, a gender marker change petitioner needs to establish that the petition is made in good faith and not for a fraudulent or unlawful purpose.”

Because both A.L. and L.S. met that standard, the trial court should have granted their petitions for gender marker change, Baker said. The case was reversed on that issue and remanded with instructions to grant both petitions and directing the Indiana State Department of Health to amend both birth certificates to reflect the male gender.

Further, the appellate court also found L.S. established that publication of his intent to change his name would create a significant risk of substantial harm, as he presented sufficient evidence concerning violence against transgender people in the country, state and his local community. Thus, under the exceptions to the publication requirement in Administrative Rule 9(G), the appellate court remanded the case with instructions to ensure the record in L.S.’s case remains sealed and for consideration of his name change petition.

Tiger Moth Tepid 7-2 favorite Over Danzatrice In Groupie Doll

0
HENDERSON, Ky. (Thursday, August 11, 2017) — A capacity and well-matched field of 12 fillies and mares came together Thursday for Sunday’s $100,000, Grade 3 Groupie Doll Stakes, Ellis Park’s signature race. As they have been throughout the meet, Brad Cox and Steve Asmussen — the two winningest trainers at the meet — figure prominently with two entries apiece.
Cox, who has won with 11 of 23 starters this meet, is sending out John Gunther’s 5-year-old Tiger Moth, who in her last start won Indiana Grand’s $100,000 Marie Hulman George, and the 3-year-old Pinch Hit, who comes in off a pair of good-looking allowance victories.
Asmussen, last year’s Ellis meet training champion, is making a run at Cox in the standings, having cut his win deficit 11 to nine (and also having 13 seconds). The Hall of Famer is running Winchell Thoroughbreds’ Churchill Downs allowance winner Adore, who figures to be part of the pace, and Iowa Distaff winner Danzatrice, who should be kicking in late.
Ellis Park odds-maker Joe Kristufek made Tiger Moth, who will break from post 8 under meet-leading jockey Corey Lanerie, the tepid 7-2 favorite over 4-1 Danzatrice (post 7), with Churchill Downs’ Grade 3 Matron winner Walkabout 5-1 from post 9. A testament to the competitiveness of the field, only two horses are higher than 15-1 odds in Kristufek’s morning line.
“Extremely competitive race and a tough morning line to make,” Kristufek said. “Tiger Moth won the Indiana stakes convincingly, and Brad Cox and Corey Lanerie are our leaders at Ellis Park — that’s why she got the nod as the lukewarm favorite. Danzatrice and Walkabout were fairly obvious as the second and third choices.
“There are several horses in the 8-1 to 10-1 range who could be live. Put Da Blame On Me and the 3-year-old Student Body come to mind. They don’t have the class of some of the others, but their recent wins make them dangerous. As a bettor, if you’re able to put winning tickets together, you’re going to get paid handsomely for it.”
The Adore connections are hoping to add a graded-stakes victory to the graded placing the filly earned in her third career start when third in the Grade 2 Fair Grounds Oaks. She was a tiring fourth off a 10-month layoff at Oaklawn, then ran second at Churchill Downs before winning a 6 1/2-furlong allowance sprint
“She was too rank the first time we ran her back this year at Oaklawn (when fourth off a 10-month layoff), then caught the slop at Churchill and ran a good race,” Asmussen said of Adore. “With her Fair Grounds Oaks, she’s got ability. She’s usually away pretty cleanly and stuff; Ellis, we’re hoping it suits her, trying to return to form. She’s trained well since her win, so we ought to be OK.”
Gainesway Stable’s Danzatrice, a double stakes-winner trying to get a graded placing or better, actually has excellent speed but, aside from easily winning the Fair Grounds’ $50,000 Tiffany Lass, she has not finished up when making the lead early. In the $100,000 Iowa Distaff, the daughter of Belmont Stakes runner-up Dunkirk powered from last to wear down the leaders for the stakes victory.
