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CHANNEL 44 NEWS: Ford Center Nominated For “Venue Of The Year” By ACM.

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Ford Center Nominated For “Venue Of The Year” By ACM.

The Ford Center is getting a huge honor from the Academy of Country Music. It’s been nominated for “Venue of the Year” by the group. Over the past few years, it’s more a regular stop for some of the biggest names in Country Music including…

2017 NATIONAL MERIT SCHOLARSHIP WINNERS

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Corporate-Sponsored Merit Scholarship Winners

(Evanston, Illinois) Today, National Merit Scholarship Corporation (NMSC) released the names of the fi rst group of winners in the 62nd annual National Merit Scholarship Program. More than 1,000 distinguished high school seniors have won corporate-sponsored National Merit Scholarship awards fi nanced by about 200 corporations, company foundations, and other business organizations.

Scholars were selected from students who advanced to the Finalist level in the National Merit Scholarship competition and met criteria of their scholarship sponsors. Corporate sponsors provide National Merit Scholarships for Finalists who are children of their employees, who are residents of communities the company serves, or who plan to pursue college majors or careers the sponsor wishes to encourage.

Most of these awards are renewable for up to four years of college undergraduate study and provide annual stipends that range from $500 to $10,000 per year. Some provide a single payment between $2,500 and $5,000. Recipients can use their awards at any regionally accredited U.S. college or university of their choice.

Funding for these National Merit Scholarships is provided by corporate organizations that represent nearly all sectors of American industry. Sponsors from the business community have underwritten awards offered in all 62 competitions, expending or committing more than $767 million to support the intellectual development of the nation’s scholastically talented youth.

2017 National Merit Scholarship Competition

Over 1.6 million juniors in more than 22,000 high schools entered the 2017 National Merit Scholarship Program when they took the 2015 Preliminary SAT/National Merit Scholarship Qualifying Test (PSAT/NMSQT®), which served as an initial screen of program entrants. In September 2016, some 16,000 Semifi nalists were designated on a state-representational basis in numbers proportional to each state’s percentage of the national total of graduating high school seniors. Semifinalists were the highest-scoring program entrants in each state and represented less than one percent of the nation’s seniors.

To be considered for a National Merit Scholarship, Semifinalists had to fulfill requirements to advance to Finalist standing. Each Semifi nalist was asked to complete a detailed scholarship application, which included writing an essay and providing information about extracurricular activities, awards, and leadership positions. Semifinalists also had to have an outstanding academic record, be endorsed and recommended by a high school official, and earn SAT® scores that confirmed their qualifying test performance. From the Semifi nalist group, some 15,000 met Finalist requirements

. By the conclusion of the 2017 competition, about 7,500 Finalists will have been selected to receive National Merit Scholarships totaling over $32 million. Winners are the Finalist candidates judged to have the strongest combination of academic skills and achievements, extracurricular accomplishments, and potential for success in rigorous college studies.

NMSC, a not-for-profi t organization that operates without government assistance, was established in 1955 to conduct the National Merit Scholarship Program. The majority of National Merit Scholarships offered each year are underwritten by some 420 independent corporate and college sponsors that support NMSC’s efforts to honor the nation’s scholastically talented youth and encourage academic excellence at all levels of education.

 

 

A New Meth Surge Gathers Momentum

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A New Meth Surge Gathers Momentum

By Christine Vestal For Stateline News

The opioid epidemic has killed tens of thousands over the last two years and driven major reforms in state and local law enforcement and public health policies for people with addiction.

But another deadly but popular drug, methamphetamine, also has been surging in many parts of the country. And federal officials say that, based on what they learned as opioids swept the U.S., methamphetamine is likely to spread even further.

“The beginning of the opioid epidemic was 2000 and we thought it was just localized,” said Kimberly Johnson, director of the Center for Substance Abuse Treatment at the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA). “Now we know that drug outbreaks aren’t likely to stay localized so we can start addressing them sooner and letting other states know of the potential for it spreading.”

From Arizona, New Mexico and Oklahoma to Montana, Wisconsin and Minnesota and all across the South, inexpensive methamphetamine is flowing in from Mexico, fueling what police and epidemiologists say is an alarming increase in the number of people using the drug, and dying from it.

Nationwide, regular use of the inexpensive and widely available illicit stimulant increased from 3 to 4 percent of the population between 2010 and 2015, according to SAMHSA. At the same time, heroin use shot from 1 to 2 percent of the population.

