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7th Circuit Asked To Rehear Title VII Sexual Orientation Case

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7th Circuit Asked To Rehear Title VII Sexual Orientation Case

 by Marilyn Odendahl for www.theindianalawyer.com

The former math instructor at Ivy Tech Community College in South Bend who claims that the school violated her Title VII rights by repeatedly denying her promotions and eventually terminating her employment because she is a lesbian has petitioned the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals for rehearing.

Lambda Legal filed the petition for rehearing and rehearing en banc Thursday, arguing the circuit court should follow the lead of the U.S. Supreme Court rulings since 2000 and find that Title VII protections extend to sexual orientation.

“The 7th Circuit has the power to make this right,” said Greg Nevins, the Lambda Legal attorney representing Kimberly Hively. “The sad reality is that lesbian, gay and bisexual people are vulnerable and losing their jobs because old case law interpreted Title VII too narrowly. It is past time to fix that.”

In Kimberly Hively v. Ivy Tech Community College, South Bend, 15-1720, the 7th Circuit upheld the court’s precedent that Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 does not cover gays and lesbians who dress and behave like heterosexuals. Written by Judge Ilana Rovner, the 44-page opinion affirmed the dismissal of Hively’s complaint but then undertook an extensive examination of current law and court rulings. At the conclusion, the majority of the court stated its decision was based upon a “paradoxical legal landscape” and asked that Congress or the Supreme Court of the United States settle the question of whether Title VII protections extend to the LGBT community.

The original complaint was filed in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Indiana.

Petitioning for a rehearing, Hively emphasized her argument about the differences in how Title VII is applied in sexual discrimination and racial discrimination cases. In its opinion, the panel agreed that a disparity does exist where Title VII extends protections to a woman who is fired for having a romantic relationship with a man of a different race but does not extend protects when that woman has the same type of relationship with another woman.

Quoting passages from the panel’s own opinion, Hively’s petition argued a woman who is attracted to other woman cannot legally be treated differently than a woman who does not conform to another gender stereotype.

The petition stated, “To be sure, the panel opined that differential legal treatment of sexual orientation discrimination could theoretically be justified based on ‘some aspects of a worker’s sexual orientation that create a target for discrimination apart from any issues related to gender,’ citing as possible examples of stereotypes not ‘related to gender’ but instead ‘about particular aspects of the (so-called) gay and lesbian “lifestyle,”…ideas about promiscuity,…spending habits, child-rearing, sexual practices, or politics.’

“But even if it remains legal to fire employees based on such practices or beliefs, it cannot be legal to fire them based on assumption one makes about such practices or beliefs based in part on their race, color, religion, sex, or national origin. Title VII would be violated if a white woman were harassed based on stereotypes about her ‘promiscuity,…spending habits, child-rearing, sexual practices, or politics’ that arose only because she married a black man, and the same must be true if those stereotypes arose only because she married a woman.”

Responding to the petition for rehearing, Ivy Tech pointed to its earlier statement released after the 7th Circuit’s decision. The college steadfastly denied Hively’s allegations and noted it explicitly bans employment discrimination based on sexual orientation.

“In the (Hively v. Ivy Tech) decision the court ruled that such a claim is not recognized under current law and ‘is beyond the scope of the statute,’” the college stated. “Ivy Tech recognizes the importance of this issue and will continue to conduct its operations in a manner that is consistent with its statement of values and its policies prohibiting discrimination.”

Amicus briefs in support of the petition for rehearing were filed by the National Center for Lesbian Rights and GLBTQ Legal Advocates & Defenders, and by five members of Congress (Democratic Sens. Jeffrey Merkley, Tammy Baldwin and Cory Booker and Democratic Reps. David Cicilline and Mark Takano).

The National Center for Lesbian Rights and the GLBTQ Advocators & Defenders noted the practical implications of current precedent on the workplace.

“… the absence of a principled way to determine how courts will rule on Title VII claims by lesbian, gay, or bisexual plaintiffs has left both employers and employees bereft of clear guidance,” the groups argued in the amicus brief. “This instability and unpredictability inherent in such a scheme thwart reliance, leaving litigants to guess as to whether courts will categorize particular facts as evidence of sexual orientation discrimination or as evidence of sex discrimination. Overruling the exclusion would not cause hardship or inequity; rather it would eliminate the inconsistent and inequitable results made inevitable by the existing rule.”