Two races back, Danzatrice, who has shipped all over the southwest to run, was one of the favorites in a stakes at Evangeline Downs when the jockey Gerard Melancon came off the mare early in the race. She won her next start with Hall of Famer Mike Smith, with Shaun Bridgmohan gaining the Groupie Doll mount.
“We definitely figured out that she needs to come from off the pace,” Asmussen said of Danzatrice. “That’s why Adore and her are a complement to each other. When she was on the lead at Sam Houston, she jumped every shadow and just completely blew that race. Sunland, she just got away from Florent (Geroux) and went 45-and-change (seconds for the half-mile) going a route. We intentionally took her back in the allowance race at Lone Star and had success. For her to put it all together finally after the eventful year she’s had, Iowa was nice. Because the mare does have talent.”
Walkabout, winner of the Grade 3 Matron moved from Arlington Park to Churchill Downs this spring, is one of two graded stakes winners in the field, along with Brooklynsway, winner of last year’s Hilliard Lyons Doubledogdare Stakes at Keeneland.
Student Body in her third career start won a six-furlong Ellis allowance by 11 lengths in 1:08.21. However, she is a good possibility to scratch in favor of training up to a race at Saratoga, said trainer Chris Davis, who had an adventurous morning Thursday, sustaining a dislocated shoulder in a barn mishap on a horse.
A horse drawing very favorably in getting the rail, given her speed, is Put Da Blame On Me, owned by Evansville’s Mike Bruder. That 4-year-old filly has raced very well since adding blinkers three starts back, including a pair of allowance victories at a mile at Churchill Downs.
Others in the field are CCed, who captured a second-level allowance at Churchill Downs; She Mabee Wild, fourth in Churchill Downs’ Grade 3 Chicago Handicap; Indiana Grand allowance winner Hone In; and Gulfstream allowance winner She Takes Heart, who breaks from post 2 and also has speed.
“Sunday is going to be a great day of racing,” said racing secretary Dan Bork. “We’ve got classy old veterans in there. We’ve got a couple of young 3-year-olds in there with Pinch Hit and Student Body. We got young ones and old ones and a lot of quality.”
The Groupie Doll will be race eight, with an approximate post time of 4:10 p.m. Central. The Groupie Doll is named for the two-time Breeders’ Cup Filly & Mare Sprint and Eclipse Award winner who won the stakes in 2011 when it was called the Gardenia and was third in 2013 en route to successfully defending her championship.
Also drawn Thursday was the $50,000 Cliff Guilliams Memorial for 3-year-olds and up on grass at 1 1/16 miles. The Cliff Guilliams traditionally was on closing day but was moved up to serve as a stepping stone to the lucrative stakes and allowance races at Kentucky Downs’ early September meet. That also drew a full field of 12, including the accomplished Cox-trained Chocolate Ride; last year’s Guilliams and Churchill Downs’ Grade 2 Firecracker victor Pleuven, multiple stakes-winner One Mean Man, Grade 2 winner Flatlined and last year’s Queen’s Plate winner Sir Dudley Digges.
The nine-race card also includes pair of 2-year-old mile turf maiden races, and a strong money-won allowance race at a mile on dirt with an optional $50,000 claiming price that is headed by millionaire Rise Up.
The Groupie Doll Stakes (Grade 3)
Purse: $100,000
Distance: mile
Post time: Sunday at 4:10 p.m. Central (eighth race)
pp horse (weight) jockey/trainer odds
1.  Put Da Blame On Me (120) Graham/Tomlinson 8-1
2.  She Takes Heart (120) Hill/Estevez 30-1
3.  She Mabee Wild (120) Court/Danner 15-1
4   Hone In (120) Mena/V. Oliver 30-1
5.  Adore (120) G. Saez/Asmussen 12-1
6.  CCed (120) Rocco/Walsh 12-1
7.  Danzatrice (120) Bridgmohan/Asmussen 4-1
8.  Tiger Moth (120) Lanerie/Cox 7-2
9.  Walkabout (122) Hernandez/Wilkes 5-1
10. Pinch Hit (115) De La Cruz/Cox 12-1
11. Student Body (115) Doyle/Davis  10-1
12. Brooklynsway (120) Borel/Flint 8-1

Photos: Groupie Doll morning-line favorite Tiger Moth winning Indiana Grand’s $100,000 Marie Hulman George under Florent Geroux. John Engelhardt photo

