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Meth conviction reversed over toxicology authentication

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IL for www.theindianalawyer.com

The Indiana Court of Appeals has reversed a man’s conviction of operating a vehicle with meth in his blood and subsequently causing death after finding that the state failed to authenticate the toxicology report that found traces of drug in his blood sample.

In the case of William C. Williams v. State of Indiana, 82A04-1602-CR-295, Williams was driving his motorcycle in August 2013 when he ran into the back of a van that was stopped at an intersection, ejecting his passenger and girlfriend, Nancy Parsons, who died from her injuries. Williams was also transported to the hospital, where a blood draw tested positive for THC and meth.

Williams was subsequently charged with two counts of Class B felony operating a vehicle with a Schedule I or II controlled substance, marijuana and meth, in his blood causing death. During the trial in Vanderburgh Superior Court, Williams testified that he did not know how meth could have been in his blood and objected to the admission of State’s Exhibit 65, which contained the toxicology report that showed meth in his blood and the chain of custody for his blood sample. All of Exhibit 65 except for the two pages of the toxicology report was submitted to the jury, and Williams was convicted on both counts.

Williams did not contest his marijuana conviction but instead appealed the conviction related to meth, arguing that the state failed to establish a chain of custody for his blood sample “so as to allow the admission of the results of tests showing it contained methamphetamine.”

A panel of the Indiana Court of Appeals agreed in a Thursday opinion, writing that the state had failed to properly authenticate Exhibit 65 because its Certificate of Authenticity contained only a notary signature as a witness, not a signature of a records custodian or other qualified person.

But the state argued that it had properly authenticated the exhibit by the testimony of Jennifer Turri, an analyst with NMS Labs, which completed the toxicology report that found meth in Williams’ blood. Turri testified that she did not physically produce the report, but that a computer generated it after the results of the Williams‘ blood sample test were submitted through the lab’s information system.

The Court of Appeals wrote Wednesday that because Turri’s testimony only partially explained how the toxicology report was created and did not address the other components of Exhibit 65, her testimony did not authenticate the exhibit.

Thus, at the request of the state, the appellate court allowed Williams’ marijuana conviction to stand but reversed his conviction related to meth.

Ivy Tech, Fisk University partner to offer seamless transfer option 

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INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. — Ivy Tech Community College, the largest community college system in the United States, and Fisk University, a private historically Black university and the oldest institution of higher learning in Nashville, Tenn., have signed an agreement to offer seamless transfer opportunities for eligible Ivy Tech students.

As part of the agreement Fisk University agrees it will guarantee admission to those Ivy Tech students who have met the following criteria for transfer: received an associate degree with a minimum cumulative grade point average of 2.5 on a 4.0 scale; met the minimum requirements for admission of all transfer students to Fisk; and made proper application for admission to Fisk which includes submission of an official transcript. The application fee will be waived for all Ivy Tech students.

“We are thrilled to offer this opportunity to our Ivy Tech transfer students,” said Sue Ellspermann, president of Ivy Tech Community College. “This agreement between Ivy Tech and the renowned Fisk University is a demonstration of true cooperation with students’ success as the ultimate outcome.”

Ivy Tech transfer students, upon approval of meeting the needed requirements for Fisk University, will be admitted as upper-division students provided they have received grades of C or better in their course requirements.

“To partner with one of the nation’s premier community college systems is a true honor,” said Dr. Rodney S. Hanley, Provost and Vice President for Academic Affairs at Fisk University.  “We believe that students transferring from Ivy Tech will enhance the overall intellectual environment of our university, and they will receive a top-notch education here.”

Fisk University is well known for their leadership role in the education of African-Americans, graduating students from diverse backgrounds with integrity and intellect required for substantive contributions to society.

“We are honored to partner with Fisk University as a pathway for a four-year degree seeking students,” said Doran Moreland, executive director of statewide diversity and outreach for Ivy Tech Community College. “Fisk is a venerable, historically Black institution, known worldwide for producing exceptional and diverse graduates. This partnership is one of the many high quality experiences Ivy Tech is providing to help each of our students reach their goals.”

President Ellspermann, Doran Moreland, five Ivy Tech students and an adjunct instructor, will visit Fisk University on Monday, October 24 for a campus tour and participate in the official agreement signing.

Ivy Tech Community College offers more than 100 transfer programs with in-state and out-of-state schools. For a complete list of participating institutions, local transfer advocate contacts and next steps, visit ivytech.edu/transfer.

