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INDIANA DEMOCRATIC PARTY’S FAST FACTS
INDIANA DEMOCRATIC PARTY’S FAST FACTS
With February marking Black History Month, The Indiana Democratic Party would like to celebrate and honor the achievements of African-Americans across Indiana and throughout the nation.
Talking Points for the Week
Mike Pence’s Late to the Game Strategy on Infrastructure Continues to Fail Indiana
While Mike Pence and the GOP-controlled Statehouse are still mulling over an election year short-term strategy to address the state’s D+ rated infrastructure system, concrete parts of the I-70 overpass in Terre Haute are literally crumbling and falling onto U.S. 41 putting lives of everyday Hoosiers in jeopardy.
After jeopardizing our ‘Crossroads of America’ reputation and wasting $71 million on faulty asphalt, Governor Mike Pence has been doing literally anything possible in an election year to make it look like he’s concerned about Indiana’s crumbling infrastructure.
The fact is, Gov. Pence has only provided the bare minimum needed for Indiana to keep its D+ grade while also ignoring 90% of the state’s roads.
Instead Hoosiers are ready for a leader like John Gregg, who foresaw this crisis and advocated for the improvement of the state’s entire infrastructure system back in 2012.
Is Mike Pence Moving JustIN Within His Own Administration?
Did last week’s report on the faulty ISTEP review ring any bells? It should.
Perhaps Mike Pence scrapped the JustIN news service publicly, but it appears as though privately, it still exists within his administration.
Did Gov. Pence fear more bad results from an independent audit? It certainly looks that way. Why else would he have intervened in the review of ISTEP and manipulate the numbers?
Obviously, the Pence Administration still believes they are entitled to putting out their own version of news.
Hoosiers deserve independent answers to the ISTEP review and full transparency from Mike Pence and all of his staff.
Mike Pence Talking Through Both Sides of His Mouth on HIP 2.0 Evaluation.  Mike Pence sent a letter to Congress this week claiming he had “no confidence†in the independent evaluation of HIP 2.0. This letter comes after the Pence Administration last week manipulated an “independent†review of the ISTEP exam.
Considering his administration manipulated a review of the ISTEP exam, Mike Pence is talking through both sides of his mouth if he claims there’s ‘no confidence’ in the independent review of the HIP 2.0 program.
Hoosiers should expect this with Mike Pence as he won’t even admit it’s the Affordable Care Act that’s paying HIP 2.0’s bills.
This letter was Gov. Pence’s last-ditch effort to keep the facts about HIP 2.0 away from everyday Hoosiers. And once again, it’s Mike Pence putting his out-of-touch ideology ahead of the overall well-being of the state.
ICYMI.
Stories from This Week
South Bend Tribune: Our Opinion: No Good Way to Say ISTEP is bad WTHITV.com: Both Lanes of I-70 Bridge Open Again But One Lane of U.S. 41 Closed Until Further Notice
The Washington Post: The Big Trouble in Indiana Public Schools, As Explained by a Troubled Educator.
Indy Star: Gov. Mike Pence says He Won’t Seek Extra Medicaid Money.
Indems.org: Why We Challenged Todd Young’s Candidacy
Eagle Country: Ritz, Gregg Stump for Votes in Aurora
Save the Dates
May 3, 2016 – Primary Election
June 17, 2016 – Hoosier Hospitality Dinner
June 18, 2016 – State Convention
July 25-28, 2016 – National Convention
Aug 25-28, 2016 – IDEA
Nov 8, 2016 – Election Day
Sen. Becker statement on HB 1004
Statement from Sen. Becker
State Sen. Vaneta Becker (R-Evansville) made the following statement regarding the
Senate Republican Caucus’s decision not to proceed with House Bill 1004:
“The Senate has decided not to move forward with House Bill 1004, which would have made significant changes to school pension plans, as well as supplemental pay to teachers in certain subjects.
“I earlier opposed similar legislation, specifically Senate Bill 10 because I believe there is already flexibility for school corporations to make some adjustments.
