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Bad Fall In Race Doesn’t Stop Lull

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Colebrook Glad He came for Sprint

There might be a faster horse than Lull in Friday’s $1 million Juvenile Fillies Turf at Santa Anita Park. But it’s hard to imagine there’s a 2-year-old filly in the race possessing more heart.

After winning her debut by three lengths at Belmont Park, Lull clipped heels rounding out of the turn and fell hard in Saratoga’s $100,000 Bolton Landing Stakes. She got up, ran off before being collared by the outrider, then was walked back to trainer Christophe Clement’s barn. Sixteen days later, Lull shipped from upstate New York to Kentucky Downs to capture the $350,000 Exacta Systems Juvenile Fillies over the promising Caroline Test.

“She’s so athletic that she could overcome that — mentally, too,” said Adele Dilschneider, who bred and co-owns Lull with Claiborne Farm.

“The way she came out of that, I’ll remember forever,” said trainer Christophe Clement. “Remarkable horse. It just shows she’s a great filly with a very good mind. Very few horses could fall and then do so well.”

Lull is a daughter of Claiborne’s stallion War Front. Her mom, Quiet Now, is from the family of the late Breeders’ Cup Classic winner and Horse of the Year Saint Liam, as well as 2016 Breeders’ Cup Dirt Mile contender Gun Runner and Grade 1 winner Buster’s Ready.

She was second to La Coronel in Keeneland’s Grade 3 Jessamine Stakes, which at 1 1/16 miles is a sixteenth-mile longer than the Breeders’ Cup.

“We’re very proud of her for putting in that kind of effort,” Claiborne president Walker Hancock said of the Kentucky Downs victory, adding of the Jessamine, “She ran fine. We were second-best, but we’re going to take another shot here. The race is a sixteenth-mile shorter, and it will be firm turf again, so I think we have a shot. She’s 15-1, and she should be 15-1. That filly beat her handily, and I know there are some really nice fillies that ran well in Grade 1 races in Europe. But we like our chances.”

Colebrook happy Limousine Liberal made trek from Kentucky

With Lord Nelson scratched Thursday after being treated with antibiotics for an infected cut, trainer Ben Colebrook is really glad that Limousine Liberal shipped from Kentucky for Saturday’s $1.5 million Breeders’ Cup Sprint. It was no sure thing that the 4-year-old would make the sojourn after losing Keeneland’s Grade 2 Phoenix by a gut-wrenching nose to streaking A.P. Indian. The inch or so margin was the difference between having an entry fees-paid trip and paying his way.

The Keeneland-based Colebrook said he left the decision up to owners K.K. and Mike Ball, both former trainers. “I just told them the horse was doing well and if they wanted to take a chance, he’s probably worth coming,” Colebrook said Thursday. “Now I’m glad we did with the two scratches.”

Earlier in the week, Belmont’s Grade 1 Vosburgh winner Joking was declared out with a temperature. That leaves a field of seven, which would make it the smallest Sprint field ever. Last year, champion Runhappy mastered a capacity field of 14 at Keeneland.

“I think he’s coming into this race a lot better,” Colebrook said of Limousine Liberal’s second Sprint. “He’s still a bit of a work in progress. Last year, he’d never been in a field that size and faced those kinds of horses. He had a little bit of an inside post, and when that wall of dirt hit him, he was kind of lost. This year, he has an outside post (now 7), and I think he’s more mature and the blinkers last time helped.

“Having Jose Ortiz back helps. Last year, every time he ran he had different rider. It was like nobody got in a real groove with the horse. Jose really knows him, has a lot of confidence in him. I think the key to the horse is you just have to wait and let him decide when he wants to make his run. Not anybody’s fault, but I think the other riders were sensing that when he wasn’t on the lead and it was time to go, they would make him go. And he doesn’t like that. His head would come up. Every rider who got off him always said it felt like there was more there; he just wasn’t giving it to us. I think his last race he really laid down and ran. What I’ve always seen with the horse in the morning, he finally showed in the afternoon.”

Limousine Liberal burst on the scene last year when, after winning a Churchill maiden race and Ellis Park allowance, he finished second in Saratoga’s Grade 1 King’s Bishop behind Runhappy, who also had won an Ellis allowance race. He finished 11th in the Breeders’ Cup. The son of Successful Appeal was equipped in blinkers after finishing seventh in Saratoga’s Forego this year. Then came the Phoenix.