Danzatrice is led off the track after training at Ellis Park by assistant trainer Christy Hamilton with exercise rider Elias Carrizales in the saddle. Jennie Rees photo

Other upcoming promotions:

Friday: Meet the Announcer – Sign up for a chance to meet announcer Jimmy McNerney and hang out in his booth while he calls a race. Contact Brianna Vitt at bvitt@ellisparkracing.com for more information or to sign up.
Saturdays: “Inside Track with Joey K. and Jimmy Mac” — Join analyst Joe Kristufek and announcer Jimmy McNerney every Saturday at 10:30 a.m. Central in the clubhouse’s second-floor Gardenia Room as they handicap the afternoon’s races. Free with programs, coffee and donuts available to participants.
Junior Jockey Club — Kids between 5 and 12 can sign up to be the week’s designated Junior Jockey, serving one race as the honorary paddock judge and telling the jockeys “Riders up!” and watching a race from the winner’s circle. Contact Brianna Vitt at bvitt@ellisparkracing.com for more information or to sign up.
Saturday, Aug. 12 only: Ladies Day — Free admission in the Gardenia Room, where women can check out cool stuff from area boutiques and get a chance to win a Michael Kors purse.
Sundays: Value Day – Every Sunday enjoy substantial savings on draft beer ($2 for 16 ounces), hotdogs and 12-ounce Coke products ($1.25) and chips and peanuts ($1).
Kids on the Track: Kids 12 and under square off in heats by age group for foot races on the racetrack, the winners getting a pair of jockey goggles and all the fame they can stand. Simply meet in the winner’s circle after the last race every Sunday during the live meet.

Aug. 20 live-money Bluegrass Tournament: Ellis Park is back with a handicapping tournament, this a live-money event presented by AmWager. Entry fee is $500 ($200 to prize money and $300 bankroll), betting minimum of $20 on each of 10 races from Ellis Park’s card and optional races to be announced. Top four finishers get trip to 2018 National Horseplayers Championship in Las Vegas, plus hotel and airfare up to $500. Top 10 finishers earn prize money. Register at www.amwager.com/bluegrasstournament.

