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

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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 Commercial Vehicle Enforcement Division Trooper Randy McPike. Trooper McPike discusses the Indiana State Police school bus inspection program and the inspection process.

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 Kids, a subsidiary of the Indiana State Police Alliance.

AFFORDABLE CARE ACT SEMINAR SET FOR THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 10TH

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St. Mary’s Senior Connection will hold a Welcome to the Affordable Care Act seminar Thursday, September 10, at 6:00 p.m. at Evansville Central Library Large Group Room, 200 NW Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd.

Understanding the options under the Affordable Care Act can be confusing at first. This educational seminar is designed to help you get a better understanding of the ACA and its effect on you. St. Mary’s Senior Connection can provide insight into the ever changing labyrinth of the insurance world.

This is an informational program only and will be presented by staff of St. Mary’s Senior Connection. It is free but registration is required. Call St. Mary’s Senior Connection at 812.473.7271 or toll free at 800.258.7610 for reservations and directions. Seating is limited.

EVSC Meets with Teamster’s Local 215 for Negotiations

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The EVSC’s negotiation team met for a collective bargaining negotiation session with Teamster’s Local 215. An exchange of ideas took place regarding employee concerns and economics, and the EVSC team remained firm on the two matters of public policy the board needed to have addressed by Local 215:

No employee should be forced to pay a fee for representation or membership to a Union just to have a job with the EVSC.
The School Board will not negotiate away its legal responsibility to make decisions regarding critical financial decisions and who works around our students.
Members of the School Board have no issue with anyone who wants to be a member of any union, but remain unwavering on the two matters of public policy.

The negotiation team will meet with members of the School Board in executive session on Monday, Aug. 31.

This is the eighth negotiation meeting that has taken place with leadership of Teamster’s Local 215. The five Collective Bargaining Agreements for employee groups that were represented by Local 215, expired on June 30.

EVSC employees continue to work for the EVSC, are being paid their wages and are receiving their benefits – and, will soon receive a 2 percent raise, as approved by the EVSC School Board on Aug. 24.
For more information about the previous proposals made, go to http://www.edlinesites.net/pages/EVSC/EVSC_Offices/Office_of_Human_Resources/Collective_Bargaining_Agreemen/Negotiation_Information_-_Retu

Thank you,

Marsha

EPD Media Report

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

Vanderburgh County Recent Booking Report

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

 

http://www.vanderburghsheriff.com/recent-booking-records.aspx#content

Pets of the Week

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Honey is a female, orange tabby cat.  She is only 9 months old.  $30 adoption fee includes spay, microchip, vaccines and bag of food. VHS is open for adoptions and viewing, Tuesday – Saturday from Noon until 6 PM. Check out other animals up for adoption at www.vhslifesaver.org

Dr. Victor Villanueva to be Hispanic History Month speaker at USI

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In honor of National Hispanic History Month, Dr. Victor Villanueva, a Regents Professor and Edward R. Meyer Distinguished Professor of Liberal Arts at Washington State University, will be the University of Southern Indiana’s featured speaker at 6 p.m. September 24, in Carter Hall, in University Center West. The event is free and open to the public.

Dr. Villanueva is the author, editor, or co-editor of eight books and nearly 50 articles or chapters in books. Among his list of award winning books, Cross-Talk in Comp Theory: A Reader, is one of the top books for training of English teachers of writing in the United States and abroad. His area of interest is the connection between language and racism.

Having delivered hundreds of talks nationally and internationally, he has received numerous awards including Rhetorician of the Year in 1999 and the Exemplar Award in 2008 for his discipline, rhetoric and composition. Dr. Villanueva also has served as the head of the national organization for Rhetoric and Writing studies along with the Conference on College Composition and Communication, from 1997 to 2000.

For information on USI Hispanic History Month programs, call Pamela Hopson, director of USI’s Multicultural Center at 812-465-7188.

Award of attorney fees in wrongful death depends on existence of survivors

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Marilyn Odendahl for www.theindianalawyer.com

In a case of first impression, the Indiana Supreme Court said it was “neither absurd nor contrary to public policy” to find the state’s General Wrongful Death Statute provides different damage awards depending on survivors.

The question of damages arose in a wrongful death claim Courtney Frederick filed on behalf of the estate of her deceased husband, Stephan, against SCI Propane LLC and others. After a jury apportioned 65 percent of the liability to the defendants, the estate moved for partial summary judgment, seeking attorney fees under the Indiana’s General Wrongful Death Statute.