About Ivy Tech Community College

Ivy Tech Community College is the state’s largest public postsecondary institution and the nation’s largest singly accredited statewide community college system. Ivy Tech has campuses throughout Indiana. It serves as the state’s engine of workforce development, offering affordable degree programs and training that are aligned with the needs of its community along with courses and programs that transfer to other colleges and universities in Indiana. It is accredited by the Higher Learning Commission and a member of the North Central Association.

 

About Fisk University

Founded in 1866, Fisk University is Nashville’s first institution of higher education and currently ranks in the top 20% of all liberal arts institutions in the nation according to The Washington Monthly. According to the American Physical Society, Fisk is the #1 producer of underrepresented minority Master’s in Physics degrees.  Fisk is ranked in the top 15 institutions for awarding the Master’s in Physics degree for all students, and tied for fourth place for Master’s degrees awarded to women. Fisk is the 4th highest ranked institution in Tennessee and the highest ranked Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) in Forbes magazine’s 2015 edition of “America’s Top Colleges.” Fisk has ranked in Princeton Review’s “Best Southeastern Colleges” publication for 22 consecutive years.  U.S. News & World Report ranks Fisk in the elite Tier One liberal arts institutions. Fisk has earned 4 R&D 100 Awards, the only HBCU to do so. For more information about Fisk University, please visit www.fisk.edu.

 

Governor Pence Directs Flags Be Lowered to Half-staff Statewide to Honor Hoosier Army Private Dakota Stump Killed in Fort Hood Car Accident

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Indianapolis – Governor Mike Pence today directed flags at state facilities statewide be flown at half-staff for Army Private and Avon native Dakota Stump after he was killed in a car accident in Ft. Hood, TX. Flags should be flown at half-staff from sunrise to sunset on the day of Pvt. Stump’s funeral, Saturday, November 12.

Governor Pence also asks businesses and residents to lower their flags to half-staff to honor the service and sacrifice of Pvt. Stump.

 

AG Zoeller Settles Data Breach Case Against Software Company

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INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. – Attorney General Greg Zoeller announced today Indiana is one of 16 states that reached a settlement with the software company Adobe Systems, Inc. after an investigation into a 2013 data breach of certain Adobe servers revealed approximately 24,049 Hoosiers were affected.

The hacker stole the personal information of approximately 2.9 million people nationwide, including names, addresses, telephone numbers, e-mail addresses, usernames, encrypted payment card numbers and expiration dates, as well as other data. Indiana’s share of the $1 million settlement is $53,718.36, which will be earmarked for consumer education and protection.

 “This case is yet another example of the importance of protecting your personal and financial information,” Zoeller said. “I continue to be an advocate for Indiana’s credit freeze protections and encourage all Hoosiers to place credit freezes with the major credit bureaus.”

The states involved in the investigation of the unauthorized server access alleged that Adobe did not use reasonable security measures to protect its systems from an attack or have proper measures in place to immediately detect an attack. The agreement resolves consumer protection and privacy claims against the company and requires Adobe to implement new policies and practices to prevent future similar breaches

For more information on how you can activate a credit freeze, click here.

The states that participated in the investigation and joined Indiana in the agreement are Arkansas, Connecticut, Illinois, Kentucky, Maryland, Massachusetts, Missouri, Minnesota, Mississippi, North Carolina, Ohio, Oregon, Pennsylvania, and Vermont.

States Of Indiana Monthly Revenue Report

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Thursday, November 10:

The monthly revenue report for October, along with commentary from State Budget Director Brian Bailey, has been posted on the State Budget Agency webpage. The report and commentary can be found here: http://in.gov/sba/2696.htm. Charts visualizing revenue data are located on the Management and Performance Hub under the State Tax Revenue section: http://www.in.gov/mph/staterevenue.html.

Results

General Fund revenues for October totaled $1,163.8 million, which is $17.9 million (1.5%) below estimate based on the December 17, 2015 Forecast and $56.7 million (5.1%) above revenue in October 2015.

  • Sales tax collections totaled $622.1 million for October, which is $9.6 million (1.5%) below the monthly estimate but $28.7 million (4.8%) above revenue in October 2015.
  • Individual income tax collections totaled $463.6 million for October, which is $7.9 million (1.7%) above the monthly estimate and $25.5 million (5.8%) above revenue in October 2015.
  • Corporate tax collections totaled $17.1 million for October, which is $8.9 million (34.2%) below the monthly estimate and $10.1 million (144.6%) above revenue in October 2015.
  • Riverboat wagering collections totaled $20.3 million for October, which is $2.0 million (9.0%) below the monthly estimate and $3.0 million (12.8%) below revenue in October 2015.
  • Racino wagering collections totaled $7.6 million for October, which is $0.1 million (1.5%) below the monthly estimate and $0.5 million (5.9%) below revenue in October 2015.

