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Horses, Workers Arriving At Ellis Park Month Before Meet

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Horses, workers arriving at Ellis Park month before meet
‘Our enhanced purses have resonated with horsemen, and we expect to keep building on memorable 2016 season’ —  racing secretary Dan Bork

HENDERSON, Ky. (Thursday, June 1, 2017) — Horses — and those who care for them — are steadily arriving at Ellis Park, a month in advance of the thoroughbred track’s July 1-Labor Day meet. J.J. Gloria, Ellis’ stall superintendent, says 180 already are on the grounds with scores more expected well before the  deluge that hits right on top of the summer racing season.

Expected soon are at least 48 horses trained by Hall of Famer Steve Asmussen, whose division stabled at Ellis Park last year included 2017 Kentucky Derby runner-up Lookin At Lee. That colt, who won a maiden race and the $75,000 Ellis Park Juvenile at the track, also finished fourth in the Preakness Stakes and will contest the June 10 Belmont Stakes, the Triple Crown’s finale.

“We definitely have more horses than at the same time last year, and we’re getting a lot more inquiries from all over, really,” said Gloria, who has worked at Ellis off and on for 28 years. “I get new calls every day. The purse money is right now, so it’s worth it for them to come. And this is the best racetrack surface in the world. Go anywhere and show me a better one.”

Trainers who for the first time will either have their entire stable or a division based at Ellis include Brad Cox, Randy Morse, Ingrid Mason, Jose Castanon and Chris Davis.

“Our enhanced purses have resonated with horsemen, and we expect to keep building on the memorable 2016 season,” said racing secretary Dan Bork.

That also included maiden wins by the Kenny McPeek-trained Kentucky Oaks runner-up Daddys Lil Darling, now in England for Friday’s Group 1 Investec Oaks at legendary Epsom Downs, and the Dale Romans-trained Not This Time, who fell a head shy of winning the Breeders’ Cup Juvenile.

Some stall space remains available for stabling, Bork said. Here’s the Ellis Park condition book.

Ron Moquett was one of the first out-of-town horsemen to ship into Ellis, with about 35 horses. Among the 2-year-olds Moquett had training last summer at Ellis at some stage were future stakes-winner Uncontested and stakes-placed Petrov.

“The track is very kind here,” said Eddie Ruiz, a Moquett assistant who has trained on and off on his own. “Ron has confidence in the racetrack to bring those kinds of horses here. I watched Lookin At Lee run here, and (in 2015) Runhappy, who went on to be champion sprinter. You have good horses come here.”

Increased play on Historical Horse Racing terminals, the innovative parimutuel technology that provides a different gambling experience, and a $1.65 million transfer in purses and Kentucky Thoroughbred Development Fund purse supplements from Kentucky Downs will boost Ellis’ purses to record levels in the top-tier races. That includes maiden races carrying total purses of $40,000 for registered Kentucky-bred horses, which form the majority of those running.

“Obviously we need the stalls, but we’re going to support the racing,” said Cox, Ellis’ 2015 training champion whose horses currently rank No. 9 in North America in purse earnings ($3.4 million) and No. 10 in wins (79) in 2017. The purses are good, and we’ve had luck down there in some of the stakes the past couple of years. It seems like there are some quality baby races there. Dale has done a great job of preparing babies there and moving forward with them the second half of the year. You don’t have to go to Saratoga.”

John Hancock, a third-generation thoroughbred trainer from Henderson, predicted last year that Ellis Park would have its “meet of all meets.”

“And it was,” he said. “As good as last summer was, fans are in for a treat this year. There’s no doubt in my mind, with the caliber of horses and people coming, this will be even better.”

Hancock said one component is that Ellis’ local horsemen “have really stepped up” and that showed with horses who wintered at Henderson’s Riverside Downs training center winning seven races during Keeneland’s spring meet.

Hancock won five of those races, including with 2-year-old fillies Amberspatriot and Waki Patriot, who went on to be second (by a neck) and a troubled fourth, respectively, against boys in Churchill Downs’ Kentucky Juvenile. Now he’s looking at New York’s Astoria Stakes for them, while saying he has some other babies that might be as good or better and who likely will surface at Ellis.

Horses at Ellis Park mean an array of workers on the backstretch — people who will live and spend money in the area. Cox estimates his 30 horses to be stabled at the track will involve “15 or 16” employees. Hancock says he has 10 employees, not counting his heavily-involved family members, taking care of 30 horses. (Such jobs are lined up through individual stables and not the racetrack.)

