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IS IT TRUE MAY 8, 2017

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IS IT TRUE that the question about just what does it take for a hockey team to make money at the Ford Center while paying enough rent for the Ford Center to pay its bills?…the City County Observer has attempted to show how the Evansville Thunderbolts have lost on and off the ice while seemly bleeding the Ford Center dry with subsidies?…it is common knowledge that the Evansville Icemen lost on the order of $600,000 per year paying market rate rent ($10,000 for each home game) and drawing much larger crowds than the Evansville Thunderdolts?…it’s obvious that even with the Evansville Iceman paying market rent did not make the Ford Center break even?…it seems as though there is not much of a chance for success and ice hockey to coexist in Evansville?…we want to forewarn our readers that an editorial on what it will take to make hockey work is in the works?…someday this week this work will be published?

IS IT TRUE that the City is paying for half of the utilities costs at the FORD CENTER and VenueWork is paying the other half?  …one entity is paying for electric and the other is paying for gas?  …we have no idea who is paying for water?  …we are told that we will be shocked when we find out what the annual costs for utilities for FORD CENTER are?

IS IT TRUE that another retail chain is closing all of their stores?…this time it is long time sports retailer Gander Mountain that has elected to close all 150+ of its stores nationwide?…Gander Mountain joins Sports Authority in getting out of the brick and mortar retail distribution business?…Dicks has been struggling for a couple of years as well?…the only big box sports retailer that is not admitting to any problems is the Bass Pro Shops which cater to a demographic that is less prone to online purchasing?…two things that are wallowing in denial these days are mall owners and cities that depend on sales tax revenue for existence?  …we hope that someone will explain this to 1st Ward City Councilman Dan McGinn (R)?

IS IT TRUE that Evansville has showed up on some national weather maps this week among the parts of the country that have gotten over ten inches of rain in a week?…we all know what that means for the south side of Evansville in terms of raw sewage making its way into the streets and being discharged directly into the Ohio River?…it was pathetic to start learning about the level of neglect that has lead to an EPA mandate to spend a billion dollars to correct for an antiquated combined sewer system?…at that time many felt sorry for  the administration that had to deal with this legacy of neglect and the scourge of disease?…now that it is clear that the powers that be are only concerned about downtown fun and games projects while dedicated to kicking the can of neglect down the road, it has become a joke and a badge of shame?…at some point this $#|+ has got to be fixed?

IS IT TRUE Vanderburgh County Democratic Party Chairman Scott Dank’s requested that the CCO clarify that the Democratic State Party rules prohibit the stating of candidates?  …that Mr. Danks has not taken a position at this time whether he will  be endorsing candidates in the primaries?

IS IT TRUE we expect the At Large Councilwoman Michelle Mercer (R) to make it through the primary without a problem?  …Mercer re-election challenge start the day after the primary election is over with?  …so far Ms Mercer has done everything the Mayor wants?  …if she continues to be the Mayors “puppet” its going to be difficult for her to persuade the voters to re-elect her to a second term

 IS IT TRUE  Missy Mosby primary opponent is a life long democrat?  …he’s from a blue collar working class  background? …we are hearing that many individuals that served on campaign committees of her pasts opponents are supporting his campaign?  …we are hearing that he will be a fiscal watchdog and not a political lap dog for the Mayor?  …he ask us not expose his identify at this point until he complete a series of campaign strategy meetings?  …we agreed to honor his request?  …this is a developing story?

