The suspect in the April 15th double shooting outside of the Pony Gentlemen’s Club is in police custody.
Clarence Boris Miller, 33, was arrested by members of the U.S. Marshal’s office in Chicago Illinois late this afternoon.
Miller is suspected of opening fire on a crowd of people outside of the club just after 3:00am. Two people were shot during the incident. One victim survived. The other victim, Aaron Tyler Jennings, died at the scene.
No other suspects are being sought at this time. However, the investigation is ongoing and police are still wanting to speak with anyone who may have witnessed the shooting.
Additional details surrounding the arrest, including his pending charges, will be provided during an EPD press conference on Wednesday morning. The time will be announced when it has been determined.
Breaking- Arrest made in April 15th shooting at the Pony Gentlemen’s Club
VANDERBURGH COUNTY FELONY CHARGES
 Evansville, IN – Below are the felony cases to be filed by the Vanderburgh County Prosecutor’s Office today.
Stanley Wendell Robinson Sr.: Intimidation (Level 6 Felony), Stalking (Level 6 Felony)
Austin Eric Nieton: Theft (Level 6 Felony), Unlawful possession of syringe (Level 6 Felony)
Angela Faye Skaggs: Unlawful possession of syringe (Level 6 Felony), Possession of a narcotic drug (Level 6 Felony)
IS IT TRUE APRIL 18, 2017
IS IT TRUE we are  told that many Westside Republicans and Independents are pleased to hear that Wadesville Republican Sen. Jim Tomes has a primary challenger for the 2018 election?  … the young,  well educated and personable Westside Republican Brady Hall plans to formally announce his candidacy for  State Senate District 49 seat on April 22?  …we predict that Senator Tomes is getting ready to experience the biggest political battle of his career?
Todays “READERS POLL” question is: Do you feel that City Council Finance Chairman Dan McGinn needs to  sit the record straight concerning the true financial status of the City?
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.
CHANNEL 44 NEWS: Time Running Out For Agreement Between Indiana Lawmakers
Time Running Out For Agreement Between Indiana Lawmakers
Friday is the deadline for lawmakers in Indiana to come up with an agreement on a road-funding plan. A conference committee has been going over the differences between what the House and Senate want the bill to call for. Lawmakers are needing…
Central High School to Host “Paul Gries Field†Dedication
Tuesday, April 18 at 3:45 pm
Central High School Baseball Field -Â 5400 N 1st Ave
Central High School, EVSC, and the EVSC Foundation will ​honor Coach Paul Gries (Central High School baseball coach,  ​(​1981-2001) with a special dedication ceremony to rename Central’s baseball field the “Paul Gries Field”.
Mayor Lloyd Winnecke will ​read ​a ​proclamation ​announcing April 18th as Paul Gries Day as well as special guest Andy Benes, 1985 Central High School graduate and former St. Louis Cardinals pitcher.
The Paul Gries Fund was established last April to improve and maintain the school’s baseball facility.
This dedication concludes the Paul Gries Campaign, but individuals can still honor Coach Gries with a donation. All donations go toward improving the baseball facility at Central. For more information or to make a gift, call 812-435-0913 or send an email to info@evscfoundation.org.
February 2017 Bar Exam Results Released
February 2017 Bar Exam Results Released
IL for www.theindianalawyer.com
A total of 126 people passed the Indiana Bar Exam given in February 2017. The Indiana Board of Law Examiners released the list of successful test takers Monday but did not provide additional information on the overall number of exam takers and the overall pass rate.
The list of those who passed can be found here.
For the most part, Indiana’s overall passage rate for the February exam had been roughly hovering between 67 percent and 70 percent since 2007. It dipped in 2014 to 61 percent then bottomed out at 55 percent in 2016.
Last week, the American Bar Association Journal reported that the February 2017 multistate bar exam results were the lowest since the test was first given in 1972. The average score was 134.1, down from last February’s average score of 135.
Among those who passed Indiana’s February 2017 were four members of the inaugural class at Indiana Tech Law School. This brings the school’s total to seven from last May’s graduating class who have passed the bar.
Indiana Tech Law School has announced it will be closing in June.
Zimmer, State Get Partial Judgments From Tax Court
Zimmer, State Get Partial Judgments From Tax Court
Olivia Covington for www.theindlianalawyer.com
The Indiana Tax Court has granted summary judgment to both the Indiana Department of Revenue and an in-state manufacturer, holding that the state’s use tax applies to some of the manufacturer’s products that are stored in Indiana, but not to those products used solely for out-of-state work.
In Zimmer, Inc. v. Indiana Department of State Revenue, 49T10-1507-TA-25, Zimmer, Inc., a Warsaw corporation that designs, manufactures and distributes medical products, marketed its products at dozens of out-of-state trade shows and conventions during the 2009, 2010 and 2011 tax years. In preparation for one of the largest conventions, Zimmer hired an Illinois-based exhibit house to annually design and manufacture a new exhibition booth, which incorporated some of the original, repaired, refurbished or modified components of previous exhibition booths.
Each year, Zimmer arranged for some components of its previous exhibition booth to be shipped to the Illinois exhibit house, while other components were kept in an Indiana warehouse. Then, the components would be shipped from the Illinois location and Indiana warehouse to be set up at the out-of-state convention site.
At the conclusion of a convention, all of the components would be returned to Zimmer’s Indiana warehouse for storage. However, any components that were found to have major damage were either shipped to Illinois for immediate repair or set aside in the warehouse for subsequent in-house repair or other modification.
After Zimmer filed a claim seeking a nearly $1.1 million refund in sales tax remitted on the purchase of items used to manufacture its products, the Indiana Department of State Revenue conducted an audit on Zimmer and determined that the company owed $523,890.93 in use tax on its exhibition booth components. The department granted Zimmer’s refund claim in part, offsetting the refunded amount by the use-tax liability.
After the department denied Zimmer’s protest of the use-tax determination, the company appealed to the Indiana Tax Court, and both parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment. Indiana Tax Court Judge Martha Blood Wentworth granted each of those motions in part on Thursday.
In its appellate argument, the department claimed that Zimmer’s in-state storage of the exhibition booth components subjected it to the use tax “because the type of storage excluded from use tax requires permanent use outside the state, not – as here – continuous revolutions between in-state storage and out-of-state use.â€
But Wentworth rejected that argument, writing that “Nowhere in Indiana Code section 6-2.5-3-1(b) is there an express temporal limitation on storage or a prohibition on returning previously stored property to Indiana for continued storage.†Instead, the judge said the statutory exclusion from the tax applies when property is stored in Indiana for subsequent use solely outside of the state, as is the case with Zimmer.
However, Wentworth agreed with the department that the repair of damaged components by an in-house carpenter at Zimmer’s warehouse constituted a taxable use because the designated evidence “does not establish that those repairs were necessary for storage to occur or that the exhibition booth components (or any others) deteriorated during storage.â€
Thus, the tax court granted summary judgment to Zimmer on the exhibition components that were stored in Indiana for solely out-of-state use, while granting summary judgment to the Department of Revenue on the components that were repaired in Indiana.