MARION, Ill. – University of Southern Indiana junior centerfielder Terrick Thompson-Allen (Sioux, Iowa) hit a three-run blast and junior right-hander Gavin Seebold (Jeffersonville, Indiana) threw eight strong innings to lead the Screaming Eagles to an 11-2 win over University of Tennessee at Martin in the second round of the OVC Baseball Championship Wednesday afternoon at Mtn Dew Park. The Eagles are 26-30 overall, while the Skyhawks finish their year, 21-35.
The Eagles advance to play top-seeded University of Arkansas at Little Rock Thursday at 11 a.m. Little Rock, which is 32-22 overall, 19-8 in the OVC, leads the all-time series with USI, 5-0, after sweeping a series early this month.
Thursday’s action in the OVC Baseball Championship will begin the double-elimination portion of the tournament that runs through Saturday.
USI kicked off the scoring in the opening frame when junior shortstop Caleb Niehaus (Newburgh, Indiana) singled up the middle to score junior third baseman Ricardo Van Grieken (Venezuela) for a 1-0 lead. The Skyhawks bounced back to tie the score, 1-1, with a tally in the top of the fourth.
Thompson-Allen, who was two-for-four with a team-high four RBIs, put the Eagles back into command with a three-run blast to right field for a 4-1 advantage. UT Martin closed the gap in the top of the seventh, 4-2, with a home run of its own.
The Eagles put the game away with a seven-run frame in the bottom of the seventh. USI scored seven times on seven hits and a UT Martin error to lead 11-2. USI junior catcher Logan Mock (Livermore, California) highlighted the frame with a two-double to finish the scoring.
On the mound, Seebold was dominating through a season-high eight innings. The junior right-hander allowed two runs on seven hits and a walk, while striking out three.
Sophomore left-hander Trevor Geddes (Prospect, Kentucky) finished the game for the Eagles, throwing a scoreless ninth, allowing a walk and striking out one.
USI open post-season with 11-2 win Eagles advance to play top-seeded Little Rock
Smith great as Otters fall in middle game
WASHINGTON, PA – The Evansville Otters fell in the middle game of the series Wednesday to the Washington Wild Things 2-1 at Wild Things Park.
Scoring was hard to come by. The Otters (4-8) scored first for the second time in the series, but gave up the lead to the Wild Things (7-3) and could not recover.
In the top of the third inning, Patrick Lee launched his third home run of the year over the left-center wall, the deepest part of the yard. The no-doubt home run gave the Otters a 1-0 lead.
Washington answered in the bottom of the inning. On a one-out walk, a wild pitch sent the runner from first to third as Justin Felix could not locate the baseball. Later in the inning, a second wild pitch plated a run to even the score.
The Wild Things took the lead in the fourth on an RBI single and their pitching guided them through the rest of the game.
In the sixth, eighth and ninth innings, Evansville had two runners on base in each frame but could not capitalize, accounting for six of the seven men left on base. The final runner was Anothony Calarko who led off the second inning with a double, but the next three batters struck out to end the inning.
Lee and Calarco led the bats with two hits. The Otters outhit the Wild Things 9-4.
Zach Smith (0-2) was terrific on the mound. He took the hard-luck loss after throwing in 6.2 innings allowing both runs on just four hits with seven strikeouts and five walks. Despite the free passes, he rolled two double plays to help himself out.
Jon Beymer did not allow a baserunner in the 1.1 innings he saw out of the bullpen.
Evansville will finalize their three-game series against Washington tomorrow with a 6:05 PM CT first pitch.
The Robocall Reckoner: Attorney General Todd Rokita continues relentless takedown of illegal scam callers
Attorney General Todd Rokita and his team continue to rack up tens of millions of dollars in penalties from illegal robocalls, amassing court wins and settlements that stretch far beyond Indiana state lines.
Just last week, Rokita’s office led 49 bipartisan attorneys general from the Anti-Robocall Multistate Litigation Task Force against Avid Telecom, a company which sent 24 billion problematic calls during a 4-year period. Avid Telecom even continued transmitting robocalls despite hundreds of warnings that illegal phone calls were being transmitted across their networks – a blatant disregard for telecom privacy that is common throughout the illegal industry.
