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IS IT TRUE FEBRUARY 29, 2016

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IS IT TRUE for the last several years the City of Evansville officials have claimed that the not-or-profit Evansville Brownfields Corp isn’t an entity of the City?   …the.not-for profit Evansville Brownsfields Corp staff member is paid by the City?  …her.office and their organization records are located and maintained in the DMD offices located in the Civic Center? …all the Evansville Brownfields Corp land bank title expenses and fees are paid by the City?  …income that supports the overall operations comes from grants and sale of properties given to them by the City/County taxpayers?  …after reading the information we just posted concerning the Evansville Brownfields Corp we wonder if you think that EBC meetings should be closed to the public?

IS IT TRUE we are extremely puzzled about why Vectren Corp would allow anyone from their organization to serve on the board of a City/County taxpayer funded organization that holds their meetings in private?  …over the last several years Vectren Corp has been doing a masterful job in improving their public image?  … they shouldn’t allow an employee from their organization to serve on a taxpayer funded board that conducts their business in private? …we also feel that Vectren Corp should not allow Evansville Brownfield Corp to use their conference room for secret closed door meetings? …we are watching with interest to see if the new Vectren way of doing business is that they support open transparency in government?

IS IT TRUE we also feel that 4th Ward City Councilwoman, Connie Robinson, should immediately resign from serving on the taxpayer funded Evansville Brownfields Corp board because they conduct the people’s business behind closed doors? …we feel that no elected official should serve on a board that is supported by taxpayers dollars that holds their meetings behind close doors?

IS IT TRUE last year GOP Party Chairman Wayne Parke  alleged that Cheryl Musgrave wasn’t a Republican? …earlier this year Mr. Parke, with the support of Mayor Winnecke, hand picked a political unknown to run in the Republican primary against political power house Cheryl Musgrave? …the 32 year-old candidate for County Commissioner Alex Schmitt voted in the last Democratic Party Primary election and Parks had to give him special permission to run for this seat?
 
IS IT TRUE we were surprised that Alex Schmitt had the political gall to call Mrs Musgrave an agitator just because she challenges the actions of the political machine?  …all we can say to Mrs. Musgrave is “Give Them Hell” girl?

IS IT TRUE we hear that City Council President Missy Mosby is quietly telling people that she is supporting Governor Pence for re-election? …we thought she was a Democrat?

IS IT TRUE we were informed by  a committee member of a person running for public office that they shall not be advertising in the City County Observer?  …the reason they decided to do this is because we posted something about their candidate that they didn’t like?  …just because a candidate advertises in the CCO doesn’t mean were not going to take them to task when they do something wrong?  …in fact we are glad that they took their advertising dollars elsewhere?

FOOTNOTE: Our next “IS IT TRUE” will be posted on this coming Wednesday?

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

Todays “Readers Poll” question is: Do you feel that the main stream media failed in reporting the real facts concerning the 2014 SBOA audits short falls of the City of Evansville? 

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

 

Corruption Continues As Government Budgets Go Unchecked

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Those tools come from Indiana’s State Board of Accounts (SBOA). That’s the agency charged with investigating allegations of financial fraud in the government. Over the last five years alone, SBOA has investigated at least 250 cases of public fraud worth over $8 million.

But, an I-Team 8 investigation discovered a growing amount of government spending has little oversight left on it at all, because there’s simply no one left to watch it.

CLOSING IN ON CORRUPTION

On a cold, quiet day in sleepy Spencer, the feds closed in on former Owen County auditor and County Councilwoman Angela Lawson.

County attorney Richard Lorenz was among the first officials to get a call last July from the current Owen County auditor notifying him that his office had uncovered something that didn’t seem to add up.

“I got a call from the county auditor and one of the commissioners who indicated they had found a receipt, or an invoice for payment from a credit card company that was a surprise to them. We had never seen that type of invoice before. So, we looked closer. And, it was patently obvious from the very beginning of our research on the matter that something had gone awry, and that people had misused their office,” Lorenz told I-Team 8.

Lawson is accused of using five different county credit cards to ring up personal purchases, primarily at Wal-Mart stores in and around the Spencer area.

