Home Blog Page 5478

VANDERBURGH COUNTY FELONY CHARGES

0

 Below is a list of the felony cases filed by the Vanderburgh County Prosecutor’s Office today.

Mark Allen Kellems Unlawful possession of a syringe, Level 6 felony

Battery resulting in bodily injury, Class A misdemeanor

Possession of marijuana, Class A misdemeanor

Possession of paraphernalia, Class A misdemeanor

Jaylen Ryan Kurtz Unlawful possession of a syringe, Level 6 felony

Theft, Class A misdemeanor

Ricky Lee Page Theft, Level 6 felony

Jason Vance Evitts Battery, Level 5 felony

Battery with moderate bodily injury, Level 6 felony

Domestic battery, Class A misdemeanor

Amy Davette Breece Unlawful possession or use of a Legend Drug, Level 6 felony

Operating a vehicle with an ACE of .15 or more, Class A misdemeanor

Possession of marijuana, Class B misdemeanor

Rameish Cartez Madison Battery resulting in bodily injury to a pregnant woman, Level 5 felony

Jerry Wayne Persinger Sr. Battery in the presence of a child, Level 6 felony

James Michael Davis Battery against a public safety official, Level 6 felony

Resisting law enforcement, Class A misdemeanor

Criminal trespass, Class A misdemeanor

Disorderly conduct, Class B misdemeanor

Todd Jeffrey Higdon Operating a motor vehicle after forfeiture of license for life, Level 5 felony

Operating a vehicle while intoxicated, Class C misdemeanor

Phillip G. Baxter Operating a motor vehicle after forfeiture of license for life, Level 5 felony 

Larry Eugene Foster Criminal confinement, Level 6 felony

Domestic battery, Class A misdemeanor

Myceisha Marchele Hunter Battery against a public safety official, Level 6 felony

Disorderly conduct, Class B misdemeanor

Joe Lee Lockridge Strangulation, Level 6 felony

Domestic battery, Level 6 felony

Jajaun Donta Bennett Residential entry, Level 6 felony 

Darrell Rhodes Jr. Residential entry, Level 6 felony 

John Raymond Holland III Residential entry, Level 6 felony 

Jeremy Nathaniel Hurst Residential entry, Level 6 felony 

Deaveyonte Marquis Emery Residential entry, Level 6 felony 

Shamar Antione Clardy Residential entry, Level 6 felony 

Robert John David Hull Possession of methamphetamine, Level 4 felony 

William Lee Zeigler Domestic battery, Level 6 felony 

Marlon Lamont Jones Battery against a public safety official, Level 6 felony

Domestic battery, Level 6 felony

Resisting law enforcement, Level 6 felony

John David Rybolt Operating a motor vehicle after forfeiture of license for life, Level 5 felony 

 

Family-Owned Logistics Provider Adding Jobs in Indianapolis

0

Business that Started in Indianapolis 65 Years Ago Continues to Thrive

Indianapolis – Merchandise Warehouse, a third-party logistics company specializing in temperature-controlled warehousing services, announced plans today to expand its operations here, creating up to 65 new jobs by 2019. As part of its hiring plans, the company is committed to continuing to hire many of its employees through the Edna Martin Christian Center, which provides job training services and employment coaching for community members in need of assistance.

“Indiana’s growing logistics industry plays a key role in our state’s economy, supporting a workforce that employs more Hoosiers than ever before in our 200-year history,” said Governor Mike Pence. “With its Indiana expansion, Merchandise Warehouse is helping connect manufacturers and food producers with customers across the nation and around the world. Indiana is ideal for logistics growth not only because of our central location and thriving business climate, but because of the hardworking Hoosiers who truly make this industry successful.”

The third-generation family-owned business will invest $13.58 million to construct and equip a 90,000-square-foot, 50-foot-tall addition to its food-grade facility at 1414 South West Street in Indianapolis. The addition will increase the company’s operating space by nearly 25 percent, allowing it to meet increased demand from its largest client, a food producer supplying restaurants across the country, as well as new customers. Merchandise Warehouse is also installing cutting-edge technology at its facility, with a robotics system using conveyers and pallet shuttles to select goods stored in racks 33 pallets deep and six lanes high. This system reduces the need for forklifts, maximizes space utilization and increases logistical efficiency for its customers.

Merchandise Warehouse currently employs 69 full-time associates, with plans to begin hiring for forklift and supervisory positions in August. Interested applicants can apply through an employment training program at the Edna Martin Christian Center or through Spherion Staffing.