After successful arguments from Rokita’s office, the Arizona District Court ruled against Avid Telecom’s motion to dismiss, setting up Indiana’s Data Privacy & ID Theft team to hold the company, owner Michael D. Lansky, and vice president Stacey S. Reeves, accountable in the courtroom.
But beating robocalls in court – or sometimes even locating them – is the result of innovation and dedication within the Indiana Attorney General’s office.
In the years leading up to Rokita’s tenure as attorney general, Consumer Reports and trade magazines described the billions of robocalls hitting Indiana as “an epidemic…no phone is safe.”
Rokita’s anti-robocall attorneys pursued defendants who were responsible for hitting Hoosiers with more than 25 million scam calls in less than one year, taking advantage of everything from auto insurance claims to DirectTV payments. Defendants, like John Caldwell Spiller II, the owner of Texas-based Rising Eagle Capital Group LLC and JSquared Telecom LLC, spoofed phone numbers and bypassed both federal and Indiana “Do Not Call” lists to target their victims.
Rokita and his office’s Data Privacy and Identity Theft team declared war on robocalls in 2021,filing a first-of-its-kind lawsuit against Startel Communication LLC, a now-banned gateway operation that allowed robocallers from India, the Philippines and Singapore to freely harass Hoosier phone lines. That same year, Rokita dismantled the massive Associated Community Services (ACS) telefunding operation, which swindled $110 million from 67 million consumers nationwide who thought they were donating to charities.
Today, robocall tracking sites like Robokiller have removed Indiana entirely from their “top scammer target states,” revealing a reduction of tens of millions of scam calls since 2020.
“Everyone knows robocalls are a huge nuisance, but they pose dangers much worse than merely disturbing our peace,” Attorney General Rokita said. “Quite often, these robocalls are part of criminal schemes aimed at stealing Hoosiers’ identity and taking our hard-earned money. These annoying and illegal calls are the work of professional scammers looking to prey on unsuspecting victims. That’s why we have fought robocalls so doggedly since my first day in office, issuing around $392 million in fines and settlements from robocalling operations.
In August of 2022, Attorney General Rokita announced that his team was co-leading (with North Carolina, and Ohio) the Anti-Robocall Litigation Task Force, a 51-member collective focused on actively investigating and pursuing enforcement actions against various entities in the robocall ecosystem. Attorney General Rokita has earned national praise from telecom outlets over the years for the innovative ways in which his team has investigated and prosecuted wrongdoers – and their ability to work in lockstep with attorneys general offices across the country.
Some of these robocalls are amorphous and slippery figures that claim to have all the answers for unsuspecting U.S. victims of all ages, regarding Medicare rewards, Social SecurityAdministration information, auto warranty “updates,” or even posing as Amazon delivery personnel.
Many robocalling operations move frequently from state to state or even nation to nation, dissolving and then reappearing under new names. That makes pursuing individual robocallers a daunting, uphill task.
In response to their changing tactics, Rokita’s anti-robocall attorneys led the innovative approach of going after the telecom gatekeepers: Voice-Over-Internet-Protocol (VoIP) providers. The move allowed Indiana to curb millions of calls and block out foreign scammers who abuse the American phone system. In another novel approach, Rokita’s anti-robocall attorneys also targeted another key ally of robocall
s – people like Michael T. Smith and Scott Shapiro – operators of the physical call centers that profit from these robocalls.
RUNDOWN BULLET POINTS:
- State of Indiana, et al. v. John Spiller II, et al.
- John Spiller: $122,339,320, suspended to $50,000. Injunctive terms to curb robocalling and telemarketing.
- Jakob Mears: $122,339,320, suspended to $10,000. Injunctive terms to curb robocalling and telemarketing.
- Scott Shapiro: $ 73,076,930, suspended to $250,000. Injunctive terms to curb robocalling and telemarketing.