Morgan County Chief Deputy Prosecutor Robert Cline, who was assigned as a special prosecutor in the case, called the scope of the allegations against Lawson troubling.

“It’s a lot of money,” Cline told I-Team 8. “Over $300,000 is a lot of money, especially when you’re talking about a county the size of Owen County. And, she was masking it all. She’s the one printing out the checks. She’s the one receiving the invoices on the Wal-Mart cards. She was the only one seeing that. So, if she’s the only one seeing it, there’s no one to question it.”

The shock went even deeper as Cline subpoenaed credit card records to see what the purchases were.

“There was alcohol, jewelry, clothing, gift cards and the like,” Lorenz said. “There were as many as three transactions sometimes in Wal-Mart stores on the same day.”

“We received a search warrant based on that, and went back and recovered those goods,” Cline said.

Many of the purchases that hadn’t been consumed were later found in Lawson’s home, he added.

Lawson’s attorney wouldn’t comment on the charges, but said she is cooperating with prosecutors and has agreed not to sell off any “significant assets.” She is due to appear in court again in March.

ACCOUNTABILITY DELAYS

The investigation into Lawson’s alleged personal spending of public funds began in July 2014. Charges came at the end of the year. The audit detailing the abuse and a state lawsuit seeking repayment and restitution of more than $400,000 was finally filed in mid-February 2015.

But, investigators say Lawson’s credit card abuse began way back in 2004. That means the alleged malfeasance went unchecked for nearly a decade.

“It should have been caught earlier,” said Lorenz. “A check to Wal-Mart standing alone would not stand out. But, checks to Wal-Mart of this magnitude, and over that period of time, would immediately, in my mind, call a red flag. There should have been a finding of this particular discrepancy far earlier. There are annual routine audits conducted by the State Board of Accounts. And, in my impression, one of the principal things they would look for was to reconcile things involving the payroll and the claims process. There are lots of things I would love to have seen happen that didn’t happen here.”

So, why didn’t they?

“When you can print out a $20,000 check and not have anybody sign it, and some clerk can do that, it seems to me that the control has been bypassed.”

Cline, the prosecutor, said part of the problem is that Lawson became skilled at covering her tracks.

“When you have someone that really is knowledgeable of the system, it gets harder and harder to detect. It’s not just your entry-level field auditor that can go out and find that type of criminal activity, and be able to document it in such a way that it’s evidence in court,” he said.

But, pressed further, Cline said Lawson’s case brought up a new level of concern.

“We need better accounting controls,” he said. “When you can print out a $20,000 check and not have anybody sign it, and some clerk can do that, it seems to me that the control has been bypassed.”

HIDDEN FROM SCRUTINY

State Board of Accounts auditors are charged with opening the books annually on more than 3,500 units of local government, including cities, counties, townships, schools and libraries.

But, I-Team 8 uncovered a problem inside the agency that’s made accomplishing that task essentially impossible.

Records obtained by I-Team 8 show the agency’s budget has been cut by more than $3 million over the last three years. Nearly 100 SBOA employees have disappeared during that time, including many field auditors charged with overseeing audits like the one on Lawson in Owen County.

State Board of Accounts Number of Employees

Since the cuts began, more than 1,000 statutorily mandated audits — mostly in smaller towns like Spencer — have simply been ignored. Some have been delayed by as many as five years.

In total, more than one-third of all governmental units — from utilities, libraries, airport authorities, and fire protection districts to towns and townships — have gone unexamined, according to SBOA records obtained by I-Team 8.

Indiana State Examiner Paul Joyce, the head of the agency, is now facing a difficult reality.

“Just because it’s not being reported, we know it’s still occurring,” Joyce told I-Team 8.

Units of government receiving more than $500,000 per year in federal grants are guaranteed an audit. Those that don’t may never be audited.

Joyce says his team presses to complete as many of the so-called “leftover” audits as it can. But, he admits, that’s been a challenge.

“We’ve had people in the last four to five years actually retire because they felt we were pressing them too hard,” he said. “We have an issue that we have to find a way to address, because (the governmental units that aren’t getting audited) aren’t getting what they need.”