“These adjustments should be done as a collective unit, giving superintendents and teachers the opportunity to negotiate the specific financial needs of all teachers.
“The Senate listened to the concerns of superintendents and teachers from around the state and decided not to move forward on HB 1004.â€
TRUMP PLANTS THE FLAG!
Trump looks like he has climbed the GOP mountain! Of-course, he is planting the flag in the elephant’s butt, and I thought hard about whether to drop the elephant’s pants. I decided not to drop the pants because I thought that would be too raunchy for the mainstream papers – this one might be too raunchy for them even with the pants in place.
I drew this one live, but I haven’t posted the video here. This stream was something of an adventure, as I continue to learn how to live-stream. I was experimenting with hosting other artists streams at the end of my own stream; this is a Twitch custom, when a stream ends it is a nice gesture for an artist to “host†another artist’s stream, so his audience at the end just moves on to the other artist. OK. I did that, and went out to dinner and an evening of watching the entertaining Republican debate.
When I woke up the next morning, I noticed that the computer was still streaming, for 19 hours. I sleep in the bedroom close by my studio, and had sent out a live stream of my snoring all night. To my surprise, I had an audience of 20 people watching the broadcast of nothing, and I was picking up new followers through the night at about the same rate as when I’m actively streaming. My program (OBS) that does the streaming, had frozen, and turning it off or quitting didn’t work, I had to force-quit.
On top of that nonsense, when I sat down at my computer this morning I was wearing my underwear and the stream got a nice view of me in my chones. (It could have been worse; there’s a 40% chance that I might not have been wearing any underwear.) YouTube and Twitch selected a random image from the stream for the lead image of the video, and both selected the view of my underwear. Finally, I understand what happened to Anthony Wiener, poor guy.
Adopt A Pet
 Speckles is a 1-year-old female tortoiseshell! She’s spayed and up-to-date on shots, ready to go home today. Her $30 adoption fee also includes her nationally-registered microchip! Call (812) 426-2563 or visit www.vhslifesaver.org for adoption information!
Wendy McNamara Supporting Teachers
Lawmakers are supporting a Career Pathways and Mentorship Program thatschools can begin using to foster career development for their teaching faculty. Under House Bill 1005, which I co-authored, schools would begin tailoring new teacher mentorship programs best suited for their needs. This proposal would also lay the foundation to recognize and reward educators who take on extra roles and leadership positions.
To ensure Indiana is effectively measuring whether students are mastering the lessons and skills taught in classrooms, we are also working on a comprehensive review of the ISTEP+ testing program. If passed into law, House Bill 1395would establish a panel of education experts and stakeholders to study testing alternatives and make recommendations for a replacement test as we phase out ISTEP+ before July 1, 2017. Their findings would be submitted to the State Board of Education for review.
After being amended and approved by the Senate, these proposals will now return to the House to be reexamined.
If you have questions or input as we continue moving Indiana forward, please contact me at (317) 232-9816 or h76@iga.in.gov.
Aces complete regular season with 23 wins
UE fell to UNI, but has sights set on #2 seed
 EVANSVILLE, Ind. – In a defensive battle that came down to the final shot, UNI was able to hang on for a 54-52 win over the University of Evansville men’s basketball team on Saturday afternoon at the Ford Center.
Evansville (23-8, 12-6 MVC) seniors D.J. Balentine, Egidijus Mockevicius and Adam Wing were honored prior to the game and kept UE in it, scoring 43 of the Aces 52 points. Balentine was the leading scorer in the contest with 19 points while Mockevicius notched his 26th double-double of the year with 14 points and 16 rebounds. Wing had a solid day, posting 10.
“Our seniors have been great all year and great for the last four years,†UE head coach Marty Simmons said. “I thought our guys prepared well. We knew it would be a grind it out game. They got 15 points off turnovers in the first half and that made a difference. I thought our guys played hard, but. We made a lot of mistakes. We just have to be better, in tune and locked in.â€
UE has its sights set on the second seed for Arch Madness. The Aces finished the regular season in a tie with Illinois State. After splitting the season series, the tiebreaker will be determined by the RPI according to the Jim Sukup RPI Report on Sunday morning. UE began the day with an RPI of 81 while Illinois State, who fell to Wichita State on Saturday, was 105.