“At first I thought I got beat,” Colebrook said. “Then I thought I won. Then I thought it might be a dead heat. Then I saw he did get beat. So a lot of emotions in the span of 20 seconds.”

Phoenix victor A.P. Indian brings 6-race win streak into Sprint

The 6-year-old gelding A.P. Indian, the 4-1 fourth choice in the Sprint’s morning line before the two scratches, is unbeaten in six starts after ending 2015 with a sixth in Saratoga’s Tale of the Cat and another sixth in Keeneland’s Phoenix.

“He came out of that with a chip in his knee, so he probably had that chip going into the first race at Saratoga,” said Richard Masson of Versailles, Ky., who with his family bred and owns A.P. Indian in the name of their Green Lantern Stables. “They suggest you give them 60 days after that; we gave him six months. When he came back from that fully rested, he was a different horse.”

A.P. Indian, who is trained in Maryland by Fairhill-based Arnaud Delacour, was scratched from Belmont’s Vosburgh because of the muddy track, running in the Phoenix a week later and nosing out Limousine Liberal. Joe Bravo, aboard for the gelding’s last five races, has the mount.

“It will be tough,” said Masson’s wife, Sue. “There are a lot of good horses in there. But Joe Bravo is really confident in him. He loves him. They’re a good combo. When you have a jockey who is really confident in a horse, your horse runs better. That’s good karma coming in. So we just hope.”

The gelding is out of the same mare as 2015 Indiana Derby winner Tiz Shea D. His third dam was the late Warner Jones’ Fit for a Queen, a popular mare who earned $1.2 million in the early 1990s racing in all the filly and mares stakes around Kentucky.

Jennie Rees is a racing communications specialist from Louisville. Her Breeders’ Cup coverage, which concentrates on the Kentucky horses, is provided free to media as a service by Kentucky Downs, Ellis Park, the Kentucky HBPA and JockeyTalk360.com.

Ramirez Named GLVC Freshman Of The Year

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Eagles Have Four Named All-GLVC

EVANSVILLE, Ind. — University of Southern Indiana freshman forward Eric Ramirez (Vincennes, Indiana) was named the Great Lakes Valley Conference Freshman of the Year and first-team All-Conference at the GLVC Men’s and Women’s Soccer Awards Banquet Thursday night in Indianapolis, Indiana. Ramirez becomes the first USI men’s soccer player to be named Freshman of the Year since Kyle Penick in 2002.

Ramirez, despite missing the last two matches due to injury, leads the Eagles in scoring with 21 points on a USI freshman-best and team-high 10 goals and one assist. He broke the USI freshman record for goals that was set by Eric Schoenstein when he posted nine in USI’s 1988 run to the GLVC championship.

Joining Ramirez in earning first-team All-GLVC honors was junior goalkeeper Adam Zehme (Orland Park, Illinois). Zehme has had a career season in 2016, posting career-highs in wins (13), saves (68), and shutouts (7). The junior goalkeeper, who has a 0.85 goals against average (GAA) this fall, moved into the USI top four all-time with 12 career shutouts.

Senior defender Michael Sass (New Palestine, Indiana) and junior midfielder Kyle Richardville (Vincennes, Indiana) were named to the second-team All-GLVC. Sass has helped lead the Eagles’ defense to a 0.85 team GAA, while posting three points on one goal and one assist.

Richardville, who has missed the last three matches with an injury, has been the igniter of the USI offense this fall and follows Ramirez in the scoring column with 19 points on seven goals and five assists. Richardville’s seven goals and five assists also rank second on the Eagles.

The third-seeded Eagles, who are ranked 20th nationally, continue GLVC Tournament action Friday night at 7:30 p.m. (CDT) when they play seventh-seeded University of Indianapolis at Carroll Stadium in Indianapolis. The GLVC Championship game is slated for 2 p.m. (CST) Sunday at Carroll Stadium, featuring the winner of the USI-UIndy contest against the winner of match between top-seeded Rockhurst University and fifth-seeded Quincy University.

