It’s been hard on many volunteers to find the girl that went missing without a trace, and now they say an even bigger obstacle is against them.
Lilly King’s Former Coach Reflects On Her Olympics Journey
It’s been hard on many volunteers to find the girl that went missing without a trace, and now they say an even bigger obstacle is against them.
Lilly King’s Former Coach Reflects On Her Olympics Journey
ABA Calls For Including Implicit Bias In Jury Instructions
Marilyn Odendahl for www.theindianalawyer.com
Over opposition from some attorneys including one from Indiana, the American Bar Association has adopted a resolution that calls for judges to instruct jurors on implicit bias.
Resolution 116, which amended two sections of the ABA Principles for Juries and Jury Trials, was approved by the ABA House of Delegates during the annual meeting Aug. 4 through 9 in San Francisco. The second part of the resolution proposed adding a provision to Jury Principle 6 that would require judges to educate jurors on the impact implicit bias can have on the deliberation process. The Indiana State Bar Association discussed implicit bias at its 2015 annual meeting.
According to the ABA Journal, that provision stirred some opposition, including from Indianapolis Bar Association delegate Phil Isenbarger. Rather than making a strict requirement, he advocated for softening the language to say that judges “should consider†giving juries instructions on bias. However the House of Delegates passed the measure.
The ABA’s Commission on the American Jury and the Diversity & Inclusion 360 Commission proposed the implicit instructions. In their report to the delegates, the commissions stated, “Courts must find practical ways of eliminating implicit bias in jurors. Due to the limited opportunities to educate jurors in the court room setting, the importance of a well-crafted specialized jury instruction may be the only available practical option of making jurors aware of implicit bias.â€
The ABA Journal reported that Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Ramona See supported the provision. She noted the bench in California has been instructing juries on implicit bias for 19 years and “has shown that it does work.â€
Still Isenbarger, partner at Bingham Greenebaum Doll LLP who practices in litigation, raised concerns about the ABA rushing to introduce the subject to juries that judges and lawyers are still studying. While implicit bias instruction is meant to get jurors to stop and think about their decisions, he pointed out in an interview with Indiana Lawyer what he sees as the irony in the association not taking more time to consider this resolution.
The amendment was revised to provide more information to jurors. Isenbarger said the revision helped but he would have like for model instructions to have been included to give guidance to judges.
Isenbarger noted he was speaking for himself and not on behalf of the IndyBar.
Resolution 116 also included an amendment to Principal 2(B) which covers eligibility for jury service. The section was revised to prohibit anyone from being barred from a jury because of marital status, gender identity or gender expression.
“The purpose behind Principle 2 is to make certain that the jury pool and ultimately juries are representative of the communities that they serve,†the commissions wrote in their report. “The broader the participation, the greater will be the public trust and confidence in the decisions made by the jury and the judgements (sic) of the court.â€
This provision passed with no opposition. Isenbarger said the amendment will help bring more diversity to the jury box.
Links To Video of the 2yo Gemacho Winning Today’s Fourth Race And 2yo First-Time Starter Parlor Winning The Sixth Race And 2yo First-Time Starter Parlor Race 4 At Ellis Park
https://www.dropbox.com/s/5agytxdl1hs9rgq/08.14.2016%20Video%201.mp4?dl=0
Race 6 – https://www.dropbox.com/s/xjq2z6p5361k4w8/08.14.2016%20Video%202.m4v?dl=0
Tuxedo is an 8-year-old male – you guessed it – tuxedo cat! His markings make him look like he’s always wearing his Sunday best. He’s a little older and is pretty scared in the shelter environment. But he gets along with other cats and he will make someone a great companion for the next 10+ years! Call the Vanderburgh Humane Society in Evansville at (812) 426-2563 or visit www.vhslifesaver.org for adoption details!
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Making Sense by Michael Reagan
Donald Trump didn’t listen.
Last week I said the only thing that could save his campaign was for him to literally shut up for at least a month.
My modest proposal was for his campaign people to lock him in a soundproof booth until November 9th.
But forget that. I’ve got a better idea to put the Trump circus train on the right track.
Trump’s support in the polls is stuck at about 42 percent.
To win, we know he has to get the votes of disaffected Republicans, terrified independents and people who don’t already believe Obama was born in a grass hut in Kenya.
But to get their support by Election Day he has to do two things.
He has to stop saying stupid things in public and he has to give a hundred more speeches like the great one he delivered in Detroit on Monday.
Unfortunately, there’s just one way to prevent Trump from saying stupid things and it’s probably against federal election laws.
His campaign people need to make him wear a shock collar —- just like the ones you put on your family dog for those invisible backyard fences.
That way, every time Donald strays from the teleprompter, Paul Manafort can just hit the button and give him a big jolt upside the neck.
“Although the Second Amendment people, maybe ….†—- ZAAAPPPPP.
This week was a total disaster, but it began with a really good speech in Detroit. Of course someone else wrote it. Of course Trump read it.
But with a few exceptions his conservative economic ideas sounded like they came from the Wall Street Journal editorial page.