TODAYS “Readers Poll” question is: Do you feel that any member of the media should be allowed to ask any questions concerning city business during any official city council meeting

 

CHANNEL 44 NEWS:VCSO Welcomes 11 New Correctional Officers

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VCSO Welcomes 11 New Correctional Officers

Vanderburgh County Sheriff’s Office welcomes 11 new confinement officers. The group had to complete a 40-hour course to earn the title. The jail officers course is mandatory for all new hires in their first year. Confinement officers learned a…

City Council Meeting Information May 8, 2017

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I. INTRODUCTION
II. APPROVAL OF MEETING MEMORANDA
III. REPORTS AND COMMUNICATIONS
IV. SPECIAL ORDERS OF THE DAY
V. CONSENT AGENDA: FIRST READING OF ORDINANCES AND RESOLUTIONS

ORDINANCE F-2017-07

Sponsor(s): Discussion Led By: Notify:

ORDINANCE R-2017-12

Petitioner: Requested Change: Representative:

ORDINANCE R-2017-13

Petitioner:

Requested Change: Representative:

VI. COMMITTEE REPORTS

An Ordinance of the Common Council of the City of Evansville Authorizing Transfers of Appropriations, Additional Appropriations and Repeal and Re-Appropriation of Funds for Various City Funds McGinn
Finance Chair McGinn 5/22/2017
Russ Lloyd, Jr., City Controller

An Ordinance to Rezone Certain Real Estate in the City of Evansville, State of Indiana, More Commonly Known as 119 W. Franklin Street and 121 W. Franklin Street
Andrew & Lori Ricketts Owner: Andrew & Lori Ricketts R4 to C4 w/ UDC Ward: 3 Hargis
Andrew & Lori Ricketts

An Ordinance to Rezone Certain Real Estate in the City of Evansville, State of Indiana, More Commonly Known as 1021 E. Sycamore Street and 201, 205, 209, 211, 215, 217, 219, 221, 223, 301, 307, 309 and 315 S. New York Avenue

New Odyssey
Investments, LLC
R2 to C4 & M1
Mark S. Samila, Esq., Kahn, Deese, Donovan & Kahn, LLP

Owner: Ward:

New Odyssey Investments, LLC
4 Robinson

VII. REGULAR AGENDA: ORDINANCE F-2017-05

Sponsor(s): Discussion Led By: Notify:

ORDINANCE F-2017-06

Sponsor(s): Discussion Led By: Notify:

ORDINANCE R-2017-04

Petitioner: Requested Change: Representative:

ORDINANCE R-2017-05

Petitioner:

Requested Change: Representative:

ORDINANCE R-2017-06

Petitioner: Requested Change: Representative:

VIII. RESOLUTION DOCKET

Hirsch-Martin Development, LLC
1 McGinn

SECOND READING OF ORDINANCES AND RESOLUTIONS

An Ordinance of the Common Council of the City of Evansville Authorizing Transfers & Re-Appropriations Within the Department of Metropolitan Development
McGinn
Finance Chair McGinn 5/8/2017
Kelley Coures, DMD

An Ordinance of the Common Council of the City of Evansville Authorizing Re-Appropriations within the Department of Metropolitan Development
McGinn

Finance Chair McGinn 5/8/2017 Kelley Coures, DMD

An Ordinance to Rezone Certain Real Estate in the City of Evansville, State of Indiana, More Commonly Known as 525 S. Green River Road
Dennis W. Gensic Owner: GPM 517, LLC

C1 to C2 Ward: 3 Hargis Dennis W. Gensic

An Ordinance to Rezone Certain Real Estate in the City of Evansville, State of Indiana, More Commonly Known as a Portion of Parcel Known as 1501 N. Burkhardt Road

An Ordinance to Rezone Certain Real Estate in Vanderburgh County, State of Indiana, More Commonly Known as E. Virginia Street, 5401 E. Virginia Street, 5431 E. Virginia Street
Bulkley Investments, LLC Owner: Bulkley Investments, LLC C4 to M1 Ward: 1 McGinn

Bret Sermersheim, Morley & Associates

Costco Wholesale
Corporation, Bruce Coffey
C2 to C4
Theodore R. Johnson, TJ Design Strategies, Ltd.

Owner: Ward:

IX. MISCELLANEOUS BUSINESS

  1. THE NEXT MEETING of the Common Council will be Monday, May 22, 2017 at 5:30

    p.m.

  2. ADDITIONAL MISCELLANEOUS BUSINESS

X. COMMITTEEREPORTS

XI. ADJOURNMENT

Ivy Tech/Castle South Middle School Media Opportunity

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Ivy Tech Automotive Technology and Castle South Middle School students test electric go karts they are building for the Electric Karting World Finals

 

When: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 at 4:45 p.m.

