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IS IT TRUE FEBRUARY 19, 2016

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IS IT TRUE we had a short telephone conversation with the new owner of the Evansville Hockey team?  …Mr. Hall indicated that he has investor/partner in this extremely risky business venture?  …he said that the management of the Ford Center, VenueWorks, is partnering with him in this venture?  …Mr. Hall promises to get back with us and give more detailed information about his business arrangement with VenueWorks? …since then we haven’t heard a “peep” from Mr. Hall?  …we invite Mr. Hall to send us a detailed letter explaining this agreement between  him and VenueWorks?  …we shall post his letter without opinion, bias or editing once we receive it from him?

IS IT TRUE DMD Director Kelly Course hit the airwaves this week declaring that City Council will vote 9-0 to approve his ill-advised North Main street “Bike Trail” in the seedy part of town?  … the hired help  Course announced that he has a 9-0 commitment from our elected officials to support this project is out of bounds?  …if our City Council members agreed to support this project by a 9-0 margin without open public discussion is a breach of the public trust?  … City Council isn’t being  transparent concerning the spending about $18 million dollars of the taxpayers money without discussing this project in public and asking for public input?  …it look like this deal was cut behind closed doors?

IS IT TRUE  about 6 months ago DMD Director Course announced that the North Main  street  Bike Trail project will cost $13 million dollars and today the guesstimated cost is around $18 million dollars?

IS IT TRUE we are hearing that the Evansville Fire Department Quartermaster program is moving forward in a positive way?  …we congratulate Chief Connelly for being visionary?

IS IT TRUE if the ISTEP test scores increase like the salaries of EVSC Administers every school  located in  the Vanderburgh County system will have passing grades?

IS IT TRUE we would like to point out that Vanderburgh County Coroner Anne Groves has done an outstanding job over the last several years?

IS IT TRUE that the Vanderburgh County Recorder Z Tuley has also done a credible jobs in that position?

IS IT TRUE that we enjoyed the discussions in our “Reader’s Forum” and look forward to more of them?

IS IT TRUE that we encourage all of our readers to either attend next Monday’s City Council meeting in person or watch it on television?

We are asking our readers to “like us” on Facebook and encourage friends and family to do so, as well? Our next IS IT TRUE will be posted on this coming Friday?

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

Todays “Readers Poll”:Do you feel Council should spend $16 million dollars to renovate North Main area?

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

BREAKING NEWS: DALE McCUISTON WITHDRAWING FROM COMMISSIONER RACE

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DALE McCUISTON WITHDRAWING FROM COMMISSIONER RACE

Media Release—Friday February 19,2016—by Wayne Parke Chairman VCRP

Dale McCuiston has informed me he is withdrawing from being a Candidate for the County Commissioner District # 1 position because of medical issues.

Dale was a great candidate and I believe he would have been elected. He indicated it was a difficult decision but it was the best thing for him and his family.

By State Election rules, Noon Monday February 8, 2016 was the deadline to file an official withdrawal of candidacy for the primary election. Therefore Dale’s name will remain on the ballot for the May 3, 2016 Primary but will cease immediately his election campaign.

On May 4, 2016, As Chairman, I plan to announce when I will call a caucus to fill this Republican ballot vacancy for County Commissioner District # 1. The Precinct Committeemen in Commissioner District # 1 will decide who the Republican Candidate will be on the November 8, 2016 General Election Ballot.

Interested Candidates for this position should contact me for details on how to be considered for this ballot vacancy. One of the requirements to run for this position is the Candidate must live in Commissioner District.

Evansville Police Department Officer Jacob C. Thompson, JR Service – Saturday, February 20th

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On behalf of the Evansville Police Department Administration, Fraternal Order of Police, Lodge 73, Evansville Police Department Foundation and Evansville African-American Museum we invite and encourage you to attend Saturday’s Legacy Service and Reception honoring Officer Jacob Thompson, JR who served from 1877 to 1878. He was one of the first African-Americans appointed to the police force, served from 1877 to 1878, and died from tuberculosis at age 25. And though his tenure on our department was brief, we believe his personal story merits honor and sincere recognition.