 Commentary 

Year-to-date General Fund collections total $4,762.7 million, which is $75.7 million (1.6%) below the December 2015 revenue forecast but $192.2 million (4.2%) above the prior fiscal year.

Year-to-date sales tax collections total $2,500.3 million, which is $74.2 million (2.9%) below the December 2015 forecast but $75.5 million (3.1%) above collections through the same period from the prior fiscal year.

Individual income tax collections total $1,766.4 million year-to-date, which is $34.5 million (2.0%) above forecasted collections and $132.6 million (8.1%) above year-to-date collections from the same time last fiscal year.  Compounding the year-over-year growth of individual income tax in fiscal 2017 is the “five Friday effect.”  There was one more Friday of payroll processing in September, which was recorded in October’s payroll tax withholding.  In October 2015 there was no “five Friday effect,” so October 2016 individual income tax revenue is higher than October 2015 revenue due to this factor.

Corporate tax collections continue to underperform compared to forecast and compared to prior year collections.  Corporate collections are $38.7 million (15.7%) below forecast year-to-date and $8 million (3.7%) below fiscal year-to-date collections through the same period.

 

Elizabeth Nolan to be Speaker at UE’s Jean Dreyfus Boissevain Lectures

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Elizabeth Nolan, professor of chemistry at MIT, will be the speaker for the Jean Dreyfus Boissevain lectures planned at the University of Evansville this week.

On Thursday, November 10, at 12:15 p.m., Nolan will give a general science lecture titled “Humans and Microbes: Understanding How a Gut Peptide Entraps Bacterial Pathogens.” The lecture will be in Room 162 in the Schroeder School of Business Building.

Later that day – at 4:00 p.m. – she will be giving a community outreach lecture at the Koch Family Children’s Museum.

Then on Friday, November 11, at 6:00 p.m., Nolan will be giving a talk titled, “Metals and Immunity: Bioinorganic Explorations of the Host-Defense Protein Calprotectin.” That lecture will be in Room 101, in Koch Center for Engineering and Science.

These events, which are being sponsored by UE’s Department of Chemistry, are all free and open to the public.

Nolan graduated magna cum laude from Smith College in 2000 and earned her PhD in inorganic chemistry from MIT. She pursued her post-doctoral research at Harvard Medical School. She joined the Department of Chemistry at MIT in 2009. Her current research involves synergies between metal ion homeostasis and immunity. Some of Nolan’s recent awards include being selected as an Alfred P. Sloan Foundation Fellow in 2013, and a Camille Dreyfus Teacher-Scholar in 2014.

EDITORIAL: BOARD OF ZONING APPEALS SHOULD APPROVE REQUEST FOR PROPOSED WESTSIDE BAR

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 BOARD OF ZONING APPEALS SHOULD APPROVE REQUEST FOR PROPOSED WESTSIDE RESTAURANT-BAR

For almost a year well respected and successful businessman Kerry Chesser petitioned the Board of Zoning of Appeals to approve his re-zoning requests concerning a Restaurant-Bar on West Franklin street.

At the last meeting his request ended with a 3 to 3 tie with one member absent.  Because of the tie vote he’s forced to wait another month to see if his re-zoning request will be approved by Board of Zoning of Appeals. This delay will cost him additional legal expenses.

Mr. Chesser originally requested that the Board of Zoning Appeals approve his plans to renovate his 11,000 square foot building into an upscale Restaurant-Bar on West Franklin street.  Because his on-site parking plans doesn’t meet current zoning parking requirements he is now forced  to tear down a section of the building in order to comply with the City’s parking requirements.  Instead of having a 11,000 square foot building to house his proposed Restaurant-Bar will now be 5,000 square feet.

Because of legal opposition from a future competitor, Mr Chesser was forced to draw up new plans for a 5,000-square-foot Restaurant-Bar.  The amended plans will now have the seating capacity for 235 people.  It will have 76 parking spaces and with an side agreement with adjoining property owner  to share 17 parking spaces.  Its important to point out that the amended plans will provide a greater percentage of parking spaces than most other West Franklin street businesses.

We recall several years back that City Council approved West Franklin street as an “ENTERTAINMENT ZONE.”  Also owners of other Restaurant-Bars on West Franklin street supports Mr. Chesser’s new parking request.   Another good reason why the Zoning  Appeals Board should give approval to Mr. Chesser’s request is that the Lamasco Neighborhood Association “endorsed” Mr. Chesser’s petition for parking at his new Restaurant-Bar.