 

Where: Castle South Middle School (back parking lot)

 

Background:  Ivy Tech Automotive Technology students and Castle South Middle School students have been collaborating to build electric go karts to participate in the Electric Karting World Finals. The competition is set to take place at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway May 16 – 17. Overall, twenty carts will compete.

 

On Wednesday, May 10, Ivy Tech Automotive Technology students and Castle South Middle School students will meet to test and tune their cart. The media is invited to come and see the hard work the students have put in as well get a sneak peek at the progress they have made on their kart.

 

Contact at the Event:  Chris Kaufman, Automotive Technology program chair.

Kiefer and Tornatta win State Awards

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May 4th at the Indiana Commercial Real Estate Conference, held at the Indiana Convention Center in Indianapolis, IN, two Hahn Kiefer Real Estate Brokers were recognized for their outstanding success in commercial real estate in 2016.

Joe Kiefer, Managing Broker for Hahn Kiefer Real Estate Services, was recognized as the top Retail Performer for 2016 in the State of Indiana.

 

 

 

 

 

Troy Tornatta was one of 3 people recognized in the Rookie of the Year category for commercial real estate transactions.  Troy joined Hahn Kiefer Real Estate Services in September, 2015.

 

 

 

 

 

FOTNOT: The sales and leasing transactions are tracked through the Indiana Commercial Real Estate Exchange.

 

Vanderburgh County Board of Commissioners Agenda

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AGENDA

Vanderburgh County

Board of Commissioners

May 9, 2017

3:00 pm, Room 301

  1. Call to Order
  2. Attendance
  3. Pledge of Allegiance
  4. Action Items
  5. Department Head Reports
  6. New Business
  7. Old Business
  8. Public Comment
  9. Consent Items
    1. Contracts, Agreements and Leases
      1. Burdette Park: Oswald Marketing Extension Agreement
    2. Approval of May 2, 2017 Meeting Minutes
    3. Employment Changes
    4. County Clerk: April 2017 Monthly Report
    5. County Engineering:
      1. Department Head Report
      2. Pay Request #23 University Parkway T.I.F account for the sum of $18,700.80
  10. Adjournment

A Man Convicted Of Murder 20 Years Ago Will Have A New Trial

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A Man Convicted Of Murder 20 Years Ago Will Have A New Trial

IL For www.theindianlawyer.com

A man convicted of murder more than 20 years ago will have a new trial after the Indiana Supreme Court held Friday that his trial counsel performed deficiently and his appeal was not barred by the doctrine of laches.

Benjamin Laughlin and Stephen Sites were driving around Anderson looking for crack cocaine one night in April 1995 when they approached three people in an alley who they believed to be cocaine dealers. The dealer got in the cab of the truck Laughlin and Sites were driving and pulled a gun, and when Laughlin tried to grab the gun it was discharged, striking Laughlin in the abdomen.

The dealer jumped out of the truck and ran away, and Laughlin eventually died from his injuries. Donnie Smith, one of the three people in the alley, testified that Trondo Humphrey had been carrying a gun that night, though Smith said he did not hear any shots or see Humphrey approach or enter the truck.

But Roosevelt Brooks, who Smith said was also in the alley, gave an unsworn written statement saying he heard a “noise” after Humphrey approached the truck, then said Humphrey confessed to shooting one of the men. However, at trial Brooks said he was not with Smith and Humphrey on the night of the shooting and repudiated his statement, which had been admitted to impeach the credibility of his courtroom version, saying it was fabricated due to police pressure.

Humphrey was convicted of murder in 1996 and was sentenced 60 years. He appealed, arguing the Madison Circuit Court had abused its discretion in admitting Brooks’ statement into evidence and had erred when it did not admonish the jury to consider the statement for impeachment purposes only. The Indiana Supreme Court initially affirmed his conviction in Humphrey v. State, 680 N.E.2d 836, 837-38 (Ind. 1997), holding that the statement was admissible for impeachment purposes only and noting that there were no claims of ineffective assistance of counsel raised in the appeal.

