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Police are Seeking Mt. Vernon Robbery Suspect

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Indiana State Police are currently investigating an armed robbery that occurred last night at Huck’s Convenience Store located at 9th and Main Street in Mt. Vernon.

Preliminary investigation revealed that at approximately 8:45 p.m., an unknown black male entered the store armed with a large knife. The male walked behind the counter and demanded money.  After a brief struggle with the female clerk the suspect walked away with an undetermined amount of money. During the struggle the female clerk did receive a few minor cuts on her hand. She did not require medical attention.  The suspect was last seen running west toward Southwind Apartments.

Suspect Description:

  • Black Male
  • Unknown Age
  • Approximately 5’7” to 6’ Tall
  • Slender Build
  • Wearing dark coat and pants
  • Wearing a stocking cap, hood and had a scarf over the lower portion of his face.

Anyone with information concerning this incident is encouraged to contact the Indiana State Police or the Mt. Vernon City Police.

IS IT TRUE JANUARY 22, 2016

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IS IT TRUE the Evansville City Parks Board just approved a partial ban on smoking in City Parks?  …this ban includes all tobacco and electronic cigarettes starting on April 1, 2016?  …we are amazed that the Parks Board did not include golf courses and attached parks, Wesselman  Park, Howell Par-3 courses, Mesker Park Zoo and Botanic Gardens?  …it looks like special interests and back room politics ruled the day at Wednesday Parks Board meeting?  …we can’t wait to hear the comments from our readers on this issue?

IS IT TRUE that Evansville Water and Sewer Utility Board and City Council will meet with the State Board of Accounts on February 1, 2016 to discuss items in the 2015 Audit?  …we are pleased to hear all members of the new City Council are invited to attend this Audit Exist Conference with the State Board of Accounts?  …when we get an official copy of this audit we shall make it public?

IS IT TRUE the State Board of Accounts still hasn’t released the City of Evansville 2015 audit? …we can’t wait see if SBA will address the alleged $6 million deficit that City of Evansville had at the end of 2015? …we look forward to see if City Controller Russ Lloyd Jr or former Councilman John Friend was right about this issue?

IS IT TRUE at this coming Monday City Council meeting Finance Chairman DAN McGINN will be presenting a resolution asking Council to  approve a lease between the Evansville Redevelopment Commission and the Evansville Brownfields Corp. relating to the Downtown Convention Hotel Project? …this seems like a back door way of putting money in Brownsfields coffers?

IS IT TRUE that former Mayor Wienzapfel was responsible for writing contract between the City and IceMen not Mayor Winnecke?  …the more we hear about the working relationship between the IceMen  and the management of the Ford Center maybe it was for the best for IceMen to re-locate to Owensboro?

IS IT TRUE that St. Mary’s Medical Center has been included on a list of the best hospitals in the country?  …St. Mary’s Medical Center has received the Healthgrades Distinguished Hospital Award for Clinical Excellence this week for the third year in a row?  …we also consider St. Mary’s Medical Center media relations Department the best in our region?

IS IT TRUE we know that the Winnecke Administration will get a big kick out of this coming CCO Editorial on Monday?

IS IT TRUE we have been approached by some “Mover and Shakers” in Owensboro, Ky. to publish a City County Observer edition in Owensboro, Ky?   …we are seriously considering it?

IS IT TRUE that today “READERS POLL” question is; Do you feel its ethical for elected officials to allow themselves to be wined and dined by vendors who conducts business with the City of Evansville?

IS IT TRUE starting Monday January 25, 2016 the IS IT TRUE articles shall be posted on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays?

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

Vanderburgh County Tea Party Patriots Membership Meeting

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Vanderburgh County Tea Party Patriots Membership Meeting

Public Library, Red Bank Branch, 120 S. Red Bank Road, in the Howard Room at 1:00 p.m
Dr. Moss will get 10 min to announce his candidacy to those who do not yet know he is running. We are asking you to join us and wear your buttons in a show of support.

This meeting will feature the film The Free Speech Apocalypse, directed by Darren Doane (Collision and Unstoppable). A 95-minute documentary that highlights our cultural decay, The Free Speech Apocalypse clearly demonstrates the erosion of free speech and religious liberty in America since an April 13, 2012 confrontation between IU students and Pastor Douglas Wilson (who was lecturing on traditional marriage and family) at the University of Indiana.