The number of people using methamphetamine, also known as meth, crystal meth, crystal, crank, ice and speed, has been among the highest of any illicit substance for decades. But despite the stimulant’s harmful long-term effects on the body — including rotting teeth, heart and kidney failure, and skin lesions — its overdose potential is much lower than prescription painkillers and other opioids.

Still, overdose deaths from methamphetamine have spiked recently.

In 2014, roughly 3,700 Americans died from drug overdoses involving methamphetamine, more than double the 2010 number, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. In 2015, the most recent year for which federal data are available, nearly 4,900 meth users died of an overdose, a 30 percent jump in one year.

Early Warnings

In Oklahoma, methamphetamine was involved in 328 overdose deaths last year, a sharp climb from 271 in 2015, and more than the combined deaths from prescription painkillers hydrocodone and oxycodone, according to Mark Woodward, a spokesman for the Oklahoma Narcotics Bureau.

In contrast to the last epidemic, which began in the 1990s, rural meth labs are now a rarity and the fires and explosions that captured headlines back then are practically nonexistent today, Woodward said. “So a lot of people thought if meth labs are down, meth use is down.”

“But so much is coming in from Mexico, and it’s just as good as the domestic cooked product,” he said. “Why risk leaving a paper trail at a pharmacy when you have a buddy coming up from El Paso tonight with a cheap supply?”

The majority of methamphetamine is now smuggled across the Southwest border, according to the Drug Enforcement Administration’s 2016 National Drug Threat Assessment Summary. Its purity is high and its street price is relatively low, much cheaper than heroin. “While the current opioid crisis has deservedly garnered significant attention, the methamphetamine threat has remained prevalent,” the report warns.

Minnesota, a hot spot during the last methamphetamine epidemic, is experiencing a surge in admissions for treatment of methamphetamine addiction, according to the state Human Services Department.

In the upper Midwest and much of the rest of the country, 2005 was the peak year for methamphetamine use. After that, federal and state laws restricting the sale of an essential ingredient in methamphetamine, the over-the-counter cold medicine pseudoephedrine, led to a sharp decrease in U.S. meth labs.

As more meth started coming in from Mexico, the number of people seeking treatment began creeping up again and began to surge in many places in 2015. Last year, nearly 11,600 meth users were admitted for treatment in Minnesota, according to state data — a significant increase over the 6,700 who sought treatment for methamphetamine addiction in 2005.

Methamphetamine is also showing up in places that never experienced an earlier epidemic.

“What we’re seeing is that the use of methamphetamines has recently moved out of trailer parks and rural areas and into inner cities,” said Ken Roy, medical director of a major treatment facility, Addiction Recovery Resources, in New Orleans. “We’re seeing a lot of heroin addicts that also use methamphetamines. It used to be the only way we got meth patients was when they came to the hospital from rural areas,” Roy said.

Different Drugs

Opioid users experience a dreamlike state and typically nod off. But methamphetamine produces an entirely different high. Users experience a sense of elation and hypervigilance, and often become paranoid and aggressive. “They may binge on meth for days without eating or sleeping, and they often start seeing things that aren’t there,” said Carol Falkowski, an addiction expert in Minnesota.

Death from a methamphetamine overdose is also very different from an opioid death. With opioids, which affect the part of the brain that controls breathing, high enough doses can shut down respiratory functions, quickly causing death.

With methamphetamine, death is typically caused by a stroke or heart attack, and is characterized by extreme sweating as the body overheats prior to death. Because methamphetamine represents a lower risk of overdose, many use it for decades, which often results in gradual organ failure and death. Those deaths are typically not counted in the overdose statistics.

Likewise, treatment for addiction to methamphetamine is different than for opioids. No FDA-approved medications exist to stop the cravings for methamphetamine, whereas three effective drugs are available to help people recover from opioid addiction.

As a result, methamphetamine treatment primarily consists of outpatient therapy, often after a brief stay in a residential facility. People who stop using methamphetamine do not suffer the severe withdrawal symptoms such as the vomiting, muscle pain and other flu-like symptoms suffered by opioid users. But they do tend to become immobilized, sleeping a lot and binge eating, as well as suffering from severe depression, anxiety and drug cravings.

Falkowski said that during the last methamphetamine epidemic, there was more emphasis on the way people behaved when using meth for long periods of time, and the threat they posed to public safety.

Health officials in places like Minnesota and Oklahoma say the health care providers who helped legions of people overcome methamphetamine addiction during the last epidemic are prepared for a new onslaught. But Johnson, the SAMHSA director, cautioned that the addiction treatment workforce has not grown in proportion to the growth in overall drug use since then.

