Newest member of the Evansville Police Department to be introduced
The Evansville Police Department will introduce it’s newest member.
Thanks to a donation to the Evansville Police Department Foundation, Sonitrol Alarm Company has made it possible for the EPD to purchase a dual certified police dog.
Members of the EPD Foundation, EPD, and representatives from Sonitrol will introduce our new four legged crime fighter  at the Sonitrol offices at 208 NW 3rd St in downtown Evansville.
Governor Pence to Offer Remarks at Feed ’em For Freedom
Governor Mike Pence will offer remarks at Walmart’s Feed ‘em for Freedom, in which soldiers at Camp Atterbury will be treated to a free lunch. Details below.
Friday, June 10:
11:00 a.m. EDT — Governor to offer remarks at Walmart’s Feed ‘em for Freedom
*Media are welcome to attend and are asked to bring a driver’s license and show media credentials at the main gate before proceeding to the USO Club Building.
Camp Atterbury – USO Club,  Building 347, Edinburgh, IN
Warrant Accountability Event Brings in Roughly 150 Participants
The Warrant Accountability Event was deemed a success by the Vanderburgh County
Prosecutor’s Office after about 150 people showed up today. A line of participants started to form outside of Courtroom 110 before the two-hour event even started.
“We knew it would draw in a lot of people who missed previous court dates because we had multiple phone calls about it all week,†said Whitney Riggs, spokesperson for the prosecutor’s office. “Everything went smoothly though and about 150 people have a new start to their cases.â€
The goal of the event was to have those people who have missed court dates for whatever reason to get back in the system. Currently, there are more than 12,000 warrants out in Vanderburgh County. Superior Court Judge Les Shively, who volunteered to preside, welcomed Level 5, Level 6 and misdemeanor cases.
“No charges were dropped for these people, but hopefully some of them can keep moving forward with their cases now without worrying about a warrant hanging over their head or potentially getting arrested,†Riggs said.
Shively and his staff stayed an extra hour until 1 p.m. to make sure all the attendees received new court dates. There were also five staff members from the prosecutor’s office who volunteered.
“We want to thank Judge Shively and his staff for taking the time to help us make the event possible,†Riggs said. “We will look into holding something similar again in the future.â€
ANOTHER WALK-OFF WIN FOR THE OTTERS
 The Evansville Otters split an action packed doubleheader against the Normal Cornbelters on Wednesday night at Bosse Field. Evansville lost the first game by a score of 5-4 and won the second 3-2. Within the opening match the Cornbelters jumped out to a 2-0 lead in the first inning. Otters first baseman, Nik Balog would hit a majestic homerun in the second to bring the score to 2-1. Evansville would rally to tie the game at 2-2 in the fourth. The game would continue to teeter totter after Normal tacked on a run in the fifth, with Evansville answering by scoring a run of their own in the seventh. The eighth inning would prove to be detrimental for the Otters as four Cornbelters reached safely to add an additional two runs and take a 5-3 lead. Evansville would score a run in the eighth to pull the game within one, but ultimately couldn’t come back.
The second contest featured a pitcher’s duel early, as neither team could muster a run through three innings. Normal would score first in the fourth behind a high flying double with a pair of runners on base. The Otters would persevere and rally to tie the game at 2-2 in the fifth. The offensive outburst was highlighted by three consecutive runners reaching base, followed by a sacrifice fly and throwing error. Both teams would remain fairly quiet with the bats until the seventh inning unfolded. Saving the best for last, the smallest player on the team, Kaeo Aliviado, provided a giant blast to left- field to seal a walk-off 3-2 victory for Evansville. The 5’6 Aliviado was swarmed by teammates and disappeared into what appeared to be one amped up dogpile.
Next, the Otters will finish a three game series tomorrow against the Normal Cornbelters, with first pitch slated for 6:35 pm CDT. Tickets are on sale and may be obtained online or by calling (812) 435-8686.
Can you Identify the Fraud Suspects in this Photo?
The Vanderburgh County Sheriff’s Office is seeking the public’s help in identifying these three fraud suspects. Â Please leave a tip by clicking here or call 812-421-6339.
Berniece Elenora Tirmenstein Remembered
The Quiet Warrior of Faith
by Michelle Peterlin
Faith ran like a ribbon of thread throughout Berniece’s life. It never left her and guided her every thought and life decision.
Berniece was born on October 10, 1931 in Fort Branch, Indiana. As a young girl, she dreamed of becoming a nurse. In her senior year of high school, Pearl Harbor was attacked. She was born into a modest family and money was tight. Nursing school was expensive.