Jacob Thompson was born a slave in Boyd County, Kentucky in 1852. His family moved to Evansville in 1867 when he was about 15-years-of-age. At a time when African-Americans met resistance for advancement at every level, Jacob Thompson focused on education, public service, and “giving back” to the community. He was one of two African-American men to first gain admission to the Normal School (now Indiana State University at Terre Haute), an institution for training elementary school teachers. He taught at schools in both Vanderburgh and Warrick County and was active in local politics. Thompson was appointed to the Evansville Police Force on April 7, 1877. At his death he was remembered as a, “…Faithful and intelligent officer, a man of fine character…an ornament to his race and living testimonial to the possibilities that lie before them in spite of prejudice and sophistry”.

As there are no direct descendants of Thompson’s line, he is survived only by his law enforcement family.
This unique event is open to everyone.

Saturday, February 20 Events
Oak Hill Cemetery Service: 12:00 PM – Reception, African-American Museum: 1:00 PM until 3:00 PM
For full details, view this message on the web.

Day of Service at Ivy Tech Today

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What:  5th Annual Ivy Tech Days of Service

When:  Friday, Feb. 19, 8 a.m.-Noon (Best time to catch the action, 10 a.m. and after)

Where:  Carver Community Organization, 400 SE Eighth Street, Evansville

 

Background:  Ivy Tech students, faculty, and staff at campuses statewide are participating in service events in their communities – and here in Evansville, a group of students, staff and faculty will be painting, organizing the pantry, and working with children at Carver Community Organization all morning tomorrow. This event is conducted annually in conjunction with the National Random Acts of Kindness Week. While serving their community, our students will learn more about the needs of the community and resources available, while learning about themselves and giving back to others.  Great hands on photos/b-roll opportunities available. If you want to help us spread the word about this great event on social media – any posts or tweets please use #IvyService!

 

Contact at the Event:  LaNell Lucius, Ivy Tech Community College Southwest, Director of Student Life

Are People Turning Against The “Two Party System At Last?”‏

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HORNING v. STATE OF INDIANA challenges discriminatory laws that grant special powers, immunities, access, money and rights to the Democratic and Republican parties, at the expense of all other parties and individuals.

This is the core issue behind most others today. Whether it’s the injustice of “Super Delegates,” the campaign donation/ legislative payback system that promotes corporate corruption, endless war and infinite debt, or the whole notion that corporations have human rights; it all starts with laws that elevate the partisan cronies above the rest of us.

By their nature, ballot access laws limit voters’ choices on Election Day. Ballot access laws proliferated in the 1930’s to suppress the surge in Socialist Party votes, and again in the 1970’s through 80’s to combat what came to be called, “third parties.” Partisan judges encouraged this preferential treatment by calling it “stare decisis” such that, today, most people think that our “Two Party System” is legal, moral, and what the founders intended all along.

In fact our founders warned us against the entrenchment of parties, and wrote parts of our constitutions to protect us against their inherent corruption. American citizens have become so disenfranchised by the corruption in our government that they are turning toward those they think are “outsiders,” or abstaining from voting entirely. Happily, this is having an effect on the courts.

On January 27, the Constitution Party won its case against Missouri’s county ballot access laws. Just last week, the Libertarian Party of Illinois won its case against the “full slate law.” But no recent reversals addressed the core issue that human beings have been separated into classes; and that individual humans are in the lowest class, below even the smallest corporate entities/political parties.

The timing is right to stop hacking at the fast-growing branches of our problems, and strike at the root. All citizens must be equal under the law at long last. The constitutions demand it, citizens are coming to demand it, and that is the substance of HORNING v. STATE OF INDIANA.

Contact:
Andrew Horning
cell: (812) 585-0545
andrewhorning@hotmail.com

Faced With Staggering Backlogs of Rape Kits, States Change Testing, Investigations

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Faced With Staggering Backlogs of Rape Kits, States Change Testing, Investigations

Seeking to secure justice for thousands of rape victims, about 20 states are moving to test a backlog of unexamined rape kits found in storage rooms in police departments across the country — and change the rules for how rape cases are handled in the future.