Beth Csukas Medical Bill Fund Drive

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Beth Csukas Medical Bill Fund
On January 16th, while traveling to Indianapolis, Beth Csukas had a car accident. The accident left her with broken ribs and a much more serious condition with bleeding in her brain and swelling.  As she battles, the bills will mount for her.

Update On Legislation State Legislature’s 2016 Session

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Update On Legislation State Legislature’s 2016 Session

Now that the Indiana State Legislature’s 2016 session is well under way in Indianapolis, I wanted to give you an update on some of the legislation I am working on or following very closely:

Body Cameras:

Last week, we heard law enforcement and media representatives testify on legislation, House Bill (HB) 1019, pertaining to access police body camera recordings.

There are still some issues to work out on HB 1019. Disagreements exist over the role of the Public Access Counselor in handling requests from the media and also whether or not there should be payment of attorney fees in lawsuits regarding video from police body camera recordings.

HB 1019 is expected to be considered on the House floor next week—and amendments to this legislation will be offered by those of us who have expressed concern with the legislation as it is now written.

Local Government Accountability:

HB 1372: This bill calls for changes to Indiana’s bond law, exit conferences and audits. It is a next step in ensuring that Indiana’s local units of government are accountable to the public. Rep. Matt Lehman (R-Berne) is carrying HB 1372 and I am co-author.

HB 1022: For those attending private, independent colleges in Indiana, the college police departments of those colleges will be more open to public access if there is a crime. The bill’s author, Rep. B. Patrick Bauer (D-South Bend), is pushing for changes after an incident at Notre Dame. HB 1022 will be eligible for a vote in the House later today (Jan. 21, 2016).

Local Government Leadership:

HB 1137: Rep. Steven R. Stemler (D-Jeffersonville) has an important bill on water and interstate cooperation regarding water usage. This legislation means a great deal to the citizens and communities of Southwestern Indiana and across the state, as well. HB 1137 will be heard in a House committee on Tuesday, Jan. 26.

Children’s Issues:

HB 1064: The victim of a rape should not have to give the rapist custodial rights to a child born out of that rape. This bill deals with such situations. The leading Democratic representative on issues of violence toward women, Rep. Christina Hale (D-Indianapolis), is the co-author of this bill. Rep. Harold Slager (R-Schererville), is HB 1064’s primary author.

Senate Bill (SB) 305: This bill—among others—is being sought by Child Protective Services and would add human trafficking to Indiana’s child abuse statutes.

Roads:

The roads plan advanced by the Indiana House Republican Caucus, HB 1001, was passed out of the Indiana House Roads & Transportation Committee yesterday (Jan. 20, 2016) and now moves to the House floor for consideration by all 100 state representatives. Unfortunately, HB1001 currently calls for a tax increase, something Democrats in the Indiana State Legislature would like to avoid by utilizing some of the state’s budget surplus.

Education:

The House has just passed SB 200 with a vote of 97-1 and is expected to take action later today (Jan. 21, 2016) on a companion bill, HB 1003, that holds teachers harmless for recent failures in ISTEP testing.

Brandon Lee Ferguson Officially Files For State Representative IN INdy

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Brandon Lee Ferguson Officially Files For State Representative In Indy

Attention public TEACHERS in the area!   I have officially filed at Indianapolis yesterday, I want to make sure everyone is aware of this.  Just when you think the teachers are finally getting a break, the Republicans try passing HB 1325, which basically added an EXTRA TEN YEARS OF SERVICE to be able to retire.

I confronted the author of the bill and asked him why take away from the teacher AGAIN!  He doesn’t like the idea of government funding retirement.  He gave me an example of other state, which can’t fund its own retirement.  Which infuriates me, because of a couple reasons: first, you can’t compare other states to our own, that’s like comparing apple to oranges. Secondly, in Illinois the money was taken out of that fund for other uses and promised to be put back but was never returned. Just like social security was taken out to fund a war and was never returned. Now I wonder when they are going to attack that.

The real question is where the accountability is! The middle class has to always make up the difference. We gain nothing and lose everything. Please support me in becoming the next State Rep for Evansville and I will do everything i can to protect our public education!

Sincerely

Brandon Lee Ferguson

Deportation Raids Split Many Cities, States

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Deportation Raids Split Many Cities, States

STATELINE By Teresa Wiltz

Carmen was sleeping when they came for her and her two children. It was early Saturday morning, Jan. 2, and about a dozen federal immigration officials banged on her parents’ door in Atlanta. The 27-year-old single mother from El Salvador said she had just enough time to throw on some clothes over her pajamas.