Trump said he’d cut income tax rates, increase individual exemptions, reduce the number of tax brackets from seven to three and slash the corporate tax rate to 15 percent.
He’d also end the death tax and the alternative minimum tax.
What Trump said in Detroit —- especially the part about how the city has been wrecked by half a century of local Democratic rule and liberal federal social policies —- should become his standard stump speech.
He could read it almost word for word in city after city. All he’d have to do is change Detroit to Chicago, Toledo, St. Louis, etc.
A speech like that is what it takes to win a general election, not another speech calling Hillary a liar or charging the Clinton family with pioneering the globalization of graft.
Trump got great media coverage for his Detroit speech but it didn’t even last a day.
On Tuesday every liberal in the media was parsing his comments about “Second Amendment people†to prove he was encouraging the assassination of Hillary or joking about it.
I’m surprised no one on CNN’s panel of liberals went to a blackboard and started to diagram Trump’s sentences.
But the media don’t really care what he actually says or meant to say. They’ll spin it whichever way they can so that Trump appears to be in favor of killing babies.
Trump blew himself up again, thanks to his own stupidity and lack of self-control.
Instead of getting a week of praise for a hard-hitting economic speech, he spent four days watching the print and electronic media gang up on him like he was America’s Vladimir Putin.
Instead of enjoying Hillary Clinton stumbling over answers to questions about her emails, or explaining why the Taliban-loving father of the Orlando mass murderer was her biggest supporter, Trump hogged the airtime.
He proved my point last week —- just shut up, Donald.
It’s a shame. If any of the other 16 candidates had won the Republican primary this election would be over.
All Trump and his daily fumbles are doing now is opening the door wider and wider for the libertarian twins, ex-Republican governors Gary Johnson and Bill Weld.
At the end of the day, they may be the only adults in the room.
 The Evansville Otters took down the Southern Illinois Miners nine to three in game two of the series. The Otters had outstanding pitching from Tyler Vail and the Otters offense had a fantastic hitting night with 12 on the night.
Vail pitched for six innings, allowing six hits, two runs and had nine strikeouts on the night. With the win, Vail moves to six and three on the season. For the Miners Dyllon Nuernberg started on the mound and received the loss. On the night, Nuernberg allowed five hits, six runs, and had four walks in four innings. Nuernberg will move to six and four on the season with the loss.
The Otters would build a two to zero lead in the first, when Rolando Gomez and Josh Allen both scored. In the third, the Otters would score two more when Chris Breen blasted a two-run homer to score Christopher Riopedre. The Miners would put up one run in the fourth to make it four to one with Brandon Cummins RBI-single. The Otters would answer the Miners with Julio Rodriguez’s RBI-double to bring in Breen.
The Otters would go on the attack in the fifth to put two more runs on the board. Nik Balog would score Allen with an RBI- single, and John Schultz had an RBI-single to score Riopedre. In the sixth, Josh Allen continued the scoring with a triple off the right field wall to score Gomez to extend the lead eight to one.
The Miners would finally make their way back on the score board in the seventh with a two run homer over right field wall from Shane Kennedy. Rodriguez would find his second RBI of the game when he brought in Breen with a single to extend the lead to nine to three.
The Otters (42-32) take on the Miners (51-26) in game three of the series Sunday, August 14. First pitch takes place at 5:05pm at Bosse Field. Tickets available at www.evansvilleotters.com or by phone at 812-435-8686 ext. 21.
EVANSVILLE, IN, August 13, 2016 – The Evansville Otters took down the Southern Illinois Miners nine to three in game two of the series. The Otters had outstanding pitching from Tyler Vail and the Otters offense had a fantastic hitting night with 12 on the night.
Vail pitched for six innings, allowing six hits, two runs and had nine strikeouts on the night. With the win, Vail moves to six and three on the season. For the Miners Dyllon Nuernberg started on the mound and received the loss. On the night, Nuernberg allowed five hits, six runs, and had four walks in four innings. Nuernberg will move to six and four on the season with the loss.
The Otters would build a two to zero lead in the first, when Rolando Gomez and Josh Allen both scored. In the third, the Otters would score two more when Chris Breen blasted a two-run homer to score Christopher Riopedre. The Miners would put up one run in the fourth to make it four to one with Brandon Cummins RBI-single. The Otters would answer the Miners with Julio Rodriguez’s RBI-double to bring in Breen.
The Otters would go on the attack in the fifth to put two more runs on the board. Nik Balog would score Allen with an RBI- single, and John Schultz had an RBI-single to score Riopedre. In the sixth, Josh Allen continued the scoring with a triple off the right field wall to score Gomez to extend the lead eight to one.
The Miners would finally make their way back on the score board in the seventh with a two run homer over right field wall from Shane Kennedy. Rodriguez would find his second RBI of the game when he brought in Breen with a single to extend the lead to nine to three.
The Otters (42-32) take on the Miners (51-26) in game three of the series Sunday, August 14. First pitch takes place at 5:05pm at Bosse Field. Tickets available at www.evansvilleotters.com or by phone at 812-435-8686 ext. 21.