RIPE FOR RIPOFFS

Last year, the non-partisan Association of Certified Fraud Examiners estimated that 5 percent of Indiana’s annual revenues were at risk of fraudulent transactions.

For Joyce, it’s a concerning figure.

“We oversee right at $77 billion (in government assets and spending) each year,” Joyce told I-Team 8. “So, if you take just 5 percent of that, you’re looking at $3.8 billion that is susceptible to some form of either fraud, waste or abuse.”

If even a portion of that money isn’t being audited regularly — and it isn’t — Joyce said taxpayers are being put at risk.

“Right now, I have 20 active fraud audits going on,” Joyce said. “And, that is pretty typical. But, we know there are likely more out there.”

STATE SPENDING RECORDS

With that in mind, last year I-Team 8 made a public records request to get spending records from dozens of state agencies. Our request asked for details on any charges made the previous year, 2013, on state-owned credit cards by both elected office holders and anyone on their staffs given a credit card to use.

After waiting more than 10 months, the state finally responded, providing electronic records on 72 cardholders from the State Auditor to the State Director of Youth Services — and dozens in between.

The charges were mostly comprised of travel and lodging expenses that appeared to be used for legitimate state business purposes.

The records showed Attorney General Greg Zoeller, for example, spent nearly $26,000 on travel expenses during the one-year time period we requested, including more than a dozen trips to Washington D.C. Zoeller also took quarterly trips to conferences for the National Association of Attorneys General, many of which were held in expensive hotels like Ritz Carltons in New Orleans and Washington D.C., the Fairmont Chicago and Gaylord National Hotel in Washington D.C.

Secretary of State Connie Lawson spent nearly $28,000 on travel expenses during the same time period, according to records provided by her office. Her trips also included multiple conference expenses, and often included travel charges for staff members.

More questionable charges came from inside records from Indiana’s Economic Development Corporation (IEDC), which charged more than $44,000 in purchases on one state credit card during the time period we requested. Again, the charges focused mainly on travel, but also reflected more than $10,000 in charges on food and drinks — including dozens of expensive meals featuring things like steak and lobster and multiple occasions where alcohol was purchased.

I-Team 8 took the findings Joyce, the state examiner, for a closer look. He said the travel expenses didn’t seem to set off immediate red flags. And, because the IEDC is partially funded by private donations, he said the agency’s purchases on things like food and alcohol likely didn’t break any state ethics policies.

But, Joyce also said the State Board of Accounts had never actually looked at such individual receipts, as I-Team 8 did, to see for sure.

SKIMMING THE SURFACE

The problem, Joyce said, is that SBOA is now forced to weigh quantity versus quality.

“At state government, we actually have the authority to do efficiency and performance type audits. But, we don’t do them because I just don’t have staff to go do that kind of audit,” he said.

That’s meant that a series of audits, including those on the IDEC, have fallen by the wayside.

“We have the authority to audit IEDC. And, we get the audits from IEDC, and review them. But, we don’t currently go over to IEDC and audit. Looking (into receipts) at that level would be beyond the normal scope. You would have to have an indication that something was probably wrong there. There’s just too many to go down there and dig around to find problems,” Joyce said.

But, Joyce said his staff has pulled back from what he called a dangerous trend toward audits that only “skim the surface.”

“We made an attempt to speed the process up some,” he said. “Looking back, I wouldn’t probably do it again.”

For IUPUI School of Public and Environmental Affairs Public Policy Professor Sheila Kennedy, the trend toward lower levels of oversight on government spending sets a dangerous precedent.

“You’re not only supposed to be ethical, you’re supposed to seem ethical. Auditing does that.”

“When you’re dealing with public funds and you are entrusted by the public to spend those funds in a fiscally responsible fashion, then there should be a higher degree of scrutiny,” she told I-Team 8. “And, even if something isn’t immediately sticking out as a red flag, there is what we call in my classes the appearance of impropriety. You’re not only supposed to be ethical, you’re supposed to seem ethical. Auditing does that. When it’s not there, people can start assuming that you’re having a high old time on the taxpayers’ dime, that really undercuts the authority of government across the board.”