HOT JOBS IN EVANSVILLE

0
Overnight Stocker
Lowe’s Inc. 19,381 reviews – Evansville, IN
Also responsible for providing excellent customer service by greeting customers and assisting customers in locating, selecting, demonstrating, and loading of…
Stockroom Utility
Cintas 1,506 reviews – Evansville, IN
The selected individual is responsible for general duties throughout the stockroom department as needed, including break, vacation and absence coverage for all…
Loader / Unloader – 2nd Shift
Cintas 1,506 reviews – Evansville, IN
A valid driver’s license, preferred. To support our aggressive growth plans, we offer unique opportunities, including advancement, ongoing training, mentoring…
Coordinator of Leasing
Regency Properties – Evansville, IN
Has a valid driver’s license and reliable personal transportation means available. Constantly strives to perfect the flow of documents, leasing processes and…
Help Wanted
Lombardi’s Pizza NY Pizza – Evansville, IN
Now hiring at 4900 Spring Valley Road,…
LTL Stocker
Lowe’s Inc. 19,381 reviews – Evansville, IN
Also responsible for providing excellent customer service by greeting customers and assisting customers in locating, selecting, demonstrating, and loading…
Field Technician I
Spectrum 7,399 reviews – Evansville, IN
Valid driver’s license with satisfactory driving record within Company required standards. Perform all work as necessary to conform to quality, security and…
Load Puller
Lowe’s Inc. 19,381 reviews – Evansville, IN
Support delivery activities including inspecting and preparing merchandise and loads for delivery, unloading, installing, and checking appliances and store…
Business/Marketing
Evansville Vanderburgh School Corporation 18 reviews – Evansville, IN
As a contract teacher, this position will automatically be enrolled in the Teacher Retirement Fund (TRF) through the state of Indiana, which includes a defined…
Head Cashier
Lowe’s Inc. 19,381 reviews – Evansville, IN
Associate’s Degree in Business, Retail Management, Specialty related to department (e.g., design, appliances), or related field….
SAFETY INSPECTOR
Zachry Group 636 reviews – Owensville, IN
Must understand how to read and interpret technical. Objects, materials, controls and tools. Demonstrated industrial maintenance history experience….
Chair Builder
Furniture Row 92 reviews – Evansville, IN
If you have a zeal for life, a passion for professional success, and thrive in an environment that rewards performance;…
Retail Sales Consultant
Sprint 6,988 reviews – Evansville, IN
$40,000 a year
Best of all, when you’re doing what you do best (being awesome), you’re nailing Sprint’s customer satisfaction and growth goals and having fun while doing it….
Best Buy Mobile Sales Consultant
Best Buy 14,147 reviews – Evansville, IN
Customer contracts and warranties, customer payments, cash and credit card/check transactions. Develop, maintain and communicate strong, up-to-date knowledge of…
Outside Sales Representative
Beacon USA – Evansville, IN
_To find out about this opportunity (Because you don’t want to miss out being the first in your area to Market this New Technology!), complete the following…
Hamilton Pointe – Dietary Manager
TLC Management 33 reviews – Newburgh, IN
Have completed or be willing to complete the formal Dietary Managers’ training as required by the State. Develop or update policies/procedures for the Dietary…
SUSA Supervisor
Securitas 6,169 reviews – Henderson, KY
Must be able to meet and continue to meet any applicable state, county and municipal licensing requirements for Security Officers.”….
Pet Care
Lisa E. – Evansville, IN
We have a 15 lb Bich-a-poo that we are looking for an occasional sitter for several times a year. She is diabetic and needs injections @ 5:00am and 5:00pm (or
Hands-on Care Needed For My Mother In Henderson
– Henderson, KY
Help needed for my mother in her 90s – seeking full-time hands-on care. The ideal match will meet the requirements below….
Millwright Journeyman
Tradesmen International 762 reviews – Evansville, IN
+ Ability to construct, assemble, repair and dismantle machinery and equipment using tools such as:. + Installing, maintaining, and repairing machinery and…
Family Looking for Child Care Services for 2 Year Old
– Evansville, IN
Evansville family is trying to find child care services in or around Evansville. All day services are needed starting in August for 4 days per week….
Industrial Maintenance Technician Journeyman
Tradesmen International 762 reviews – Evansville, IN
As an Industrial Maintenance Mechanic you will be responsible for installing and repairing electrical systems, hydraulic, pneumatic and electronic components…
Family Looking for Child Care Center and Preschool for 2 Year Old
– Evansville, IN
Family from Evansville is seeking child care center and preschool in or around Evansville. Starting in August, all day services are needed 4 days per week for 2…

Otters partnering with “E is for Everyone” campaign Aug. 18

0

The Evansville Otters are partnering with the city’s “E is for Everyone” campaign Aug. 18 when the defending Frontier League champions host the River City Rascals at Bosse Field.

“E is for Everyone” is a community initiative that helps connect, contribute and celebrate the great things about living in Evansville.

First pitch is scheduled for 6:35 p.m. and gates will open an hour before. Admission to the game will be free with a special voucher courtesy of the campaign. Vouchers can be picked up at any Evansville public library in advance of the game and a limited number will also be available at the Otters front office.

Fans must have a ticket to enter, either with the campaign voucher or a regular game ticket. The first 500 fans through the gates will also receive a t-shirt.

The ballpark will have inflatables; clowns for face painting and the Boom Squad will be performing on the concourse. Plus, the police and fire department color guard will be in attendance. Special prizes will also be given away each half inning and winners must be present to redeem the prizes.

The Otters are very excited to host “E” Night sponsored by “E is for Everyone” and it promises to be a memorable night as we celebrate our city in one of its most iconic venues.

After the game, fans are encouraged to stay for a spectacular fireworks show and kids will be able to run the bases of Bosse Field and receive autographs from Otters players and coaches.

For more information, go to evansvilleotters.com or eisforeveryone.com/otters.