“Indianapolis remains the ‘Crossroads of America’ and we continue to see a growing demand for our services, due not only to the nature and quality of the service we provide, but because of our location,” said Tim Siddiq, president and chief executive officer of Merchandise Warehouse. “It made sense, when we decided on expanding, to stay right here and build upon our strong team and take advantage of the excellent business climate.”

Founded in Indianapolis more than 65 years ago, Merchandise Warehouse packages, stores and ships goods for the food, grocery, pharmaceutical and general commodity industries. The company’s food-grade facility has been at capacity for the last two years, with large freezer and cooler areas that allow the company to serve a variety of food production customers. In addition to its food-grade facility, Merchandise Warehouse also operates an industrial warehouse at 3000 Shelby Street in Indianapolis.

The Indiana Economic Development Corporation offered Merchandise Warehouse Company Inc. up to $300,000 in conditional tax credits based on the company’s job creation plans. These tax credits are performance-based, meaning until Hoosiers are hired, the company is not eligible to claim incentives. The city of Indianapolis supports the project in partnership with Develop Indy, a business unit of the Indy Chamber.

“The continued growth of Merchandise Warehouse in Indianapolis is a testament to the company’s decades-long commitment to our community as well as the resources, talent and connectivity our city provides,” said Indianapolis Mayor Joe Hogsett. “I welcome the positive impact today’s announcement by Merchandise Warehouse will have on families and neighborhoods across Indianapolis and look forward to many more opportunities like this in the years to come.”

Merchandise Warehouse’s announcement comes on the heels of news last month that Indiana ranks as the best state in the Midwest and among the top five states in the nation for doing business. With Indiana’s strong business climate and workforce, companies have added 136,000 new private sector jobs in Indiana in the last three years, including the addition of 46,600 new jobs so far this year.

R. THUNDERBOLTS SIGN TWO LOCAL TALENTS FOR SECOND SEASON

0

THE JR. THUNDERBOLTS ACCENTING LOCAL TALENT WITH FIRST TWO PLAYER SIGNINGS EVANSVILLE LOCAL STANDOUTS KODY KIFER AND ANDREW WARE FIRST TO SIGN FOR ’16-17 JR. ‘BOLTS CONTINUING TO EMPHASIZE HOMEGROWN TALENT FOR SECOND NA3HL SEASON

EVANSVILLE, IN— When Evansville’s elite junior hockey team, the Evansville Jr. ThunderBolts, launch their second season as members of the NA3HL in 2016-17, they will continue to assemble a roster replete with homegrown talent from both the Tri-State area as well as the State of Indiana. This was certainly validated in the form of the club’s initial two player signings for the team’s upcoming second season.

On this date, Jr. ThunderBolts General Manager/Head Coach Mark Cody has announced that city of Evansville local standouts KODY KIFER and ANDREW WARE have each signed tenders to join the Evansville club for the 2016- 17 NA3HL campaign.

KIFER, 6-1, 190lb, is a top-flight product of the local EYHA program, having starred the past two seasons with the EYHA Thunder High School Team, leading his squad in point production last season. Widely-recognized as a premiere power forward who excels playing an intensely physical game, KIFER registered a prolific 33-points in 24-games on a combination of 19-goals, 14-assists. His 132-PIM attest to his affinity for physical contact. The local star seems to blend the key elements of size, speed and firepower into his new team’s lineup.

WARE, a package of punch and power on defense at 5-11, 215lb, has been a stellar performer of the highest order, also with the EYHA Thunder HS squadron where he gained acclaim for the past three years. Reputed to be a very reliable, steady, physical rearguard, WARE has combined those key qualities with his outstanding puck-moving ability and strong decision-making when the pressure is on. In 26-games in 2015-16 with the Thunder, the rock- ribbed blue line bulwark engineered 11-points on 4-goals, 7-assists along with 120-PIM.

GM/Coach Cody is looking forward to having two familiar faces rejoining him in ’16-17; only this time around under the Jr. ThunderBolts banner. “I have had the pleasure of coaching both Kody and Andrew for the last two seasons. Kody has great speed and an above average shot. He is a hardnosed player who does not mind mixing it up. He will fit in extremely well with the brand of hockey our ‘Bolts will play in this upcoming season. As for Andrew, he has been a very solid defenseman for the Thunder High School team over the last three seasons. I feel that he has made great strides through the past two years and is ready to make the jump to junior hockey. Andrew is another player who does not shy away from the physical aspects of the game. In addition, he is an outstanding decision- maker with the puck and sees the ice very well.”

