This gentle giant is Titan! He’s a male Great Dane/Shepherd mix. He is tall and lanky, and gets along fairly well with other dogs. Sometimes he can be picky with canine friends, so he’ll need to meet any other potential doggie roommates before going home. Titan is one of the VHS’ longest canine residents. He’s only a year old and weighs 57 lbs. Titan’s adoption fee is $100 and includes his neuter, microchip, vaccines, heartworm test, and more. Contact Vanderburgh Humane at (812) 426-2563 or adoptions@vhslifesaver.org for details!
HOT JOBS IN EVANSVILLE
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Forfeiture: Proceeds of Criminal Activity Pays Law Enforcement Costs  Â
Two Indiana Prosecutors said on Wednesday that civil forfeiture is a legal procedure, sanctioned by the Indiana Constitution, that saves city, county and state governments over $3 million in law enforcement costs each year.
Marion County Prosecutor Terry Curry and Delaware County Prosecutor Jeff Arnold told the legislative Interim Study Committee on Courts and the Judiciary that forfeiture saves tax dollar expenditures by providing essential supplies to county prosecutor’s offices that county budgets cannot pay for. Law enforcement agencies also receive essential funds for needs such as drug dogs.
“The Delaware County Prosecutor’s Office has had no budget increase in seven or eight years,†said prosecutor Arnold. “Forfeiture money allows us to supplement our county budget. I was able to buy all of my deputy prosecutors laptop computers that they could take to court. That may sound primitive but we would not have been able to purchase those laptops any other way.†Arnold said he also was able to provide training for his office’s domestic violence unit with forfeiture funds.
Prosecutor Curry explained where, in some forfeiture cases, criminal prosecution cannot be pursued, such as in drug interdiction operations. Displaying a photograph that showed piles of money amounting to $2.6 million in cash, Curry told of a semi destined for McAllen Texas that was stopped on the west side of Indianapolis and upon investigation, a panel inside the trailer was removed and the cash fell out. “These were clearly illicit funds,†said Curry. “Without a forfeiture procedure, there is no way law enforcement could receive this money. This was obviously money destined for a sophisticated drug cartel.â€
Curry also said that restitution to victims – including Indiana taxpayers – is also possible through forfeiture. A criminal case against a chain of restaurants returned $1.86 million in unpaid sales tax to the state of Indiana.
Additionally, Indiana’s forfeiture laws received the second-best rating in the country by the Institute for Justice, based on the protections afforded to property owners and the lack of incentives for law enforcement agencies to police for profit.
Facts about civil forfeiture in Indiana that prosecutors shared include:
- Forfeiture proceedings take place before a judge who makes the final decision on the disposition of the property.
- Innocent owners have an absolute defense against forfeiture of property.
- The state must prove the property’s connection to criminal activity, that the property was used for the purpose of committing, attempting to commit, or conspiring to commit an enumerated offense.
- Forfeiture of cash from a drug cartel or criminal street gang has a greater negative impact because drugs are manufactured very cheaply on the black market and sold for huge profits; the organizations behind drug dealers can easily manufacture more drugs – taking their profits hurts their ability to continue illegal commerce.
- The proceeds law enforcement receives for forfeitures helps pay for essential law enforcement operations; forfeiture proceeds must go to defer costs related to forfeiture proceedings and law enforcement efforts.
To further alleviate misconceptions, Indiana prosecutors are proposing changes to the Indiana Code pertaining to forfeiture. Among the legislative proposals is that if property is returned without a forfeiture action being filed, the owner is not liable for towing, storage or maintenance fees. Additionally, if the court denies a forfeiture, the owner is not subject to charges for storage or other expenses incurred in the preservation of the property.
ROMAIN CROSS POINTE SELECTED AS THE OFFICIAL DEALERSHIP OF THE 2017 EVANSVILLE HYDROFESTâ„¢
Romain Cross Pointe Auto Park is proud to be recognized as the official
automotive dealership of the 2017 Evansville HydroFestâ„¢. This event will be staged on the
Ohio Riverfront in Downtown Evansville, Indiana over the Labor Day weekend, September 1 –
3, 2017, hosting the American Power Boat Association’s North American Championships and
Eastern Divisional Championships.