“The horse industry here puts a lot of money in area farmers’ pockets,” Hancock said. “Feed companies, hay and straw. I bet that four months out of the year, Ellis Park is the biggest employer within 50-60 miles, with everybody who works in the industry, frontside and backside.”

More women being hired as general counsel

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Il for www.theindinalawyer.com

A new report is hailing the increase in the number of women hired for general counsel jobs in Fortune 500 companies, a trend which is expected to continue.

The report by Russell Reynolds Associates found that the rate of hiring female candidates for top legal jobs at Fortune 500 companies jumped nearly 50 percent from 2012 to 2016. Twenty-four percent of the open general counsel positions at these businesses were filled with women in 2012 and by 2016, the portion had jumped to 35 percent.

Companies wanting general counsels who have previous experience working in-house is fueling the increase in female hiring. Since 2014, four out of five of all external candidates hired by Fortune 500 have worked in corporate legal departments.

In the past, companies made at least a third of external general counsel appointments from the top partner ranks at law firms. But women are still struggling to obtain equity partnerships or become firm mangers and practice group leaders, and the number of Fortune 500 general counsels hired from law firms has slid almost 50 percent since 2014 as companies look for candidates who can step into the leadership role of the legal department and immediately begin tackling the business issues.

This shift has increased the number of women in the general counsel candidate pool. Within the last three years, 91 percent of women hired externally had in-house experience and 61 percent had been a general counsel.

The report expects the trend to continue. With more women gaining in-house experience and competing for general counsel positions, their hiring prospects should continue to improve.

ABA President Addresses ISBA Solo, Small Firm Conference

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ABA President Addresses ISBA Solo, Small Firm Conference

Olivia Covington for www.theindianalawyer.com

The legal industry is evolving quickly, with technological advancements and societal shifts making the traditional paper-and-pencil model of practicing law nearly obsolete. But for solo and small firm attorneys, the administrative burdens of simply running their firms can significantly eat into the time they would otherwise devote to developing new and more efficient methods of doing their work.

American Bar Association President Linda Klein, addressing Indiana solo and small firm attorneys Friday morning in French Lick, said she understands the impact of that administrative burden. She spent her year as ABA president-elect meeting with lawyers across the country, listening to their concerns and soliciting their ideas for ways the ABA could help improve their practices.

Throughout her travels, Klein said the administrative burden of running a firm was the concern that was most troubling to solo and small firm practitioners. Whether it is devoting time during the work day to handling client billing needs or something as simple as answering the phones because they can’t afford a receptionist, the ABA president said solo and small firms consistently told her they needed tools to make their practices more efficient.

Once she officially became president, Klein told attendees of the Indiana State Bar Solo and Small Firm Conference that she, together with ABA Deputy Executive Director Jim Dimos, took those concerns and turned them into a new tool solo and small firm attorneys, and all ABA members, could use to help alleviate their administrative burdens – ABA Blueprint.

Launched in late 2016, Blueprint is designed to be a one-stop shop where attorneys can access various legal tech tools to make the practice of law more efficient. For example, a trip to the ABA Blueprint site could yield a trove of software related to digital credit card processing, marketing and e-discovery, Klein told Friday morning’s audience. There’s even a “Ruby the Receptionist” tool that can facilitate live call answering for small firms that can’t afford to pay an employee to field client calls, she said.

“I think it’s turning out to be the tool that we envisioned it would be, and people seem to be excited about having the hard work done for them,” Klein told Indiana Lawyer after her presentation.

Aside from the tools Blueprint can offer, Klein also encouraged the solo and small firm lawyers to take advantage of other ABA offerings, such as the association’s cybersecurity handbook that provides guidance for avoiding and responding to data breaches and similar cyberattacks. Adam Gwaltney, an agent with conference sponsor Ritman & Associates, told attendees Friday morning the FBI reports roughly 4,000 cyberattacks daily, but estimates the number of actual attacks is likely three times higher.

But more important than the assistance the ABA offers to solo and small firm attorneys, Klein stressed the importance of attorneys from all firms stepping up to help the ABA advocate for the most basic judicial right – equal access to justice.

The ABA president raised concerns about access to justice for veterans – many of whom face homelessness due to legal concerns – as well as concerns about planned cuts to federal legal services funding. Wearing a pin on her lapel that advocated for legal services dollars, Klein urged the attorneys to contact their representatives and tell them not to support cuts to legal services programs.

