|
|||||||
|
|||||||
|
|||||||
|
|||||||
|
|||||||
|
|||||||
|
|||||||
|
|||||||
|
|||||||
|
|||||||
|
|||||||
|
|||||||
|
|||||||
|
|||||||
|
|||||||
|
|||||||
|
|||||||
|
|||||||
|
|||||||
|
|||||||
|
|||||||
|
|||||||
|
|||||||
|
|||||||
|
|||||||
|
|||||||
|
|||||||
|
|||||||
|
|||||||
|
|||||||
|
|||||||
|
|||||||
|
|||||||
|
|||||||
|
|||||||
|
|||||||
|
|||||||
|
|||||||
HOT JOBS IN EVANSVILLE
Troopers Investigate Fatal Mowing Incident on I-64
This afternoon at approximately 5:04, Indiana State Police, Posey County Sheriff’s Department and Poseyville Fire Department responded to an incident on I-64 near the 14 mile-marker that claimed the life of a 31-year-old Hispanic male from Mexico.
Preliminary investigation revealed the operator was driving a John Deere mowing tractor westbound in the median near the 14 mile-marker when he failed to see a large sink hole. When the tractor struck the sink hole the operator was thrown from the tractor and onto the ground. The tractor continued and the bush hog that was being pulled behind the tractor ran over the operator. The tractor crossed the eastbound lanes and came to a final rest in a wooded area south of I-64. The operator of the tractor was pronounced dead at the scene by the Posey County Coroner’s Office.
I-64 eastbound was closed for approximately two hours while troopers investigated this crash.
The identity of the operator will be released when his family in Mexico has been notified.
Investigating Officer: Trooper Dustan Rubenacker, Indiana State Police
Assisting Officers: Sgt. Russ Werkmeister, Trooper Josh Greer, Trooper Ross Rafferty and Trooper Brandon Deig
Assisting Agency: Posey County Sheriff’s Department and Posey County Coroner’s Office
City Is Responsible For Thunderbolts Financial Losses For The 2016-2017 Hockey Season?
CHANNEL 44 NEWS: EPD Rolls Out New Golf Cart
EPD Rolls Out New Golf Cart
Evansville Police Department are revealing its newest cruiser; a golf-cart fully decked out with all the bells and whistles. EPD Officials say an area business donated the tricked out cart to the department. EPD has only had it for a couple days…
COA Affirms 65-year Sentence For Man Who Killed Officer
COA Affirms 65-year Sentence For Man Who Killed Officer
Olivia Covington for www.theindianalawyer.com
The Dearborn Circuit Court did not err in imposing a 65-year sentence on a man convicted of felony murder after he shot and killed a deputy sheriff in the line of duty, the Indiana Court of Appeals held Tuesday.
In Tommy R. Pruitt v. State of Indiana, 15A05-1606-CR-1235, Morgan County Deputy Sheriff Daniel Starnes noticed Tommy Pruitt driving erratically, so he initiated a traffic stop and obtained Pruitt’s information. Starnes then learned about a recent robbery that suggested Pruitt might have been in possession of stolen weapons, and when Starnes approached Pruitt’s car the second time, Pruitt opened fire.
Starnes was shot five times and eventually died. Pruitt was charged and convicted of murder, attempted murder, possession of a handgun without a license, resisting law enforcement and four counts of receiving stolen property. After the jury recommended the death penalty, the Dearborn Circuit Court imposed a death penalty sentence for murder and sentenced Pruitt to an aggregate of 115 years for the remaining charges.
After moving through the state courts, Pruitt was granted a conditional writ of habeas corpus in the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals, which vacated the death penalty after finding Pruitt had demonstrated that he was intellectually disabled and, thus, constitutionally ineligible for the death penalty. The state was ordered to either initiate a new penalty-phase proceeding or release Pruitt, so the case was remanded to the trial court for resentencing on the murder conviction in April 2016.
Pruitt asked the trial court to consider and take judicial notice of the entire record, including the post-conviction proceedings, to find intellectual disability and mental illness as mitigating circumstances. The trial court reviewed the existing records from 2003 to 2016, and also considered the nature of Starnes’ murder, Pruitt’s criminal history and his post-sentence behavior as aggravating factors.
After giving “due consideration and weight†to Pruitt’s mental health, the Dearborn Superior Court resentenced Pruitt to the maximum enhanced term of 65 years for murder, with credit for time served, and ordered that sentence to be served consecutively with the 115-year sentence imposed for his previous convictions.
On appeal, Pruitt first argued because he committed his crime in June 2001, his enhanced sentence violated the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision in Blakely v. Washington, 542 U.S. 296 (2004) because “his Sixth Amendment right to have the facts supporting the enhancement of his sentence tried to a jury was violated.â€
But Judge James Kirsch, writing for a unanimous panel of the Indiana Court of Appeals, said Tuesday Pruitt had forfeited his Blakely argument because he did not raise such an argument during his resentencing hearings. Further, the trial court would have imposed the same 65-year-sentence had it considered only the aggravators that comply with Blakely, Kirsch said, so the court did not err in its sentencing.
The appellate panel also rejected Pruitt’s argument that his sentence for murder was inappropriate, finding the trial court “properly determined that Pruitt deliberately elected to shoot Deputy Starnes … and was fully award of the wrongfulness of his conduct.â€
Eagles Secure Seven All-Region Awards During Outdoor Season
Five University of Southern Indiana Track & Field student-athletes were honored with U.S. Track & Field and Cross Country Coaches’ Association All-Midwest Region accolades Tuesday afternoon.
The Screaming Eagles collected a total of seven USTFCCCA All-Region awards, with junior Bastian Grau (Höchstadt, Germany) earning accolades in three separate events. Grau outdoor All-Region honors during the outdoor season included the 800-meters, 1,500-meters, and 5,000-meters.
With two NCAA Division II automatic qualifying times, Grau owns the fourth fastest time in the 1,500-meters and the fifth fastest in the 5,000-meters in the NCAA II this season. He also has a provisional time in the 800-meters, ranking 38th.
Two Eagles earned All-Region nods in the 3,000-meter steeplechase with some of the top times in the country. Senior Chase Broughton (Marengo, Indiana), a 2016 All-American in the event, ranks 12th in the country, while junior James Cecil (Owensboro, Kentucky) ranks 21st. Both runners have earned NCAA II provisional times on the season. It is the first track & field All-Region award for Cecil.
Senior Noah Lutz (Evansville, Indiana) is the final men’s athlete to pick up All-Region honors with the 14th-fastest time in the NCAA II this season in the 10,000-meters. It is the first All-Region award for Lutz during either track & field season.
Junior Jessica Lincoln (Palatine, Indiana) was the lone women’s athlete to pick-up an All-Region nod, doing so for the first time in here track & field career. Lincoln owns the 19th-fastest time in the NCAA II this season with her finish in the 10,000-meters at the MT. Sac Relays.
The Eagles still await their NCAA Division II Outdoor Championships fate with the final declarations yet to be announced. Those that advance to the Championships will compete May 25-27 in Bradenton, Florida.