“Romain Cross Pointe has been a huge community supporter for over 30 years and we are proud
to be a part of the continued growth of the Downtown Evansville area. The Evansville Hydrofestâ„¢
is a wonderful opportunity to showcase Evansville’s beautiful riverfront as well as our
community as a whole,†stated Amy Romain, Vice President of Romain Automotive Group.
Admission cost for the 2017 Evansville HydroFestâ„¢ is $10 total for all three days of excitement
plus children 12 and under are free. The wristbands are currently on sale in a variety of
Evansville and Tri-state locations. For more information about Evansville HydroFest visit
United Companies is a privately-owned corporation founded in 1964 and is headquartered in Evansville, Indiana.
It is comprised of United Leasing & Finance, Professional Transportation, Inc. and the Romain Automotive Group.
With over 6,100 associates, United Companies has direct operations in 40 states and the District of Columbia, while
managing assets in all 50 states, Canada and Mexico.
Big Pharma’s Tobacco Moment As Star Lawyers Push Opioid Suits
Big Pharma’s Tobacco Moment As Star Lawyers Push Opioid Suits
IL for www.theindianalawyer.com
Big Pharma is having a Big Tobacco moment as litigation over opioids attract star lawyers and a growing list of states and local governments seeking their own multibillion-dollar payout to deal with costs of a burgeoning drug epidemic.
On Tuesday, South Carolina became the sixth state to sue opioid makers alleging they have created a public health crisis. The suit filed by Joe Rice, a plaintiff lawyer who helped negotiate a $246 billion settlement with the tobacco industry in 1998, suggests states are laying the groundwork to force a resolution that provides billions of dollars to cover the costs of an epidemic blamed for 62 deaths per day.
“The more states they have signed up, the bigger their hammer when it comes time to decide who should be on the settlement negotiating committee,†said David Logan, a Roger Williams University law professor who teaches mass-tort cases.
Legal action tied to opioids is increasing at the same time that lawmakers are seeking more funding to defray costs tied to abuse, addiction and overdoses. Last week, President Donald Trump said he’s ready to declare a national emergency, which would clear the way for extra funding and government authority to address the wave of drug-related deaths. The administration gave no timetable for when the declaration would be signed.
In response to South Carolina’s lawsuit, filed in state court in Columbia, Purdue spokesman John Puskar said Tuesday that while the company denies the allegations, it shares the state’s “concerns about the opioid crisis.â€
‘Find Solutions’
“We are committed to working collaboratively to find solutions,†Puskar said in an email. “OxyContin accounts for less than 2 percent of the opioid analgesic prescription market nationally but we are an industry leader in the development of abuse-deterrent technology, advocating for the use of prescription drug monitoring programs and supporting access to Naloxone.â€
More than 22,000 Americans died from prescription opioid overdoses in the U.S. in 2015, an increase from 19,000 the year before, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
A study in the October issue of Medical Care journal puts the economic cost of opioid overdose, abuse and dependence at $78.5 billion. Health care accounts for about a third of that cost while expenses for lost productivity in non-fatal cases add another $20 billion, according to the journal published by Wolters Kluwer.
South Carolina’s complaint follows similar filings by New Hampshire, Ohio, Missouri, Oklahoma and Mississippi. Drugmakers are also facing more than a dozen other complaints filed by counties and cities accusing them of downplaying the addiction risks and overstating the effectiveness of powerful painkillers.
“If they can get 14 or 15 states to file against the drugmakers, that will put stress on the companies, cost wise, to defend these suits all over the country,†said Carl Tobias, who teaches product-liability law at the University of Richmond in Virginia. “That will give them incentive to talk rather than fight.â€
Star Lawyers
Even more important than the states themselves are the lawyers behind the complaints; a dream team comprised of plaintiff attorneys who successfully sued Big Tobacco including Rice, Steve Berman, and ex-Mississippi Attorney General Michael Moore.