Down as many as 12 points in the second half, UE clawed its way back with a chance to win it on the last shot. A late triple fell short as UNI (19-12, 11-7 MVC) held on for the win. Wes Washpun was the leading scorer for UNI, notching 14 points.
Balentine gave the Aces an early 3-0 lead, but UNI came back with a 9-0 stretch. The Panthers hit four out of five shots in the stretch. Jaylon Brown found his groove, scoring four points to lead Evansville back within a point at 13-12, but UNI had the answer once again.
UNI reeled off the next ten points to take their largest lead at 23-12. Balentine ended the drought for UE as they went to the half trailing 25-16. Evansville shot just 29.4% in the first half while turning it over nine times. UNI shot 42.3% in the opening stanza.
The Aces scored the first basket of the second half, but a pivotal turning point came just over three minutes in. Egidijus Mockevicius drew a foul, but was called for a technical. UNI converted both free throws and hit a triple when they got the ball back to open up their largest lead at 30-18.
At that point, Evansville kicked it into high gear, getting within six at 32-26. A Paul Jesperson triple put UNI back up nine, but the Aces rallied once again. A Balentine free throw made it a one possession game (37-34) with 7:15 left.
Just four minutes later, Wing hit a huge triple that got the Aces within a pair at 49-47. His second trey of the day in the final minute would cut the UNI lead to 51-50. The Panthers were able to respond every time, but a missed free throw with 13 seconds remaining gave the Aces the ball trailing by just two. Out of a time out, Balentine had a 3-pointer blocked by UNI. He was able to get the rebound and find Mislav Brzoja, whose triple at the buzzer came up just short.
Eagles rally late but fall to Ashland, 11-6
The 21st-ranked University of Southern Indiana baseball team could not overcome an 11-0 deficit in falling to Ashland University, 11-6, Saturday afternoon at the USI Baseball Field. USI sees its record go to 3-2 mark, while Ashland watched its record go to 1-1.
USI junior right-hander Lucas Barnett (Sellersburg, Indiana) had a rough day in his second outing of the year, allowing eight runs, six earned, in 4.1 innings of work. Ashland struck early, scoring five runs off of Barnett (1-1) in the second and three more in the fifth.
Ashland added a fourth run in the fifth and two more in the seventh to lead 11-0 after seven. USI tried to rally and cut the deficit to six runs with a five spot in the eighth.
In the eighth, USI plated a pair runs on three singles, a hit batter, and a walk to make the score 11-2. The Eagles scored three more times in the inning when a fly ball off the bat of senior centerfielder Hamilton Carr (Evansville,Indiana) was dropped in left center, scoring senior catcher Ryan Bertram  (Zionsville, Indiana), senior first baseman Andrew Cope (Evansville, Indiana), and sophomore leftfielder Buddy Johnson (Shelbyville, Kentucky).
Down 11-5 in the ninth, USI would score one more time but left runners at second and third for the 11-6 final. Senior rightfielder Kyle Kempf (Evansville, Indiana) was the only Eagle to have multiple hits in the game with a pair of singles.
The Eagles concludes the Dunn Hospitality Classic with a second showdown with Ashland University Sunday at 4 p.m. Live statistics will be available at GoUSIEagles.com.
Apple Lays Out Legal Arguments To Resist FBI’s iPhone Demand
IL for www.theindianalawyers.com
Tim Cook has called it nothing less than a threat to civil liberties, the digital privacy of millions and even children’s safety.
Now, a week after federal investigators threw down a gauntlet to Silicon Valley, Cook’s lawyers have weighed in, offering cool-headed legal arguments against having Apple Inc. unlock the iPhone used by one of the attackers who killed 14 people in San Bernardino, California, in December.