Governor, First Lady Donate Residence Timber to Local Career and Vocational Center

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Indianapolis – Today, Governor Mike Pence and First Lady Karen Pence welcomed students from the Area 31 Career Center at Ben Davis High School to the Governor’s Residence to collect wood pieces for use in their vocational courses. Recently, the Governor’s Residence lost a large cherry tree limb due to storm damage. In light of the Governor’s ongoing efforts to make career and vocational education a priority in Indiana high schools, the Governor and First Lady saw an opportunity to give back to local career centers by donating wood pieces from the fallen tree limb.

The Area 31 Career Center at Ben Davis High School partnered with Indianapolis-based Wood-Mizer to prepare the donated wood from logs with bark to rough cut lumber. The wood will take up to two years to dry. Once the rough cut lumber is dry, the career center will use their lab equipment to plane the boards into smooth flat boards. Through this process, career center students will examine the life cycle of materials and resources by learning about the manufacturing processes used to turn raw material into rough cut lumber.

Each year, the Area 31 Career Center at Ben Davis High School prepares more than 1,200 students from 11 different school districts for college and careers.

 

 

 

Asmussen Breaks Out Of ‘Slump,’

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Winning Two As Golden Mischief Puts n show In Maiden Score

Newly-inducted Hall of Fame trainer Steve Asmussen didn’t accrue the second-most victories (7,386) in racing history by going very long without a win. So, with Ellis Park’s meet-leading stable going all of two weeks without an Asmussen horse hitting the wire first, you knew the barn soon would burst back into the winner’s circle.

That happened twice Friday, as Asmussen went 2 for 3, winning the second race for $5,000 claimers with Kitchen Boss and the seventh as the 2-year-old filly Golden Mischief captured a maiden race by eight lengths over early pacesetter Defy. That put Asmussen’s meet-leading total up to 14 victories, four ahead of second-place Ian Wilkes with six days left in Ellis’ summer meet. Asmussen also has nine seconds and five thirds in 63 starts. Wilkes has run 33 horses.

“That’s part of horse racing,” said Christy Hamilton, who oversees Asmussen’s Ellis Park operation. “Especially with a stable as large as ours, we’ve got so many horses all over. You’ve got to run where they fit. Sometimes they might not have a race here that fits a horse, and they’re shipping around.

“Clearly when you start off as strong as we did and as good as we did, and you go two weeks and don’t win a race, it is a little hard. You take it a little personal and you come back with a vengeance. It makes you work harder, wanting to get there.”

Golden Mischief, owned by Asmussen’s long-time clients Bill and Corinne Heiligbrodt, was making her fourth start. She lost her May 20 debut at Churchill Downs by a neck but showed enough that Asmussen shipped her to New York, where she was a very respectable fourth in the $200,000 Astoria. She led all the way until weakening at the end for another fourth in a Belmont maiden race.

With Didiel Osorio up for the first time, Golden Mischief broke sharply but quickly relaxed into third, some seven lengths behind the stern pace set by Defy. On the far turn, Golden Mischief began reeling in the field, exploding through the top of the stretch before Osorio wrapped up on her late. Even then, the daughter of Into Mischief powered 5 1/2 furlongs in 1:03.32, the Equibase chart footnotes saying “drew away to score as the rider pleased.”

The track record is 1:02.73, set in 2014 by Royal Saint, who coincidentally also was trained by Asmussen.

“I had a lot of horse,” Osorio said. “The last sixteenth, I looked back and little and saw nobody was coming.”

“She ran impressive. I’m very proud of her,” Hamilton said. “I loved how she rated. Man, she’s nice. Yesterday in the (barn) office, we were looking horses up and I pulled her up on my laptop. We were looking at her results, and when we saw her fourth in the Astoria, all of us just started smiling. That kind of told up what we needed to know – the fact that Steve thought that much of her.”

Eight different riders won Friday’s eight races. On a day where favorites ruled, jockey Ty Kennedy won the sixth race aboard the Marty Rouck-trained Keepinyourchinup, paying $34.60. The 22-year-old Kennedy, who had been riding at Prairie Meadows, said not only was it his first mount at Ellis, he’d never before stepped foot in the state.

