Evansville Brewhouse to host The Alhambra Theatre Film Festival “Brew & Viewâ€
The Alhambra Theatre Film Festival will be hosting a “Brew & View†event on March 22nd to kick off the third annual Alhambra Theatre Film Festival. The Alhambra Theatre Film Festival is raising awareness and funds for the restoration of The Alhambra Theatre while celebrating quality independent films from across the United States and the world.
The Alhambra Theatre Film Festival continues to grow and has become an opportunity for independent filmmakers to share their work and their vision with our audience. Through this commitment, we have screened award-winning films from around the world, presenting films that have won at major film festivals like Sundance Film Festival, Slamdance Film Festival, BAFTA, and Oscar nominated films. The Alhambra Theatre Film Festival is proud to provide Evansville and the region with the highest quality film festival.
Come out for a sneak peak of the upcoming films at this year’s Alhambra Theatre Film Festival by joining us at the Evansville Brewhouse. We will also be announcing this year’s award nominee. Winners will be announced during the awards ceremony on Saturday April 8th.
The Brew & View event is Wednesday, March 22,2017 6pm to 9pm at the Evansville Brewhouse located at 56 Adams Avenue, Evansville, Indiana. Must be 21 to enter. The event is free and open to the public. Advance ticket sales for The Alhambra Theatre Film Festival will be on sale as well as The Alhambra Theatre Film Festival memberships and merchandise.
For more information, please visit our website at : www.thealhambratheatrefilmfestival.com Contact Festival Director Malcolm Cook at 812-455-5408 or malcolmcook1@gmail.com
Mission Statement: The Alhambra Theatre Film Festival’s mission is to bring awareness and financial support for the restoration of the historic Alhambra Theatre by bringing the world of film together. We showcase films that might not otherwise have an opportunity to screen in the Evansville, Indiana market. We encourage film makers and students by presenting workshops, screening, and other opportunities to meet and network with others in the industry and to bring an audience to those films.
IU Continues Great Performance at NCAA Championships
The No. 15-ranked Indiana University women’s swimming and diving team had a tremendous Thursday night at the 2017 NCAA Championships at the IU Natatorium in Indianapolis, Ind.
Through two days, the Hoosiers sit in 10th place overall with a total of 61 points.
Kennedy Goss had an unbelievable performance in the 500 freestyle, placing third in the Championship Final with a personal-best time of 4:36.13. Goss’ time is a personal-best that ranks as the fifth-fastest mark in school history, ranking her as the third-best performer in the event at IU.
The Toronto, Ontario native closed the race with an incredible final 50 free split of 26.26 that was second only to NCAA champion Katie Ledecky’s 26.03.
Goss’ third-place finish is the best for any Hoosier in the 500 free at a NCAA Championships since Jennifer Hooker placed second in 1980. Her effort also marked the 10th-straight year that at least one IU swimmer has scored in the event at the NCAA Championships.
Goss’ third-place finish is all the more impressive considering the junior was seeded No. 38 in the 500 free entering the day.
In the 400 medley relay, the Hoosier team of Goss, Lilly King, Gia Dalesandro and Holly Spears had a great showing, placing fifth with a school record time of 3:28.58. The fifth place finish for IU is the best in program history in the event at the NCAA Championships.
Continuing her great night, Goss led IU off with a personal-best 100 backstroke split of 52.77, ranking her as the ninth-best performer in Indiana history.
King followed with the best-ever 100 breast split in NCAA history in a 400 medley relay, touching the wall in time of 56.17.
Dalesandro followed with great 100 fly time of 50.99, giving the Hoosiers the lead after three legs. Spears had a great time of 48.65 in her 100 free, helping IU take fifth place.
In the Consolation Final of the 1-meter dive, Jessica Parratto placed second to finish 10th overall with a total of 311.10 to earn Honorable Mention All-America honors. The finish was a career-best for the redshirt-sophomore in the 1-meter at NCAA’s. Parratto has now earned three All-America accolades for the Hoosiers.
Also for Indiana, Goss’ two All-America honors push her career total to an impressive 10, while King earned her fifth All-America accolade. Dalesandro earned her seventh, while both Spears and Ali Rocket, who swam in the prelims on the 400 medley relay, earned their first.
The Indiana University women’s swimming and diving team will continue competition at the 2017 NCAA Championships on Friday morning at 10:00 a.m. ET with the prelims of the 400 IM, 100 butterfly, 200 freestyle, 100 breaststroke, 100 backstroke, 200 medley relay and 3-meter dive.