Berniece saw a poster advertising the US Cadet Nursing Corps. There had been a critical shortage of nurses and to help alleviate the situation Congress passed the Bolton Act which created this special nursing corps. US Cadet Nursing Corps members were given free room and board plus free tuition to nursing school. They also had a small stipend of $10 per week for year one. Berniece joined the corps and she served for 3 years. She had her choice of going overseas or staying state side. Berniece wanted to stay and help the community she loved. She chose to serve at Deaconess hospital.
During her time at Deaconess with the corps, demand was great and the nurses had to work 12 hour or more shifts. It was tiring, grueling work. Berniece was having a hard time with the stress so in order to get help from above, she visualized having the words of St. Paul tucked under her nursing cap, “I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me”. It gave her the strength she needed to complete her daily tasks.
When the war ended, Berniece continued her nursing career at Deaconess hospital. Along the way, she married Paul and had two children.
Berniece had an internal faith compass she followed fearlessly her entire life. She was a tiny, petite woman with a soft voice and impeccable manners. Inside the diminutive package beat the heart of a faith justice warrior. She never backed down from doing what she felt was right. She never stopped serving others and caring for their needs. She was fierce when supporting a cause she believed in. She wrote letters, made countless phone calls, went to protests and was a fixture at City Council meetings. Many times, she spoke before the council and expressed her opinion and concerns.
She was a go to girl and she got things done. When the police chief was attacked in the media, Berniece made calls to gather support. Mayor Winecke needed votes, Berniece worked the phone. She took on city hall and helped get the homestead credit back. She was so effective, her nickname became the “the Terminator”. It was an unlikely new name for a woman whose body was racked with severe osteoporosis. She was fragile and in constant pain.
Even at nearly ninety years old, she had an incredible memory for Evansville history. She wrote several articles about the history of Evansville. She loved the James Gresham house in Garvin park and did much to save it and get repairs made.
The military and police department had a special place in her heart. They could not have had a more faithful cheerleader and she prayed for them every day. One of her last public outings was at the police rally in May. She sat on her pillow in her little portable chair directly in front of the Civic Center stairs waiving a support sign for all the world to see.
Berniece’s earthly journey came to an end on June 5, 2016. Always a nurse on duty, she was in route to visit a sick friend at a nursing home, making a home visit to like she had done for decades. The car she traveled in was in a terrible accident and her frail body finally failed her. When the paramedics arrived, she was calm and able to talk. St. Mary’s hospital was closer but she requested to go to Deaconess because “her” nurses were there and this was her home. Her journey ended where it began.
THURSDAY “READERS FORUM”
WHAT’S ON YOUR MIND TODAY?
FOOTNOTES: Our next “IS IT TRUE†will be posted on this coming Friday.
Todays READERS POLL question is: If the election was held today for President of the United States who would you vote for?
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
How Hillary Changed After Bernie
How Hillary Changed After Bernie
BY EMILY ATKIN, ALICE OLLSTEIN & KIRA LERNER
After a massive win in New Jersey and significant leads in South Dakota and New Mexico, Hillary Clinton is expected to win a majority of pledged delegates Tuesday night, far surpassing the threshold needed to win the Democratic Party nomination this July. Barring an unexpected upset at the convention, she will become the first woman in the history of the United States to represent a major political party.
Clinton is claiming the mantle of the presumptive nominee, but the campaign is not over for her opponent, Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT). Because Clinton’s grand total includes superdelegates — party elites who vote however they choose on the day of the convention — Sanders has pledged to focus on flipping those superdelegates by the time they vote in July.
Should Sanders’ attempt fail, however, he would not walk away from the hard-fought primary unaccomplished. Over the course of his more than year-long campaign, the groundswell of support for his progressive stances have helped push Clinton to the left on a number of issues, from economic inequality to the environment and trade. Pressure from Sanders and his supporters helped force Clinton to embrace more progressive positions throughout her primary campaign.
Clinton’s shift to the left is also reflective of a more progressive Democratic Party. According to a Pew survey last year, the percentage of Democrats who identify as liberal is greater than the percentage who consider themselves moderate for the first time ever. To secure the nomination of a party that is more progressive than it has been in decades, Clinton had to evolve on a number of her more centrist positions and had to embrace positions to the left of President Obama and her husband.
Here are some of the key policy areas where Clinton has shifted since Sanders entered the fray — and a few where she’s stood firm, despite pressure.
Where she’s shifted
Keystone XL
It was a long summer for Clinton when it came to Keystone XL, the controversial proposed 1,179-mile pipeline that would have carried tar sands crude oil from Canada down to the Gulf coast.
