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Eagles break 100-point plateau, win 108-94

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University of Southern Indiana Men’s Basketball broke the 100-point plateau for the first time in 2016-17 and defeated Florida Southern College, 108-94, in the opening night of the Small College Basketball Hall of Fame Classic Friday at the Ford Center. USI sees its record go to 3-0 overall, while Florida Southern goes to 1-3.

An even contest through the first seven minutes before a 12-3 USI run gave the Screaming Eagles control of the first half, 24-15, with 10:13 left until halftime. Florida Southern would rally to cut the USI margin to four points four times before the Eagles scored the final eight points of the opening 20 minutes to lead by 12 at the intermission, 50-38.

Senior guard Jeril Taylor (Louisville, Kentucky) led the Eagles’ offensive attack during the first half, scoring 20 points. He was six-of-10 from the field, a blistering four-of-six from long range, and a perfect four-of-four from the charity stripe.

The Eagles continued their run into the early minutes of second half, finishing the 25-7 run with a 23-point, 65-42 lead. The Moccasins chipped away at the Eagles’ advantage, cutting the margin to 10 points, 98-88, but that would be as close as they would come before the 108-94 final.

Taylor added to his first half total and finished with a game-high 30 points. He was eight-of-16 from the field, four-of-eight from long range, and 10-of-10 from the stripe to post his third 30-point game as an Eagle.

Junior forward Julius Rajala (Finland) and sophomore guard Alex Stein (Evansville, Indiana) followed Taylor in double-figures with 23 points and 17 points, respectively.

As a team, USI shot 49.3 percent from the field (33-67), 47.1 percent from beyond the arc (8-17), and 77.3 percent from the stripe (34-44), while outrebounding Florida Southern, 47-38. The Eagles also had control of the paint, outscoring the Moccasins, 40-26.

USI completes action in the SCB Hall of Fame Classic Saturday at 8:30 p.m. when the play long-time rival Kentucky Wesleyan College. The Panthers saw their record go to 2-1 after falling Lincoln Memorial University, 88-72, in Friday’s second game.

KWC leads the all-time series with USI, 49-40, but the Eagles have won the last four meetings and five of the last eight. The last meetings were in 2013-14 when USI swept KWC, winning at the Sportscenter, 70-61, and at the PAC, 80-68.

In the first SCB Hall of Fame Classic game on Friday, Bellarmine defeated third-ranked University of Alabama-Huntsville, 81-68.

Live coverage of the tournament’s final day can be found on GoUSIEagles.com and ESPN3.

ESPN3 is ESPN’s live multiscreen sports network, a destination that delivers thousands of exclusive sports events annually. It is accessible on computers, smartphones, tablets and connected devices through WatchESPN and the ESPN app. The network is currently available nationwide at no additional cost to fans who receive their high-speed Internet connection or video subscription from an affiliated service provider. It is also available at no cost to U.S. college students and U.S.-based military personnel via computers, smartphones and tablets connected to on-campus educational and on-base military broadband and Wi-Fi networks.

 

 

“READERS FORUM” NOVEMBER 19, 2017

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WHATS ON YOUR MIND TODAY?

Todays “READERS POLL” question is: Do you feel that yesterdays Zoning Board of Appeals meeting was opened, fair and objective?

Please take time and read our newest feature articles entitled “IU WOMEN’S-MENS SWIM AND DIVING TEAMS”.

Also take time to read “BIRTHDAYS, HOT JOBS” and “LOCAL SPORTS” posted in our sections.

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City County Observer has been serving our community for 15 years.

Copyright 2015 City County Observer. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistribute.

CHANNEL 44 NEWS: Jack Henry Gates Laundry Celebrates First Anniversary

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 It’s a special day for a local non-profit in Evansville. Jack Henry Gates Laundry is celebrating its first anniversary. This is a place where people can do their laundry for free with special coins. It’s located on East Columbia Street. To thank the community, the organization handed out 200 turkeys on a first-come, first-served basis. They also grilled hot dogs along with chips and drinks.

It’s a special day for a local non-profit in Evansville. Jack Henry Gates Laundry is celebrating its first anniversary. This is a place where people can do their laundry for free with special coins. It’s located on East Columbia Street. To thank the community, the organization handed out 200 turkeys on a first-come, first-served basis. They also grilled hot dogs along with chips and drinks.

BREAKING NEWS FROM CHANNEL 44: ISP Concludes Investigation Into 4 Suspended EPD Officers

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ISP Concludes Investigation Into 4 Suspended EPD Officers

 Indiana State Police say they have concluded their investigation into four officers, accused of using excessive force during an arrest in late October.