View the Eclipse at Ivy Tech Evansville on Aug. 21

0

An Eclipse viewing party is planned at Ivy Tech Evansville, on Aug. 21, from the beginning of the Eclipse through the end. Led by Michael Hosack, assistant professor of physics at Ivy Tech, Ivy Tech students and the public will have the opportunity to learn about the Eclipse as they are viewing it.

The event, “It’s a New Day at Ivy Tech,” will take place from 11:55 p.m. (CST) to 2:49 p.m. (CST) with maximum coverage at 1:24 p.m., on Tuesday, Aug. 21. The viewing party will be located on Ivy Tech’s northeast parking lot, at the corner of Colonial Avenue and Tremont Road on the Ivy Tech Campus at 3501 N. First Avenue in Evansville. The event is free and open to the public.

“We are pleased to be able to share our faculty’s expertise with our students and members of the community, during this unusual Eclipse which is occurring not only here – but across the United States,” said Chancellor Jonathan Weinzapfel. “Our faculty member, Dr. Hosack, is looking forward to sharing his insight in a safe and informative environment, as the moon passes between the earth and the sun.”

Hosack has been with Ivy Tech since 2013. Prior to Ivy Tech, he was a visiting assistant professor of physics at Purdue University, and worked for three years at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, as a scientist working on radiation detectors for satellites. He will lead an informal discussion intermittently as the first hour of the Eclipse is viewed.

Free ISO certified solar viewing glasses and souvenir t-shirts will be provided by Ivy Tech while supplies last. Also at the event will be materials to make small pinhole projectors for group or individual viewing of the eclipse. The solar glasses and the projector are the only safe ways to view the eclipse.

According to the website, “Great American Eclipse,” solar eclipses occur because of a cosmic coincidence: “the Sun is just about the same apparent size in our sky as the Moon. While the sun is actually about 400 times larger in diameter that the moon, the moon is also about 400 times closer than the sun. Therefore, the sun and moon appear to be about the same size in our sky.” The coming Eclipse is special because “it will be accessible to so many millions of Americans…There is a 60 to 70 mile wide path of totality,” according to the website. This year’s Eclipse is special because it cuts diagonally across the entire United States. The last time a total solar eclipse swept the whole width of the U.S. was in 1918.

Totality will cross from Oregon to Idaho, Wyoming, Nebraska, Kansas, Missouri, Illinois, Kentucky, Tennessee, Georgia, North Carolina, and South Carolina.

Evansville is not in that path of totality, but individuals will be able to see an Eclipse that covers 99% of the sun. The next total solar Eclipse that will be in the U.S. will occur on April 8, 2024. The line of totality will cross from Texas, up through the Midwest, almost directly over Indianapolis, Cleveland, Buffalo, NY, and over New England to Maine, then to Canada.

 

Prosecutors and Health Care Need Tools to Fight Opiate Epidemic

0

By Patricia A. Baldwin, President
Indiana Association of Prosecuting Attorneys, Inc.

The Indiana Drug Prevention, Treatment and Enforcement Task Force has released a plan for dealing with the State’s opiate epidemic.  Laudably, the plan proposes increased prevention and treatment efforts.  However, the plan lacks meaningful enforcement proposals, without which the prospects of controlling the epidemic through prevention and treatment are impossible.

Drugs like opiates are classified as controlled substances by the federal government.  These drugs are controlled because they are dangerous if not delivered properly.  There are effectively two delivery systems for controlled substances in Indiana–the legitimate medical industry and the illicit drug industry.  The legitimate medical industry is highly regulated and provides several important functions regarding controlled substances.  Pharmaceutical companies test and develop drugs, and are overseen by federal regulators to ensure efficacy and purity of the substances.  Highly trained medical professionals evaluate patients, make diagnoses and prescribe medications.  Pharmacies help screen for drug interactions, and guarantee purity and dosage.  Patients are monitored with an end goal of restoring health.

The illicit drug industry has different aims.  It is driven solely by profit.  It has traditionally been even more highly regulated than the medical industry.  It is a criminal offense to possess or deliver controlled substances outside of the legitimate medical processes.  The aim of the criminal justice system in this area is to discourage participation in the illicit drug industry.  Prosecutors and police do this by attacking the supply side of drug use by arresting, prosecuting and incarcerating drug dealers.  We also apply consequences to drug users to encourage rehabilitation.  Since 2014, law enforcement has suffered from a weakened ability to accomplish these two important parts of the equation – holding dealers accountable and encouraging users to get help.

