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Vanderburgh County Recent Booking Reports

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

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.

Media Report

MEDIA_9-4-2015

Anchor Babies

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With clerk jailed, same-sex Kentucky couples get marriage license

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Indiana Lawyer, Associate Press

A gay couple emerged from a county clerk’s office in Morehead, Kentucky, with a marriage license in hand Friday morning, embracing and crying as the defiant clerk who runs the office remained jailed for her refusal to issue the licenses because she opposed same-sex marriage.

William Smith Jr. and James Yates, a couple for nearly a decade, were the first to receive a marriage license in Rowan County. Deputy clerk Brian Mason issued the license, congratulating the couple and shaking their hands as he smiled. After they paid the license fee of $35.50, Yates rushed across the steps of the courthouse to hug his mom as both cried.

“This means at least for this area that civil rights are civil rights and they are not subject to belief,” said Yates, who had been denied a license five times previously.

A crowd of supporters cheered as the couple left, while a street preacher rained down words of condemnation. Yates and Smith said they are trying to choose between two wedding dates and plan a small ceremony at the home of Yates’ parents.

The licenses were issued only after five of Kim Davis’ deputy clerks agreed to hand them out, the lone holdout from the office being her son, Nathan Davis. Her office was dark Friday morning, with a sheriff’s deputy standing guard in front of it.

“I just want the licenses given out. I don’t want her in jail. No one wanted her in jail,” Yates said.

A second couple, Timothy and Michael Long, also were issued a license about an hour after Yates and Smith. When the couple got inside the office, a man harassed them and said, “More sodomites getting married?” The Longs did not respond, and a worker told the man to leave.

A third couple, April Miller and Karen Roberts, arrived around midday.

“Now we can breathe. I’m still ecstatic and happy. I just can’t wait to get married now,” Roberts said.

During a hearing Thursday, U.S. District Judge David Bunning had offered to release Davis if she promised not to interfere with her employees issuing licenses, but she refused, citing her Christian beliefs.

Speaking to reporters Friday morning, Davis’ husband, Joe Davis, held a sign saying “Welcome to Sodom and Gomorrah” and said his wife was in good spirits after her first night in jail.

When asked if she would resign, he said, “Oh, God no. She’s not going to resign at all. It’s a matter of telling Bunning he ain’t the boss.”

Kim Davis and Joe Davis still support her employees, whom he called “good people” and “good workers.” He said he ate with the other deputy clerks on Thursday at an Applebee’s restaurant and told them “I loved them and I was proud of them.”

Davis’ son supported his mother and was warned by the judge Thursday not to interfere with his fellow employees. The judge said he did not want “any shenanigans,” like the staff closing the office for computer upgrades as they did briefly last week.

“That would show a level of disrespect for the court’s order,” Bunning said. He added: “I’m hoping that cooler heads will prevail.”

The marriage licenses in the county usually have Davis’ signature on them, but the ones handed out Friday did not have any signature. The county attorney and lawyers for the gay couples said they are legal and valid despite the lack of a signature.

Bunning was asked during Thursday’s hearing about the licenses if Davis refused to authorize them, and he said it was up to the gay couples to take that chance.

The judge indicated Kim Davis would remain in jail at least a week, saying he would revisit his decision after the deputy clerks have had time to comply with his order. Her attorneys planned a news conference later Friday.

Republican presidential candidate Mike Huckabee said he would visit Davis in jail next week and planned a rally to support her.

Davis said she hopes the Legislature will change Kentucky laws to find some way for her to keep her job while following her conscience. But Democratic Gov. Steve Beshear again refused to call a special session of the Legislature on Thursday. State lawmakers will not meet until January.

Davis, an Apostolic Christian, wept during her testimony in federal court Thursday, telling the judge she was “always a good person” but that she gave her heart to the Lord in 2011 and “promised to love Him with all my heart, mind and soul because I wanted to make heaven my home.”

“God’s moral law conflicts with my job duties,” Davis told the judge before she was taken away by a U.S. marshal. “You can’t be separated from something that’s in your heart and in your soul.”

VHS Pet of the Day- Hossy

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Hossy is a 9 year old mix breed dog. He lived in the same home his whole
life but now his family decided to have a baby and they gave him up. He does
good with other dogs. His adoption fee would be $100 which includes his
neuter, vaccines, microchip and a bag of food. VHS is open Tuesday –
Saturday from Noon until 6 PM for adoptions & viewing.

Volcano

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IS THEORY WORK?