“There’s never a wrong time to defend the rule of law, but this is a particularly important time, and with that the ABA needs your membership support now more than ever,” Klein told the audience. “This is a defining moment for our country.”

Finally, during his Friday morning presentation, ISBA President Mitch Heppenheimer cautioned attendees to be aware of the effect online services such as Avvo and LegalZoom are having on the practice of law. Attorneys who turn a blind eye to the changes those services are making will get left behind, Heppenheimer said, so attorneys must embrace the changes and adapt accordingly.

But Klein told IL she is still optimistic about the future of the legal profession. Though online services may be more convenient than meeting an attorney in his or her office, she said clients will always need a certain level of human interaction to help them through their legal issues.

“Clients hire lawyers because of their ability to solve problems,” Klein said. “As long as lawyers remain dedicated on a very personal level to helping their clients solve problems, lawyers will always be relevant.”

This Week at USI

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USI, SWI-AHEC partner with EVSC for Public Health Camp

The Evansville Vanderburgh School Corporation’s Southern Indiana Career and Technical Center (SICTC), in collaboration with Southwest Indiana Area Health Education Center (SWI-AHEC), is hosting a one-week summer public health camp, Go Viral: Be a Disease Detective. The camp is for students currently in the seventh and eighth grades in Gibson, Posey, Spencer, Vanderburgh and Warrick counties who are interested in exploring epidemiology and careers in public health. Read More

 

Exhibit open through Tuesday, July 21

New Harmony Gallery hosts new exhibition Mercatus

The New Harmony Gallery of Contemporary Art is hosting the exhibition, Mercatus, Saturday, June 3 through Tuesday, July 21. The exhibition is free and open to the public. Read More

 

1:30 p.m. Wednesday, June 7

Public forum on 2017-19 tuition set for June 7

The University of Southern Indiana will conduct a public forum to solicit public comment on proposed tuition and mandatory fees for the 2017-2018 and 2018-2019 academic years. The public hearing will take place at 1:30 p.m. Wednesday, June 7 in the Griffin Center on the USI campus. Read More

 

6 p.m. Saturday, June 10

Third-annual USI Party on the Quad to feature live music, entertainment

The University of Southern Indiana Alumni Association will host the third annual USI Party on The Quad from 6 to 10 p.m. Saturday, June 10 on the University’s Quad, located in the center of campus. The event is open to USI alumni, employees, retirees, friends and USI students age 21 and older. Tickets are $10, which includes food, live music, activities and a commemorative beverage glass. Read More

 

Throughout the Summer:

Registration open for USI summer camps

Registration is now open for a variety of camps offered this summer through the University of Southern Indiana. The camps each have a different focus, and range from engineering and other STEM-related themes to sports and general enrichment. Here is a sampling of the offerings available for summer 2017. Visit USI.edu/summer for the full listing of camps. Read More

 

Adopt A Pet

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Sassy Sue is anything but sassy – she’s wonderfully sweet! She is a 10-year-old female brown tabby. Because of that number, she’s considered a “senior” ready to “graduate” into her new home! Sassy is very affectionate and loves people when they visit her in the Cageless Cat Lounge. She’s fixed and ready to go home TODAY for $30. Contact Vanderburgh Humane at (812) 426-2563 or adoptions@vhslifesaver.org for details!

VANDERBURGH COUNTY FELONY CHARGES

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

Jordan Clark Burris: Attempt Fraud on a financial institution (Level 5 Felony)

Richard Allan Wroten: Dealing in a synthetic drug or synthetic drug lookalike substance (Level 6 Felony)

Cory Antwan Copeland: Criminal confinement (Level 3 Felony), Domestic battery resulting in serious bodily injury (Level 5 Felony), Domestic battery (Level 5 Felony)

Shane Michael James: Theft (Level 6 Felony)

Timothy Alan Schwake: Battery resulting in moderate bodily injury (Level 6 Felony)

The Vanderburgh Humane Society Is Celebrating 60 Years Of Serving The Pets & People

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The Vanderburgh Humane Society is celebrating 60 years of serving the pets & people of our community with an Ice Cream Social, sponsored by Nomad Technology Group and Pet Supplies Plus! Saturday, June 24th, 2017 from 11:00-4:00, the public can enjoy free ice cream, hot dogs, kids’ activities, and behind-the-scenes shelter tours on the VHS campus.