Be sure to keep up with all the latest news on the Indiana men’s and women’s swimming and diving teams on social media – Twitter, Facebook and Instagram.
500 Freestyle
- Kennedy Goss – 4:36.13 (Personal-Best, All-America Honors)
400 Medley Relay
- Kennedy Goss, Lilly King, Gia Dalesandro, Holly Spears 3:28.59 – (School Record, All-America Honors; Ali Rockett also earns All-America honors for swimming in prelims)
1-Meter Dive
- Jessica Parratto – 311.10 (Honorable Mention All-America Honors)
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Basketball Fans Beware
INDIANAPOLIS – Indiana Attorney General Curtis Hill today is warning Hoosiers – and especially those visiting Indianapolis this weekend for the first and second rounds of the NCAA men’s basketball tournament – to be careful when buying game tickets on the secondary market. The Consumer Protection Division (CPD) of the Office of the Indiana Attorney General is advising those attending this weekend’s games to be cautious when engaging in person-to-person buying. This method can put you at risk of purchasing fake tickets and losing your hard-earned money. Person-to-person buying is almost always a cash transaction following a verbal, agreed-upon price between the seller and the buyer, leaving the buyer without documentation that the tickets are authentic and without means to retrieve their money in the event the tickets are fake, lost or stolen. Always try to buy directly from the venue first, and only then proceed to the secondary seller websites. Many unscrupulous secondary market ticket websites sell tickets available through the venue’s ticket office but at a substantially higher markup. If you must buy tickets from the secondary market, the CPD advises those who plan to attend the games to look through safer options such as trusted resale websites where a debit or credit card is required. If you plan on engaging in person-to-person buying, take the necessary steps to ensure your security from a fraudulent transaction. ·         Double check to make sure the tickets have the correct date and time ·         If you know someone who has already purchased tickets through primary markets, look at their ticket(s) and compare the appearance with that of the ticket(s) you are attempting to buy when engaging in a person-to-person transaction ·         If possible, get the name and phone number of the person selling you the tickets, and call the number before exchanging any money to ensure it is actually the seller’s number. Encountering a seller who refuses to share such information, or who gives you a fake phone number, is usually a tell-tale sign you might be getting scammed. ·         If you’re engaging in person-to-person buying, don’t purchase the first ticket(s) you come across. Inquire with several different sellers. This will allow you to see a common resemblance in the look of the ticket, ensuring they are authentic. ·         Most importantly, if you can’t purchase tickets from the venue first, try to buy from secondary resale markets such as trusted websites before engaging in person-to-person buying. |
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Pence wants Supreme Court to dismiss public records case after release of white paper
Olivia Covington for www.theindianalawyer.com
After a “white paper†detailing a legal challenge to a federal immigration order was leaked as part of a journalistic investigation, attorneys for former Gov. Mike Pence are petitioning the Indiana Supreme Court to dismiss a court case seeking to uncover the contents of the white paper, saying the case is now moot.
On Wednesday, the online publication Rewire released the white paper that was circulated to the chiefs of staff of various Republican governors, including then-Gov. Pence, in 2014. Then Texas Gov.-elect Greg Abbott’s chief of staff, Daniel Hodge, sent out the legal document to encourage other states to join a Texas lawsuit challenging a federal executive order on immigration.
After former Indiana Attorney General Greg Zoeller declined to add the state to the federal suit, Pence hired Barnes & Thornburg LLP as outside counsel, prompting Indianapolis labor attorney Bill Groth to file a request under the Access to Public Records Act seeking various emails and documents related to the state’s decision to join the legal challenge. When Pence responded, several documents were redacted while others, including the white paper, were withheld entirely.
The Indiana Court of Appeals rejected Pence’s argument that his so-called “executive immunity†prohibited judicial review of his response to public records requests, but upheld his decision to withhold the white paper under the common interest doctrine, saying its contents represented two litigants seeking third-party legal advice.
Groth had already petitioned the Indiana Supreme Court to grant transfer in the case when Rewire released the white paper Wednesday. In a Notice Regarding Change in Circumstances filed late Wednesday evening, Pence’s Barnes & Thornburg attorneys claimed that because the white paper, the only document at issue in the Supreme Court transfer petition, had been released, the case should be dismissed as moot.
