Gardner wins Frontier League Home Run Derby
Evansville Otters outfielder Jeff Gardner won the 2017 Frontier League Home Run Derby presented by MK Orthopedics Tuesday with 14 home runs in the final round.
Florence Freedom infielder Jordan Brower finished second with 13 and Evansville’s Dane Phillips was third with eight in the final round.
Watch on Otters TV // Allen throws BP to Gardner, Phillips // Gardner wins Home Run Derby
Gardner finished with 41 total homers over three rounds. He had 13 home runs in the first round, the highest total among the 12 competitors in the event. In the second round, he hit 14 more to pace the group of six batters vying for the third.
The win in the derby for Gardner comes as he leads the Frontier League with 13 home runs in the regular season. The University of Louisville product also has 41 RBIs and 30 runs scored in 46 games for Evansville.
Most of his home runs sailed over the right field wall at Slammers Stadium, with the wall sitting 327 feet down the line. Gardner clinched the title with a home run that easily cleared the right field wall.
Phillips also advanced to the third round before falling to his teammate. He was fourth in the first round with nine home runs and in the second round; he advanced by hitting 12 more, good enough for second-most among the six competitors.
Evansvilleotters.com will have coverage of All-Star festivities in Joliet so check back for updates throughout the week.
The Otters will travel to Gateway on Friday for the first game of a three-game weekend series. First pitch is scheduled for 7:05 p.m. and Lucas Corley will provide coverage on WUEV 91.5 FM.
The Evansville Otters are the 2006 and 2016 Frontier League champions. Group packages and single game tickets are now on sale. For more information, visit evansvilleotters.com or call 812-435-8686
IS IT TRUE JULY 12, 2017
IS IT TRUE that the top economic news yesterday was the announcement that Alcoa will once again have an aluminum smelting line operating at the Warrick Operations in Southern Indiana?… it was only a few years ago that the smelting operation was mothballed resulting in job losses and fear among employees?…that 275 jobs will be added at the Warrick plant to begin smelting again?…one of the biggest reasons that aluminum smelting has been reduced in the United States is the cost of electrical power as compared to other countries like Chile where much of the raw material used in smelting is found?…in years gone by Alcoa was ahead of Vectren when it comes to electrical generation because they put in their own power plant and coal mine?…it is highly likely that the best profit center on the Alcoa property was the power plant and not the smelter?…this announcement is a good win for greater Evansville, Vectren and Alcoa alike? Â …we join Lieutenant Governor Suzanne Crouch in joy and congratulations for this legacy employer making the commitment to smelt aluminum in Southwest Indiana again?
IS IT TRUE one of the reasons for the prices that Vectren charges for electricity is that they got ahead of the hounds in cleaning the coal they burn?…because of the expensive equipment used by Vectren to clean coal prompted the Indiana Utilities Regulatory Commission to authorize the highest rates in Indiana?…we now hear that many of those expensive improvements  made by Vectren may be squandered to make way for the cheaper natural gas rates? …the body that approves the rate increases (IURC) is a bunch of people appointed by politicians who may or may not know the first thing about power generation?… the legacy combined sewer problem looming over Evansville and the decrepit water pipes repairs someday will cause the utility costs for a regular middle class home may be as much as the house payment?
IS IT TRUE that Local Income Tax funds are now being used to pay down City Employee Hospitalization for this budget year?  …so far the City of Evansville has used $2.7 million dollars of this fund to pay down the City Employee Hospitalization for this budget year
IS IT TRUE that any day now we expect bids to be submitted by Ragle Construction Inc.  telling us how much it will costs to correct the curb problems on North Main Street? …we  can’t wait to see who will pay to correct this costly mistake? …we know that city officials would like to see this issue to quietly go away?
IS IT TRUE the entertainment festival known as ParksFest will be taking a year off in 2017 but is hopeful that it will return for 2018?…the ParksFest was born when it’s founder saw the distinction of Evansville being named “the most miserable place in the United States†in a Gallup well-being survey?…the response to being named a miserable bottom feeder inspire the ParksFest that eventually grew to having an attendance of 10,000 in Garvin Park and attracted musicians from all around the Tri-State?…ParksFest is an equivalent economic driver to the Evansville Jazz and Wine Festival started by GAGE in 2008 after the then CEO attended a Jazz Fest in Montreal?
Todays READERS POLL question is: Who has done a better job of handling our tax dollars?
Please take time and read our newest feature articles entitled “LAW ENFORCEMENT, READERS POLL, BIRTHDAYS, HOT JOBS†and “LOCAL SPORTS†posted in our sections.  You now are able to subscribe to get the CCO daily.
If you would like to advertise in the CCO please contact us City-County Observer@live.com.
EDITORS FOOTNOTE:  Any comments posted in this column doesn’t represents the views or opinions of our advertisers.
CHANNEL 44 NEWS: ALCOA WARRICK TO RESTART 3 OF 5 POTLINES AT ALUMINUM SMELTER
Alcoa Warrick to Restart 3 of 5 Potlines at Aluminum Smelter
Alcoa Warrick Operations will add more than 200 jobs by next spring. Alcoa Corporation plans to restart three of five potlines at its Warrick Operations aluminum smelter, creating about 275 jobs. The process to restart the three potlines will…
Amazon Prime Day Can Be Prime Time For “Porch Pirates”
Many online shoppers will be taking advantage of the special deals being offered during Amazon Prime Day. When making your purchases, it’s important to remember that package thieves don’t just operate during the holidays. Taking some precautions can protect your items from being hauled off by a porch pirate. Here are some suggestions from the Better Business Bureau website:
Track your packages: Follow shipments from the seller to your front door with online, text message or phone call tracking offered through the delivery company. Sign up for alerts to be notified of delays or exceptions and when the package has been delivered.