Tackling a new meth addiction wave on top of an opioid epidemic could strain the nation’s health care system, she said. “I don’t think what we’ve done to scale up access to treatment for opioid disorders is going to be that helpful for methamphetamines.”

Planned Parenthood Challenging New Indiana Abortion Parental Consent Law

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Planned Parenthood Challenging New Indiana Abortion Parental Consent Law

IL for www.theindianalawyer.com

Planned Parenthood of Indiana and Kentucky has filed a lawsuit challenging portions of Senate Enrolled Act 404, which in part requires unemancipated minors to obtain consent from a parent or legal guardian before being allowed to have an abortion.

The American Civil Liberties Union of Indiana filed the lawsuit Thursday in federal court in Indianapolis. PPINK and the ACLU maintain portions of the new law — which goes into effect July 1 — violate equal protection and due process under the U.S. Constitution as well as the First Amendment.

Gov. Eric Holcomb signed SEA 404 into law last month, which says for a minor under the age of 18 to obtain an abortion, her parent, legal guardian or custodian must accompany her and provide written consent and government-issued proof of identification. When he signed the legislation into law, Holcomb said he saw it as a “parental rights issue.”

If the unemancipated minor objects to having obtain consent, she can petition the juvenile court for a waiver of parental consent and notification. The new law allows the juvenile court to order the minor’s attorney to serve the parent or legal guardian notice by certified mail or personal notice.

The court could waive the parental notification requirement if it finds having the abortion without parental notification is in the minor’s best interests. A minor denied wavier can appeal.

The lawsuit doesn’t challenge SEA 404 as a whole, only Section 4, the parental consent aspect and process a physician must follow to certify the relationship between the minor and parent, and Section 4.2(a), regarding preventing someone from assisting an unemancipated pregnant minor in obtaining an abortion without the consent required under Section 4.

PPINK maintains this section violates the First Amendment as it prohibits the organization from advising its minor patients and people seeking abortion services that they can travel to other states where consent may not be required to obtain abortions.

It is seeking a preliminary injunction — later to be made permanent — preventing these two sections from taking effect.

“If this law is allowed to go into effect, it will have a chilling effect on teenagers already dealing with a difficult situation,” said Betty Cockrum, president and CEO of PPINK. “We encourage teenagers to have open and honest conversations with their family members, but unfortunately not every teenager is in an environment where that is safe. This law seeks to stifle open and fully informed conversation between our staff and our patients. Patients should know all options regarding their pregnancies. It is blatantly unconstitutional and is entirely without compassion for vulnerable Hoosiers.”

“For over four decades, courts have confirmed that this constitutional right extends to unemancipated minors who have been deemed, by a judge, to be sufficiently mature to make a decision to obtain an abortion without parental consent, Jane Henegar, executive director of the ACLU of Indiana, said in a statement. “SEA 404 imposes new burdens on a young woman’s access to abortion and on her health care providers, in violation of often reaffirmed constitutional rights.”

The Indiana Attorney General Curtis Hill said his staff is reviewing the lawsuit. “We look forward to defending the rights of parents and the welfare of children that are under attack by this lawsuit,” he said.

 

Dr. Bucshon Supports Thin Blue Line Act

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On Thursday, the United States House of Representatives passed H.R. 115, the Thin Blue Line Act, which ensures criminals who murder or attempt to murder law enforcement officers face justice for their crimes.

Prior to the vote, Bucshon spoke on the House floor honoring the sacrifices made by law enforcement and urging support of H.R. 115.


Bucshon’s speech can be viewed here: https://goo.gl/j8XLD6 and the full text as delivered is included below:
Mr. Speaker, law enforcement across this country go to work every day to serve and protect our communities.

These brave men and women risk everything to keep our communities and our families safe and secure 

And they do it selflessly.

I recently attended a ceremony in Putnam County Indiana honoring the service and sacrifice of the Indiana State Police officers who have given their lives in the line of duty.

And yesterday, I was at the White House with Vice President Pence to recognize the dedication of the Indiana Fraternal Order of Police and remember the service of the late Sheriff’s Deputy Carl Koontz of Howard County, who was killed in the line of duty.

Events like these are somber reminders of what these heroes who stand on the thin blue line, and their families, sacrifice on our behalf.

We should all be grateful.

Mr. Speaker, this legislation ensures that officers who fall in the line of duty, and their families, receive the justice they deserve. 

I urge all of my colleagues to support this legislation that confirms that the United States Congress stands behind our law enforcement.