The entire event is FREE to the public! The event will be held indoor/outdoor, rain or shine, and has public restrooms and wheelchair accessibility in most areas. Kids and leashed pets are welcome!

This summer happens to also be the VHS Low-Cost Spay & Neuter Clinic’s 10th birthday, and Cardio for Canines’ FIRST birthday! The public will not want to miss this party.

The VHS is the Tri-State’s largest animal welfare agency, serving more than 10,000 animals in three states every single year. But there are still people who don’t know about their lifesaving programs. Who have never even been to their “new” facility, built in 2004. There are many who don’t know about the services they offer, or what they do every day. This is the perfect chance to get to know the VHS! Ask questions, and learn about the past 60 years AND what the future holds.

Door prizes will be awarded. “2K Fetch” tickets are available for purchase for $10 each. Every ticket corresponds to one of 250 numbered tennis balls, one of which will be “fetched” by a shelter dog during the event. Purchase as many tickets as you’d like for your chance to win $500!

All Departments including Adoptions and the Happy Tails Resale Shop will be open!

Corporate sponsorships are still available for a limited time! Email a.coburn@vhslifesaver.org or call (812) 426-2563 x 218 for information.

 

 

 

Olivia Covington for www.theindianalawyer.com

A former attorney in the Indiana Attorney General’s Office has been relieved of a $15,000 judgment against him for his role in the raid of an alleged puppy mill, the most recent decision in a long-running case stemming from the state’s seizure of roughly 240 dogs.

After the Indiana Department of Revenue and Office of the Indiana Attorney General received information about the alleged puppy mill operating on a dairy farm without collecting sales tax or adequately reporting sales-related income, state officers conducted a raid on the Harrison County farm. Roughly 240 dogs, including several family pets, were seized in a “dramatically staged” raid in June 2009. The dogs were seized after the owners of the farm and dog breeding business, Virginia and Kristen Garwood, said they could not or would not pay the more than $142,000 they owed in assessed liabilities.

Former Indiana Attorney General Greg Zoeller and then-Chief Counsel for Tax Litigation Andrew Swain celebrated the raid and the so-called “Al Capone” approach to taking down illegal puppy mill operations. Specifically, the state officers had issued jeopardy assessments, or “an immediate tax warrant that turns automatically into a tax judgment which is immediately collectible,” prior to the raid.

Both Garwood women pleaded guilty to Class D felony evasion of income tax, while Virginia Garwood also pleaded guilty to Class D felony failure to remit or collect sales tax. Both women had their sentences suspended to probation.

Meanwhile, prior to their guilty pleas, the Garwoods sought judicial review of the jeopardy assessments in the Indiana Tax Court, which held the jeopardy assessments were “void as a matter of law.” Virginia Garwood then sought a tax refund of more than $100,000, and the Tax Court held in January 2015 the DOR had improperly denied that refund on the value of the dogs. However, the Indiana Supreme Court vacated that ruling one year later.

Further, in the instant case of Virginia Garwood and Kristen Garwood v. State of Indiana, et al., 31A01-1603-CT-679, the Garwoods filed a complaint pleading seven claims against 56 defendants. They alleged state-law torts of conversion, defamation and intentional infliction of emotional distress, as well as federal claims of due process violations, unlawful search and seizure, selective enforcement under the equal protection clause and a conspiracy to violate their civil rights.

The defendants included Zoeller, Swain and state and other officials, but only the claim against Swain was successful. A jury entered a $15,000 compensatory verdict against him, and the court awarded the Garwoods’ counsel a total of $89,500. The Garwoods appealed for a new trial against the same defendants, except Swain, while the state cross-appealed, arguing the Harrison Circuit Court had erred in failing to grant Swain either absolute or qualified immunity.

After clarifying the Indiana Court of Appeals, and not the Indiana Tax Court, had jurisdiction to hear the appeal because “neither the jurisdictional value of finality nor that of validity would be served by returning this case to the tax court to decide the constitutional and tort-law consequences of its earlier tax-law holding,” Judge Paul Mathias wrote in a 59-page opinion Monday that the $15,000 judgment against Swain was not supported by sufficient evidence.

The Garwoods failed to show a procedural due process violation for which Swain could have been held personally liable, because the state’s jeopardy assessment scheme has been held constitutional and because the Garwoods received a post-deprivation hearing in the Indiana Tax Court. Further, the Garwoods confused a state law violation with a due process violation when they claimed the tax’s court ruling made it as if the jeopardy assessments “literally never happened,” he wrote.