Apple painted the case as being one of the Justice Department overstepping its authority, saying it isn’t about a single iPhone but “the FBI seeking through the courts a dangerous power that Congress and the American people have withheld; the ability to force companies like Apple to undermine the basic security and privacy interests of hundreds of millions of individuals around the globe.â€
In a filing Thursday to a federal court in Riverside, California, Apple asked the magistrate to set aside her Feb. 16 order requiring it to help the FBI defeat the encryption on the iPhone used by Syed Rizwan Farook, who led the shooting rampage with his wife. The company argued unlocking Farook’s device could ultimately make all its users’ most confidential and personal information vulnerable to hackers, identity thieves, hostile foreign agents and unwarranted government surveillance.
‘Greater good’
“The greater public good is a secure communications infrastructure protected by ubiquitous encryption at the device, server and enterprise level without building in means for government monitoring,†Apple said.
While the government has said it isn’t asking for a backdoor or trying to set a precedent and is only concerned with accessing Farook’s phone, Apple is already fighting at least eight other attempts to force it to aid prosecutors in opening devices tied to investigations. The company says that if it complies with one order, others will follow and foreign governments may also make similar demands.
Apple’s response to the order is the company’s first formal step in a case that could be destined for the U.S. Supreme Court. In 65 pages, the filing lays out a basic legal argument: that the court has overreached its authority by compelling Apple to write new software, and that forcing the company to do so would represent an “undue burden.†The government’s demand violates Apple’s constitutional rights against compelled speech and forced business activities, the company argued.
Hypersecure room
It could take as many as 10 company engineers and employees as long as four weeks to devise the software needed to unlock the phone, Apple said. These engineers would also have to use a hypersecure isolation room to create and test the new compromised operating system and then supervise its use by the FBI. Then they’d have to tear it all down, Apple said.
“No operating system currently exists that can accomplish what the government wants, and any effort to create one will require that Apple write new code, not just disable existing code functionality,†according to the filing.
Apple also said the U.S. doesn’t have the authority to force the company to help the FBI. The magistrate’s decision that it must provide “reasonable technical assistance†was premised on an unprecedented expansion of the All Writs Act, a 1789 law that prosecutors relied on for last week’s order. The act compels third parties to take “non-burdensome†steps to help law enforcement carry out search warrants in circumstances not covered by other statutes and doesn’t authorize a judge to “conscript Apple†into developing software, the company said.
‘Too dangerous to build’
“The order demanded by the government compels Apple to create a new operating system — effectively a ‘back door’ to the iPhone — that Apple believes is too dangerous to build,†Apple said.
The All Writs Act has never been used – and should not be used – to force a company to produce software code that could be used as a “master key†to bypass a mobile phone’s security features, Apple said in the court filing. A hearing on whether to enforce the order is scheduled for March 22 in Riverside.
Apple also scolded the FBI for an error in its investigation. It said agents changed the password associated with one of the attacker’s accounts without consulting the company or reviewing public materials about the operating system. This kept the phone from automatically backing up to the iCloud. The government has already accessed the data on the iCloud, which ended more than a month before the attack. Without that mistake, this dispute might not have arisen, Apple said.
Free speech
Computer code is well-established to be protected by the First Amendment right to free speech, Apple argued. The company said it can’t be compelled in this case to create the code because that would impinge on its freedom of expression. The lawyers then unspooled some fanciful scenarios including a pharmaceutical company being forced to create a drug used for lethal injection or a journalist being told to plant a false story to lure a fugitive out of hiding.
The hypothetical prospect of forcing a company to make a drug for lethal injections was previously discussed in Brooklyn, New York, where prosecutors are trying to get access to a convicted drug dealer’s phone. A decision is expected shortly in that case.
The California filing comes a day after Cook blasted the U.S. demand as being “bad for America†in a nationally televised interview with ABC News. And in fiercely worded blog posts, the Apple chief executive accused the government of threatening civil liberties, of looking for an end-run around encryption that could expose Americans to privacy breaches, of a “chilling†and undemocratic overreach.
Privacy vs. safety?
The standoff, over whether the U.S. can require Apple to write code that would override a key security feature of the iOS operating system, is on one level just about what law enforcement can demand of one company in its investigation into Farook’s motives. The couple died in a shoot-out with police.