 

IDEM Whistleblower Makes Argument To Indiana Supreme Court

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IDEM Whistleblower Makes Argument To Indiana Supreme Court

Marilyn Odendahl for www.theindianalawyer.com

A former employee of the Indiana Department of Environmental Management appeared in the Indiana Supreme Court courtroom Thursday arguing her right to bring a complaint against the state under the whistleblower provision of the Indiana False Claims Act.

Suzanne Esserman claimed IDEM terminated her employment in retaliation for her objections to claims paid through the Excess Liability Trust Fund. Her position required that she review and approve payment for the work to clean up the contamination caused by leaking underground storage tanks. However several times, she rejected the claims, finding the applicants had not provided proper documentation.

Marion Superior Court dismissed her complaint on the grounds that IDEM was protected by sovereign immunity. The Indiana Court of Appeals reversed in Suzanne E. Esserman v. Indiana Department of Evinronmental Management, 49A02-1605-PL-1129. The unanimous panel ruled the state environmental agency was not entitled to common law sovereign immunity.

Before the Supreme Court, the IDEM argued it was immune because the Indiana General Assembly did not specifically note the state could be subject to the False Claims Act, Indiana Code 5-11-5.5-8.

Justice Geoffrey Slaughter questioned Indiana Solicitor General Thomas Fisher as to why the statute did not provide relief for Esserman?

Fisher pointed out that the state was not included in the definition of “employer” unlike the Civil Rights Act, which does include the state.

“So you think the Legislature needs to have an opt-in, that is “employer” specifically includes the state as opposed to an opt-out which says we’ve described employer in broad-brush terms and we’re not excluding the state,” Slaughter asked. “You don’t think that failure to exclude is good enough?”

“No, I don’t think that’s consistent with sovereign immunity,” Fisher replied. “One of the consequences, one of the implications of sovereign immunity is the need for a clear statement to waive it, otherwise it becomes a doctrine that is not really subject to legislative control any longer.”

Fisher then cited State ex rel. Indiana Dep’t of Conservation v. Pulaski Circuit Court, 231 Ind. 245, 108 N.E.2d 185 (1952), which held courts cannot infer a waiver of sovereign immunity but rather it must be explicitly waived.

“What do we infer from the fact that our Legislature made the decision to not statutorily define (employer),” Chief Justice Rush asked. “… You’re saying that we have to infer that they meant the state out based on sovereign immunity?”

“No,” Fisher responded. “I think what I’m saying is we can’t infer that they intended the state to be included.”

“So you’re saying the word employer is ambiguous,” Rush countered.

“At best, yes, I think that’s it,” Fisher said. “And ambiguity cuts in favor of the state here because of the interpretive rule that we’re advocating which is the need for a clear statement.”

When Esserman’s attorney, Mary Jane Lapointe, returned for rebuttal, Slaughter wondered what was wrong with the state’s approach that it has sovereign immunity because the Legislature did not waive it in the False Claims Act.

Lapointe replied to take that approach, the court would have to ignore what “employer” and “employee” means when it is not defined in the statute.

Slaughter continued, “The state makes the point that when it comes to the Civil Rights Act, the Legislature knew how to make explicit that the state was a covered employer for purposes of civil rights violations but it didn’t do so here. So why shouldn’t we draw a negative inference in this case based on that silence?”

“I think there are other occasions where the word employer is not used where there hasn’t been sovereign immunity,” Lapointe responded.

She then cited recently retired Justice Robert Rucker’s dissent in Berry v. Crawford, 990 N.E.2d 410 (Ind. 2013), which argued the term “employer” in the wage payment statute does include the state because the other closely related statutes explicitly identify the Indiana government as an employer.

Holcomb Visits Northwest Indiana to Ceremonially Sign Two Region-Focused Bills

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INDIANAPOLIS – Today, Governor Eric J. Holcomb visited Michigan City and East Chicago to ceremonially sign two bills focused on improving the lives of Northwest Indiana residents.

First, he joined House Minority Leader Scott Pelath (D-Michigan City), state Rep. Hal Slager (R-Schererville), Michigan City Mayor Ron Meer as well as other local elected officials and community leaders for a ceremonial bill signing of House Enrolled Act 1144. This bill increases regional quality of place by helping double track the South Shore Rail Line to make Northwest Indiana a stronger magnet for jobs and workforce talent.