Clinton for months refused to say whether or not she supported the project, reasoning that her former position at the State Department — which oversaw the approval process — put her in a conflicted position. She would wait until President Obama made his final decision before making hers, she said.
Meanwhile, Sanders continually pressured Clinton on the issue. In speech after speech, he called on Obama to reject Keystone XL primarily because of its contributions to human-caused climate change, indrectly highlighting his policy difference with the former secretary of state.
Finally, in September — two months before Obama eventually rejected the pipeline — Clinton came out and opposed the project, which she called a “distraction from the important work we have to do on climate change.â€
Minimum Wage
A federal contract worker sits under a tree following a march past the Capitol to a rally on Capitol Hill in Washington, Wednesday, July 22, 2015, to push for a raise to the minimum wage to $15 an hour. A federal contract worker sits under a tree following a march past the Capitol to a rally on Capitol Hill in Washington, Wednesday, July 22, 2015, to push for a raise to the minimum wage to $15 an hour. Â Â Sanders has long said he supports a $15-an-hour federal minimum wage. Clinton, on the other hand, launched her campaign calling for a boost to the minimum wage, but would not commit to the $15 number. In a town hall meeting in Iowa last November, she said she supported a $12 minimum wage on the federal level, but would allow cities and states to set higher floors if they had local support.
“If not, $12 can give us a good, solid increase,†she said at the time, adding that a higher federal minimum would risk job losses. But then in April, as Sanders became more of a threat to Clinton’s campaign and as he continued to inspire progressive crowds by calling for a higher boost for low-wage workers, Clinton appeared to change her position. During a debate in New York, a moderator asked Clinton if as president, she would sign $15 minimum wage legislation if it reached her desk.  “Well of course I would,†Clinton replied. “I have supported the Fight for $15,†she continued, before Sanders pointed out the contradiction.
Wall Street
How Bernie Sanders And Hillary Clinton Differ On Wall Street
The Vermont senator won over voters across the country by attacking the U.S. banking system for creating profit for a few at the expense of the many, and by promising if elected to break up and forcefully regulate Wall Street’s financial giants.
Clinton, who has taken millions in donations from Wall Street bankers and hedge fund managers and who previously made hundreds of thousands of dollars giving private speeches to big banks, has not fared as well on this issue. In response to attempts to paint her as too cozy with Wall Street, she unveiled an aggressive regulatory plan that would make it easier to prosecute and jail individual bankers and would impose a tax on Wall Street speculation — both policies Sanders has long demanded.
Pressure from the party’s populist wing has also pushed Clinton to call for higher taxes on the rich, their inherited wealth, their investments, and their corporate profits. Echoing Sanders’ repeated calls for the nation’s millionaires and billionaires to “pay their fare share” in taxes, Clinton made a “fair share surcharge†tax of 4 percent on multi-millionaires a central piece of her platform.
Trade
Los Angeles community members wait for Hillary Rodham Clinton’s motorcade as they oppose the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) and Trade Promotion Authority (TPA) known as “The Fast Track,” in Beverly Hills, Calif., Thursday, May 7, 2015.Los Angeles community members wait for Hillary Rodham Clinton’s motorcade as they oppose the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) and Trade Promotion Authority (TPA) known as “The Fast Track,” in Beverly Hills, Calif.
Clinton began the 2016 race as a staunch supporter of President Obama’s trade agenda, including the controversial, long-debated Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) — a massive free trade deal the United States recently negotiated with 11 other nations. As Secretary of State, she repeatedly and forcefully defended the TPP while it was still being negotiated, saying it “holds out great economic opportunities to all participating nations” and promising it would create “better jobs with higher wages and safer working conditions” around the world.
Sanders, meanwhile, came out swinging against the deal, calling it a gift to large corporations that will encourage the outsourcing of American jobs to lower wage countries overseas. Sanders has vowed to do all he can to prevent the Senate from ratifying the agreement.
Anti-free trade fervor gripped both the left and the right as both Sanders and Donald Trump told cheering crowds that such deals can be devastating to American workers. In October, Clinton joined them, officially declaring her opposition to the TPP. She specifically cited concerns about the deal’s impact on the price of medicine around the world and it’s lack of protections against outsourcing U.S. jobs.
Clinton added that a lot of trade agreements “look great on paper†but don’t end up having the desired result, citing the South Korea free trade agreement enacted under President Obama while she was Secretary of State. “Looking back on it, it hasn’t had the results we thought it would have in terms of access to the markets, more exports, et cetera,†she told PBS.