 

 

Adopt A Pet

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 Fontana is a 5-month-old female calico kitten! She was originally part of the “Mountain Lake” litter and is named after Lake Fontana in North Carolina. Her brother Hiwassee is still available, too. Fontana’s adoption fee is $18 thru 11/19 as part of the “Fantastic Cats” special! It includes her spay, microchip, vaccines, and more. Contact the Vanderburgh Humane Society at (812) 426-2563 or at www.vhslifesaver.org for adoption details!

Lawsuit calls 2 Indiana tax statutes unconstitutional

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Marilyn Odendahl for www.theindianalawyer.com

A Marion County resident, whose bank account of $155.44 was frozen by the Indiana Department of Revenue, is suing to prevent the state from taking assets for income tax debts without leaving the debtor something to pay for basic necessities like food and shelter.

David A. Niehoff, represented by Indiana Legal Services Inc., filed his complaint Oct. 4 in Marion Superior Court. According to the lawsuit, Niehoff owes $3,330.02 for past-due taxes but has been unable to satisfy the debt because of ongoing economic hardship. In April, Premiere Credit of North America LLC, the company contracted by Indiana to handle collections, placed a hold on his bank assets.

Niehoff argues the revenue department’s action violates Indiana Constitution, Article 1, Section 22, which exempts a “reasonable amount of property from seizure or sale for the payment of any debt … .” Indiana statute enables debtors to keep $400 but separate statutes – Indiana Code 34-55-10-14 and I.C. 6-8.1-8-3(a) – exclude exemptions for tax collection cases, which Niehoff contends is unconstitutional.

“By denying any exemption in tax lien cases, the state of Indiana is pushing financially strapped Hoosiers further into poverty,” said Jon Laramore, Indiana Legal Services executive director. “An exemption may allow someone to purchase food or medicine while they develop a plan to repay an outstanding tax debt.”

The case is David A. Niehoff v. Indiana Department of Revenue, Premiere Credit of North America, LLC, 49D11-1610-PL-035444. A typo in Odyssey misspells the plaintiff’s last name as Nichoff.

According to Indiana Legal Services, Niehoff is not alone. The legal service provider has seen this problem among low-income residents who get their money seized by the Department of Revenue and then have no means to provide for the bare minimum they need to live.

In addition, the seizure also freezes these bank accounts for 60 days, leaving low-income residents unbanked for at least two months.

Niehoff is asking for a refund of the $155.44 and that the pair of Indiana statutes that deny any exemption be declared unconstitutional. Marion Superior Court granted motions from both defendants giving them until Nov. 28 to respond.

Indiana State takes 3-0 win over UE Volleyball

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Sophomore Mildrelis Rodriguez recorded 10 kills as the University of Evansville volleyball team lost at Indiana State by a 3-0 final on Friday evening.

 

Rodriguez led the Purple Aces (5-22, 1-13 MVC) with the ten kills and also a match-high 13 digs.  Cathy Schreiber continued her solid play, finishing the night with 8 kills.  One week after her career night, Jelena Merseli paced UE with 21 assists.

 

Indiana State’s (10-15, 4-9 MVC) offense was led by Bree Spangler, who notched 12 kills.  Rachel Griffin topped all players with 30 assists.

 

Holding a 9-7 lead in the opening frame, the Sycamores finished on a 16-7 run to earn a 25-14 win and take a 1-0 lead.  The Aces quickly regrouped in a highly-competitive second game.  A Rodriguez kill gave UE an early 6-4 lead before the Sycamores fought back.  Neither team was able to open up a large lead, culminating in an 18-18 score.  ISU posted the next two points and held on for a 25-22 win.

 

Another close game took place in the third with Evansville opening up by scoring five of the first six points.  Indiana State made its way back, tying it up at 5-5 before grabbing a 17-12 lead.  The Aces refused to give up, cutting the Sycamore lead to just two at 19-17 as Joselyn Coronel notched a kill.  That was as close as UE would get as Indiana State clinched the match with a 25-20 win.

 

Tomorrow night, the Aces continue on the road at Illinois State for a 7 p.m. contest.

 

USI Volleyball rallies come up short

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ST. LOUIS—University of Southern Indiana Volleyball could not overcome early deficits Friday night as it suffered a 25-21, 25-21, 25-20 Great Lakes Valley Conference setback to host University of Missouri-St. Louis.

The Screaming Eagles (9-17, 3-11 GLVC) rallied from six down in the opening set to cut their deficit to two late in the frame; but could not complete the comeback as the Tritons held on for the four-point win.