Carmen, who illegally crossed the Mexico-Texas border with her children in June 2014, was shocked when the officials said they were deporting her right away. She was in the midst of an appeals process — and even had a court appointment for that Monday — in a bid to stay.

“I asked them, ‘Why are you sending me back to my country where it’s so dangerous? I could be killed,’ ” she said from a detention center in Dilley, Texas, where she is being held with her children, ages 6 and 8. (She asked that her real name not be used for fear of compromising her case.)

The mother and her two children are among 121 people — mostly women and children from Guatemala, Honduras and Mexico — who were rounded up early this month, in raids primarily in Georgia, North Carolina and Texas amid growing fears that the U.S. faces a surge of illegal unaccompanied minors fleeing violence in Central America comparable to 2014. So far 77 have been deported.

The deportation raids have sparked fear in U.S. immigrant communities and highlight the wide confusion and political division among federal, state and local authorities on how the nation should deal with as many as 11 million undocumented immigrants, most of whom entered the country illegally across the southern border.

The Democratic mayors of Philadelphia and New Haven, Connecticut, last week said they would not cooperate with the deportation efforts. The Democratic New York City Council announced that city agencies would not report undocumented people to federal authorities.

In Maryland, the Democratic executive in Montgomery County said local police wouldn’t cooperate in any raids. And Prince George’s County urged federal officials not to round up children in schools or people in stores, social service agencies or county buildings.

Meanwhile, in Texas, Republican Gov. Greg Abbott last month extended the 18-month mission of National Guard troops along the border in response to a rise in the number of unaccompanied minors crossing the Rio Bravo.

And the U.S. Supreme Court said Tuesday it will hear a case involving President Barack Obama’s 2014 order that would have provided protection to as many as 4.9 million undocumented immigrants — an order that has been stayed while a lawsuit works its way through the courts.

Texas and 25 other mostly Republican states filed the suit against the order, while dozens of mostly Democratic cities, the National League of Cities and the U.S. Conference of Mayors have backed the order in court briefs.

At the same time U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents are carrying out the raids, the Obama administration is building temporary shelters to house unaccompanied immigrant children in Colorado, Florida and New Mexico.

The shelters will house up to 2,200 children for on average 32 days each and will provide schooling for them until they are placed with sponsor families. Under federal law, unaccompanied children must be transferred out of detention centers within 72 hours.

The federal government “doesn’t want to get caught the way they did in 2014,” said Marc Rosenblum, who is leaving his position at the Migration Policy Institute to become deputy assistant secretary of Homeland Security and director of the Office of Immigration Statistics. “They want to give relief to people who have valid claims while enforcing their borders.”

Either way, he said, it’s a dilemma with no easy solutions. “It’s a tough policy problem.”
Targeted Raids

Targeted Raids

White House spokesman Josh Earnest said the raids begun last month are intended as deterrence, by discouraging people from attempting “the dangerous journey from Central America to the southwest border.”

They have targeted families who had illegally crossed the border after May 1, 2014, and who had exhausted their legal options for staying, ICE said. The families will be held in detention centers for processing and then flown back to their home countries.

But some defiant local officials say the raids have created a public safety crisis. Parents, they say, are keeping their children home from school and skipping doctor’s appointments. Whole families, they say, are hiding out in their homes, too frightened to go to the grocery store — or to talk to the police.

“This is having a severe impact on the immigrant community itself,” said Maryland state Del. Ana Sol-Gutiérrez, a Democrat. “They are very much afraid of what ICE raids can do to their families. The community is panicked.”

In announcing local police wouldn’t cooperate in the deportation effort, Montgomery County Executive Ike Leggett said, “We want all of our community members to know that they are free to go about their daily life, to go to schools and work, social service agencies, hospitals and medical clinics.

“If you have reason to need help from our police, do not be afraid to call on them.”

The Surge
The raids come amid a rise in illegal crossings at the border, where last fall thousands of families and unaccompanied children fleeing gang violence, drought and poverty in El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras, slipped under the fence.

The rise — more than 17,000 between October and December, compared to nearly 8,000 during the same period the previous year — has stoked fears that the nation will experience a surge like the one it witnessed in 2014, when roughly 69,000 children swarmed the border, creating a crisis in U.S. detention facilities and overwhelming states and municipalities.

“Right now, we’re on pace to have more families and unaccompanied minors arrive in fiscal year 2016 than in 2014,” Rosenblum said.