Some states, including Colorado, Illinois, Ohio and Texas, already have passed laws that require that old kits be tested, and have seen charges brought against suspects as a result. In several states, including Michigan and Tennessee, law enforcement agencies face new time limits for submitting rape kits for testing. In others, law enforcement agencies were ordered to make a full count of their backlogged kits before state officials decide how to go about testing them.

This year, Arizona, Hawaii, New Hampshire and New York are considering bills that would require an inventory of backlogged rape kits. Oregon is considering legislation that would require testing the old kits, and Massachusetts, New Jersey and Rhode Island are considering bills that would require both, according to the Joyful Heart Foundation, a nonprofit founded by actress Mariska Hargitay of the Law and Order: Special Victims Unit television program and which advocates for the testing of all rape kits.

The goal of all the legislation is to ensure that forensic evidence in the kits, such as DNA that is collected from victims in an invasive process that can last four to six hours, is promptly and properly tested to help identify and prosecute suspected rapists. The DNA evidence is placed in an FBI database so that it can be compared to that of criminals and suspects who’ve had theirs taken.

“For someone to have survived a rape, reported it to police, and endured the invasive evidence collection, only to have it sit in an evidence room untested — I find that appalling,” said state Rep. Janet Adkins, a Florida Republican who is sponsoring a bill that would require faster testing of new rape kits.

The exact number of untested rape kits across the country is not known, but indications are it’s staggering. The Joyful Heart Foundation initially documented about 140,000 kits in the 27 states for which it has data. But Ilse Knecht, the group’s policy director, said old kits are continuously being discovered. Last week, for instance, Honolulu police officials said they had a backlog of 1,500 rape kits dating back more than a decade. Florida officials said in January that nearly 13,500 untested kits had been found across the state.

“We don’t really have a figure for how many kits there are, and that’s a symptom of the problem,” Knecht said.

Backlogs often grew over the years because testing is expensive and labs with limited capacity can be forced to address some cases over others. Older kits piled up because evidence collected in the 1980s was used to run blood tests — something that happened only when there was a suspect to compare it with.

Advocates for rape survivors say the kits also piled up because rape cases weren’t investigated seriously. “The bigger problem is not that they chose not to test the kit but that they chose not to investigate the case,” said Rebecca Campbell, a professor at Michigan State University who helped Detroit assess its backlog.

While many states have intensified their efforts to deal with their backlogs since discovering them, investigators and prosecutors stress that testing the kits can be meaningless without police following up on them.

“Some people are just testing the kits, and I don’t get that approach at all,” said Kym Worthy, Wayne County, Michigan, prosecutor, which had a backlog of 11,000 in 2009, much of which was from Detroit. “It’s great to test the kits and it puts information in the [FBI] database, but it does nothing for justice.”

Testing Pays Off
So far, just Colorado and Illinois have cleared their backlogs.

But some cities have taken action. Detroit and Houston began testing kits as part of a federal National Institute of Justice program that required them to study how the backlogs were created and how to avoid them in the future.

The cities sent the kits to private labs for testing because state or local police labs were overburdened. Houston spent $4.4 million to send its backlog of 6,600 kits — some of which dated to the 1980s — to two private labs in 2013. When the testing was completed, comparisons with the FBI database that contains DNA profiles of more than 12 million offenders and suspects led to 66 new charges. The results also helped police confirm 132 previous arrests that were made without DNA evidence.

Detroit, which received $7 million from the state to test its backlog, has seen the number of untested kits drop from roughly 11,000 to 1,000, according to the Wayne County prosecutor’s office. The kits helped identify 729 suspects and ultimately led to 36 convictions.

By testing the kits and entering the results into the FBI’s database, police aren’t just coming up with new suspects in old cases — they’re connecting them to cases in other states and jurisdictions and mapping out the paths of serial rapists. “Rape kits in just one city and one county have tentacles in 39 other states,” Worthy said.