- Michael T. Smith and Health Advisors of America: $ 73,076,930, suspended to $250,000. Injunctive terms to curb robocalling and telemarketing.
- State of Indiana v. Startel Communication LLC, et al.
- Startel and Wanda Hall: $1,338,100, suspended to $5,000, and total ban from industry.
- Pirates: $150,000, suspended to $50,000 and injunctive terms.
- VoIP Essential: $150,000, suspended to $25,000 and injunctive terms.
- State of Indiana v. Eric Simkin, et al.: $2,500 settlement and injunctive terms.
- State of Indiana v. Greg Sheppard, et al.: $30,000 settlement and injunctive terms
- Other actions:
- State of Indiana, v. One Eye LLC: Successful Civil Investigative Demand enforcement, with penalties.
- State of Indiana v. MV Realty LLC, et al.: Lawsuit
This past January, Rokita’s office successfully led 45 attorneys general in a comment to the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), ensuring that a new FCC rule would not impact the states’ litigation into VoIP providers. Litigation against those that help and assist robocalls is important, as Rokita’s office has shown. Rokita’s office was able to secure an industry-wide ban against Startel Communication, and other injunctive terms against providers like VoIP Essential and Piratel, and callers like Eric Simkin and Greg Sheppard.
Through bans and injunctive action, Rokita’s team has protected Hoosiers while winning millions in suspended settlements that ensure compliance and justice moving forward.
“Winning the war on robocalls requires constantly staying on offense and tracking the latest technologies the scammers are using to carry out their schemes,” Attorney General Rokita said in March 2023, following a string of large settlements and trial victories against multistate robocall operations. “We have pledged to do that since we first took office, and we continue to make good on that promise.”
“If you aid and abet lawbreakers in their commission of criminal acts, then you had best expect to be held accountable for your role in those misdeeds,” Attorney General Rokita said this week, four years into his anti-scam caller crusade. “We have sent that message loud and clear to the culprits paving the way for illegal robocalls, and we’re going to keep going after them tooth and nail.”
THE FUTURE OF THE EVANSVILLE RIVERFRONT
THE FUTURE OF THE EVANSVILLE RIVERFRONT
Second In A Series by Johnny Kincaid
MAY 23, 2024
E-REP has created a 655-page document outlining an ambitious multi-decade plan for Newburgh, Mt. Vernon, and Evansville. This series will convey an overview of the project and what it means for our community’s future.
Under the plan, the Evansville riverfront, from the Evansville Museum to the LST, would undergo a major redesign. The goal is to attract new residents to live downtown with an active, vibrant waterfront featuring outdoor activities, shopping, and dining options.
The walk along the river will provide breathtaking views of the Ohio River from the elevated canopy walk, access for kayaks and jet skis, a riverfront playground, sports fields, and more.
Some familiar sites will remain but may be relocated. The Four Freedoms Monument would be moved two blocks to the intersection of Riverside and Main, and the Rail Road museum will also be moved.
Traffic patterns would change, and Riverside Drive would be reduced from four lanes to two lanes with parking on each side of the street.
Two residential developments are planned on the riverfront, and about a dozen additional buildings are planned along Court and Walnut Streets.
The plan allows for a thirty-year implementation, divided into short-, medium-, and long-term accomplishments. In the first five years, we might see changes to traffic on Riverside Drive and work to begin transforming Dress Plaza into a riverfront park. Over time, there would be a series of upgrades and improvements along the riverfront.
The best way that we can explain the full scope of the project on the Evansville riverfront is to show you. In an upcoming “This Week in Evansville” podcast, we’ll take you on a walk along Riverside to point out what stays, what goes, and what gets moved. That episode will be posted on the City-County Observer.
What will it all cost? Estimates from people who have examined the plan place the final cost of this project at about $600 million. In a future installment, we’ll examine where the money will come from.
Hopson To Serve As Interim Vice President For Student Affairs
Dr. Pamela Hopson, Executive Director of the Multicultural Center (MCC) at the University of Southern Indiana, has accepted the position of Interim Vice President for Student Affairs, effective July 10.