Once they cross, they end up in every state. How they are treated can depend on which one they go to.

California, Florida, New York, Texas and the Washington, D.C., region that includes Maryland and Virginia have the largest numbers of unaccompanied children.

California threw open its doors. In 2014, Gov. Jerry Brown, a Democrat, signed into law a bill allocating $3 million in legal aid for Central American children. That same year, then-Maryland Gov. Martin O’Malley, a Democrat, sought to house the children in foster homes rather than in group shelters and pushed to have them treated as refugees.

But other states made it clear the children were not welcome. Iowa Gov. Terry Branstad, a Republican, said in 2014 he did not want the children sent to his state because it would encourage others to cross the border illegally. Meanwhile, then-Nebraska Gov. Dave Heineman, a Republican, protested that the federal government had sent 200 children to his state without consulting him.

Today, the raids are happening in cities and states that have some of the toughest immigration courts, said Amy Fischer, policy director for RAICES, a Texas-based organization that is providing pro bono legal aid to immigrants in the deportation centers.

For example, she said, “very, very few people get granted asylum in Atlanta.”

Other regions, such as the Washington, D.C., area, have courts that tend to be more immigrant-friendly, Fischer said. It’s also easier for immigrants there to find a lawyer, she said.

U.S. Justice Department statistics back that up. In Atlanta, only 1 percent of asylum requests were granted in 2014, compared to 71 percent in Arlington, Virginia, and 84 percent in New York City.

Escalating Violence
As Carmen found out, Atlanta wasn’t the best place to arrive undocumented, after fleeing her home and job as a cosmetologist in El Salvador in the face of gang violence in the summer of 2014.

She was apprehended at the Texas border, where she applied for asylum and was ordered to wear an ankle bracelet to track her whereabouts. From there, she went to Atlanta, to be with her parents and brothers and sisters. She said she never missed a court appearance. But in October, a judge ordered her deported.

Carmen was awaiting a decision on her appeal when ICE knocked on her door and hauled her off. Now, she said, she is working with her pro bono lawyers and praying for good news. “I hope God lets me stay,” she said.

 

Lewis hands Eagles fifth straight loss

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University of Southern Indiana Women’s Basketball could not contain No. 9 Lewis University as the No. 9 Flyers handed the visiting Screaming Eagles a 76-47 Great Lakes Valley Conference setback Thursday evening.

 

Lewis (17-1, 8-0 GLVC) used a trio of 7-0 runs in the opening half to build a 37-24 halftime advantage; then followed a 5-0 run with a pair of 6-0 spurts and a 10-0 surge in the second half to ensure the Eagles their fifth consecutive loss.

 

USI (10-6, 3-5 GLVC) shot just 27.1 percent (5-18) from the field in the first quarter as Lewis, which shot 61.5 percent (8-13) in the first 10 minutes, built a 22-11 lead heading into the second period.

 

The Eagles trimmed that deficit to six points with just under two minutes to play in the opening half, but the last of Lewis’s 7-0 runs sent USI into the locker room facing a 13-point halftime deficit.

 

USI scored the opening bucket of the second period, but 11 points was as close as the Eagles would get as Lewis’s lead ballooned to 22 points (57-35) at the end of three quarters and to as much as 32 points before the final whistle.

 

Junior guard Kendyl Dearing (Huntingburg, Indiana) had 14 points to lead the Eagles, while sophomore guard/forward Kaydie Grooms(Marshall, Illinois) added nine points. Junior forward Hannah Wascher (Rantoul, Illinois) finished with a game-high eight rebounds.

 

Senior forward Mariyah Brawner-Henley and freshman forward Jessica Kelliher had 20 and 18 points, respectively, to lead the Flyers. Lewis shot 51.8 percent (29-56) from the field and held the Eagles to 36.5 percent (19-52) from the floor.

 

Lewis also made the Eagles pay for their offensive mistakes as the Flyers scored 31 points off USI’s 21 turnovers. USI had 13 of those turnovers in the final 20 minutes.

 

The Eagles conclude their three-game road trip Saturday when they travel to Somers, Wisconsin, to take on the University of Wisconsin-Parkside. The Rangers (10-6, 4-4 GLVC) suffered a 75-73 home setback to Bellarmine University Thursday evening.

 

EVSC Schools Closed Today

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The EVSC will be closed today, Jan. 22. When the EVSC is closed, all buildings, offices and schools also are closed. Thanks!