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VANDERBURGH COUNTY FELONY CHARGES

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 Below are the felony cases to be filed by the Vanderburgh County Prosecutor’s Office today.

Nicholas Thomas Alexandr Prince: Possession of a synthetic drug or synthetic drug lookalike substance (Level 6 Felony)

Thomas McNeel White: Theft (Level 6 Felony)

John Christopher Rowlett: Possession of methamphetamine (Level 6 Felony)

Patricia Louise LaTouche: Possession of methamphetamine (Level 6 Felony), Possession of paraphernalia (Class C misdemeanor)

Robert Alonzo Sallee: Robbery (Level 5 Felony), Residential entry (Level 6 Felony), Domestic battery (Level 6 Felony)

Matthew P. Bishop: Theft (Level 6 Felony)

Kelly Jean Decorrevont: Neglect of a dependent (Level 6 Felony), Possession of marijuana (Class B misdemeanor)

Adopt A Pet

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Gypsy is a female black Lab mix. She gets along great with other dogs! In fact, she does play group with Emma and Snuggie, two other female black dogs about her same size. She’s a happy, jolly girl with a beautiful wavy coat. Gypsy is just over a year old. Her $100 adoption fee includes her spay, microchip, vaccines, and more. Contact the Vanderburgh Humane Society at (812) 426-2563 or adoptions@vhslifesaver.org for details!

 

Series opener against Miners postponed

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Series opener against Miners postponed

Friday’s Riley Children’s Foundation Princess and Superhero Night between the Southern Illinois Miners and Evansville Otters has been postponed due to wet field conditions.

With the postponement, the Miners and Otters will open the series Saturday at 6:35 p.m. as Evansville celebrates 125 years of Deaconess and the game will feature a postgame fireworks show.

Sunday’s Bob’s Gym Day and Family Fun Day will now be a doubleheader with first pitch of game one at 4:05 p.m. Game two will follow approximately 30 minutes after the conclusion of game one and both games on Sunday will be seven innings. Gates open one hour prior to first pitch.

Riley Children’s Foundation’s Princess and Superhero Night will occur later in the season and the makeup date for that theme night is still being determined. Once that information is finalized, updated information will be shared on Otters social media platforms and at evansvilleotters.com.

Fans with tickets for tonight’s postponed game will be able to use them at a future 2017 game.

Also, fans with ticket vouchers from Riley should hold on to their coupons. Those coupons can be redeemed at the new to-be-determined Princess and Superhero Night.

This is the second game in the last week for Evansville impacted by weather. Sunday’s game at Washington was suspended after two innings due to rain with the Otters leading 2-0. The game will be finished when the Wild Things come to Bosse Field July 21-23 and details for that are still being finalized.

Tickets for Saturday and Sunday against Southern Illinois are still available by going to evansvilleotters.com or calling 812-435-8686.

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

Subscriptions for ODN are now on sale and more information can be found at evansvilleotters.com

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.

Vanderburgh County Recent Booking Records

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http://www.vanderburghsheriff.com/recent-booking-records.aspx

Indiana Can Help Nationally To Fight Opioid Addiction

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Indiana Can Help Nationally To Fight Opioid Addiction

What great news that President Trump has committed national attention to the problem of opioid addiction.

His commitment supports what we all appreciate has been a critical issue for some time. As an article in Thursday’s New York Times explains – “About as many Americans are expected to die this year of drug overdoses as died in the Vietnam, Iraq and Afghanistan wars combined.” (‘Opioids, a Mass Killer We’re Meeting With a Shrug’ by Nicolas Kristof, New York Time, June 22, 2017,

A friend recently sent me the article and it immediately brought back fine memories of the accomplishments of the former Attorney General, Greg Zoeller, his team and the State legislature in advancing the cause to decrease opioid use by Hoosiers.

Attorney General Zoeller and his administrative team assembled medical and mental health professionals, educators, legislators, victims and law enforcement to study and make recommendations. They then took the most important step. Zoeller’s team effectively worked to push those recommendations into policy and legislation.

Some of the legislative and policy focus areas I remember included promoting the use of Narcan by first responders, reducing the incidence of babies born dependent on drugs (NAS), decreasing excessive long term use of Methodone in addiction treatment, and encouraging best practices in treatment while those serving sentences are still incarcerated.

The AG’s office made a real difference.

The icing on the cake came when then Governor Mike Pence established his own task force to deal with the issue. Some saw it as “Johnny-come-lately” but many of us saw it as “Atta boy, Governor”. With his endorsement he raised the discussion to a new level in Indiana.

It is just that kind of involvement I am counting on in his relationship with the President.

In fact, I hope more than anything that the Vice President is whispering in the ear of the President now about how successfully Indiana has been addressing the issues. And then, I’m hoping the President directs his pick to head up his task force, Governor Chris Cristie, to take a trip to Indiana.

The author of the same article wrote, “… it’s bizarre that Republicans should be complacent about opioids, because the toll is disproportionately in red states — and it affects everyone.”

Well, Governor Cristi, I see that as an open invitation to come to Indiana!