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Gavel Gamut

By Jim Redwine

 

Elizabeth Barrett Browning wrote of, … “passion put to use in [her] old griefs”. I surmise she meant regrets and the gnashing of teeth are counterproductive but knowledge from life’s tough lessons can help assuage the pain and avoid repeating it. That’s the way I see Legal Theory.

It may be mentally taxing, however, if properly applied to everyday legal problems, sound theory can provide a foundation for analyzing perplexing situations. Often cases in court or questions brought to one’s attorney do not fall smoothly into pre-packaged solutions. And, if judges and lawyers force a pro-forma termination to unique facts, the parties must carry on without achieving complete resolution. This can lead to even greater conflicts between and among the contestants in the future. It certainly results in dissatisfaction with the legal system, which may lead to lack of support for one’s government or even to another inane television series about law.

So, what is Legal Theory and how can it be put to use? It is the reduction of law and government to elements and it is the realization the molecular structure of those elements changes as events change. For example, an elementary understanding of theft for hominoids three million years ago in Africa is not adequate to address how water can be rationed in California today.

On the other hand, legal scholars in the Olduvai Valley attempting to legislate permissible taking of mastodons and state and federal regulators in Sonoma Valley regulating water rights can achieve better, i.e. fairer and more reasonable sanctions, if they look first to general principles that have been developed based on experience.

One of the basic differences in Legal Theory and scientific theory is law is prescriptive and science is description. That is, law is often: if x happens then y is the penalty, whereas with science actions, reactions, etc., are observed and described. With law there are consequences and with science there are results. See Jerome Hall, “Law and Legal Method”, from Living Law of Democratic Society, p. 30.

As Professor Hall writes, “…[O]ne of the oldest insights of jurisprudence (Legal Theory) is that rules of law have the form of normative propositions”. What he means by this is law and its constant companion, ethics, are analyzed in terms of “ought”. If a cave man or an avocado farmer steals from his neighbor, then certain things should happen. The wrongdoer “ought” to do something “good” or “ought not” to do something “bad” and the legal system, whether in caves or courts “ought” to reward or sanction the caveman or the farmer.

Well, I warned you last week our discussion of Legal Theory would not draw the attention of the “Nattering Nabobs of Negativism” in the national media, or even, perhaps, both of you who have read to this point. However, I submit that even though Gavel Gamut may not compete with the Code of Hammurabi, Justinian, St. Thomas Aquinas or even Jerome Hall, there is value in Legal Theory.

Now, whether I can prove that proposition to you or whether you simply think it’s not worth the candle, may be another matter. Next week the topic will be putting Legal Theory to use by juxtaposing its two great concepts, Natural Law versus Positive Law.

The age-old dilemma for legal philosophers, attorneys and judges comes down to an examination of where Law comes from. Is it pre-existing, a creation of the gods, or are the gods a creation of mankind including “god-given” moral codes?

Another way of approaching the general dichotomy of Natural Law (eternal and unchanging) versus Positive Law (made by humans based on experience) is to ask the question: If one steals a neighbor’s goat (or water) is there a sanction based on some ethereal edict or does the sanction (law) arise from experience?

For example, if x steals from y and society does not help y, then y may attack x and make society weaker and more dangerous. Is this knowledge a gift from the gods (Natural Law) or knowledge gained from experience (Positive Law)?

Another more likely question you are probably asking is, “Do you believe they pay law professors to teach this stuff?”

Monthly Revenue Report

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The monthly revenue report for August, along with commentary from State Budget Director Brian Bailey has been posted on the State Budget Agency webpage. The report and commentary can be found here: http://www.in.gov/sba/2659.htm. Data on August revenues can also be found on the MPH website here: http://in.gov/mph/staterevenue.html.

Results include:

· State general fund revenues for August were $1,079.1 million, which is $6.4 million (0.6%) above the estimate based on the April 16, 2015 forecast and $104.2 million (10.7%) above revenue in August 2014.
· Sales tax collections were $611.1 million for August, which is $14.9 million (2.4%) below the monthly estimate and $2.5 million (0.4%) above revenue in August 2014.
· Individual income tax collections totaled $409.3 million for the month, which is $16.4 million (4.2%) above the monthly estimate and $84.4 million (26.0%) above revenue in August 2014.
· Corporate tax collections were $5.7 million for the month, which is $5.1 million above the monthly estimate.
· Riverboat wagering collections were $11.2 million for the month, which is $0.1 million (0.7%) above the monthly estimate.
· Racino wagering collections totaled $7.4 million for the month, which is $0.3 million (4.0%) below the monthly estimate.