Home Blog Page 5939

Pet of the Week

0

Hanna is a sweet 8 year old beagle. Her adoption fee is $100 which includes her spay, vaccines, microchip and a bag of food

Pet of the Week

0

Gus is a 2 year old Shepherd mix.  His adoption fee is $100 which includes his neuter, vaccines, microchip and a bag of food.

BREAKING NEWS: MAYOR REQUESTING TRANSFER OF $8 MILLION FROM FUNDS FOR CASH FLOW AND EMPLOYEE PAYROLL

20
MAYOR
MAYOR

Linked below are a Resolution for Authorizing Transfer of Funds and the Resolution to Transfer $8 million Dollars from the Riverboat and Rainy Day Funds.

This is a developing story and we shall update you on any developments as they happen.

Resolution Authorizing Transfer of Funds Page 1

page 2

 

Resolution Authorizing Transfer $8 Million Dollars From Riverboat and Rainy Day Funds for Cash Flow Purposes

page 1

page 2

page 3

FOOTNOTE: In todays Courier and Press on page 13A in the VIEWPOINT section Mayor Winnecke wrote a “Special” article.  This well crafted and self serving political article written by the Mayor seemly blames everyone except himself for the City’s present “Financial Crisis”.  Please get a copy of the Mayors letter because we are sure you will find his remarks entertaining.

Do you wonder why the Mayor didn’t send the City County Observer a copy of his letter for our readers to analysis his written remarks concerning the city finances.  Fact is that the  CCO hasn’t received one official press release from the Mayor’s Press Secretary for the last 3 years. The moral of this story is when you question information sent to in official press release from the Mayors office they put you on the “don’t send list”!  Now you know why we call the Mayor’s Press Secretary the “MINISTER OF PROPAGANDA”!

 

Vanderburgh County Recent Booking Records

0
SPONSORED BY DEFENSE ATTORNEY IVAN ARNAEZ. 
DON’T GO TO COURT ALONE. CALL IVAN ARNAEZ @ 812-424-6671.

EPD Activity Report

0
SPONSORED BY DEFENSE ATTORNEY IVAN ARNAEZ. 
DON’T GO TO COURT ALONE. CALL IVAN ARNAEZ @ 812-424-6671.

PROBLEM SOLVING

0

Gavel Gamut

By Jim Redwine

(Week of 14 September 2015)

PROBLEM SOLVING

Problems must be solved in all jobs. Physicians diagnose and treat. Engineers design and build. Plumbers stop leaks. Carpenters repair roofs. Lawyers and judges are charged with solving social problems, dilemmas arising from life’s complexities.

Often these social problems are matters of first impression for which prior solutions will not work. This is particularly true as technology advances and creates situations once reliable legal formulae do not fit. For example, the law of libel and slander that for many years was adequate for books, radios, newspapers and television needs renovation when Facebook or Twitter raise their heads.

The law concerning steamboats and railroads is not adequate when people operate automobiles on public highways with their knees while their thumbs and brains are lost in texting.

Positive laws, legislative responses to such “advances” in human development, are more likely to help assuage new legal problems if sound legal theory is at their foundation.

Legislators, lawyers and judges are society’s legal problem solvers. Of course, not all responses to new problems successfully address society’s needs. Sometimes new laws are poorly thought out and sometimes lawyers and judges fail to properly apply sound legal theory to unique factual situations. Such cases as Dred Scott or Bush/Gore come to mind.

As our friend, Professor Jerome Hall, says:

“Every sound use of legal method is an experience in truth-seeking and right-seeking that has inherent value ….”

Hall, Living Law of Democratic Society, p. 46.

In other words, unsound use of legal theory will lead to unjust outcomes but properly understood and applied Legal Theory will help lawyers and judges resolve legal problems that do not lend themselves to stock approaches:

“Legal problems cannot be solved by the perfunctory application of established norms but call, instead, for the discovery of the particular right action that fits the problem at hand, and whose application is feasible.

…

[legal problem solving] requires recognition and comparison of meanings, the application of general rules to specific facts, the imaginative discovery of principle, and the testing of hypotheses against the facts.”

Hall @ p. 50 – 51.

What all this means to a lawyer’s client with a unique problem or litigants in court before a judge is the lawyers and judges should first seek truth and justice then fashion a sound approach to achieving it.