Corey Lanerie won the nightcap on Freedom Works for a meet-leading 20th victory, two more than Miguel Mena and three more than Osorio, Brian Hernandez Jr. and James Graham.

Racing resumes Saturday at 12:50 p.m. Central, the card including the return of three-time Kentucky Derby winner Calvin Borel, who rides Ellis’ sixth race. Reminder that the schedule for Labor Day weekend is live racing on Thursday, Friday, Sunday and Monday. There is no live racing next Saturday, Sept. 3, that being opening day at Kentucky Downs.

Board of School Trustees of the Evansville Vanderburgh School Corporation Will Meet

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The Board of School Trustees of the Evansville Vanderburgh School Corporation will conduct a board retreat in executive session pursuant to IC 5-14-1.5-6.1-(b)(2)(A) at 3:00 p.m. on Monday, August 29, 2016, in the

John H. Schroeder Conference Room at the EVSC Administration Building, 951 Walnut St., Evansville, IN 47713.

Catch the Latest Edition of “The Indiana State Police Road Show”

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 Indiana - Catch the latest edition of the “Indiana State Police Road Show” radio program every Monday morning at your convenience.

This week’s show features Indiana State Police Master Trooper Jeremy Woods. M/Trooper Woods discusses his recent participation in the CVSA North America Inspectors Championship held in Indianapolis Indiana.

Download the program from the Network Indiana public websites at www.networkindiana.com.  Look for the state police logo on the main page and follow the download instructions. The ISP Road Show can also be viewed via YouTube.

Go to https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCu5Bg1KjBd7H1GxgkuV3YJA or visit the Indiana State Police website at http://www.in.gov/isp/   and click on the YouTube link. This 15 minute talk show concentrates on public safety and informational topics with state wide interest.

The radio program was titled “Signal-10” in the early sixties when it was first started by two troopers in northern Indiana. The name was later changed to the “Indiana State Police Road Show” and is the longest continuously aired state police public service program in Indiana.

Radio stations across Indiana and the nation are invited to download and air for FREE this public service program spons

Hot Jobs in Evansville

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Evansville Vanderburgh School Corporation  9 reviews - Evansville, IN
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Questions concerning compliance with these laws should be directed to the Chief Human Resources Officer, Evansville Vanderburgh School Corporation, 951 Walnut…
Caregiver Homes  16 reviews - Evansville, IN
The Office Assistant is responsible for all operational support for a branch or field support office including front office and customer service operations, and…
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Receives and screens visitors and telephone calls, and handles general inquiries. Establishes and maintains filing systems….
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Springstone - Newburgh, IN
License in social work preferred. Brentwood Meadows is a 48-bed, state of the art mental health and addiction treatment center, offering highly specialized…
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Valid drivers’ license. Questions concerning compliance with these laws should be directed to the Chief Human Resources Officer, Evansville Vanderburgh School…
Old National Bank  70 reviews - Evansville, IN
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First Security Bank, Inc. - Evansville, IN
Ability to communicate in an effective and professional manner with customers, public, management and staff whether in person or over the phone….
The Fresh Market  793 reviews - Evansville, IN
As a Cashier with The Fresh Market you will be responsible for working closely with the Store Manager, Assistant Store Managers, Front End Managers in order to…
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Evansville Vanderburgh School Corporation  9 reviews - Evansville, IN
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German American Bancorp - Evansville, IN
Provides quality customer service by greeting customers, ascertaining needs, processing deposit and loan transactions, solving routine problems, and making…
Star Industrial Services - Evansville, IN
$9 an hour
Valid Drivers License. Required license or certification:. Work with disabled adults and help them through day to day life while getting paid….
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TOP GROUP  3 reviews - Evansville, IN
$32,000 – $45,000 a year
Entry to Mid-level Japanese/English Bilingual Office Admin *Salary:. We do not accept any resumes from any third party organizations or other recruiters….
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Holiday Retirement  222 reviews - Evansville, IN
Provide tours, negotiate/sign leases, and make sales calls as needed. Qualified applicants will receive consideration without regard to race, color, religion,…
Woodforest National Bank  488 reviews - Newburgh, IN
Processes a variety of customer transactions accurately and efficiently in adherence to bank policies and regulations such as cashing checks, processing…
HR Solutions, Inc.  13 reviews - Evansville, IN
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Fielding telephone calls. We have been selective in building our own staff from the most highly qualified, certified, and experienced individuals in the Tri…
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SMMG Network HQ - Evansville, IN
The Representative, Patient Services Clinic works in a customer service capacity providing administrative and clerical support to patients and customers in an…
A Member of Ascension Health - Aug 22
CROSSMARK  1,521 reviews - Henderson, KY
Permanent Part time (Looking for supplemental income? Enjoy flexibility that enables you to have a work-life balance while you promote various products during…
Crittenden Health Systems  3 reviews - Evansville, IN
Integrity and the ability to maintain the hospital’s compliance with federal and state laws, rules and guidelines;…
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Circle K  2,020 reviews - Evansville, IN
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Redbanks Nursing Home  13 reviews - Henderson, KY
Include education in bookkeeping or accounting preferred and at least one year experience in Kentucky Medicaid/Medicare billing and private collections….
Kimberly-Clark  615 reviews - Owensboro, KY
Promote and participate in mill loss control management by utilizing Modern Safety Management Principles, World Class Manufacturing Principles, and compliance…
Family Dollar  5,927 reviews - Evansville, IN
Key priorities include greeting customers, assisting them with selection of merchandise, completing transactions, and answering questions regarding the store…
JCPenney  10,102 reviews - Evansville, IN
You listen, help, and you make them want to come back. Inspire strong performance in yourself and others….
Evansville Vanderburgh School Corporation  9 reviews - Evansville, IN
Valid Indiana teaching certification in appropriate grade level and area of study required. Questions concerning compliance with these laws should be directed…
W.W. Grainger  994 reviews - Evansville, IN
Must have a valid driver’s license. Create a territory plan that optimizes call routes, maximizes time in the field and ensures you are delivering and executing…
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7th Circuit tackles ‘moral turpitude’ in immigration case