But Groth, through his attorney, Greg Bowes, immediately filed a response alleging that there were other issues still to be resolved that are keeping his case alive.
Specifically, Bowes pointed to the recent revelations that Pence used a private AOL email account to discuss state business while he was governor. Official emails from that account were released earlier this month, but in an earlier motion to remand, Groth and Bowes expressed concern that the contents of those previously undisclosed email could have been subject to his APRA request had they been sent through the governor’s official account.
“Because of this possibility, the controversy has not ended,†Bowes wrote in his response.
Additionally, under Indiana Code 5-14-3-9(i), if the requesting party prevails, “a court shall award reasonable attorney’s fees, courts costs, and other reasonable expenses of litigation.†The governor’s “improper refusal†to release the white paper led to Bowes spending dozens of hours working on Groth’s case, which, thus, keeps the attorney fees issue alive, Bowes said. As long as that issue is alive, the case cannot be moot, he said.
Further, the white paper contains phrases such as, “We would welcome your state’s participation in this effort†and “Please consider whether joining in this legal action is the appropriate course for your State†– phrases that, according to Bowes, undercut the theory that the white paper was protected under the common interest doctrine. Rather than acting as a request for legal advice, Bowes said those statements prove that the white paper was a solicitation from the Texas governor’s office, which would not be protected from public view.
Bowes also urged the court to accept transfer to address other legal theories raised by the Court of Appeals, including the “deliberative materials†exception to APRA requests.
“In 2016, the federal government received 788,769 public record requests,†Bowes wrote Wednesday. “It is likely that Indiana agencies will also have thousands of public records requests in the future, and this Court would serve those agencies well by issuing its first opinion on the parameters of the deliberative materials exception.â€
Finally, even if the release of the white paper did resolve the case, Bowes urged the court to take up the issue as a matter of “great public interest†under the exception laid out in In Re Lawrence, 579 N.E.2d 32, 37 (Ind. 1991).
COA Rejects Ineffective Counsel Claim Based On Judge’s Sentencing Practices
COA Rejects Ineffective Counsel Claim Based On Judge’s Sentencing Practices
Olivia Covington for www.theindianalawyer.com
A man who pleaded guilty to child molesting cannot prove that he received ineffective assistance of trial counsel, the Indiana Court of Appeals held Wednesday, but the post-conviction court must still address the issue of whether his plea was voluntary.
In Gary Hanks v. State of Indiana, 10A01-1604-PC-690, Gary Hanks was charged with one count of Class A felony child molesting and four counts of Class C felony child molesting. Christopher Sturgeon, a Clark County public defender appointed to represent Hanks, advised his client of a plea offer from the state that would allow Hanks to plead guilty to only the Class A felony and be sentenced to 30 years.
Hanks rejected the plea deal, so that state made an “open offer†that would have allowed him to plead guilty to the Class A felony charge without the benefit of a sentencing recommendation from the state. Hanks testified that he and Sturgeon did not discuss how the judge might sentence him on an open plea, but Hanks still chose to accept the offer.
Clark Circuit Judge Daniel F. Donahue, who admitted that he had a reputation for taking “a hard stance in sentencing defendants in sexual offender sentencing proceedings,†especially in open pleas, sentenced Hanks to the statutory maximum of 50 years in the Department of Correction. Hanks then filed for post-conviction relief, which was denied one year ago.
On appeal, Hanks argued that Sturgeon provided ineffective assistance of counsel by failing to advise him of Donahue’s sentencing practices, but for which he would not have rejected the original 30-year offer. Further, Hanks argued that because he did not know of Donahue’s sentencing practices, his guilty was plea was not knowing, intelligent or voluntary.
Judge Paul Mathias, writing for the Indiana Court of Appeals, said in a Wednesday opinion that, “If information about a local judge’s sentencing practices is a necessary component of receiving effective assistance from local counsel in a particular case, the accused’s lack of such information satisfied the performance prong (of an ineffective counsel claim) without regard for why counsel failed to supply it.â€
However, Mathias also wrote that “there is no evidence in the record that reasonable professional competence in Clark County in 2001 required knowledge of Judge Donahue’s sentencing practices in sex offender cases.†Thus, Hanks has failed to carry his burden to show that Sturgeon’s failure to advise him of Donahue’s practices fell short of the standard of reasonable competence, the appellate judge said.
The appellate panel did, however, remand Hanks’ knowing, intelligent and voluntary plea claim to the post-conviction court after determining that the issue was not resolved.