CLINTON’S SORRY STATE

2

By Peter Funt

“Sorry seems to be the hardest word,” noted Elton John.

On Monday, Hillary Clinton told the Associated Press there was no need to say “sorry” about her email set-up while Secretary of State. Twenty-four hours later she called the emails “a mistake,” telling ABC News, “I’m sorry about that.”

What changed? Very little, apparently, except that news media place so much emphasis on that single five-letter word — as if uttering “sorry” fundamentally changes anything.

ABC’s David Muir practically jumped from his chair. “I did hear a word there just a moment ago, and I’m curious,” he said, clearly sensing a breakthrough moment in Emailgate. “Would you acknowledge that you made a mistake here?”

Hillary Clinton has bobbed and weaved on this matter since the day the email story broke. She has parsed every word so thoroughly that nothing, not even “sorry,” means anything anymore. So she told Muir, “I’m sorry that it has, you know, raised all of these questions.”

On “The Ellen DeGeneres Show,” Clinton put it this way: “I’m sorry for all the confusion that has ensued.” She echoed those exact words in an interview with NBC’s Andrea Mitchell.

Any serial apologizer understands the translation. “I’m not really sorry for what I did so much as I’m sorry that it was discovered and that all of you reporters keep asking me about it, and if it keeps up it’s going to spoil my chances to be president.”

Many outlets — from The New York Times to Fox News Channel — characterized Clinton’s statement as an “apology.” I’m not hearing that. In fact, I don’t think an apology is what’s called for anyway.

Regardless of legal findings to come, Clinton is already guilty in the court of public opinion and, regrettably, there’s little she can say now to change that. In a way her apology or pseudo-apology only makes things worse.

Even more grating is Clinton’s dogged use of the phrase, “I take responsibility.” She said that even before the ABC interview, but what’s the point? Of course she’s responsible! Acknowledging responsibility only has purpose when, as Harry Truman put it, “the buck stops here” — in other words, if you had no involvement or awareness in the first place.

But taking responsibility for something about which you were personally responsible is the exact kind of political doubletalk that voters are sick of.

The timing of Clinton’s linguistic shift is made awkward by a report in The Times that she is trying to “shed her scriptedness” and be more spontaneous. Her latest interviews seemed anything but.

It will be tragic for Clinton and her supporters if her candidacy is ultimately undone by this unfortunate business. If she fails it won’t be because of how State Department emails were handled nearly so much as the way candidate Clinton has handled everything since.

Now the GOP’s campaign machine has what it has sought all summer: video of Clinton saying the word “sorry.” The fact that Clinton knows how it will be used is a key reason why she waited so long to say it. And by waiting so long, she’s played into the opposition’s hand while doing little to improve her situation.

Her tune sounds too much like the one from John Denver: “More than anything else, I’m sorry for myself.”

APPLE TECHNOLOGY

0

Catch the Latest Edition of “The Indiana State Police Road Show”

0
SPONSORED BY DEFENSE ATTORNEY IVAN ARNAEZ. 
DON’T GO TO COURT ALONE. CALL IVAN ARNAEZ @ 812-424-6671.

Catch the latest edition of the “Indiana State Police Road Show” radio program every Monday morning at your convenience.

This week’s show features Indiana State Police Trooper Aaron Pfaff. Trooper Pfaff discusses the history of the Indiana State Police Motorcycle Unit and the daily duties and responsibilities they perform across the state of Indiana.

Download the program from the Network Indiana public websites at www.networkindiana.com.  Look for the state police logo on the main page and follow the download instructions. The ISP Road Show can also be viewed via YouTube.

Go to https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCu5Bg1KjBd7H1GxgkuV3YJA or visit the Indiana State Police website at http://www.in.gov/isp/   and click on the YouTube link. This 15 minute talk show concentrates on public safety and informational topics with state wide interest.

The radio program was titled “Signal-10” in the early sixties when it was first started by two troopers in northern Indiana. The name was later changed to the “Indiana State Police Road Show” and is the longest continuously aired state police public service program in Indiana.

Radio stations across Indiana and the nation are invited to download and air for FREE this public service program sponsored by the Indiana State Police Alliance and Cops for K