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Jennifer Nelson for ww.theindianalawyer.com

The 7th Circuit Court of Appeals is concerned about the classification of every crime involving deception involving “moral turpitude,” which would prevent some unauthorized immigrants from seeking discretionary cancellation of removal under the law.

Maria Eudofilia Arias, who has been in the country illegally since 2000 and works at Grabill Cabinet Co. in Grabill, Indiana, was charged in federal court in 2010 with falsely using a Social Security number to work for Grabill. She pleaded guilty and was sentenced to “just about the lightest felony sentence one is likely to find in modern federal practice,” Judge David Hamilton wrote, one year of probation and a $100 special assessment. After completing probation and receiving employment authorization, Grabill rehired her. The company calls her an “excellent employee.”

Also in 2010, Arias received notice to appear for removal proceedings. She applied for cancellation of removal under 8 U.S.C. Section 1229b(b)(1). The attorney general of the United States may cancel the removal of unauthorized immigrants who have been in the country for at least 10 years and can show removal would cause exception and extremely unusual hardship to their children, spouses or parents who are U.S. citizens. Arias’ two youngest children are U.S. citizens.

The immigration judge held her crime was a crime involving moral turpitude, which then bars discretionary cancellation. The Board of Immigration Review upheld the finding.

Hamilton noted the conflict in this case, as the rule that all crimes involving any element of deception categorically involve moral turpitude would produce results at odds with the accepted definition of moral turpitude. But there is also significant precedent indicating that deceptive conduct is morally turpitudinous.

“Arias’s case brings into focus the troubling results that would follow from a rule that every crime that involves any element of deception involves moral turpitude. As of 2014, unauthorized immigrants made up about five percent of the United States labor force,” Judge David Hamilton wrote, citing the Pew Research Center. “Has every one of those millions of workers who gives a social security number to her employer committed a crime involving moral turpitude? Those persons are removable because they are not in the United States lawfully. The issue for Arias and all the others is whether they are barred from even discretionary relief because they have provided false social security numbers so that they can work and pay taxes.”

“It seems inconsistent with the terms ‘base, vile, or depraved’ to hold that an unauthorized immigrant who uses a false social security number so that she can hold a job, pay taxes, and support her family would be guilty of a crime involving moral turpitude, while an unauthorized immigrant who is paid solely in cash under the table and does not pay any taxes would not necessarily be guilty of a crime involving moral turpitude.”