Then, 15 years later, Humphrey filed a petition for post-conviction relief, alleging his trial counsel had rendered ineffective assistance by failing to object to the admission of Brooks’ statement on hearsay grounds, failing to request the admonishment to the jury, failing to “object to and improperly endorsing the trial court’s erroneous instruction on prior inconsistence statements” and, finally, failing to offer an instruction that “reflected a correct statement of law.”

The state denied Humphrey’s claim and argued that they were barred by the doctrine of laches. The post-conviction court found that Humphrey’s claims were not barred but denied relief on the merits. The Indiana Court of Appeals affirmed the post-conviction court on the issue of laches but reversed on the substantive claims, holding that “Humphrey was prejudiced by counsel’s errors that allowed the jury to consider as substantive evidence the only evidence that identified Humphrey as the shooter.”

The Indiana Supreme Court on Friday remanded the case, Trondo L. Humphrey v. State of Indiana, 48S02-1609-PC-480, for a new trial, pointing out a variety of errors made by Humphrey’s counsel its opinion.

Justice Robert Rucker, writing the majority opinion, said Humphrey’s counsel only objected to Brooks’ statement on the basis of an improper foundation, not on hearsay. Had a hearsay objection been raised, the court would have been required to sustain it, Rucker said, so counsel’s failure to do so was a deficiency in his performance.

Similarly, Indiana precedent holds that “if a defendant believes there is a danger that a jury could use a statement as substantive evidence, then it is incumbent upon the defendant to request that the jury be admonished that the statement be used to judge the witness’s credibility only.” Because Humphrey’s counsel did not move for such an admonishment or limiting instructing, his performance was deficient, the high court found.

Further, the trial court’s jury instruction, which stated that jurors “may also consider the out-of-court statements as evidence…” was an incorrect statement of law to which Humphrey’s counsel should have objected. Given those deficient performances, Rucker wrote that Humphrey had satisfied the first prong of the two-part test in Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668 (1984).

Humphrey also satisfied the prejudice prong of the Strickland test, Rucker wrote, noting “there is simply no admissible evidence that Humphrey possessed a gun that evening, let alone that he shot Laughlin.”

Thus, the Supreme Court reversed the judgment of the post-conviction court, writing, “In viewing the evidence without the inadmissible hearsay statements, we believe there is a reasonable probability the result of Humphrey’s trial would have been different, namely Humphrey would not have been convicted of murder.”

In a concurring opinion joined by Justice Geoffrey Slaughter, Justice Mark Massa wrote that the remedy of a new trial was “regrettable and avoidable.” Further, Massa wrote the state failed to develop its laches arguments at the post-conviction court level, leaving those arguments unavailable on appeal and compelling the high court to affirm the determination that Humphrey’s petition was not barred by laches.

“But make no mistake, being compelled to act is a far cry from being satisfied with the outcome, particularly when the outcome – retrial of a convicted murderer two decades later – can subject the criminal justice system to the dismayed contempt of survivors and the public writ large,” he wrote.

Anthem asks Supreme Court to review blocked Cigna deal

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IL for www.theindianalawyer.com

Health insurer Anthem is not ready to give up its $48-billlion bid for rival Cigna and now hopes to find a favorable audience in the U.S. Supreme Court.

The Blue Cross-Blue Shield insurer is asking the court to review last week’s rejection by a federal appeals court.

That court upheld a federal judge’s ruling that said the deal would further reduce competition in an already concentrated insurance market. The ruling was made earlier this year after regulators sued last summer to block the deal.

Even Cigna Corp. wants this deal to go away. The insurer has sued Anthem and is seeking billions of dollars in damages.

But Indianapolis-based Anthem Inc. said Friday that it hopes “1960s-era merger precedents” that the courts relied upon for their decision can be updated to reflect “the modern understanding of economics and consumer benefit.”