The present Attorney General, Curtis Hill,jr is again prioritizing the fight against drug addiction. With some of the same team members from Zoeller’s adiministration still on board, I know the chances for continued success are great. I am sure they can help Gov Christie jump start the President’s task force and quicken the whole process of making sweeping changes in national policy and legislation.

It is past time to help reduce these terrible statistics and offer those affected and their families a new start in life.

Well, that’s the view from someone who used to be involved on the inside and now looks at issues from the view outside.

IS IT TRUE JUNE 23, 2017

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IS IT TRUE one of the shortcomings of downtown Evansville has been and continues to be the fact that there is no grocery store even close to the residential units that are in the area?…there have been some attempts in the past by local investors like Wesselmans and the Sunshine Market that were on the edge of the downtown but couldn’t get enough traction to survive?…there was recently an attempt at a small grocery section by Stratman’s Pharmacy that was a long time downtown business that did their best to make groceries available to downtown residents?…instead of prospering Stratman’s Pharmacy made the decision to cease downtown operations leaving the downtown with no grocery and no pharmacy?…the reality is that the number of customers who are required to keep such businesses profitable just don’t live near the downtown?

IS IT TRUE an investigation was done with urging from Mayor Winnecke to learn what it would take to attract a Trader Joe’s to downtown Evansville in 2008?…the gap in required numbers was staggering?…Trader Joe’s at the time was looking for 50,000 people within a 10 mile radius that had an average income of over $70,000 per year?…until criteria requirements like this are relaxed substantially the idea of getting a Trader Joe’s will continue to be a laughing matter?…all of the new grocery stores from the Aldi Markets to Schnuck’s for the last three decades have been located where there are large blocks of affluence and population?…the horizon for downtown Evansville to attract any grocery that uses demographic criteria is most likely a lifetime or two away?…the numbers required are just not possible without some very high density residential towers full of upper middle class people?

IS IT TRUE there is another issue with the building stock in downtown Evansville that makes it difficult to make a profit in any business that competes for dollars with businesses located in new buildings in the population zones?…the age of the buildings and the primitive state of the electrical and insulation systems make the utility bills exorbitant in downtown Evansville?…when a service provider has a $1,000+ utility bill tries to compete with someone in the burbs who has a $150 bill the playing field is not level and often the difference cannot be made up for in pricing and volume?…until something is done to equalize the cost of doing business in downtown Evansville smart businesses will stay away and starry eyed downtown supporters who believe the hype with try and eventually learn the hard way about empty promises?

IS IT TRUE that the Downtown Market grocery store located on Lincoln Ave. owned and operated by Memorial Community Development Corp. closed their doors without fanfare? …that competition from the big grocery stores chains and neighborhood convenience stores created to much competition for Downtown Market to make a profit? …the Evansville Department of Metropolitan Development funneled about $450,000 plus of Community Development Block Grant funds to help fund the Downtown Market grocery store project for Memorial Community Development Corp.?
IS IT TRUE we recall just days before the 2015 City election ended Mayor Winnecke, City Council members, Rev Adrian Brooks of Memorial Baptist Church and many other political movers and shakers of the 4th Ward attended the ribbon-cutting event for the Downtown Market project?  …the timing and the reason of this ribbon cutting events was obvious?  …once again Evansville DMD has funded another questionable business venture without proper vetting?  …we wonder when the local taxpayers will make a public call for the Evansville Department of Metropolitan Development to be audited by an outside entity?
IS IT TRUE that the Director of Evansville Department of Metropolitan Development should do a bit more than shrug his shoulders and accept the price increases associated with the elementary but expensive error that was made in designing the width of the North Main Street improvement project?…there are ways to leverage the insurance and bonding that the construction company(s) must have been required to have to get this job?..if relief for this idiotic oversight is not sought we can assume that the stupid mistake was an inside job?…in that case maybe the city should sue its own insurance company for the failures of staff?  …we also feel that this project should be audited by an outside entity?
 Todays “READERS POLL” question is: Do you feel that its time for the City of Evansville Department of Metropolitan Development to be audited by an outside accounting firm?
EDITORS FOOTNOTES:  If you would like to advertise or submit and article in the CCO please contact us City-County Observer@live.com .
Any comments posted in this column doesn’t represents the views or opinions of our advertisers.

Indiana Supreme Court Affirmed The Admission Of A Gun

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Indiana Supreme Court Affirmed The Admission Of A Gun

Olivia Covington for www.theindianalawyer.com

In a decision reaffirming the notion that the doctrine of res gestae is defunct and is not grounds for admission of evidence, the Indiana Supreme Court affirmed the admission of a gun and resulting convictions in a joint Lake County resisting law enforcement and battery trial for two defendants.

After Reginald Harris refused to leave his girlfriend Summer Snow’s property, Snow called police and officer Terry Peck arrived on the scene. Peck asked Harris to get out of Snow’s car, where he had been sitting, but Harris refused, resulting in a scuffle.

During the scuffle, Harris pulled Peck into the car and began hitting him, with Snow encouraging him to beat the officer up. Peck eventually handcuffed Harris and advised Snow that if she did not stop shouting at him and go inside, she would be taken to jail for disorderly conduct.