In the second stanza, USI surged back from an eight-point deficit to get to within two points late. Once again, however, the Tritons turned the Eagles away for a four-point win and a two-set lead in the match.

USI trailed by five at multiple junctures of the third frame before closing the gap to two points; but the Tritons, like they did in the first two sets, stopped the Eagles’ push to earn a five-point win and three-set sweep.

Senior middle/outside hitter Amy Zwissler (Bloomington, Indiana) led the Eagles with 13 kills and a .323 attacking percentage, while sophomore setter Erika Peoples (Bloomington, Illinois) finished with 26 assists.

Junior libero Shannon Farrell (Munster, Indiana) led all players with 21 digs as she moved past Jamie Roth (1994-97) for fourth all-time at USI in career digs (1,279). Farrell needs just 12 digs to become the first player in program history to reach the 500-dig plateau in back-to-back seasons.

USI returns to action Saturday at 3 p.m. when it visits Maryville University in St. Louis, Missouri. The Saints (3-24, 1-13 GLVC) are coming off a three-set loss to Bellarmine University Friday night.

Note: With the loss, USI is officially eliminated from GLVC Tournament contention, breaking a streak of 17 straight GLVC Tournament appearances.

Short Box Score (Match)

Univ. of Southern Indiana Volleyball

Southern Indiana vs Missouri-St. Louis (Nov 04, 2016 at St. Louis, MO)

Missouri-St. Louis def. Southern Indiana 25-21,25-21,25-20

Southern Indiana (9-17, 3-11 GLVC)

(Kills-aces-blocks) – Zwissler, Amy 13-0-1; Jung, Amanda 6-0-1; Whitfield, Te’Ayla 5-0-2; Coleman, Elexis 4-0-3; Humphrey, Mikaila 4-1-2; Peoples, Erika 2-0-1; Totals 34-1-5.0. (Assists) – Peoples, Erika 26. (Dig leaders) – Farrell, Shannon 21; Humphrey, Mikaila 7

Missouri-St. Louis (14-11, 8-6 GLVC)

(Kills-aces-blocks) – Rogers, Lexi 13-0-2; Jones, Gaylnn 11-1-4; Rudsinski, Kylie 10-0-1; Nolte, Selena 9-0-0; Childers, Morgan 6-2-0; Uradzionek, Kristen 4-0-2; Totals 53-3-5.0. (Assists) – Buchman, Kendall 21; Abeyta, Madyson 21. (Dig leaders) – Waedekin, Danielle 17; Buchman, Kendall 7

 

 

 

USI’s Farrell earns academic honor

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University of Southern Indiana Volleyball junior libero Shannon Farrell (Munster, Indiana) has been named Academic All-District by the College Sports Information Directors of America for her efforts in the classroom and on the court.

 

Farrell, who is double-majoring in accounting & professional services as well as finance at USI, has racked up a 4.00 grade point average during her time at USI.

 

On the court, Farrell is having another banner year as she leads the Screaming Eagles with 5.37 digs per set.

 

Last week, Farrell tied USI’s single-match record with 37 digs in USI’s four-set loss to Missouri S&T. She had 21 digs in the fourth set alone.

 

Farrell, who needs just four digs to move past Jamie Roth (1994-97) for fourth all-time at USI, has racked up 1,258 digs during her three-year career at USI. She needs just 33 digs to become the first player in program history to reach 500 digs in back-to-back seasons.

 

With the Academic All-District award, Farrell moves on to the national ballot for Academic All-America consideration.

 

 

Krieg DeVault’s Daniels to lead USA Gymnastics sex abuse review

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IL for www.theindianalawyer.com

An Indianapolis attorney with a background in child abuse and sex offense litigation has been selected to conduct a review of USA Gymnastics’ policies and procedures for reporting and responding to allegations of sexual misconduct.

USA Gymnastics announced Thursday that Krieg DeVault LLP managing partner Deborah Daniels would lead the independent review of the organization’s sexual abuse reporting practices after it came under fire for allegedly covering up allegations of abuse against its gymnasts.

A media investigation revealed in August that USA Gymnastics, an Indianapolis-based organization, had failed to report complaints of improper conduct toward young gymnasts by more than 50 coaches between 1996 and 2006. USA Gymnastics President Steve Penny had said in 2015 that he believed there was no duty to report the allegations unless they came directly from the victims or their parents.