Additionally, Mathias wrote “The Garwoods’ substantive due process claim fails because Swain’s conduct was rationally related to a legitimate government interest and did not shock the conscience.” Further, the court rejected the Garwoods’ equal protection claim, finding that because they did not identify favorable comparators, the court “cannot review whether ‘there was no rational basis for difference in treatment.’”

Thus, Swain cannot be held personally liable in the case, Mathias said, which means the Garwoods are not a prevailing party, and their lawyers are not entitled to fees. The appellate court, therefore, vacated the award granting their attorneys nearly $90,000 in fees.

Finally, the appellate panel affirmed the decision of the Harrison Circuit Court in all other respects, finding the trial court did not abuse its discretion in relation to charging information, jury instructions, the admission of a court transcript or its decision to decline to give preclusive effect to the tax court’s decision to void the jeopardy assessments.

“READERS FORUM” JUNE 5, 2017

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Whats on your mind today?

Todays “READERS POLL” question is: Would you support the Vanderburgh County School Board divesting its interest in Bosse Field to the City of Evansville?

We urge you to take time and click the section we have reserved for the daily recaps of the activities of our local Law Enforcement professionals. This section is located on the upper right side of our publication.

If you would like to advertise or submit and article in the CCO please contact us City-County Observer@live.com

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Justices Weigh Restitution Order Linked To Car Theft

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Justices Weigh Restitution Order Linked To Car Theft

Olivia Covington for www.theindianalawyer.com

The Indiana Supreme Court will decide if the state properly assessed restitution against a woman convicted of auto theft after hearing oral arguments Thursday morning that suggested there was no evidence directly linking her to some of the damage to the vehicle.

In Justine Archer v. State of Indiana, 49S04-1705-CR-00288, Justine Archer was found driving Robin Boyer’s stolen vehicle, which was located with fresh red paint on the front of the vehicle, on the VIN inside the vehicle and on a section of the front window covering the VIN. Archer agreed to plead guilty to auto theft and pay restitution that, if paid in full, would result in alternative misdemeanor sentencing.

Further, in the agreement, Archer waived her right to appeal her sentence. However, the amount of restitution Archer would be required to pay was left blank on her plea agreement, which public defender Victoria Bailey said gave her the ability to appeal the $5,240.32 she was eventually ordered to pay.

The total amount of restitution included repairs required for the damage cause by the red spray paint, but Bailey argued the cost of that damage should not have been assessed against Archer because the state failed to prove she committed the act of painting the car. Archer was not charged with criminal mischief, Bailey said, but instead pleaded guilty to unauthorized control over the vehicle, a charge that does not include the crime of painting the car.

The Court of Appeals reached a similar conclusion in a February memorandum decision, which reversed the restitution order and remanded the case for a hearing on the actual loss Boyer suffered. A remand requiring the state to provide more evidence connecting Archer to the spray painting is all she is seeking on appeal, Bailey said.

Justice Mark Massa noted the case seemed to turn on the interpretation of Indiana Code section 35-50-5-3(a), which holds restitution may be imposed “as a result of the crime.” According to Deputy Attorney General Justin Roebel, a “result” can include intended and unintended consequences, as well as actions used to facilitate the crime. In this case, that would mean the act of spray painting Boyer’s vehicle could be tied to Archer.

Chief Justice Loretta Rush noted much of the confusion in the case could have been resolved had the definition of “full restitution” been quantified in the plea agreement, but Roebel said Archer herself had asked the court to leave the restitution line blank while the amount of damage to the car was being assessed so that the court could accept her plea agreement immediately.

But Roebel also conceded that if the parties had clearly agreed the blank space on the plea agreement was a “blank check,” rather than just an empty line, much of the confusion would have been alleviated. Faced with further questioning about the idea of a blank check from Justice Geoffrey Slaughter, Roebel said if the agreement had included language clearly indicating Archer would have to pay an amount later decided by the parties, much of the confusion regarding what restitution she had to pay could have been avoided.

As the situation stands now, Bailey said the state has not offered enough evidence directly linking Archer to the spray paint, which she said means Archer cannot be charged with restitution for that damage. Any evidence the state does have could be reviewed on the remand Archer is requesting, Bailey said.

The full oral arguments can be watched here.