Snow entered her home but soon returned, and a second scuffle ensued between her and Peck. The officer restrained Snow, and while he was handcuffing her, felt something hit his knee and boot and land on the ground. It was later discovered the object he felt was a gun.

Snow was charged with two counts of Level 5 felony battery against a public safety officer and one count each of Level 6 felony resisting law enforcement and Class B misdemeanor disorderly conduct. For his part, Harris was charged with Level 5 felony battery against a public safety officer and Level 6 felony resisting law enforcement.

Neither defendant was charged with a gun-related offense, and they each filed a motion in limine to stop the state from referring to the gun at their joint trial. The defendants argued because Peck learned of the gun after arresting Snow, the state was speculating about the gun’s relevance, and the danger of unfair prejudice outweighed any probative value. The state, however, said Snow may have gone into her house to get the gun, making it relevant to show “some sort of aggression.”

The Lake Superior Court denied the motion in limine, then allowed the admittance of the gun as evidence during trial over the objection of their joint counsel. Snow was found guilty of Level 5 felony battery against a public safety official and one count of Level 6 felony resisting law enforcement, while Harris was found guilty as charged.

A divided Indiana Court of Appeals affirmed the admission of the gun and their convictions, finding the weapon “explained the circumstances and context of the extended verbal and physical altercations between Snow and Officer Peck.” Chief Judge Nancy Vaidik dissented, writing the majority had affirmed the trial court under res gestae grounds for admissibility.

Counsel for Snow and Harris made a similar argument during oral arguments before the Indiana Supreme Court in April, warning the case could allow the concept of res gestae to be reintroduced into the Indiana judiciary. But in a Thursday opinion, Chief Justice Loretta Rush wrote the concept of res gestae remains defunct and the admission of the gun in this situation was permissible under Indiana’s Rules of Evidence.

The chief justice also said the court disapproved of the “inextricably bound up” standard, a concept similar to res gestae, and disagreed with the state’s reliance on that standard. Similarly, the court rejected the Court of Appeals’ reasoning that the gun was admissible because it explained the “circumstances and context” of the crimes.

Rush then went on to write the trial court was within its discretion to conclude Snow’s gun tended to demonstrate an aggressive state of mind, writing the evidence allowed for the inference that Snow “could have fetched the gun while she was in her house…and that it could have emboldened her aggression.” Further, the trial court instructed the jury about when a handgun is lawfully or unlawfully carried, Rush said, so the prejudice of the gun was not outweighed by its probative value.

The high court reached the same conclusion in Harris’ case, and further rejected his argument that the gun prejudiced his right to a fair trial because it was not relevant to his charges. Harris waived that argument by raising it for the first time during oral arguments, Rush said, and also by not moving for a separate trial or request a limiting instruction.

The cases are Summer Snow v. State of Indiana, 45S03-1703-CR-169, and Reginald Harris v. State of Indiana, 45S03-1703-CR-172.

Castellano, Smith, Velazquez Nominated for ESPY as Best Jockey

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Leading riders Javier Castellano, Mike Smith, and John Velazquez have been nominated for the 2017 ESPY Award as Best Jockey, the cable sports television and online network announced today. The 25th ESPY Awards will be presented on July 12 at the Microsoft Theater in Los Angeles, Calif., and will be televised live on ABC.

Fans will have a chance to select the winners by voting online or via mobile at this link.  Fans can also follow the official ESPYS Twitter page and provide their selections leading up to the awards show. On the day of the show, fans are encouraged to use the hashtag #ESPYS to join in on the conversation.

Castellano currently ranks third in 2017 North American earnings (which also include Dubai earnings) with nearly $11.8 million through June 21, and is ranked eighth in wins with 112. Last year, he ranked first in earnings with over $26.8 million, and fourth in wins with 300. Last month, he rode Cloud Computing to a win in the Preakness Stakes. Castellano has received four consecutive Eclipse Awards as Outstanding Jockey, and will be inducted into the Racing Hall of Fame later this summer.

Smith currently ranks first in 2017 earnings with over $13.3 million. The bulk of those earnings come from Arrogate, whom Smith rode to wins in the lucrative Pegasus World Cup Invitational in January and the Dubai World Cup in March. “Big Money Mike” has accumulated 36 wins to date in 2017, and won five stakes races on the June 10 Belmont Stakes card in New York, including the Ogden Phipps Stakes with champion Songbird, another one of his regular mounts. Last year, Smith earned over $13.3 million. Smith has won two Eclipse Awards as Outstanding Jockey, in 1993 and 1994.

Velazquez, like Smith a member of the Racing Hall of Fame, has 2017 earnings of nearly $8.7 million through June 21. He won his second Kentucky Derby Presented by Yum! Brands in May aboard Always Dreaming, and has won 86 races so far this year. Last year, Velazquez earned nearly $18.6 million aboard his mounts, good for fourth among North American jockeys. He won the Eclipse Award as Outstanding Jockey in 2004 and 2005.

The ESPYS benefit the V Foundation for Cancer Research in memory of the late college basketball coach and analyst Jim Valvano.