Last month, a lawsuit was filed in Los Angeles accusing Dr. Larry Nassar, a former USA Gymnastics doctor, of repeated sexual abuse, and also alleging that husband-and-wife coaches Bela and Martha Karolyi had intentionally ignored alleged molestations.

Daniels’ independent review will take a closer look at the gymnastics organization’s bylaws, policies, procedures and practices related to handling sexual misconduct matters and will also include consultations with experts in law enforcement, child welfare and the gymnastics community, as well as state and local officials.

“Deborah’s background makes her the right choice to lead this important effort because the well-being of our athletes is paramount,” USA Gymnastics President Steve Penny said in a statement released by the organization. “We believe Deborah’s review of our current practices against today’s standards in this critical area, coupled with interviewing members of the gymnastics community and authorities in related areas, will generate recommendations on what needs refinement to further promote athlete safety.”

Formerly a U.S. Attorney and U.S. Assistant Attorney General, Daniels’ background includes work related to the prevention and prosecution of child abuse for the U.S. Department of Justice. She also served as the first National Amber Alert coordinator.

In Indiana, Daniels supervised the sex offense and child abuse units as chief counsel in the Marion County Prosecutor’s Office.  She has also been featured as a keynote speaker at the National Conference on Human Trafficking.

“Nothing is more important than the safety of all athletes and young people,” Daniels said in a statement. “This evaluation is intended to review and strengthen the existing USA Gymnastics process, in addition to likely yielding important insights for other youth-serving organizations.”

After her review, Daniels will make a final recommendation to the USA Gymnastics Board of Directors.
 

Hoosier Swimming & Diving Hosts Michigan State on Saturday

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BLOOMINGTON, Ind. – The Indiana University men’s and women’s swimming and diving teams will host Big Ten rival Michigan State in a dual meet on Saturday, Nov. 5 at the Counsilman-Billingsley Aquatic Center in Bloomington, Ind.

 

The one-day, short-course yards dual meet will get underway at 1:00 p.m. ET and will be streamed live on BTN Plus. Live results can be found at IUHoosiers.com.

 

Fans attending the meet can park in the SRSC lot off of Law Lane for $10 on Saturday or can park for free at the lot off 10th and Sunrise. The Eigenmann Hall lot will also be free on Saturday.

 

Scouting the Hoosiers

The Indiana Hoosiers enter Saturday’s meet coming off a sweep of Tennessee and Kentucky in a tri-meet on Oct. 28. With the two wins, the No. 1-ranked Indiana men improved to 6-0 on the dual-meet season, while the No. 12-ranked Hoosier women moved to 4-2 on the year.

 

Scouting the Spartans

The Michigan State men’s swimming and diving team comes to Bloomington with a record of 0-2 on the season, having not swam in a meet since falling to both Notre Dame and Iowa in a tri-meet on Sept. 30.

 

The Spartan women’s team is 1-3 on the season, having split a tri-meet with Illinois and Marshall on Oct. 21. MSU beat Marshall, but fell to the Illini in Champaign.

 

At last year’s Big Ten Championships, the Michigan State men placed 10th, while the women finished 13th.

 

Kennedy Goss Earns Big Ten Weekly Honors

Indiana University women’s swimmer Kennedy Goss was named Big Ten Co-Swimmer of the Week after helping the No. 12-ranked Hoosiers beat both Kentucky and Tennessee in a tri-meet. The bronze medalist in the 4×200 freestyle relay for Canada at the Rio Summer Olympics touched first in both the 200 free (1:48.63) and 500 free (4:50.59).
Top Times in the Country

IU’s Ali Khalafalla owns the fastest time in the 50 freestyle this year in the country with his 19.44, while Blake Pieroni is the fastest in the nation in the 200 freestyle so far with his mark of 1:35.75. The Hoosiers also own the fastest time in the 400 freestyle relay in the country with their time of 2:55.73.

 

IU Men Ranked No. 1 in Nation in CSCAA/TYR Top 25
In the first CSCAA/TYR Top 25 poll released on Oct. 26, the Indiana men’s swimming and diving team was ranked No. 1 in the nation after sweeping both Texas and Florida to start the season. The women’s team was ranked No. 12 in the country.