Hopson joined the University in 1979, working in the Office of Student Financial Assistance. In 1994, when the MCC was established, she was selected as its director. In 2018, she was promoted to Executive Director of the MCC. Under her leadership, the MCC has enhanced the personal and academic success of students.
The following campus entities report to the Vice President for Student Affairs: Center for Campus Life; Counseling and Psychological Services; Dean of Students Office; Housing and Residence Life; Multicultural Center; Pathways to USI; Religious Life; Recreation, Fitness and Wellness; Justice, Equity, Diversity and Inclusion; and the University Health Center.
Hopson’s interim appointment follows Dr. Khalilah Doss, who has served in the position since August 2019 and has accepted a new position at Middle Tennessee State University. A national search for the Vice President for Student Affairs will begin in the fall.
USI President Dr. Ronald S. Rochon Leaving For California State University, Fullerton
USI President Dr. Ronald S. Rochon Leaving For California State University, Fullerton
MAY 23, 2024
Dear USI Community,
Today marks a moment of transition for the University of Southern Indiana and for me. I wanted to be among the first to let you know of a press release issued this morning by the California State University System Board of Trustees, indicating my acceptance of the presidency at California State University, Fullerton beginning July 22, 2024.
In discussions with the Chair of the USI Board of Trustees, Christine Keck, she expressed her congratulations on my appointment, her appreciation for our collective work in serving the University and underscored the Board’s commitment to the continuity of leadership and stability of USI in the future. The Board will conduct a public meeting to appoint an interim president before my departure in July. I have every confidence this person will be an excellent choice for the institution as the Board seeks a permanent fifth president of this great University.
It has been among the greatest honors of my life to serve as your Provost and President over the past 14 years. USI is uniquely a special place with wonderful and special people that I will carry with me every day going forward. Thank you for allowing me to respectfully serve this great community together with you. I will forever be a Screaming Eagle and wish continued success for each of you.
Peace and blessings always,
Ronald S. Rochon, PhD
USI President
FOOTNOTE: The following message was sent to the USI community on Wednesday, May 22.
All 92 Indiana Counties Opt In For Second Year Of Public Health Initiative
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Memorial Day Adoption Specials & 5 Day Donation Match Drive:
Newburgh, Indiana – Warrick Humane Society is having a Memorial Day Adoption Special and 5 Day Donation Match Drive. From May 22nd-May 26th a generous Sponsor will Match ALL Donations up to $5,000 for the New WHS Building Hope Shelter Project!
Event Highlights:
● Donation Matching up to $5,000: Donate $50 or more and stop by the shelter for a Building Hope T-Shirt
- Special Sponsorship Levels: Names of Donor’s will be permanently displayed on a Commemorative Plaque in our New Shelter!
Sponsorship Levels: Paw Partner: $150
Animal Advocate: $300
Rescue RockStar: $500
● Adoption Specials: 50% Off adoption fees for all Military Families (with ID) and Spin-the-Wheel Adoption Specials for everyone else!
In order to adopt, please fill out an adoption application at: https://warrickhumanesociety.org/adoption/
You can also come visit our location during our open hours which are 12-7 Wednesday-Thursday and 12-4 Friday-Sunday.
For more details about available animals, please visit the Warrick Humane Society Facebook page.
About Warrick Humane Society: Warrick Humane Society, a no-kill shelter located in Newburgh, Indiana. It was founded in 1983 by a handful of dedicated volunteers who rescued lost, injured and neglected animals. Since WHS opened their building in 1997 and began actively working with Animal Control agencies and other rescue organizations, WHS has saved thousands of animals and placed them in loving homes. Warrick Humane Society is a 501(c)(3) no-kill rescue dedicated to improving companion animals’ lives. WHS does not receive any funding from taxes or any national organizations. WHS is funded entirely by individual and corporate donations, bequests, grants and fundraising events. Because all animals adopted by WHS are spayed/neutered, vaccinated, treated for parasites and microchipped as well as receiving any other special care they may need, finding enough funding is always a challenge. -END-