The trial court granted the motion and the Indiana Court of Appeals affirmed.

However, the Indiana Supreme Court reversed in SCI Propane, LLC; South Central Indiana Rural Electric Membership Corp.; Rush Shelby Energy Rural Electric Cooperative, Inc. v. Courtney Frederick, as Personal Representative of the Estate of Stephan Frederick, Deceased, 55S04-1508-PL-501. The five justices ruled the 50-year-old statute does not allow for attorney fees when the decedent is survived by a spouse and/or children.

Reviewing the General Wrongful Death Statute, the Supreme Court noted it divides into two separate categories of decedents – those with survivors and those without.

The second category (deceased individuals who have no survivors) was addressed in McCabe v. Commissioner, Indiana Department of Insurance, 949 N.E.2d 816, 819-21 (Ind. 2011). Here the justices looked at the wrongful death statute in conjunction with the state’s Adult and Child Wrongful Death statutes which both apply to decedents who are unmarried and without dependents. The Supreme Court determined under the doctrine of in pari material, the language in the second category of the wrongful death statute and in the adult and child statutes indicate attorney fees are recoverable.

But in Frederick’s claim, the first category of the wrongful death statute applies. The justices note the statute allows for damages for medical and funeral expenses or for the benefit of the survivors. Taking a narrow reading, the Supreme Court concluded attorney fees do not qualify as damages.

“This outcome is neither absurd nor contrary to public policy. The existence of a surviving spouse or dependent of a decedent creates a significant incentive for the personal representative of the estate to pursue a wrongful death claim for the benefit of the survivors, who were perhaps financially dependent upon the decedent and could face significant hardship without his or her income,” Justice Mark Massa wrote for the court.
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“In the absence of such survivors, however, the only “party” arguably damaged as a matter of law is the decedent, and thus the estate itself,” Massa continued. “It is therefore logical that our General Assembly would provide extra incentive—in the form of statutory fee awards—to personal representatives prosecuting such actions, in order to ensure that those who commit acts resulting in a wrongful death are held liable, which further encourages such actors to avoid that wrongful conduct in the future.”

LEGAL THEORY by Jim Redwine

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Gavel Gamut

By Jim Redwine

(Week of 31 August 2015)

LEGAL THEORY

Now admit it; the title of this article draws you in as a moth to a flame. You cannot wait to delve into the arcane mysteries of ancient concepts such as The Rule Against Perpetuities and The Rule in Shelley’s Case. You know, I had a similar reaction in law school.

As I sat in Jerome Hall’s (1901 – 1992) final class as a professor at Indiana University’s School of Law in Bloomington in 1970 and heard him regale all the fresh young minds, my thoughts ever turned to the exciting areas of comparative legal philosophy.

And since I had that great pleasure I want to share it with you. So let’s begin with a walk down the ivy-covered halls of Bloomington’s limestone corridors.

First you will note that unlike the rest of the university where no one is expected to take root in the classrooms, the Law School has lockers for each student, in the basement, of course. There you kept the instruments of survival: canned tuna, soda crackers, and three dollars in emergency relief funds for when you spent the entire weekend trying to figure out just what some professor who had never practiced law meant when he, they were all men then, meant by Latin terms applied to convoluted fact scenarios.

With Professor Hall it was even more esoteric as he taught legal philosophy, not some real subject such as contracts. Hall had no use for facts or cases. He cared only about legal theory and impressing us with his personal relationships with other “famous” legal theorists we, nor hardly anyone else, had ever heard of. For example, do you know who Karl Llewellyn (1893 – 1962) was? Me neither, but Professor Hall made sure we all knew that Hall had known Llewellyn personally. The only Llewellyn I knew owned a bakery in my hometown. It turned out the baker was not the legal scholar; I got no credit when I identified him as such.

Professor Hall wrote several books and you know how people who write books are. They drive you crazy trying to get you to buy and maybe even read their books. With Hall he knew he was going to sell at least twenty books every semester. I have found his books to be excellent examples of heavy reading; I have moved them several times.

Well, enough of this interesting background of legal theory. Next week we will dive deeply into the exciting area of competing legal philosophies such as Legal Positivism and Natural Law. Now, don’t worry. I’ll make sure you get as much out of the discussions as I did.

NORMALIZING CUBA

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