The governor then travelled to East Chicago, gathering with state Sen. Lonnie Randolph (D-East Chicago), state Sen. Ed Charbonneau (R-Valparaiso), state Rep. Earl Harris, Jr. (D-East Chicago), East Chicago Mayor Anthony Copeland, and other state and local leaders for a ceremonial bill signing of House Enrolled Act 1344. This bill provides assistance for residents living in lead contaminated portions of the USS Lead Superfund site in East Chicago.

 

Eagles walk-off with 3-2 game one win over Wayne State

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University of Southern Indiana Softball got a fielder’s choice, walk-off RBI from sophomore designated player Claire Johnson (Pittsboro, Indiana) in the bottom of the seventh inning to earn a 3-2, come-from-behind win over visiting Wayne State University in the opening game of the NCAA Division II Midwest Super Regional Thursday afternoon at the USI Softball Field.

 

Johnson beat out a potential inning-ending double play as her ground ball was scooped up by Wayne State sophomore shortstop Hannah McClounie, who stepped on second base to get the second out of the inning. McClounie turned to fire the ball to first base, but sophomore first baseman Megan Guitar’s foot came off the bag in an effort to get the ball for the third out.

 

Meanwhile, junior third baseman Mena Fulton (Bloomington, Indiana), who opened the inning with a lead-off double, easily crossed the plate for the game-winning run that put the No. 9 Screaming Eagles up, 1-0, in the best-of-three series to decide the Midwest Region champion.

 

The run capped off a come-back for the Eagles (45-12), who trailed Wayne State, 2-0, after one inning of play.

 

Wayne State (40-15) used a two-out rally in the top of the first inning to plate a pair of runs. USI loaded the bases in the bottom of the first inning, but failed to push a run across the plate.

 

A lead-off walk to Johnson, followed by a double by senior shortstop Lexi Reese (Lebanon, Indiana), put the Eagles in position to get onto the scoreboard in the third frame.

 

Johnson scored the first run on an RBI-groundout by junior first baseman Marleah Fossett (Brownsburg, Indiana), while senior catcher Haley Hodges’ (Portage, Indiana) sacrifice fly to right field in the next at-bat pushed Reese across the plate for the game-tying tally.

 

Freshman pitcher Jennifer Leonhardt (Louisville, Kentucky), meanwhile, settled down to retire 10 of the final 11 batters she faced to put the Eagles in position to win the contest. Leonhardt (28-2) earned the victory after giving up two runs off seven hits in seven innings of work. She walked just one batter and had five strikeouts in the win.

 

Game two of the best-of-three series has been moved to a 2 p.m. start Friday at the USI Softball Field. The “if necessary” game three is slated for Friday at 4:30 p.m.

 

Southern Indiana 3, Wayne State (MI) 2 (May 18, 2017 at Evansville, IN)

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Wayne State (MI)…. 200 000 0 -  2  7  2      (40-15)

Southern Indiana…. 002 000 1 -  3  5  2      (45-12)

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Pitchers: Wayne State (MI) – Butler,Lyndsay and Turkalj,Brooke. Southern Indiana –

Leonhardt, Jennifer and Hodges, Haley.

Win-Leonhardt, Jennifer(28-2)  Loss-Butler,Lyndsay(24-10)  T-1:35  A-217

Weather: Partly cloudy, warm

Game: 57-NCAA

VANDERBURGH COUNTY FELONY CHARGES

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

Larry W. Watson II: Theft (Level 6 Felony), Possession of a controlled substance (Class A misdemeanor)

Julius Alfonzo Cabell: Domestic battery resulting in bodily injury to a pregnant woman (Level 5 Felony), Domestic battery (Level 5 Felony), Invasion of privacy (Class A misdemeanor), Battery resulting in bodily injury (Class A misdemeanor), Criminal mischief (Class B misdemeanor)

Robert Anthony Kerney: Attempt Theft (Level 6 Felony), Attempt Theft (Level 6 Felony)

Kyle Lee McReynolds: Criminal confinement (Level 6 Felony), Domestic battery (Class A misdemeanor), Resisting law enforcement (Class A misdemeanor), Theft (Class A misdemeanor)

Marquis Dawn Fletcher: Operating a motor vehicle after forfeiture of license for life (Level 5 Felony)

Kylie Elizabeth Dossett: Domestic battery (Level 6 Felony), Neglect of a dependent (Level 6 Felony), Invasion of privacy (Class A misdemeanor), Criminal mischief (Class B misdemeanor)

Niki Reanae Fallowfield: Residential entry (Level 6 Felony), Theft (Level 6 Felony), Criminal mischief (Class B misdemeanor)

Jesse Lee Hunter: Domestic battery (Level 6 Felony), Criminal mischief (Class B misdemeanor)