KODY KIFER and ANDREW WARE represent the first two players tendered under the new Jr. ThunderBolts regime of GM/Coach Cody. Both local players will be on the ice for the start of training camp in early September.

SWEENEY HITS ANOTHER GAME WINNING HOMERUN

0

 The Evansville Otters won a thrilling game by a score of 5-2 against the Joliet Slammers on Nursing Home Night, presented by Deaconess, at Bosse Field. The Otters would score in the first inning after Nik Balog was successfully able to beat the shift on an RBI single to give the team a 1-0 edge. The lead would not last long on an evening that seemed to be a grudge match, as the Slammers took a 2-1 lead in the third behind a majestic solo homerun and a single with a runner on base. Evansville quickly rallied to even the score at 2-2 in the fourth after Kurt Wertz Jr. was able to burn the Slammers leftfielder with an RBI double. The game would remain fairly uneventful until drama unfolded in the eighth. Chris Sweeney, who was the walk-off hero just a few weeks ago, was able to provide clutch hitting once again as he crushed a three-run homerun that gave the Otters a monumental 5-2 lead. Joliet would go down quietly in the ninth, with Evansville preserving a come from behind victory.

Next, the Otters will play the Joliet Slammers tomorrow on the first Thirsty Thursday of the season for the rubber match and series finale. First pitch is scheduled for 6:35 pm CDT. Tickets are on sale and may be obtained online or by calling (812) 435-8686.

Scooter Suspect Sought for Impersonating a Police Officer

0
During the early morning hours of Tuesday, May 31, 2016 the Vanderburgh County Sheriff’s Office responded to Westbrook Trailer Park in reference to an individual impersonating a police officer.
The victim reported that a white male suspect with blonde hair, wearing a black shirt and pants approached them on an orange VIP motorized scooter. The suspect stopped the victim and asked him to produce identification. The suspect allegedly pointed some kind of red and blue flashing light in the victim’s face. The victim refused to identifiy himself and the suspect fled the area.

While the Sheriff’s Office routinely patrols Westbrook Trailer Park in both marked vehicles and on marked bicycles, we do not utilize mopeds or scooters. Impersonating a Law Enforcement Officer is a Level 6 Felony and is punishable by up to two and one half (2-1/2) years in prison and a fine of up to $10,000.00.

Anyone with information concerning this suspect is asked to leave a tip here.

 

THURSDAYS “READERS FORUM”

27

WHAT’S ON YOUR MIND TODAY?

FOOTNOTES: Our next IS IT TRUE” will be posted on this coming Friday?

Todays READERS POLL question is: Who do you feel was the most effective President of Evansville City Council in recent years?

Please take time and read our newest feature articles entitled “HOT JOBS” and “LOCAL SPORTS” posted in our sections.

If you would like to advertise in the CCO please contact us City-County Observer@live.com.

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

Justices: Divorced Parents Don’t Have To Pay Kids’ Graduate School Costs

0

Justices: Divorced Parents Don’t Have To Pay Kids’ Graduate School Costs

In a unanimous decision, the Indiana Supreme Court ruled divorced parents cannot be obligated to pay the graduate or professional school expenses of their adult children in a case where a mother and father were forced to share a child’s dental school expenses after she completed her undergraduate degree.

David and Kimberly Allen divorced in 2002 and agreed to share custody of their two children. They agreed to a modification in 2010 where David Allen would be responsible for their daughter’s educational expenses and Kimberly Allen would be responsible for her health insurance.

David Allen petitioned for another change of the agreed order in 2013, seeking to have the daughter’s dental school expenses divided between him and his ex-wife. The trial court denied his order, but the Court of Appeals reversed it, ruling the trial court erred by making David Allen liable for the expenses and rejecting mother’s cross-appeal argument that the trial court lacks authority to order the parents to pay for their child’s graduate school expenses. The mother sought transfer and it was granted by the Supreme Court.

In a decision written by Justice Steven David, the court examined Indiana Code 31-16-6-2, which states in part, “The child support order or an educational support order may also include, where appropriate, amounts for the child’s education in elementary and secondary schools and at postsecondary educational institutions … .”

David wrote “postsecondary” means an organized two-year or longer program of collegiate grade directly creditable toward a baccalaureate degree, citing the higher education title. David cited four other codes in support of this interpretation.