ISP was looking to see if criminal charges should be filed against those Evansville Police officers.

The officers arrested Matt Healy October 29th.

They filed documents saying Healy fought with them during his arrest, but the body camera footage shows that was not the case.

Officers Mark Decamps, Marcus Craig, and Nick Henderson could be fired. Sergeant Kyle Kassel could be demoted.

Those four officers are suspended until Thanksgiving, but they appealed their suspensions earlier this week at the Police Merit Commission Meeting.

The chief will decide if they come back to work November 25th or be suspended with pay.

December 2nd, Indiana State Police officials will meet with Vanderburgh County Prosecutors to discuss the findings of the criminal investigation.

Notre Dame Police Department Exempt From The Access to Public Records Act

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Notre Dame Police Department Exempt From The Access to Public Records Act

Dave Stafford for www.theindianalawyer.com

The Indiana Supreme Court left no doubt that it considered the Notre Dame Police Department exempt from the Access to Public Records Act when it affirmed dismissal of ESPN’s lawsuit seeking records of the department’s interactions with 275 student athletes.

But a bill signed into law this year dealing with access to police body cameras and recordings could change that. House Enrolled Act 1019, enshrined as Public Law 58, amended a section of APRA to specifically define private university police departments as public agencies — something the justices ruled they are not. The language is found at I.C. 5-14-3(q)(11).

Hoosier State Press Association Executive Director Steve Key, who filed an amicus brief aligned with ESPN in this case, said the situation sets up a public policy issue for the coming session of the General Assembly.

“It’s murky now, and that could be an arguable point” in favor of requiring private university police departments to comply with public records laws, Key said.

Adding to the murkiness, Gov. Mike Pence, who’s now vice president-elect, in March vetoed a bill that would have exempted private universities from the Access to Public Records Act. “Limiting access to police records in a situation where private university police departments perform a government function is a disservice to the public and an unnecessary barrier to transparency,” he said at the time.

Nevertheless, the Indiana Supreme Court unanimously ruled Wednesday that Notre Dame Police Department was neither a public agency nor a law enforcement agency for purposes of APRA.

Indiana University Maurer School of Law professor Seth Lahn authored an amicus brief in support of Notre Dame for the Independent Colleges of Indiana. He agreed there might be a policy debate going forward based on the change in law that took effect July 1. But he said the court wisely ruled that Notre Dame not be subjected to public records disclosure retroactively.

“I think the court took a very straightforward approach” on a classic case of statutory construction, he said.

“I think you can understand why it would be a concern that all of a sudden that rule would be changed,” Lahn said. The Supreme Court decision “is really ensuring these rules were not changed after the fact and with risk to all the thousands and thousands of students that have gone to these colleges after the passage of APRA.”

Justice Mark Massa stressed that Notre Dame Police exist not as a government entity, but as an organization created by the university’s board of trustees, even though they have powers to arrest, detain, investigate crimes, and recommend prosecution, among others.

Notre Dame Police, Massa wrote for the court in ESPN and Paula Lavigne v. University of Notre Dame Police Department, 71S05-1606-MI-359, are “not exercising the power of the State; rather, the trustees are exercising power granted to it by the State to appoint police officers to protect and oversee their campus.” He noted the NDPD also serves functions such as enforcing the student code, escorting students late at night and acting as student caretakers.

Public university police departments are subject to APRA, but the justices’ ruling makes clear the exemption for those serving private schools.

“Private colleges and universities have not set up systems in anticipation of having everything done by their police departments subject to inspection” as a result of a public records request, Lahn said. He noted private colleges with police units are required to report some crime data under the Cleary Act, though they are not required to provide detailed reports as government police agencies must.

Notre Dame prevailed in a case in which Indiana Attorney General Greg Zoeller also advocated in favor of ESPN’s position. He argued that it’s the exercise of state power that should subject these institutions to disclosure. He said the power granted to police is at the heart of the public trust and requires transparency.

“We are extremely disappointed by the ruling and what it represents for public transparency,” David R. Scott, senior director of ESPN Communications, said in a statement.

But it’s unclear whether lawmakers will consider the issue in a public-policy sense. Lahn noted the bill Pence vetoed that would have exempted private colleges and universities had wide support among lawmakers.

Ohio and Texas are among states that in recent years have passed laws or ruled in court cases that private university police are subject to open records laws because they exercise the state’s law-enforcement powers. Massa, though, rebuffed ESPN’s argument that Indiana’s Supreme Court should rule similarly.