The lawyers are likely taking the cases on contingency, which means they only get paid if they win in court and recover money for the states or they settle the cases.
While it’s too early to quantify a dollar amount needed to fully compensate states, Anthony Sabino, a law professor at St. John’s University in New York, said he could foresee a “low double-digit billion settlement.†Any deal would also likely come with demands for fewer drug ads, he said.
Some opioid drugmakers, such as Johnson & Johnson’s Janssen unit, are standing firm by vouching for the safety of their drugs. Others, like Dublin-based Endo International Plc, have already pulled the plug on some of their products. Endo halted sales of its Opana ER painkiller in July following a request from U.S. Food and Drug Administration.
Purdue’s Troubles
In the South Carolina case, Purdue is accused of marketing its OxyContin drug in violation of an earlier agreement to avoid stoking the abuse epidemic, according to court filings.
In May 2007, the Stamford, Connecticut-based company pleaded guilty to misleading the public about OxyContin’s addiction risk, and agreed to pay $600 million in one of the largest pharmaceutical settlements in U.S. history. The case also ensnared Purdue’s president, top lawyer, and chief medical officer who all pleaded guilty to criminal misbranding charges and agreed to pay a total of $34.5 million in fines.
Counties are also suing opioid makers to recoup billions in costs. Officials of Multnomah County in Oregon are seeking $250 million in damages for costs dealing with overdoses, treating and housing addicts and training county staff on the use of naloxone. In an Aug. 3 lawsuit, county officials said pharmaceutical makers engaged in a “campaign of lies and deceptions†for more than 20 years.
Three Ohio counties also filed suits in state court earlier this month alleging McKesson Corp. and Cardinal Health Inc. failed to properly regulate deliveries of opioid painkillers and ignored red flags about large orders.
The case is State of SC v. Purdue Pharma, No. 2017-CP-400-4872, Richland County Court of Common Pleas (Columbia).
Aces to support Go4theGoal against SEMO
The University of Evansville women’s soccer team will be “Lacing Up 4 Pediatric Cancer” to support the Go4theGoal Foundation to help kids battling cancer in Friday’s regular season opener against Southeast Missouri State University and throughout the 2017 season.
UE will don gold laces as part of the Lace Up 4 Pediatric Cancer campaign, showing support for the fight against pediatric cancer.
“Both us and SEMO will be wearing gold laces on our shoes and that is to help support and raise awareness for pediatric cancer,” said head coach Krista McKendree. “A portion of the proceeds from the shoelaces we purchase go to support children fighting pediatric cancer. One of the reasons we wanted to be a part of this is because the money stays locally and affects families and kids in the tri-state area who have been affected by cancer or are living with it. So for us that is the biggest reason for wanting to do it is to try and help give back to people in our community and try and raise awareness for that cause as well.”
The Purple Aces will be accepting donations for the Go4theGoal Foundation during Friday’s match and will continue to collect at each home match in 2017.
Lace Up 4 Pediatric Cancer began in the fall of 2011. Since then, professional, college and youth teams have participated in raising funds and awareness for the #1 disease killer of children. To date, over 350,000 athletes have Laced Up to show their commitment to the fight against pediatric cancer.
Go4theGoal works to improve the lives of children battling cancer by providing financial assistance, granting special wishes, developing unique hospital programs, and funding innovative research. Learn more about Go4theGoal and how you can help to make a difference by visiting Go4theGoal.org.
Dak Attack Sticks To Game Plan
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No Solar Glasses to be Offered at Ivy Tech Eclipse Viewing Party
Ivy Tech Community College will not be distributing free solar viewing glasses at its Eclipse viewing party on Aug. 21 as had been reported earlier, due to a recall notice from Amazon today. This is affecting thousands of customers throughout the nation, according to Amazon. On its website, Amazon stated, “Safety is among our highest priorities. Out of an abundance of caution, we have proactively reached out to customers and provided refunds for eclipse glasses that may not comply with industry standards,” the website stated.