When Detroit first decided to test its backlog, Campbell of Michigan State University said some people involved with the project were uncertain whether they should test kits that were beyond the statute of limitations. The state eliminated the statute of limitations for rape in 2001. But for most cases older than that, prosecutors had six years in which to bring charges. There also were questions about whether it made sense to test kits in cases in which a victim knew her attacker or focus instead on “stranger rape” kits.

Testing of the first 2,000 kits in Detroit showed why it’s important to test all the kits, Campbell said. There were just as many hits on the FBI database in older cases as in newer ones, and the kits from acquaintance rapes got just as many matches as stranger rape cases. Just because a rapist is known to the victim, doesn’t mean it’s not worth checking to see if he was responsible for other crimes, Campbell said.

Looking Back vs. Looking Forward
Many states that want to reduce their backlog start with an inventory of police vaults and evidence rooms, which the New York Legislature is considering requiring.

Assemblywoman Linda Rosenthal, a Democrat who sponsored the New York bill, said it’s important to understand the scope of the problem to decide how to fix it. Texas required a count in 2011, and, after about 20,000 kits were found, the Legislature in 2013 set aside nearly $11 million for testing.

Audits can help states decide whether they can handle the tests within state labs or need to contract with a private lab, where it can cost $500 to $1,500 to test a kit. Colorado spent $2.7 million to test its 3,500 backlogged kits in private labs.

States also are acting to ensure new backlogs don’t occur.

Michigan passed legislation that gives police 14 days to get kits to the lab and requires labs to test the kits within three months, as long as they have sufficient staff to do so.

Colorado mandates that all new kits be tested, with law enforcement required to submit them to the state lab within 21 days. It’s something Janet Girten with the Colorado Bureau of Investigation, which tests the kits, said is essential for making sure the state never has “a backlog of kits unanalyzed in law enforcement vaults.”

But the mandate also creates three to four times the workload the lab had when police departments sent kits on a case-by-case basis, Girten said. To help deal with that, the state set aside $5 million annually for the lab to hire 16 more scientists.

Last year, Tennessee passed a bill that gives law enforcement 60 days to submit a kit for testing and requires a state task force to come up with a new policy on investigating rape cases.

Other states are considering similar legislation this year. A Florida bill, for instance, would give law enforcement 30 days to submit a kit to a lab, and labs would have 120 days to test it. A Kentucky bill would give law enforcement 30 days to submit the kit, but it puts more pressure on labs to speed up testing over time. Labs would need a 90-day average testing time by 2018 and a 60-day average turnaround by 2020.

Beyond the Lab
Investigators, prosecutors and victims’ advocates say that while testing rape kits is important, more needs to happen to bring justice in cases of rape.

Both Cleveland and Detroit have set aside people to work solely on backlogged cases, using a mix of local, state and federal funds to hire more investigators and prosecutors.

Rick Bell, assistant prosecutor in Cleveland’s Cuyahoga County, said his team spends an average of 40 hours following up on a case once an old kit gets tested. Even with about 25 people looking into old cases in Cleveland, Bell said, it will take years to go through them all. But the investigations have led to 136 convictions, and those people are serving an average of about 10 years, he said.

Support for Victims
The push to get kits tested has also put a spotlight on victims, how they are treated by police and how to give them justice.

Collecting the evidence is very involved and invasive, with victims naked in front of a stranger while their bodies are combed and swabbed for evidence.

“It’s a lengthy exam and hours of questioning when all they really wanted to do was go home and shower,” said Knecht of the Joyful Heart Foundation.

Several police departments have adopted new policies for investigating rapes. In Houston, advocates are available to help guide victims through the justice system and efforts are made to accommodate a victim’s gender preference for an investigator.

Some entities are also looking at ways to track the kits. Detroit now has bar codes on all its kits that police can use to monitor them.

Washington is considering a bill that would impose a $4 state tax on people who enter a strip club, with the money used, in part, to pay for a tracking system that the bill’s sponsor, state Rep. Tina Orwall, a Democrat, would like to make accessible to victims. Orwall said the proposal would help the state monitor law enforcement’s progress and is “a great way to be accountable to victims.”