 

Fourteen IU Swimmers Named to USA College Challenge Rosters

A total of 14 Indiana University swimming will participate in the inaugural USA College Challenge – Big Ten vs. USA Swimming on Nov. 12-13 at the Indiana University Natatorium on the campus of IUPUI in downtown Indianapolis.

Competing for the Big Ten will be Gia Dalesandro, Kennedy Goss, Lilly King, Bailey Pressey, Brooklyn Snodgrass, Ian Finnerty, Bob Glover, Ali Khalafalla, Vini Lanza, Blake Pieroni, Anze Tavcar and Cody Taylor.

Competing for USA Swimming in the short-course yards meet will be IU alum Cody Miller, as well as Indiana post-grad swimmer Zane Grothe. Indiana’s 14 participants in the event are the most of any school. Michigan is second with 11, while both Ohio State and Wisconsin have six.

IU Sends 11 to Rio Olympics, Winning Seven Medals
The Indiana Swimming and Diving program sent 13 swimmers, divers and coaches to the 2016 Rio Summer Olympics – James Connor, alumna Amy Cozad, Marwan Elkamash, Kennedy Goss, Michael Hixon, Ali Khalafalla, Lilly King, alum Cody Miller, Jessica Parratto, Blake Pieroni and Anze Tavcar. Drew Johansen served as the head coach of USA diving, while Ray Looze was an assistant coach for USA Swimming.

At the 2016 Rio Summer Olympics, the IU swimmers and divers won a total of seven medals – four golds, one silver and two bronze. Lilly King headlined the group with two gold medals, while Cody Miller won gold and bronze. Blake Pieroni earned a gold medal as a member of Team USA’s 4×100 freestyle relay team, junior Kennedy Goss earned a bronze medal as a member of Team Canada’s 4×200 freestyle relay team and junior diver Michael Hixon won silver in the men’s 3m synchronized springboard.

King Wins Two NCAA Titles in 2015
Indiana’s Lilly King dominated the breaststroke at the 2016 NCAA Championships, winning both the 100 and 200 breast with the fastest short-course yard times in history. The freshman broke every record in the event with her historic swim – the American, NCAA, NCAA Meet, U.S. Open, Indiana school, Big Ten and Georgia Tech Pool records – and owns all of the aforementioned records in both the 100 and 200 breast. In total, King recorded an impressive four All-America honors at her first NCAA Championships.

IU Swimming & Diving on Social Media
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.

 

VANDERBURGH COUNTY FELONY CHARGES

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

Gerrickk Antonio Dennis Possession of a synthetic drug or synthetic drug look-alike substance, Level 6 felony

Possession of marijuana, Class A misdemeanor

Public intoxication, Class B misdemeanor

Disorderly conduct, Class B misdemeanor

Jeremy Alan Herbert Possession of a narcotic drug, Level 6 felony

Possession of a narcotic drug, Level 6 felony

Possession of a controlled substance, Class A misdemeanor

Possession of marijuana, Class B misdemeanor

Mibcer Cifuentes Vazquez Theft, Level 6 felony

David Michael Gebhardt Unlawful possession of a firearm by a serious violent felon, Level 4 felony

Criminal recklessness, Level 6 felony

Dejong Montez Graves Invasion of privacy, Level 6 felony

Zachary Scott Pribble Domestic battery, Level 6 felony

James Edward Tuck Domestic battery, Level 6 felony

Monica Fay Wright Unlawful possession of a syringe, Level 6 felony

Possession of paraphernalia, Class C misdemeanor

John Robert Richter Robbery, Level 5 felony

Strangulation, Level 6 felony

Antonio Deon Adams Possession of cocaine, Level 6 felony

Marlon Cunningham Domestic battery, Level 6 felony

Domestic battery, Level 6 felony

Kenneth Lee Reel Unlawful possession of a syringe, Level 6 felony

Possession of paraphernalia, Class C misdemeanor

Driving while suspended, Class A infraction

Larry Edward Miles Sr. Domestic battery on a person less than 14 years old, Level 6 felony

Domestic battery, Level 6 felony

Justin Paul Skelton Unlawful possession of a syringe, Level 5 felony

Unlawful possession of a syringe, Level 6 felony

False informing, Class B misdemeanor