Anthem announced its Cigna bid in 2015. It has touted the deal as a way to help the companies negotiate better prices with pharmaceutical companies, hospitals and doctor groups. The company also has said the acquisition would help cut expenses and add more customers, which allows insurers to spread out the cost of investing in technology to manage and improve care.

But critics that include doctor and consumer groups aren’t comfortable with giving an insurer the power and leverage that would come from a huge acquisition. They have argued that this combination will lead to fewer choices for insurance shoppers.

Industry experts have suggested any consumer impact from the deal would take years to materialize and could lead to savings in some areas but higher costs elsewhere.

Earlier this year, a federal judge blocked another big insurance deal, Aetna Inc.’s roughly $34 billion acquisition of Medicare Advantage coverage provider Humana Inc. Aetna then said it was abandoning its deal.

USI wins GLVC East with split

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The 20th-ranked University of Southern Indiana baseball team won the Great Lakes Valley Conference East Division title outright with a doubleheader split at Saint Joseph’s College on the final day of the regular season Sunday afternoon in Rensselaer, Indiana. The Screaming Eagles won the opener, 7-2, but dropped the nightcap, 4-3.

USI watched its record go to 32-17 overall and 22-6 in the GLVC, while Saint Joseph’s goes to 32-18, 14-14 GLVC.  The game two loss snapped USI’s eight-game winning streak, the second longest of the season.

The Eagles scored five times in the seventh and senior right-handed starter Kyle Griffin (Morganfield, Kentucky) struck out a season-high 12 batters as USI won the opener, 7-2. The game one victory also clinched the GLVC East Division crown for the second year in a row. The Eagles have clinched the division title during the final weekend of the season each of the last two years.

Griffin was dominating on the mound for the Eagles as he became USI’s third six-game winner of the season. The junior right-hander allowed two runs, both in the third inning, on four hits and three walks, while striking out the season-best 12 Pumas. The 12 strikeouts surpassed the 11 against the University of Illinois Springfield last month.

At the plate, USI scored one in the first and tied the game, 2-2, with a tally in the fifth before setting off the fireworks in the seventh. Junior first baseman Nathan Kuester (Rockport, Indiana) drove in the first run of the seventh inning rally and the eventual game-winner.

Kuester was followed in the seventh by an RBI-single by sophomore catcher Logan Brown (Mt. Vernon, Indiana), an RBI-fielder’s choice by junior centerfielder Buddy Johnson (Shelbyville, Kentucky), and a two-run double by senior designated hitter Jaylen Quarles (Indianapolis, Indiana). The Eagles first run of the game was driven in by junior rightfielder Nick Gobert (Jasper, Indiana) with a first inning single, while Kuester scored on a passed ball to tie the game, 2-2, in the fifth.

The Pumas turned the tables on the Eagles in the nightcap by winning on a walk-off sacrifice fly, 4-3. USI had a 3-0 lead after five-and-a-half innings before Saint Joseph’s, in its final regular season game, scored three in the sixth and one in the ninth for the win.

Senior right-hander Justin Watts (Bryan, Ohio) took the loss in relief. Watts (5-2) allowed the winning run in the ninth after Saint Joseph’s loaded the bases on two walks and an error before the game-winning sacrifice fly.

The first eight innings on the mound was manned by sophomore right-handed Austin Krizan (Mt. Vernon, Indiana) and senior right-hander Mike Ringer (Springfield, Illinois). Krizan allowed three runs on seven hits, striking out five, in six innings, while Ringer gave up a hit and a walk, striking out four, in two frames.

At the plate, the Eagles, who left seven runners on, were led by junior shortstop Sam Griggs (Evansville, Indiana), who had two hits and one of the three RBIs. Junior leftfielder Drake McNamara (Mt. Vernon, Indiana) and Kuester also had a run driven in during the nightcap.

USI advances to play in the GLVC Tournament at 9 p.m. Thursday at US Ballpark in Ozark, Missouri. The Eagles’ opponent will be the fourth-seed from the GLVC West Division. More information about the league tournament pairings will be released on Monday.