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VANDERBURGH COUNTY FELONY CHARGES

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

 Below is a list of felony cases that were filed by the Vanderburgh County Prosecutor’s Office on Thursday , June 11, 2015

Anthony Minor            Theft-Level 6 Felony

Criminal Trespass-Class A Misdemeanor

Disorderly Conduct-Class A Misdemeanor

Jennifer Reed                  Theft-Level 6 Felonies (Two Counts)

John Wallace                   Legend Drug Deception-Level 6 Felony

Domestic Battery-Class A Misdemeanor

Fernando Wilson Jr    Operating a Vehicle with an ACE of .08 or More-Level 6 Felony

Justices strip adoption, reinstate statute COA struck down

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Dave Stafford for www.theindianalawyer.com

An adoptive maternal grandmother who the Court of Appeals ruled provided care in her grandchildren’s best interests despite a 1997 neglect conviction is legally barred from adopting them, the Indiana Supreme Court ruled. Justices also rebuked a COA determination that the statute was unconstitutional as applied.

“We now hold the statute constitutional, despite its harsh consequences under these facts, and remand to the trial court to reconsider the petitions in view of the absolute statutory bar,” Chief Justice Loretta Rush wrote for the court in In the Matter of the Adoption of Minor Children: I.B. and W.B.: B.B. v. B.C. and J.L., and Indiana Department of Child Services, 82S05-1502-AD-63.

Adoptive maternal grandmother B.C. adopted two grandchildren including one with special needs who had been removed by the Department of Child Services due to parental substance abuse. The children’s mother supported placement with the maternal grandmother but the paternal grandmother also petitioned to adopt the children. The maternal grandmother’s prior neglect conviction had been for failing to report her ex-husband’s molestation of their child.

Indiana Code § 31-19-11-1(c) bars adoption for anyone convicted of felony neglect. The trial court ruled that conviction was not dispositive of her ability to care for children, and based on findings in the children’s best interests, Vanderburgh Superior Judge Brett Niemeier placed the children with her. The Court of Appeals affirmed, http://www.theindianalawyer.com/children-should-remain-in-home-despite-grandmothers-felony-conviction/PARAMS/article/35534 holding the grandkids were entitled to an individualized determination of their best interests. DCS also agreed that the statute’s irrebuttable presumption of the maternal grandmother’s unfitness would be a violation of the children’s due process rights.

“We disagree with that analysis,” Rush wrote. “The United States Supreme Court has left its ‘irrebuttable presumption’ cases lying dormant for several decades. And under its more recent ‘classification’ analysis, the statute’s regrettable consequences under the facts of this case establish no as-applied constitutional violation.”

The court held the statute was constitutional because its prohibitions are rationally related to the classifications they draw, and there is no constitutional defect in barring adoptions by petitioners with felony neglect convictions.

The record also notes that the paternal grandmother failed to report her son’s domestic violence against the children’s mother – particularly an instance the paternal grandmother was aware of in 2012 when her son had beaten the children’s mother so severely she needed emergency medical care and could barely breathe.

“Distinguishing between convicted child-neglect felons and non-felons is rationally related to the legitimate legislative goal of ensuring that children will not be adopted into a neglectful home — and so the consequences of that distinction here, though regrettable, are not unconstitutional,” Rush wrote.

“We therefore reverse the trial court’s judgment on both adoption petitions and remand with instructions to vacate the adoption decree within thirty days of this Court’s opinion being certified and reconsider both adoptions to the extent they are not barred by the statute, including by considering whether a non-adoptive placement such as guardianship may be in the children’s best interests and by receiving additional evidence if the trial court so chooses.”

WHAT MAKES CATS CRAZY? by Jim Redwine

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Gavel Gamut

By Jim Redwine

(Week of 15 June 2015)

When psychiatrists and psychologists diagnose for human mental illness they use psychometric tests and sometimes DNA factors but mainly just talk. That is, people, criminal defendants who have claimed insanity for example, are simply interviewed and their responses are analyzed. If their observed behavior plus their answers fall into certain categories, they are said to be mentally ill.

I assume the researchers at Johns Hopkins Medical School and the Stanley Medical Research Institute used the same methods to determine cat ownership can lead to human mental illness. The scientific journal Schizophrenia Research stated:

“Cat ownership in childhood has now been reported in three studies to be significantly more common in families in which the child is later diagnosed with schizophrenia or other serious mental illness….”

The researchers attributed the causal connection to be a cat-borne parasite called Toxoplasma gondii that can cause an infection in humans. It is estimated that more than sixty million Americans may have caught this parasite from cats.

I do not know what methodology the researchers used, but since interviews are the main focus of detecting human mental illness I will assume the same is true for cats. I have tried this approach with our cat, Ajax. The interview went like this.

Ajax: Jim you are a human, right?

Jim: Right.

Ajax: Cats often fight over territory. Do humans engage in such behavior?