NEWER
Top State Stories 2/17

ESTATE, TAX AND PERSONAL AND BUSINESS PLANNING by Randall Craig

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ESTATE, TAX AND PERSONAL AND BUSINESS PLANNING by Randall Craig

The information that follows summarizes some of the current issues in the areas of estate, tax and personal and business planning which may be of interest to you. Although this information is accurate and authoritative, it is general in nature and not intended to constitute specific professional advice. For professional advice or more specific information, please contact my office.

SWIRCA & More 2016 Online Auction & Tailgate Party. This wonderful annual auction event will be held on Saturday, February 27, 2016. For those readers who are unable to attend, please consider making a donation to this outstanding organization which provides essential help to people of all ages. Southwestern Indiana Regional Council on Aging (“SWIRCA & More”) provides assistance to children as well as disabled adults and the elderly. Its principal goal is to enhance opportunities for independent living. SWIRCA & More provides a myriad of services which include serving more than 200,000 meals each year in its six-county service area covering Gibson, Perry, Posey, Spencer, Vanderburgh and Warrick counties, screening persons who may require admission to a nursing home to be sure that the need for long-term care exists and that people are not simply being “warehoused” when other arrangements or facilities would be more appropriate, and helping the disabled to circumnavigate the complex processes of the Medicare and Medicaid programs. SWIRCA & More also helps retirees and disabled individuals make choices pertaining to their insurance, including Medicare supplemental coverages and Part D prescription coverage. This is a very short list of only a few of the many services provided by SWIRCA & More. There is virtually no one who will not be impacted by SWIRCA & More at some point in his or her life, and when one considers the aging nature of our population, it is likely that our families will benefit from the efforts of SWIRCA & More staff at several different times during our lives. Please consider this wonderful organization when making decisions about the charities that you intend to support. A donation request letter, including additional information, is enclosed with this newsletter. Tax deductible donations may be made payable to SWIRCA & More and sent to Post Office Box 3938, Evansville, Indiana 47737-3938. Please consult the website of SWIRCA & More www.swirca.org and review the enclosed information accompanying this newsletter.

Importance Of Marital Agreements. The use of prenuptial and postnuptial agreements can be extremely important in the context of asset protection and estate and lifetime planning. Many people erroneously believe that the sole or principal purpose of a prenuptial agreement is to predetermine what will happen in the event of a dissolution of marriage. In fact, important aspects of prenuptial and postnuptial agreements include protecting a spouse’s children in the case of a second marriage and setting the stage for protecting the assets of one spouse in the event that the other spouse requires long term care. During the process of prenuptial agreement planning, the couple will often come to realize that their assets are exposed if one spouse-to-be later requires long term care. While the Medicaid rules disregard the existence of a marital agreement, nevertheless a marital agreement can bring about the process of planning for the

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possibility of requiring long term care and considering various planning arrangements, whether through the utilization of a particular kind of a trust arrangement, or possibly even the purchase of long term care insurance for one or both of the spouses. In my practice, marital agreements are more important for their planning uses and implications than in the context of divorce, particularly since I do not practice in the area of marital dissolutions. In the absence of a prenuptial or postnuptial agreement, when the first spouse dies, the surviving spouse is entitled to a share of the deceased spouse’s estate, sometimes called the “forced share” or an “elective share.” If that marital right is waived, as it will be in most cases, other arrangements can still be put in place to protect the surviving spouse, if desired. Then, should the surviving spouse who may be in a long term care facility not elect the forced share, because he or she has no right to do so, the Medicaid eligibility of the surviving spouse can be protected, or established if not eligible, while avoiding a period of Medicaid ineligibility or the possible dissipation of the predeceasing spouse’s estate. Marital agreements can also be very effective tools for asset protection by defining the specific assets that belong to one or the other spouse, and determining what will happen in the event of transfers between spouses. In a second marriage situation, especially when there are children, and whether or not both spouses are older or one of the spouses is infirm, marital agreement planning is an extremely important aspect of the estate and lifetime planning process.