The 2014 criminal code reform to a large extent deregulated the illicit drug industry.  Penalties for drug dealing and possession were dramatically decreased.  As an example, dealing over 3 grams of heroin under the old criminal code was a class A felony with an advisory sentence of 30 years.  That same offense today would be a level 5 felony with an advisory sentence of 3 years.   Prior to the criminal code reform, 60% of A and B felony admissions to prison were for drug dealing.  Today, the comparable number is 5%.  Fully 30% of the worst of the worst drug dealers convicted in Indiana received no prison sentence last year.  Prosecutors never disagreed that drug penalties were too high before the criminal code reform.  Our position has been and remains that a 90% reduction in prison sentences for drug dealers goes too far, and that there is no justification for the worst of the worst drug dealers failing to go to prison.

There have been real consequences from this dramatic reduction in penalties.   Our prison population has fallen from 29,377 in January of 2013 to 25,117 in March of 2017.  At the same time, local jail populations have exploded because the people we are not able to put in prison are still committing crimes.  They now revolve in and out of local jails on short term sentences.  Consequently, offenders are increasingly on the streets creating problems for our communities.  Reports of child abuse and neglect are up as evidenced in the increase in CHINS (Child in Need of Services) cases, which have risen from 14,227 in 2014 to 23,120 in January of 2017.  Further, Indianapolis and Fort Wayne are now among the top 30 cities in the nation for murder per capita, and both cites experienced record murder numbers in 2016.  The extreme violence in these cities evidenced by the murder numbers is reportedly due, in most part, to gangs fighting over drug dealing territory.

The narrative that spurred the criminal code rewrite, and that informs the Indiana Drug Prevention, Treatment and Enforcement Task Force report is that drug use is a medical issue and not a criminal issue.  The report urges us to think of a heroin user as having a substance use disorder (SUD), and to ignore the illegal aspects.  Proponents of this way of thinking suggest that SUD is no different than diabetes.

Most in the law enforcement community do not accept the comparison.  In my analysis, I won’t quibble with that issue.  It is not necessary to make my point, and I believe the criminal justice community and the medical community can agree to disagree and still work effectively together.  I suggest that the criminal justice systems does, in fact, treat SUD and diabetes the same.  Diabetes sufferers almost exclusively participate in the legitimate medical industry in treating their disorder.  If a diabetes sufferer were to opt out of the legitimate medical industry and instead purchase medications from a man on a street corner, the criminal justice system would rightly intervene.  As a matter of public policy, our state does not want diabetics to get medication that is illicitly obtained, not tested or labeled for purity, not prescribed after examination by a doctor, not monitored for dosage and usage, and not administered with the goal of maintaining the patient’s health.

Conversely, most addicts obtain opiates outside of legitimate medical channels.  There are, of course, avenues in the legitimate medical industry to treat addiction even with the use of opiate replacements like Suboxone, but unlike diabetics, most addicts do not choose this path.  That choice is where the corrective action of the criminal justice system should be applied.  If a person suffers from SUD, he or she has an obligation to seek treatment through the legitimate medical industry.  If we excuse or enable an addict to seek opiates through the illicit drug trade, we endorse, then, all of the negative consequences associated with that industry.  Further, we undermine the efforts of the legitimate medical industry to treat this problem.  The more readily available opiates are through the illicit drug trade, the less likely an addict will seek legitimate medical assistance.  The less severe the consequences for possession of drugs, the less likely addicts will take corrective action.  A robust enforcement effort is absolutely necessary to a functional prevention and treatment effort.

I, and prosecutors around the state, certainly appreciate the efforts of the task force to bolster prevention and treatment resources in our state.  We want the plan to succeed.  It cannot succeed, however, without a comparable and equivalent improvement on the enforcement side.  Penalties for drug possession and dealing are too low.  Prosecutors are asking the Governor and his Task Force to recommend balancing the equation, and give law enforcement the tools necessary to help our state.