Ivy Tech purchased from a NASA-approved company, and the safety glasses had the correct ISO and Shade Level requirements. “However, we have made the decision not to distribute the glasses, but to use alternative safer means to experience the 99% totality at our viewing party,†said Marsha Jackson, executive director of marketing and communication.
At the Ivy Tech viewing party, “It’s a New Day at Ivy Tech,†materials will be provided to make an inexpensive pinhole projector so that individuals can safely – with their back to the sun – view an inverted image of the movement of the moon over the sun on a piece of cardboard. Directions will be provided at the event.
Discussion about the eclipse will be led by Michael Hosack, assistant professor of physics at Ivy Tech. The event takes place on Monday from 11:55 a.m. (CST) to 2:49 p.m. (CST) with maximum coverage at 1:24 p.m. 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 member’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.â€
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.
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.
President Trump signs Messer’s Proposal Helping Vets Impacted by ITT Tech Closure Into Law
Measure is part of landmark GI Bill reform package
WASHINGTON, D.C. (Wednesday, Aug. 16, 2017) — President Donald Trump signed into law today a GI Bill reform package, which includes U.S. Rep. Luke Messer’s (R-IN) proposal to help veterans impacted by the closure of ITT Tech.
Spearheaded by Messer and Rep. Mark Takano (D-CA), the bipartisan proposal retroactively restores GI Bill benefits to veterans who were attending Indiana-based ITT Technical Institute and California-based Corinthian Colleges, both of which closed abruptly impacting tens of thousands of students nationwide, including thousands of veterans.
Their proposal is part of the Harry Colmery Veterans Educational Assistance Act of 2017, which modernizes several aspects of the GI Bill and expands benefits for military families.
“With President Trump’s signature, thousands of Hoosier veterans who unfairly lost their GI Bill benefits will finally have them restored,†Messer said. “Our servicemen and women earned these benefits and we have a responsibility to honor our commitment to them. With this new law, we are delivering real results and ensuring veterans have the opportunity to succeed.â€
Messer heard from many veterans following ITT Tech’s closure, including Jason Nyikos, a U.S. Navy veteran from Greenfield, Indiana, who had to start his degree completely from scratch, after spending two years at ITT Tech.
“Not a single credit transferred, and Jason’s GI Bill is going to run out before he can finish a new degree,†Messer said. “Jason’s story is one among thousands. Our veterans deserve better, and today is a huge victory for them.â€
The proposal provides full restoration of GI Bill benefits within 90 days to students who attended ITT Tech and Corinthian Colleges, if they were not able to transfer their credits to a new institution. It also helps veterans who may be impacted by a school closure in the future. Messer introduced legislation to restore these benefits shortly after ITT Tech closed in September of 2016 and he has been working to restore the benefits since.
“Restoring both tuition and housing benefits to veterans for a semester cut short by a school closure is simply the right thing to do,†Takano said. “And by making this provision retroactive, we are restoring a measure of justice for the students at ITT Tech and Corinthian, as well as others across the country who have been left out in the cold by a college that shuts down without warning.â€
Second Annual Bisesi Memorial Golf Scramble August 26
University of Southern Indiana Women’s Golf will host its second annual Don Bisesi Memorial Golf Scramble August 26 at 1 p.m. at Cambridge Golf Course.
The event is a four-person, 18-hole scramble to benefit the USI Women’s Golf program. Cost is $100 per individual ($400 per team) and includes an awards dinner following the scramble. Prizes will be given to the winning team, longest drive, closest to the pin. There will also be hole-in-one prizes on all par 3s including a $10,000 prize for the first hole-in-one.
Prior to the event, a putting contest will take place on the 18th green for a chance to win $2,500. Also, PGA Professional Jeff Howerton will offer a 30-minute short game clinic on the driving range at 11:30 a.m. The clinic is free and does not require the tournament entry fee. All ages are welcome!