CORRUPTION CRACKDOWN

Rep. Tom Saunders, R-Lewisville, believes the time has come for the state to stop rolling the dice.

“SBOA used to do in-depth audits. Now, they might do an examination. And, they don’t get to go as deep into the audit as they used to. And, part of the problem is: they don’t have the staff. We just need to give them the assistance to do the job we’re asking them to do,” Saunders said.

To do that, he filed House Bill 1137, which would more than triple the price local governments pay for annual audits, from $45 per day to $175 per day. The money raised through the move could only be used to hire more auditors to help oversee the governmental units that are currently being missed.

“They used to audit anybody that had any association with tax dollars,” Saunders said. “Now, it’s only the larger of the units they audit. They’re just stretched too thin. How do we know those spending figures are correct if somebody isn’t being the watchdog for us? I think the public expects us to take care of their dollars and we need to answer those questions.”

HB 1137 did not get a committee hearing early in this year’s session, but Saunders’ proposals have been rolled into the bi-annual budget bill that passed out of the House this week. It now moves on to the Senate for consideration.

Several other Senate bills that would allow additional flexibility in the audit process, including SB 326 and SB 394, are also under consideration. Both were approved on final reading by the Senate this week and now move to the House for debate.

 

Adopt A Pet

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 Castiel is a 1-year-old neutered male American/Californian mix! He was surrendered with a female rabbit, Deanna, who is currently in foster care. Castiel is currently being litter-trained and needs to be an indoor-only pet. $30 to adopt! Call (812) 426-2563 or visit www.vhslifesaver.org for adoption information!

 

Historic courtroom illustrations acquired by Library of Congress

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Marilyn Odendahl for www.theindianalawyer.com

Ninety-six original courtroom drawings from high-profile trials over the past four decades have been acquired by the Library of Congress.

The drawings by Aggie Kenny, Bill Robles and Elizabeth Williams depict well-known trials and include poignant portrayals of some of the most famous people in the past 45 years at their most vulnerable moments. Their work also relates to the major issues that have affected how Americans perceive race and race relations, gender issues, political and corporate corruption, religion, international relations and celebrities since the 1970s.

“These drawings are important for documenting moments in history that were not captured photographically because news cameras were banned from courtrooms,” Sara Duke, curator of popular and applied graphic art in the Library’s Prints and Photographs Division said in a press release. “The artists also capture individuals’ emotions in a few vivid strokes. For scholars who want to look at how attitudes shifted over time in the courtroom, here is a good place to start.”

The Library acquired the drawings through the generosity of Thomas V. Girardi, founding partner of Girardi Keese in Los Angeles and member of the Madison Council, the Library’s private-sector advisory board. The drawings will be called the Thomas V. Girardi Collection of Courtroom Illustration Drawings.

Kenny’s drawings have included many metropolitan New York trials, in addition to the James Earl Ray trial for the murder of Martin Luther King Jr. in Memphis, the Iran-Contra hearings in Washington, D.C., and the trial of Penn State University coach Jerry Sandusky on child-molestation charges. She has illustrated several U.S. Supreme Court events, including the swearing-in ceremony of the late Chief Justice William Rehnquist in 1986.

Robles is a Los Angeles-based courtroom artist. He drew the West Coast trials, during the 1970s, of Charles Manson and Patty Hearst. He covered the civil and criminal trials of O. J. Simpson. He was able to draw Terry Nichols and Timothy McVeigh after the Oklahoma City bombing, before their trials were separated. He captured Michael Jackson openly weeping as the not-guilty verdicts were read in the music star’s child-molestation trial. In addition, Robles illustrated such celebrities as Roman Polanski, Francis Ford Coppola and Johnnie Cochran.

Williams has worked in New York for more than three decades and has drawn such high-profile cases as that of European diplomat Dominique Strauss-Kahn, John DeLorean, John Gotti, the “preppy murderer” Robert Chambers, Martha Stewart, Bernard Madoff, Times Square bomber Faisal Shahzad, Osama bin Laden’s son-in-law Sulaiman Abu Ghaith, and convicted terrorist Mustafa Kamel Mustafa, also known as Abu Hamza al-Masri.