Another Reminder About Beneficiary Designations. In my practice, I am incessantly confronted with estate plans involving either an inter vivos trust (whether in the form of a revocable living trust or an irrevocable trust) or a trust under a last will and testament in regard to which beneficiary designations have been made inappropriately. Numerous previous articles in my newsletters have addressed such issues in various contexts. Although I have never kept a close count, I would wager that in the vast majority of cases, perhaps as many as 75 percent or more, a person’s or a couple’s beneficiary arrangements pertaining to their life insurance, IRAs and other retirement plans do not comport with the estate planning arrangements that they have set up. In many cases, a trust has been established, and the life insurance should have been designated to pass to the trust or to a specific sub-trust, but in fact the life insurance designation does not even contemplate that it would be paid to a trust, resulting in the life insurance proceeds passing to the wrong beneficiaries or outright directly to beneficiaries when a trust for the beneficiaries was intended. Often the payment will be paid through the estate, necessitating probate steps, when the beneficiary designation could have been named directly to the trust. A beneficiary designation can even be made directly to a trust which will come into existence under a last will and testament, without the life insurance proceeds going through the estate, thereby avoiding probate, even though the trust is a testamentary trust. In the case of IRAs and other retirement plans, the qualified dollars often will be designated to be paid directly to the trust, which in most instances is incorrect unless the beneficiary designation form is designed very carefully. Unfortunately, the vast majority of beneficiary designations are not properly implemented. This article will serve as another reminder, which probably cannot be repeated too often, that in conjunction with your estate planning, please be sure that you are getting proper guidance from your financial and legal advisors regarding the proper implementation of beneficiary designations. Many investment advisors, unfortunately, are more focused on the products that they are working with rather than the plan that the benefits will be funded with, and it is incumbent upon you to check with all of your advisors to be sure that all of the tax, legal and financial implications have been considered. There can be significant tax differences when retirement benefits are paid in the wrong way or to the wrong beneficiary.

Additional Information. Future issues of this Newsletter will address other issues of current interest. Please contact my office with any questions that you might have.

IMAGINE A WORLD WITHOUT VIOLENCE ART EVENT

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IMAGINE A WORLD WITHOUT VIOLENCE ART EVENT

February is National Teen Dating Violence Prevention and Awareness Month. Join Albion Fellows Bacon Center and Penny Lane for “Imagine a World Without Violence”, an art contest and event to showcase local teen art.

Albion is currently holding an art contest for local youth ages 13-19 with the theme, “Imagine a World Without Violence”. Submission deadline for art is on February 18th. For more information on art contest, check out Albion Fellows Bacon Center’s Facebook page.

On February 21st, Albion Fellows Bacon Center and Penny Lane are partnering together as we celebrate the contest artwork, guest speakers, and have live music from the Band “Selling the War”.

Teen dating violence is a problem of epidemic proportions in our country, our state and our community. Roughly 1.5 million high school boys and girls in the U.S. admit to being intentionally hit or physically harmed in the last year by someone they are romantically involved with. 11.3% of high school students in Indiana reported experiencing dating violence. Teens who suffer dating abuse are at high risk of having long-term consequences like alcoholism, eating disorders, promiscuity, thoughts of suicide, and violent behavior. Only 1/3 of the teens who were involved in an abusive relationship confided in someone about the violence.

Teen dating violence is a problem we can solve and community members can play an essential role. Please join Albion Fellows Bacon Center and Penny Lane on Sunday, February 21st at Penny Lane for IMAGINE A WORLD WITHOUT VIOLENCE.

February 21st, 2016, 1:00 p.m. – 5:00 p.m.
Penny Lane- 600 SE Second Street

Contact: Amy Wilkerson, Albion Fellows Bacon Center
Amy.wilkerson@albionfellowsbacon.org
812-422-9372

THIS WEEKS BIRTHDAYS

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THIS WEEKS BIRTHDAYS

NEALSON FOSTER

FRANK COLEMAN 

AARON WILSON 

ANDREW SMITH

GARY BUMB

BOB DAVIS

SHERI PAULEY

KAREN O’BRYAN

RIKKI BOND

ANGEL PUTMAN

MARK CLARK

VICKIE COSBY

LAURA BLACKBURN

SCOTT LEFLER