Medicare
For much of the primary, Clinton resisted calls from Sanders to join him in supporting a single-payer health care system, one the Vermont senator likes to call “Medicare for all.â€
Clinton And Sanders Clash Over Path To Universal Health Care
But then in May, she took a significant step to the left when she said that people should have the option to buy into Medicare.
“
I’m also in favor of what’s called the public option, so that people can buy into Medicare at a certain age,†she said at a Virginia campaign event. She then explained that people “55 or 50 and up†could be given the option to join the program, which currently is reserved for Americans over 65. Clinton suggested that allowed more adults to purchase Medicare could lower insurance costs for younger Americans.
Social Security
During the 2008 election, Clinton said she would not raise taxes on the wealthy in order to increase funds for Social Security — a statement that many interpreted as a willingness to cut the program. Sanders, meanwhile, has insisted that Social Security be expanded and has introduced legislation in Congress to do just that.
Clinton has solidified her support for the program and expressed willingness to lift the cap on payroll taxes to fund it. “I have said repeatedly… I am going to make the wealthy pay into Social Security to extend the Social Security Trust Fund,†she said during a debate in April. “That is one way. If that is the way that we pursue, I will follow that.â€Â Even before that, she appeared to respond to Sanders’ steadfast support for Social Security by promising she would not cut it:
Drilling For Oil In The Arctic
At the beginning of the Democratic presidential race, it seemed both Sanders and Clinton were on equal footing when it came to drilling for oil in America’s Arctic Ocean. Both had cast votes during their time in the Senate to ban drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife, but neither were saying much about the practice.
As the campaign wore on, however, President Obama began to move forward with a plan to allow Shell Oil to explore for oil there. At that point, Sanders upped his rhetoric against Arctic drilling. In May, he openly expressed “deep disappointment” with the administration. “The last thing our environment needs is more drilling,” he said.
Clinton initially stayed mum, likely because she supported issuing permits to Shell to drill in the Arctic during her time as Obama’s secretary of state. “We seek to pursue these opportunities in a smart, sustainable way that preserves the Arctic environment and ecosystem,” then-Secretary Clinton said in 2011.
Eventually, however, Clinton changed her position. In August — literally one day after Obama gave final approval to Shell to begin drilling off the coast of Alaska — Clinton tweeted that the Arctic was a “unique treasure” that should not be subjected to the risk of drilling.
Where she’s stood firm
Capital Punishment
Clinton reiterated her support for the death penalty during a March town hall, saying that she believes it can be held “in reserve” for certain, limited federal crimes like mass shootings and terrorism.
The position distinguishes her from many prominent Democrats, including Sanders, who said last October that “the state, in a democratic, civilized society, should not itself be involved in the murder of other Americans.” Clinton’s position also distinguishes her from a majority of the Democrat electorate — just 40 percent of Democrats support capital punishment, and it is likely that Clinton will be the last Democratic presidential candidate to support the practice.
Is Hillary Clinton The Last Democratic Presidential Candidate To Support The Death Penalty?
Carbon Pricing
Despite pressure from both Sanders and environmentalists, Clinton is not currently advocating for a national price on carbon, whether that be a carbon tax or a cap-and-trade system. Carbon pricing — the idea that businesses should pay for the amount of carbon they emit — is a way to encourage traditionally high emitters to stop putting so much carbon into the atmosphere, thereby tackling climate change. In addition, the money made from a carbon price is generally put into climate change mitigation efforts.
Clinton’s reluctance to advocate for a carbon tax may be because she doesn’t believe it will gain traction with a Republican Congress. That’s at least what her adviser John Podesta seemed to indicate in comments reported last month by Scientific American. “I’d like to see a price on carbon, but I’m more optimistic about persuading Congress to support more investment in clean energy, more investment in energy efficiency, more investment in research and development,†Podesta said.
Sanders’ climate plan explicitly calls for a national carbon tax.
Fracking
On the environmental end, Clinton has also not heeded calls from Sanders to support a national ban on hydraulic fracturing, more commonly known as fracking. During fracking, companies inject high-pressure streams of water, sand, and chemicals underground to crack shale rock and dislodge hard-to-reach oil and gas reserves. Fracking has fueled an increase in natural gas use in the United States and contributed to the decline of coal — but it also poses environmental concerns, including air and water contamination and methane leaks which exacerbate climate change.
While Sanders is calling for a complete and total ban on fracking, Clinton has said she supports the practice — but only if certain conditions are met. She opposes fracking in cases where local communities don’t want it, where it causes pollution; and when fracking companies don’t disclose the chemicals they use.
“By the time we get through all of my conditions, I do not think there will be many places in America where fracking will continue to take place,†she said.