“There is no evidence that our General Assembly intended a functional equivalency analysis, like that of Ohio’s, and we decline to read this language into the statute on the legislature’s behalf,” Massa wrote.

Key viewed the court’s decision as narrow. “I wouldn’t read this as any sort of declaration of this court on transparency,” he said. Rather, he said justices read and interpreted the language of the statute but “weren’t willing to make that connection” between the private schools’ trustees and the government power that its police have.

“I can’t fault the decision they came to,” he said. “I think we have a situation here that when the (APRA) statute was passed back in 1983, the question of these private university police departments probably never came up.”

In June, ESPN reporter Paula Lavigne participated in a panel of investigative reporters discussing the secrecy of police records from private colleges and universities in states around the country. Many of these agencies, including Notre Dame, are authorized to use police powers outside the boundaries of their campuses. While the public perception of private university police may be officers who help students who are locked out of their cars, she said, “they’re dealing with murders. God knows they’re dealing with rapes.”

She said university police and the trustees they serve also have an interest in keeping crime statistics low and in keeping their police reports secret. She said criminal matters that an officer decides to refer to school offices of judicial administration shield them from public disclosure, even at public universities.

“It astounds me,” she said, that “we have police departments that oversee thousands and thousands of residents in their jurisdiction that have the ability to act just as city police, who can operate in complete and utter secret, in the United States of America.”

FanFest To Take Place As Aces Welcome Morehead State On Saturday

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FanFest To Take Place As Aces Welcome Morehead State On Saturday

Aces and Eagles to face off at noon

EVANSVILLE, Ind. – A huge day is on tap Saturday as the University of Evansville men’s basketball team will square off against Morehead State beginning at noon inside the Ford Center.

Fans are encouraged to come out early as FanFest will take place beginning at 10:00 a.m. on Freedom Plaza, which is just outside the Ford Center.  The event is free and will have activities for all ages including bounce houses, cornhole, a photo booth, live music and much more.  Food vendors and a beer garden will also be available.

Prior to the game, 1,000 purple mustaches will be given out to Aces fans to raise awareness of “No Shave November”.   The initiative encourages men to stop shaving to evoke conversation and raise awareness of prostate and testicular cancer.  These will be distributed when fans enter the Ford Center and are courtesy of Deaconess.

A solid all-around game saw the Purple Aces get into the win column with an 82-59 win over Alcorn State in Monday’s home opener.  Career highs were set or tied across the board with Ryan Taylor (21), Jaylon Brown (19), Christian Benzon (10) and Sergej Vucetic (9) each having their top outings at Evansville.  After shooting 60.9% in the first half, Evansville finished the game at a solid 56.3% overall and 40% (6/15) from outside.

It took just seven shots for Ryan Taylor to score 21 points in the win over Alcorn State; Taylor was 5-of-7 from the field with four of those makes being from outside, he also connected on seven of his eight free throw attempts.  His 21-point effort tied his career mark while at Ohio University, which he scored on Nov. 15, 2014 against Appalachian State.  In 29 minutes of action against the Braves, Taylor also notched 2 rebounds, 2 assists along with a block and a steal.  The last UE player to finish with 20 or more points while attempting seven or few shots was Jason Holsinger, who went 6-of-7 from the field (all 3-pointers) and 5/7 from the free throw line to finish with 23 points; that came on January 19, 2008 in a road game at Bradley.

Christian Benzon notched a career-best 10 points on Monday, marking the first double digit game of his UE career.  Benzon drained four of his five shots while knocking down both free throw attempts en route to the mark.  He has gotten off to a 6-of-9 start from the field while playing 18 minutes per game to begin his senior season.

For the second time in as many games this year and the fifth time overall, Jaylon Brown matched his career-best of 19 points against Alcorn State.  A 50.8% shooter last season, Brown stands at an even 50% through the opening two games, notching 19 points in both games.  What has improved for Brown is his accuracy from long range; in his junior campaign, Brown hit 30.8% of his triples while this season has seen that number rise to 41.7% (5/12).  Brown has averaged 35.5 minutes in the opening two contests and is the only Aces player to average 30 or more minutes.

Willie Wiley has started each game for UE thus far and had one of his best games against Alcorn State.  In a career-high 27 minutes, Wiley notched 7 points and 5 rebounds, connecting on 3 of his 4 shots.