The Court of Appeals ruled the Legislature was free to enact a limit on education after high school but didn’t, so all expenses should be included. David pointed out the Legislature didn’t include graduate expenses. He also mentioned recent changes to the child support statutes mean the Legislature’s intent was to not include graduate school.

David wrote Indiana is one of the few states that have a statute providing for educational expenses once a child has reached the age of majority. Most states have no law requiring divorced parents provide college expenses, and of the states that do, the majority limit payment of the expenses to a certain age.

“We also note that married parents have no legal obligation to pay for their children’s educational expenses beyond high school, let alone graduate school expenses,” David wrote.

He ended by noting that divorced parents can still agree to pay a portion or all of their child’s graduate expenses, and that agreement can be enforceable by the court.

The case is David  P. Allen v. Kimberly W. Allen, 13S01-1601-DR-00053.

State Board of Education Releases List Of “Four Star Schools”

0

The Indiana Department of Education recently announced the 2014-15 Four Star Schools. To achieve this designation, a school must be in the top 25 percent of schools in two ISTEP-based categories.

Additionally, a qualifying school must have earned the highest designation in the state’s accountability system and be accredited by the Indiana Department of Education.

A total of 287 schools received the award throughout the state.

Locally, the Four Star Schools are:

Good Shepherd School, Evansville

Mater Dei High School, Evansville

Memorial High School, Evansville

Resurrection School, Evansville

St Philip School, Mount Vernon

Evansville Christian School, Evansville

Evansville Day School, Evansville

Oak Hill Elementary, Evansville

Scott Elementary School, Evansville

North Posey High School, Poseyville

Signature School, Evansville

Gibson Southern High School, Fort Branch

Castle North Middle School, Newburgh

Castle South Middle School, Newburgh

John H Castle Elementary School, Newburgh

Sharon Elementary School, Newburgh

Indiana Tech Law School Graduates Under Pressure To Be Exemplary Attorneys

0

by Marilyn Odendahl for www.theindianalawyer.com

Indiana Tech Law School graduates under pressure to be exemplary attorneys Class of 20 is first to graduate from Indiana Tech Law School Bicentennial class takes oath to become lawyers
Indiana law schools prepare for pomp and circumstance Recent bar passage results ‘stunning’

The 20 graduates who walked across the commencement stage May 14 and received their J.D. degrees were part of a historic day for Indiana Tech Law School as they were the first to graduate from the state’s fifth law school.

But faculty and graduates acknowledged that the graduation, while a significant milestone, is not the end of their work.

Eighteen of the 20 graduates of the first class of Indiana Tech Law School before their graduation ceremony May 14. Coming from a school that still raises doubts, the members of the charter class know they have more pressure on them than most law school graduates. Their credibility and the reputation of the Fort Wayne school relies on the graduates passing the bar exam and becoming exemplary attorneys.

“They’ve got to go out and be great,” associate dean for admissions and student affairs andré douglas pond cummings said. “…They’ve got to be really smart about how they represent clients, how they are ethically, how they engage in interactions with other lawyers. They’ve got to be better than just good lawyers.”

Bar exam preparation courses were scheduled to begin just days after graduation and the class has set a goal to have a 100 percent passage rate. Despite the task ahead, the graduates took time to celebrate their commencement.

Before the morning ceremony at the Allen County War Memorial Coliseum began, members of the charter class assembled for a group photo in front of the graduation stage.

Afterward, many returned to the law school with their families for a reception. During the light lunch, cummings recounted the triumphs and adversities of the past three years and the class presented the school with a grandfather clock as a gift. Several graduates thanked their professors and some even shed a few tears, underscoring the particularly close bond between the charter class and the faculty.

Graduate Amy Thompson said the tight relationship bolstered the school’s curriculum that focuses on producing lawyers who are ready to practice. The law professors kept their office doors open so students could walk in anytime for help, and the classmates developed close friendships that trumped feelings of competitiveness and insecurity.

“Knowing that we were a small school, I did expect that we would probably build relationships,” she said. “Never did I expect to build them as closely as we have.”

Twenty-seven students started classes at Indiana Tech Law School in August 2013.

The next three years brought trials neither the charter class nor the faculty anticipated. Peter Alexander, the founding dean, departed suddenly without explanation, and the law school initially failed to get provisional accreditation from the American Bar Association. This threw the students’ futures in doubt because Indiana, along with many states, requires individuals who take the bar exam to have graduated from an accredited law school.

Then acting as interim dean, cummings went to each student individually and told them to explore their options. He believed the law school would gain ABA approval because the problems cited in the denial were fixable with just small improvements. Indiana Tech did gain provisional accreditation in March.