Jim: Not really. We do fight but we are too highly developed to need a reason.

Ajax: From watching television while clawing at Peg’s new carpet I note humans must spend a great deal of their time talking about sex.

Jim: That’s right, but for most people it’s just talk.

Ajax: Also, my fellow cats and I have marveled at all the food we find in dumpsters and landfills. We appreciate the cornucopia but wonder where it all comes from.

Jim: Yes, we humans have given ourselves dominion over the earth and we celebrate that situation by using what we please.

Ajax: Jim, you know we cats, especially we who are male, frequently abandon our young to their own devices. How about you guys.

Jim: No, we are very proud of all of our programs that focus on other people’s children.

Ajax: When you and Peg take me to the veterinarian, say to get “fixed”, and by the way I have never thanked you for that, I note people are caring for lots of animals. Do humans treat humans the same way?

Jim: Absolutely. We have Obama Care.

After this interview Ajax curled up in my favorite chair and gnawed on my house shoe as he issued his expert opinion on whether there was a connection between cats, humans and mental illness. He scratched his conclusion into Peg’s damask tablecloth:

“Humans make cats crazy.”

Impaired Driver Arrested after Nearly Striking Trooper

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

 Saturday night, June 13, at approximately 11:40, Trooper Lucas Zeien was assisting Evansville Police and Vanderburgh Sheriff’s Department with a traffic stop on US 41 at Riverside Drive. During the traffic stop Zeien was securing a female suspect in his patrol car when he heard other officers yelling at the driver of an oncoming pickup truck to stop. The driver slammed on the brakes and stopped inches from the rear of Zeien’s patrol car. The driver then pulled away and continued to drive again nearly striking Zeien.  Moments later the vehicle came to a stop after a passenger inside the pickup truck put the vehicle in park. The driver was identified as Griffin Yorke, 30, of Henderson, KY. Further investigation revealed he had a blood alcohol content of .23%. He was arrested and taken to the Vanderburgh County Jail where he is currently being held without bond.

 

Arrested and Charges:

  • Griffin Yorke, 30, Henderson, KY
  1. Driving While Intoxicated, Class A Misdemeanor
  2. Failure to Yield to Emergency Vehicle, Infraction
  3. Open Container Violation, Infraction

Vanderburgh County Recent Booking Records

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

EPD Activity Report

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

Komen Evansville Tri-state Race

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It’s that time of year to start gathering your teams and designing your shirts.  This year we are incorporating a Superhero theme into the race, so keep that in mind when designing your T-Shirt this year.

Registrations is now open.  You may use code:  EARLYBIRD now thru June 20th for a $5.00 your registration fees.  This does exclude the Youth registration, it is already reduced to $15.00.  Click here to Register

This year we are also holding a Kid Zone T-shirt design contest.  All kids ages 4-10 are eligible to enter.  Click here to download the registration form.  Voting will take place on our Facebook page and at Old National Bank Downtown in the atrium July 6-13.  All entries must be received by June 30th.

We are introducing a new Race for the Cure® registration option this year, Superhero Package.  This registration includes your race entry, an official race Pink Superhero Cape and on site parking located next to Dillard’s.  This package cost $40.00.  Follow the fun on our Instagram page @KomenEvansville #CapefortheCure


Save the date

 

 Watch our Website and Facebook page for more information as our dates approach. 

  • June 20 – Painting with a Purpose, Hosted by Painting with a Twist, Evansville, IN  Register here.
  • August 6 & 7 – Komen Owensboro Bowl for the Cure®, Diamond Lanes, Owensboro, KY
  • August TBD  – Volunteer Appreciation Celebration, Evansville, IN
  • August 29 – Survivor Breakfast, Old National Events Plaza (formerly The Centre)
  • September 27 – Komen Evansville Tri-State Race for the Cure®, EASTLAND MALL, Evansville, IN
  • November 5 – Surviving with Style – Tropicana, Evansville, IN

Volunteers

Want to help?

Contact info@komenevansville for more information on these opportunities.

    It’s RACE SEASON! We can always use a helping hand.  We are currently looking for individuals to help with Race Entry Form Distribution.  This works best with 2 volunteers at a time, one to drive and one to drop them off.

 

BBQ Pulled Pork Fundraiser for SWIRCA & MORE

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Provided by Old Fashion Butcher Shoppe

SWIRCA & More has begun selling BBQ Pulled Pork provided by The Old Fashioned Butcher Shoppe.
2 lbs of BBQ will be sold for $15 and all the proceeds will benefit SWIRCA & More.
Orders may be placed with Rachel at the front desk at SWIRCA or at Old Fashion Butcher Shoppe. All orders are due by June 24th and the BBQ will be ready for pickup on July 2nd- just in time for your Independence Day Celebration!
For more information, contact Lexi Leak at aleak@swirca.org or 492-7407.