Be available for delivery: Track packages and arrange to be available during estimated delivery times, have a trusted friend or neighbor pick up the packages in a timely manner after delivery or ship to your work address (pending company approval). Package delivery thieves have been known to follow delivery trucks aro und town, stealing packages immediately after delivery. If you can’t arrange for pickup shortly after delivery, keep reading for alternative safe delivery tips!
Request a signature: This package delivery feature will likely come with a fee, but without a recipient’s signature, the delivery service won’t be able to leave a package exposed on a doorstep.
Personalize delivery: Schedule a certain day and/or time for your package delivery, including evenings and weekends or provide specific instructions on where a package should be placed to keep the delivery hidden from public view. Consumers can also request a package be held at a delivery center or shipped to a retailer’s nearest store location for in-person pickup. Fees for personalization do vary by delivery service.
Use your credit card: When making purchases online, use your credit card rather than a debit card or another form of payment. Credit card companies are more likely to offer refun ds in the event of theft.
Insure valuable items: Purchase delivery insurance to protect merchandise against loss or damage.
Adopt A Pet
Pawlie is a 10-month-old female American Staffordshire Terrier mix. She was found running as a stray, & never reclaimed. Her $100 adoption fee includes her spay, microchip, vaccines, and heartworm test. We’ll even include the adorable tan “Phantom of the Opera†mask on one side of her face – free of charge! Contact Vanderburgh Humane at (812) 426-2563 or adoptions@vhslifesaver.org for details!
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Hot Jobs in Evansville
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Judgment for police affirmed despite ‘insufficient’ abuse response
Olivia Covington for www.theindianalwyer.com
Though an Indiana sheriff’s department’s response to a woman’s multiple domestic violence claims against her boyfriend, who was a sheriff’s deputy, may have been “insufficient,†the woman failed to provide sufficient evidence to prove her claims against the department should go to trial, the 7th Circuit Court of Appeal ruled.
In Jennifer R. Wilson-Trattner v. Robert Campbell, et al, 16-2509, Jennifer Wilson-Trattner and Scott Roeger were in an abusive relationship. Specifically, during four separate incidents, Roeger locked Wilson-Trattner out of her home, threw her against a wall, choked her, sent lewd and threatening text messages to her, broke into her home and punched a hole through a wall in her home.
Officers with the Hancock County Sheriff’s Department and McCordsville Police responded to the incidents, and after the second incident, Roeger was told his personal life became the department’s business when he was involved in domestic violence complaints. A report that concluded Roeger had violated departmental regulations was delivered to Hancock County Sheriff Mike Shepherd, though he claimed he did not remember receiving it or placing it in a filing cabinet where it was later found. Similarly, Hancock County Captain Bobby Campbell initiated an internal investigation, but claimed he lost the paperwork.
After the fourth incident that involved Roeger breaking into Wilson-Trattner’s home, Hancock County Deputy Gary Anchor told her the sheriff’s department was “sick of getting these calls†and that they would stop responding if she kept “crying wolf.†The McCordsville Police Department arrested Roeger, who pleaded guilty to criminal charges and eventually resigned from the sheriff’s department.
Wilson-Trattner filed a complaint in 2014 against Roeger, Shepherd, Campbell, Detective Ted Munden and Hancock County Officer Brad Burkhart. Judge Larry J. McKinney of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Indiana granted summary judgment to the defendants on Wilson-Trattner’s federal substantive due process and failure to train claim, and to Shepherd on her intentional infliction of emotional distress claim. However, McKinney declined to grant summary judgment to Roeger on the battery and intentional infliction of emotional distress claims, and also declined to include him in the entry of partial final judgment in favor of the other defendants under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 54(b).
On appeal, Wilson-Trattner argued she sufficiently substantiated her substantive due process claim because her claim implicated a state-created danger. Specifically, Wilson-Trattner said law enforcement “‘conveyed the unmistakable message’ to Roeger that they would not interfere with his ongoing abuse, thereby emboldening him to reoffend.â€
But Judge Jon DeGuilio of the Northern District of Indiana, sitting by designation on a panel of the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals, wrote in a Tuesday opinion that there was no evidence that any of the officers directly informed Roeger that he could abuse her with immunity. Further, under DeShaney v. Winnebago City. Dep’t of Soc. Servs., 489 U.S. 189, 196 (1989), Wilson-Trattner cannot claim that the officers’ “dismissive and indifferent attitudes†endangered her by emboldening Roeger.
Wilson-Trattner also tried to base her case on the precedent of Okin v. Village of Cornwall-On-Hudson Police Department, 577 F.3d 415 (2d Cir. 2009), in which the Second Circuit Court of Appeals allowed a substantive due process claim to survive after police officers expressed camaraderie with a domestic violence offender and repeatedly failed to punish him. But unlike in Okin, Wilson-Trattner would not share her story with police, and officers did inform Roeger at least once that his personal life became a departmental issue in such domestic violence situations, DeGuilio wrote.
Finally, the 7th Circuit agreed with the grant of summary judgment on the failure to train and intentional infliction of emotional distress claims, finding Wilson-Trattner failed to provide sufficient evidence to support either claim.