Bottom line, Kerry Chesser is a respected businessman that has contributed many hundreds of thousands of dollars to those in need in our community for many years.  His proposed Restaurant-Bars will be an assist to the West Franklin street area.  It is our opinion that the Board of Zoning Appeals should approve without delay Mr. Chessers plans to locate an upscale Restaurant-Bars on West Franklin street!

The next Board of Zoning Appeals meeting is on Nov. 17 at the Civic Center.

EDITORS FOOTNOTE:  Some Information in this Editorial came from an article that appeared in the Evansville Courier & Press on-line publication. The article concerning this meeting was written by John Martin of the Courier & Press.

 

CHANNEL 44 NEWS: Holcomb Reacts to Indiana Electing Him Governor

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Holcomb Reacts to Indiana Electing Him Governor

 Indiana lives up to its reputation as a Red State, choosing to bring another Republican to the White House and the top seat in the state.

Lieutenant Governor Eric Holcomb easily defeated Democrat John Gregg Tuesday night, to win the top seat in the HoosierState.

Govenor-elect Holcomb has spent the majority of his life in public service.

He has worked in Indiana politics for most of his adult life.

Holcomb’s record includes various positions in the administration of former Governor Mitch Daniels and Senator Dan Coats.

He was then elected Lieutentant Governor with now Vice-President Elect Mike Pence.

At a news conference Wednesday, Holcomb expressed his gratitude to the voters.

Trump Could Cement Conservative Supreme Court

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Trump Could Cement Conservative Supreme Court

IL for www.theindianalawyer.com

Donald Trump will enter the Oval Office with the ability to re-establish the Supreme Court’s conservative tilt and the chance to cement it for the long term.

Trump is expected to act quickly to fill one court vacancy and could choose the successor for up to three justices who will be in their 80s by the time his term ends.

The court has been short-handed since Justice Antonin Scalia died in February, and Trump has said he would seek someone in Scalia’s mold from a list of 21 people, mainly conservative state and federal judges in their 50s.

Trump’s victory was a vindication for Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell’s strategy of refusing all year even to consider President Barack Obama’s nomination of Judge Merrick Garland to take Scalia’s seat. McConnell announced on the night that Scalia died that the vacancy should be filled not by Obama, but by the next president. The Kentucky Republican was heavily criticized for his stance by Obama, other Democrats and even many legal scholars.

Now Garland’s nomination is dead, if not officially.

A fifth of voters nationwide said Supreme Court appointments were the most important factor in determining their presidential vote, and nearly 6 in 10 of them backed Trump, according to exit polls.

“The people deserved to be heard yesterday, and their voice was unmistakable,” conservative activist Carrie Severino said in a statement that praised McConnell and Senate Judiciary Chairman Chuck Grassley of Iowa for standing firm on the Garland nomination.

If Trump sticks to the names of potential nominees that he put out in the spring and added to in the fall, he could choose among several experienced appeals court judges, minority candidates and women. The list also is notable for its omission of some pre-eminent Republican judges and lawyers, including Judge Brett Kavanaugh of the federal appeals court in Washington, D.C., and Paul Clement, who served as George W. Bush’s top Supreme Court lawyer.

After getting a ninth justice on the court, the next big question will be whether liberal Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Stephen Breyer, and Justice Anthony Kennedy, the pivotal vote closest to the court’s center, will retire during a Trump administration or try to stay on the bench in the hope that Trump is not re-elected in 2020. Ginsburg is 83, Kennedy is 80 and Breyer is 78.

“In the longer term, it is a question of how long Ginsburg, Kennedy, and Breyer can remain. Replacing any or all of them will tilt the Court in a much more conservative direction and can create a majority to reverse Roe v. Wade, eliminate affirmative action, strike down more campaign finance laws,” Dean Erwin Chemerinsky of the University of California at Irvine law school said in an email.

The leader of the court’s liberal bloc, Ginsburg had been confident Hillary Clinton would win the presidency, telling The Associated Press in July that the next president, “whoever she will be,” would have several Supreme Court seats to fill. She, and to a lesser extent, Breyer, had rebuffed pleas from fellow liberals, including Chemerinsky, to retire while Obama was in office and Democrats controlled the Senate, which they did until 2015.

Kennedy was appointed by Republican Ronald Reagan, but he has been the key vote in favor of gay rights and preservation of abortion rights, among issues on which he often sides with the liberals.

Recent Supreme Court history offers two examples of Republican-appointed justices, David Souter and John Paul Stevens, who appeared to wait out Bush’s presidency and then retired after Obama’s election. Stevens was 90 when he stepped down from the bench.