Morehead State comes to Evansville with a 2-1 record with wins over Kentucky Christian and Lipscomb before falling in a road contest at Marshall by a final of 85-77 on Wednesday.  Xavier Moon and Malik Maitland are each averaging double figures; Moon leads the way with 13.3 points per game while Maitland has notched 11.7 PPG.  Moon drained eight shots to pace MSU with 19 points against the Thundering Herd; Maitland finished with 10 points and six assists while Miguel Dicent finished the game with 10 tallies.

 

VANDERBURGH COUNTY FELONY CHARGES

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Below are the felony cases filed by the Vanderburgh County Prosecutor’s Office today.

Jeremel Charles Lee Domestic battery, Level 6 felony

Domestic battery, Level 6 felony

Karen Louise Boerner Possession of a narcotic drug, Level 6 felony

Maintaining a common nuisance – controlled substances, Level 6 felony

Portage Mayor Snyder Ind Lake County Sheriff Buncich Indicted

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Portage Mayor Snyder Ind Lake County Sheriff Buncich Indicted

The U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of Indiana announced today, just before deadline, the indictment of Portage Mayor James Snyder and Lake County Sheriff John Buncich.

Synder and John Cortina–the latter the owner and operator of a tow business, Kustom Auto Body, 5409 U.S. Highway 6 in Portage–have both been charged with violating the federal bribery statute.

Snyder is alleged to have corruptly solicited and received two checks totaling $12,000 from Cortina and Individual A–also the owner of a tow truck business who voluntarily came forward and cooperated with investigators–in exchange for a towing contract in the City of Portage, the U.S. Attorney’s Office said. Cortina is charged with corruptly offering those checks to Snyder.

Snyder has been charged as well with a second violation of the federal bribery statute. That count alleges that between Jan. 1, 2012, and Jan. 10, 2014, Snyder corruptly solicited and agreed to accept a bank check in the amount of $13,000 in connection with Portage Board of Works contracts, a Portage Redevelopment Commission project, and other consideration, the U.S. Attorney’s Office said.

A third charge against Snyder alleges a scheme to obstruct Internal Revenue laws undertaken by Snyder between January 2010 and April 2013, specifically to impede the Internal Revenue Service’s collection of personal taxes owed by Snyder and payroll taxes owed by his mortgage business, First Financial Trust Mortgage (FFTM) LLC. Snyder is alleged to have diverted funds away from FFTM to a sole proprietorship which he created, and submitted three forms to the IRS which failed to disclose, among other things, the existence of the sole proprietorship and its bank account–all during a time when the IRS was attempting to collect the aforementioned tax debt, the U.S. Attorney’s Office said.

Meanwhile, Buncich, his chief deputy Timothy Downs, and William Szarmach were named in a multi-count indictment alleging a “deprivation of honest services and receipt of illegal money in connection with towing contracts in Lake County.”

Buncich currently serves at Lake County Sheriff. He earlier served in the same office from 1994-2002, and was re-elected in 2010 and again in 2014. Pursuant to a Lake County ordinance, the sheriff has exclusive authority to determine what entity would do any towing required by the Sheriff’s Department.

Downs is the Chief in the Lake County Sheriff’s Department, the second person in command, appointed to that position by Buncich.

Szarmach owns and operates CSA Towing, 2599 DeKalb St. in Lake Station.

The indictment specifically alleges that, from February 2014 into October 2016, Buncich, Downs and Szarmach devised a scheme to deprive the citizens of Lake County of their right to the honest services of the sheriff’s office. According to the U.S. Attorney’s Office, the scheme was designed to enrich Buncich personally and his campaign committee, known as Buncich Boosters.

The indictment details a number of checks and cash payments, often collected by Downs, from Szarmach and Individual A–the same Individual A who cooperated in the investigation of Snyder–in exchange for Buncich awarding county towing business and towing in the City of Gary for ordinance violations, the U.S. Attorney’s Office said.

Buncich is also charged individually with a violation of the federal bribery statute and specifically alleged to have corruptly solicited, demanded, and received over $25,000 in cash and $7,000 in checks in exchange for favorable actions by Buncich regarding the towing contracts, the U.S. Attorney’s Office said.

“These indictments were the result of an extensive, ongoing investigation conducted by the Federal Bureau of Investigation and Internal Revenue Service, Criminal Investigation Division. Assistance was provided throughout by the Indiana State Police,” the U.S. Attorney’s Office said.

United States Attorney Capp stated, “These investigations are not over,” U.S. Attorney David Capp said. “Our public corruption team will continue its work, particularly into the towing contracts in both Lake and Porter counties.”

Anyone with information related to these public corruption charges is encouraged to call the FBI at (219) 769-3719.