The 7th Circuit remanded the matter because of “the unsettled state of the law” regarding how the board must go about determining which crimes involve moral turpitude. In between the board’s order and the briefing in Arias’ petition for 7th Circuit review, the attorney general of the United States vacated the order that had set the approach the board used to determine the crime involved moral turpitude. No replacement framework has yet emerged, Hamilton noted.

Judge Richard Posner wrote a concurring opinion, focusing on the concept of “moral turpitude.”

“It is preposterous that that stale, antiquated, and worse, meaningless phrase should continue to be a part of American law. Its meaningless is well illustrated by this case; and even if it is to be retained in immigration law it was misapplied by the Board of Immigration Appeals,” he wrote.

“If anything is clear it’s that ‘crime of moral turpitude’ shouldn’t be defined by invoking broad categorical rules that sweep in harmless conduct. Yet that’s what the Board of Immigration Appeals did in this case, in upholding the immigration judge’s conclusion that the petitioner had committed a crime of moral turpitude.”

The case is Maria Eudofilia Arias v. Loretta E. Lynch, attorney general of the United States, 14-2839.

CLIMATE CLOWN

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Adopt A Pet

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SEC Fines Private-Equity Firm Where Bayh Works Record $53M

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SEC Fines Private-Equity Firm Where Bayh Works Record $53M

Published On August 24, 2016 by Bloomberg News and IBJ Staff

Apollo is the latest company sanctioned in an industrywide sweep into whether private equity firms put their own interests ahead of investors. The Wall Street Journal said Apollo must pay more than $40 million back to pension funds and university endowments in the largest private equity settlement to date.

Bayh, a Democrat who is running against U.S. Congressman Todd Young, R-Indiana, for the U.S. Senate seat being vacated by Sen. Dan Coats, has worked for Apollo since January 2011. Bayh, a former Indiana governor, is seeking to return to the Senate after serving there from 1999 to 2011. He joined Apollo less than three weeks after leaving the Senate.

Jeff Cardwell, chairman of the Indiana Republican Party, called for Bayh to resign from the firm Wednesday.

“It’s bad enough that Evan Bayh used his public position to make millions for himself,” Cardwell said in a written statement. “If he truly stands for Hoosiers, it’s time for Bayh to resign from Apollo and distance himself from this corporate corruption. Hoosiers deserve to know whether Evan Bayh stands for bankers on Wall Street or Hoosiers on Main Street.”

Four fund advisers affiliated with Apollo failed to adequately disclose lump-sum payments it expects to receive from the sale of portfolio companies, the SEC said in a statement Tuesday. That reduced amounts available for distribution to fund investors, the SEC said. New York-based Apollo, which didn’t admit or deny wrongdoing, agreed to pay a $12.5 million penalty and about $40 million in disgorgement and interest.

Wall Street’s top cop has made policing private equity fees a priority. Blackstone Group LP and KKR & Co. were both fined last year by the regulator over how they informed investors of fund costs. The agency has focused on what’s known as accelerated monitoring fees, which firms charge the companies they own for services like advisory and legal work. The practice lowers the value of portfolio companies, which reduces potential profits available to clients.

“A common theme in our recent enforcement actions against private-equity firms is their failure to properly disclose fees and conflicts of interest to fund investors,” Andrew J. Ceresney, head of the SEC’s division of enforcement, said in the statement.

The former senior partner, whom the SEC didn’t name, was caught twice for improperly charging personal expenses to Apollo funds and portfolio companies from January 2010 through June 2013, according to the agency. That partner was Ali Rashid, according to two people with knowledge of the matter. Rashid left the firm in 2014.

With only repayment and a verbal reprimand as punishment, Apollo failed to find other instances where the partner saddled the fund with personal expenses. A firm-wide review led to the discovery of the additional charges, which resulted in the partner’s January 2014 departure from the firm.

“Apollo seeks to act appropriately and in the best interest of the funds it manages at all times,” Eric Kuo, an outside spokesman for Apollo, said in an e-mailed statement. “Long before the SEC inquiry began, Apollo had enhanced its disclosure and compliance relating to these matters.”