But the larger battle pits the public interest in privacy against its interest in protection from terrorists and other criminals, and highlights how advances in consumer technology, including encryption of personal digital, may have eclipsed U.S. laws. Just before the company’s filing was posted, U.S. Representative David Jolly, a Florida Republican, said “Apple’s leadership risks having blood on its hands†if it doesn’t cooperate with FBI and it is determined that critical information on the phone could have prevented a future attack.
“Tim Cook will have a hard time explaining that,†Jolly said during a hearing of a House Appropriations subcommittee to review the FBI budget.
‘Immune spaces’
FBI Director James Comey told the subcommittee that he doesn’t think it’s a good idea to have “spaces immune to search warrants,†such as phones and other devices. He conceded that the judge’s decision in the Apple case could influence the thinking of courts handling future conflicts over encryption.
Comey says one mystery the FBI would like to solve involves where the terrorists were for 19 minutes after the attacks. Agents have scoured security cameras at gas stations and other retailers but can’t figure it out, Comey said. The answer may reside on the man’s phone, he said.
Cook and Apple have garnered broad support from the tech industry. The CEO has argued there’s no guarantee that the master key would be used only once in this unique case, as the government contends, and has said creating the technology for a back door into the iPhone’s data could end up exposing all Americans to cyber criminals and hackers.
Technology companies including Twitter Inc., Google Inc. and Microsoft Corp. plan to file friend-of-the-court briefs in support of Apple next week, as will the American Civil Liberties Union. Families of those killed in the San Bernardino attack will file briefs in support of the government, their lawyer said.
Until recently, Apple routinely helped law enforcement to unlock iPhones operating on an older iOS version. The cooperation ceased last year after a magistrate judge in Brooklyn, New York, questioned whether the All Writs Act applied to the government’s request for help in unlocking a drug dealer’s phone. The judge said it appeared that Congress had deliberately left prosecutors without the power they sought in that case.
The case is In the Matter of the Search of an Apple iPhone Seized During the Execution of a Search Warrant on a Black Lexus IS300, California License Plate 35KGD203, 16-00010, U.S. District Court, Central District of California (Riverside).
The Governor’s Week in Photos
1) Welcoming Rick Hite to the Administration // February 22, 2016. Governor Mike Pence welcomes former Chief of the Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department Rick Hite to the Governor’s Office prior to naming him executive director of the Indiana Civil Rights Commission.
2) Commending Poultry Producers and State, Local Officials for Successful Avian Influenza Response // February 23, 2016. Governor Mike Pence joins State Department of Agriculture Director Ted McKinney and Purdue University Dean of Agriculture Dr. Jay Akridge at the Indiana State Poultry Association’s annual banquet to commend poultry producers and state and local leaders for their spirit of cooperation in response to avian influenza in Dubois County. Â
3) Celebrating Indiana FFA // February 23, 2016. Governor Mike Pence joins FFA members from Hamilton Southeastern High School and Eastern Hancock High School at the Indiana State Poultry Association’s annual banquet in the midst of National FFA Week.
4) Indiana Biosciences Research Institute Announces $100 Million in Grants // February 24, 2016. Governor Mike Pence joins the Indiana Biosciences Research Institute (IBRI), an independent, nonprofit applied biosciences research institute, to announce two new grants totaling $100 million from Lilly Endowment Inc. and the Eli Lilly and Company Foundation. The grants will support IBRI’s charitable, educational and scientific activities addressing metabolic disease and poor nutrition.
5) Centerville-Abington Elementary School // February 25, 2016. Governor Mike Pence visits with fourth grade students and teachers at Centerville-Abington Elementary School in Wayne County.
6) Wayne County Business Roundtable // February 25, 2016. Governor Mike Pence holds a roundtable discussion with business leaders in Wayne County.
7) Celebrating Read Across America Week // February 26, 2016. Governor Mike Pence joins Indianapolis Colts mascot Blue to read to students at Newby Memorial Elementary School in honor of Read Across America Week.