The Library’s Prints and Photographs Division collects courtroom illustrations to support the work of the Law Library of Congress in its effort to document the cases that have shaped interpretations of legislation or pivotal moments in history.

Eagles Drop Match to Lakers

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Women’s Tennis | 2/28/2016 1:54:00 PM | Shawn Chambers, USI Student Assistant

Eagles Drop Match to Lakers
Allendale, MI.- The University of Southern Indiana women’s tennis team was defeated by Grand Valley State University, 9-0, Sunday morning in Allendale, Michigan. The Screaming Eagles move to 2-4 on the year with their second defeat of the weekend.

The Eagles struggled in doubles play losing all three matches which began at 7 o’clock central standard time due to the long trip back for USI from Michigan. Kelsey Shipman<http://gousieagles.com/roster.aspx?rp_id=2454> (Olney, Illinois) fell 6-1, 6-4 at number two singles. Kymberly Brannon<http://gousieagles.com/roster.aspx?rp_id=2451> (Louisville, Kentucky) also competed well before eventually falling 6-1, 6-3.

USI now prepares for their spring break trip to Cocoa Beach, Florida where they will compete in five matches in five days from March 6-10.
University of Southern Indiana
Southern Indiana vs Grand Valley State (Feb 28, 2016)
#28 Grand Valley State 9, Southern Indiana 0
Feb 28, 2016 at Grand Rapids, MI (Ramblewood Tennis Center)
Singles competition
1. Abby Perkins (GVSU) def. Elizabeth Wilm (USI) 6-3, 6-0
2. Alexa Sweeney (GVSU) def. Kelsey Shipman (USI) 6-1, 6-4
3. Aimee Moccia (GVSU) def. Brenna Wu (USI) 6-1, 6-1
4. Madison Ballard (GVSU) def. Kymberly Brannon (USI) 6-1, 6-3
5. Livia Christman (GVSU) def. Jennifer Mizikar (USI) 6-1, 6-1
6. Rachel Sumner (GVSU) def. Haley Jones (USI) 6-0, 6-2

Doubles competition
1. Aimee Moccia/Rachel Sumner (GVSU) def. Elizabeth Wilm/Brenna Wu (USI) 8-1
2. Alexa Sweeney/Madison Ballard (GVSU) def. Kelsey Shipman/Kymberly Brannon (USI) 8-2
3. Abby Perkins/Livia Christman (GVSU) def. Haley Jones/Jennifer Mizikar (USI) 8-2

POLITICAL OSCARS

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THUNDERBOLTS WEEKLY NEWS RELEASE MON. 2-29-16

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THUNDERBOLTS GET READY FOR LAST FOUR GAMES OF 2015-16 NA3HL INAUGURAL SEASON THREE OF THUNDERBOLTS FINAL FOUR GAMES TO BE PLAYED ON HOME ICE AT SWONDER TORRID SOUTH DIVISION CO-LEADING POINT MALLARD IN TOWN FRI. AND SAT. NIGHTS 7:30

LAST WEEK’S RESULTS: 2(0-2-0) 1-11 FRI. FEB. 26 PEORIA 4 AT ‘BOLTS 0 SAT. FEB. 27 PEORIA 7 AT ‘BOLTS 1

THIS WEEK’S GAMES: (2) FRI. MAR. 4 VS. POINT MALLARD 7:30 PM

SAT. MAR. 5 VS. POINT MALLARD 7:30 PM NEXT HOME GAMES: FRI. MAR. 4 & SAT. MAR. 5 VS. POINT MALLARD / TICKETS ONLY $ 5 !!