One class member, Shawn Good, did opt to leave, transferring to Concordia University School of Law in Boise, Idaho. He said he was confident Indiana Tech would get accredited but staying was too risky, so he made what he described as a “safety move.”

Good completed his third-year coursework at Concordia but then transferred his credits back to newly accredited Indiana Tech to graduate as a member of the charter class.

The law school welcomed Good back, but cummings has special affection for the students who stayed.

“My hat is off to them for having that kind of belief and fortunately we rewarded that kind of faith by doing everything in our power to show the ABA that we are the wave of the future. We are what law schools should look like,” he said.

Indiana Tech touts its curriculum as being heavily experientially based. As an example, cummings recalled the contracts classes he took in law school. He read about contracts and learned how they were breached but never drafted one. Indiana Tech students, by contrast, draft contracts, complaints and articles of incorporation in addition to practicing other skills like interviewing clients.

“I’ve visited other law schools, I’ve taught at other law schools,” cummings said. “The entrenched faculty at other law schools don’t want to do the hard work that is required to put experiential exercises into every class and to integrate it across the curriculum and to give the students real genuine litigation and corporate practice while they are in law school.”

The curriculum was praised in a paper published in the April edition of the Wisconsin Law Review. Richard Redding, vice chancellor for graduate education at Chapman University, examines the offerings in law schools designed to provide the skills training so the students can immediately step into practice.

Noting clinics often fall short of making graduates practice ready, Redding highlighted Indiana Tech Law School as “perhaps one of the best models for skills integration throughout the curriculum.”

Indiana Attorney General Greg Zoeller, who attended the graduation reception, adjusted his syllabus when he taught an Indiana constitutional law class at Indiana Tech during the fall semester of 2015. Teaching at other law schools, he said, he was always encouraged to stick to the academic aspects of the subject, supplemented with stories from his own experience. But in Fort Wayne, he had the students draft amicus briefs and based the exam on a case from his office.

“I think they were every bit as good as any of the students I ever taught in constitutional law,” Zoeller said of his Indiana Tech class.

The curriculum attracted Charles Cercone who was appointed dean of Indiana Tech Law School in January 2015. Looking ahead, he said the faculty will have to follow the ABA’s suggestion from the accreditation process and improve the academic profile of the incoming classes. Already the school takes a holistic approach, looking at each applicant’s undergraduate grades, LSAT score, work experience and whether he or she overcame any significant disadvantages.

Next year the law school will have to say goodbye to its strongest supporter. Indiana Tech president Arthur Snyder has announced his plans to retire in 2017.

“This was his vision,” Cercone said. “But I have to say the rest of the university and particularly the board of trustees have indicated to me and the rest of the law school community that they are very supportive and big champions of the law school.”

Cum laude graduate David Felts said in working at law firms around Fort Wayne, he found many of the skills he was taught in the classroom translated into real life. He is hoping to join a firm in the community but first he is focused on the bar exam.

“If we can pass the bar at a higher rate than average, that will prove to the legal community and all the naysayers out there that we’re a viable institution and that we’ll be around for many years to come,” he said.

Felts’ father, Allen Circuit Judge Tom Felts, credited the law school with breathing new life into the local legal community. He said the city will benefit from the “hardworking, brave, very well-trained lawyers” coming from Indiana Tech.

As the faculty and students become more active across the state and word gets out about the school, more attention will be focused on Fort Wayne.

“I think the energy the school is going to generate, it’s going to take a little while, but three to five years and Indiana Tech is going to be on par with the rest of the schools in the state,” Judge Felts said.

Once she gets through with the bar exam, Thompson plans to devote more energy to looking for a position in private practice, but if nothing materializes, she is prepared to create her own opportunity. She and a law school colleague have been exploring the possibility of working in the area of consumer protection and debtors’ rights. Other attorneys, she said, have already offered to mentor them.

Good has a desk waiting for him at his father’s law firm in the Chicago area. He will take the Illinois bar then join his dad in practicing in the areas of Social Security disability, family law and estate planning.

Zoeller, who has hired a number of Indiana Tech law students as clerks and interns in his office, said the charter class will be the best advertisement for the school.

“A student who’s bold enough to come when it was not accredited, who stayed the course when everyone else was challenging and criticizing and being skeptical, that’s the kind of bold attorney I like to hire in the office of the attorney general,” he said. “These students are the definition of bold.”