*** ALL THUNDERBOLTS GAMES ARE BROADCAST LIVE ON EVANSVILLE’S WVHI-AM 1330 ***

LIGHTNING BOLTS’ SHOTS: In the midst of an extended four-game home stand at their home of Evansville’s Swonder Ice Arena, the Evansville ThunderBolts, members of the NA3HL elite junior hockey league, are set to embark on their final four games of the 2015-16 inaugural season. Under the direction of General Manager/Head Coach Scott Fankhouser, the ThunderBolts will play three of those final four games on home ice as they begin the business of making preparations for their second season in 2016-17. With those four remaining games on their schedule, the ThunderBolts first-ever regular season campaign will come to a close on Saturday, March 12th. For the present Evansville 20-man player roster, this final quartet of contests will serve as an audition test for purposes of attaining a coveted roster berth on next season’s ‘Bolts hockey club’s second edition. In fact, the grading period already is underway.

‘BOLTS BATTLE DUCKS: The ThunderBolts both continue as well as cap their present four-game home stand this upcoming weekend when they guest the South Division co-leading Point Mallard Ducks on both Friday and Saturday nights at Swonder Ice Arena. Opening face-off both nights is set for 7:30 pm. The ‘Bolts historical, first- ever victory was achieved at the expense of the Ducks in the last actual clash between the two inter-divisional rivals. The date was January 3rd at Point Mallard, (Decatur, Alabama) where the ThunderBolts rallied remarkably and resoundingly from several rather daunting deficits to ultimately prevail, 7-4. Since that date, the Ducks have been virtually invincible, having assembled their present tense 12-game winning streak and 13-games’ overall unsullied skein; 13(12-0-1). Point Mallard will enter this week sharing first place distinction with Atlanta in the fiercely- competitive, hotly-contested South Division banner chase. The Ducks have accrued 66-points on a record of 42(32- 8-2) while the Atlantans have accumulated their 66-points through a season-long log of 43(32-9-2). Concerning the ‘Bolts/Ducks season series at this late juncture of the campaign, Point Mallard leads the series 6(5-1-0). The Ducks are 2(2-0-0) here in Evansville, having extracted triumphs to the tune of 5-4 and 8-2 way back on the opening weekend of the season on September 18th and 19th at “Hockey Swonder.”

Mt. Vernon Man Arrested after Battering Passenger in a Vehicle Stopped by ISP

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Posey County – Last night at approximately 10:20 p.m., Trooper Brandon Deig stopped Jennifer Hanmore, 26, of Mt. Vernon, for speeding on Main Street near 10th Street. She pulled into the parking lot of Lamplight Manor Apartments on Main Street. After the vehicle stopped, Keith Nunnally, 39, who lives nearby, ran over to Hanmore’s vehicle and confronted the male passenger by pulling him out of the vehicle. Trooper Deig was able to separate the two males. The passenger pulled from the vehicle was a 17-year-old male from Mt. Vernon. Trooper Deig discovered Nunnally and Hanmore have children together and their two-year-old twin girls were left unattended in Nunnally’s nearby apartment. Nunnally was told to go back to the apartment and officers would continue their investigation there while Trooper Deig continued to determine if Hanmore was intoxicated.

When Sergeant Russ Werkmeister arrived and entered Nunnally’s apartment to investigate the battery complaint he detected an odor of marijuana. He also observed paraphernalia and marijuana in plain view. Nunnally attempted to destroy the items, but Werkmeister was able to secure Nunnally in handcuffs. Nunnally was arrested and taken to the Posey County jail where he is currently being held on bond. The twins were released to their grandmother.

Further investigation revealed Hanmore had a blood alcohol content of .16%. Hanmore was arrested and taken to the Posey County Jail where she is currently being held on bond. The 17-year-old male was released to a relative.user29376-1456696304-media1_acadaa_240_180_PrsMe_

Arrested and Charges:
• Jennifer Hanmore, 26, 721 Main Street, Apartment C, Mt. Vernon, IN
1. Driving While Intoxicated with a passenger less than 18 years of age, Class 6 Felony

• Keith Eric Nunnally, 39, 1305 N. Main Street, Mt. Vernon, IN
1. Obstruction of Justice, Level 6 Felony
2. Resisting Law Enforcement, Class A Misdemeanor
3. Possession of Paraphernalia, Class A Misdemeanoruser29376-1456696307-media2_969ea2_240_180_PrsMe_
4. Possession of Marijuana, Class B Misdemeanor
5. Battery, Class B Misdemeanor