Vanderburgh County Recent Booking Records
EPD Activity Report
Evansville Man Arrested after Brief ChaseÂ
Tuesday evening, June 9, at approximately 7:26, Warrick County Sheriff’s Department received information from security at Walmart that three men and a woman had allegedly stolen items from inside the store and left the area in a grey Chevrolet Malibu. Master Trooper Matt Lockridge was nearby and noticed the vehicle as it was leaving the parking lot. Lockridge attempted to stop the vehicle, but the driver accelerated and refused to stop. The driver then suddenly stopped on High Pointe Drive just east of Libbert Road. When Lockridge exited his patrol car the driver accelerated and disregarded the stop sign at Libbert Road and at S.R. 66.  The vehicle continued west on S.R. 66 reaching speeds of approximately 80 mph. The driver lost control of his vehicle as he attempted to go north on I-69. The vehicle left the roadway and came to a final rest in the center grassy portion of the cloverleaf. The passengers in the vehicle exited and immediately surrendered. The driver exited and fled on foot, but was quickly apprehended and arrested without further incident. The three passengers were questioned and later released. Further investigation revealed Simmons allegedly stole a San Disk 64 GB USB Flash Drive.
The investigation is continuing and additional arrests are possible. |
VANDERBURGH COUNTY FELONY CHARGES
 Below is a list of felony cases that were filed by the Vanderburgh County Prosecutor’s Office on Monday, June 08, 2015
Marissa Flemming       Residential Entry-Level 6 Felony
(Two Counts) Criminal Mischief-Class B Misdemeanors
Stephanie Wilkinson    Theft-Level 6 Felony
Jennifer Witham          Theft-Level 6 Felony
Norman Chavis          Domestic Battery-Level 6 Felony
Resisting Law Enforcement-Class A Misdemeanor
Natasha Payne       Theft-Level 6 Felony
Legend Drug Deception-Level 6 FelonyÂ
St. Mary’s Hospital for Women & Children Birth Records
Allison and Rasheed Hines, Evansville, son, London Paul, May 29
Brittani and Kyle Frank, Evansville, daughter, Cora Elizabeth, May 30
Casey and Joseph Hillenbrand, Evansville, daughter, Emilia Jo, May 30
Leda and Jeffrey Pankake, Evansville, daughter, Stella Dawn, May 30
Katie and Michael Skie, Evansville, son, Edison Michael, May 31
Hayley and Phillip Thomas, Morganfield, Ky., daughter, Gabbi Claire, May 31
Jessica Goldbach-Hall and Frank Eaton, Evansville, son, Murphy Andrew, May 31
Rachel Mart and Christopher Gilmore, Evansville, daughter, Nala Emmalee, May 31
Emily and Corey Dunaway, Princeton, Ind., son, Jayden Ray, Jun. 1
Erin Higginbottom, Mount Vernon, Ind., son, Axyl Ryan, Jun. 1
Megan Witt, Evansville, daughter, Jade Leigh, Jun. 1
Ashley and Trent Fluty, Evansville, son, Carter Michael, Jun. 1
Michelle Goebel and Jared Schiff, Evansville, son, Maverick Zavier, Jun. 1
Tara Osmon and Thomas Lewis Jr., Allendale, Ill., son, Tristian Liam, Jun. 1
Carlina and Roderick Metzger, Evansville, son, Zayden Kayce, Jun. 2
Nuzhat Imran and Muhammad Imran Masoud, Evansville, daughter, Umaima , Jun. 2
Emiley and Darryl Chamberlain II, Mount Vernon, Ind., daughter, Addyson Elizabeth, Jun. 2
Tara and Paul Stanley, Evansville, son, Paul Jacob, Jun. 2
Hope Wagner and Brian Snyder, Evansville, son, Oliver James, Jun. 2
Abigail Turner, Evansville, daughter, Amelia Mae, Jun. 3
Amanda and Christopher Whetstine, Evansville, son, Christopher Bradley, Jun. 3
Paula and Jeffery Wooldridge, Tell City, Ind., son, Brant Perry, Jun. 3
Nicole and Ethan Bellinger, Owensville, Ind., son, Brian Vyse, Jun. 3
Alison and Alvin Stewart, Henderson, Ky., daughter, Amber Lee, Jun. 3
Kelli French and Caleb Vaughn, Evansville, son, Cameron Kayno, Jun. 3
Christine and Alan David, Corydon, Ky., daughter, Baylee Renee Hope, Jun. 4
Leaha and Jason Anthis , Vincennes, Ind., daughter, Brylee Claire, Jun. 4
Rebecca Buehrens and Stephen Bradfield, Evansville, son, Cayden Philip, Jun. 4
Ashley Hibbs and Jonathan Harris, Evansville, daughter, Gemini Rayne, Jun. 4
Rachel and Danny Page, Shawneetown, Ill., son, Houston Devous, Jun. 5
Mahala and Chris Cooper, Oakland City, Ind., daughter, Jayla Nichole, Jun. 5
Valerie and Jeremy Owen, Carmi, Ill., son, Boe Rutley, Jun. 5
Kelly and Christopher Brookman, Newburgh, Ind., son, Rowen Christopher, Jun. 5
Lacey and Terry Marsh, Newburgh, Ind., son, Caleb Dean, Jun. 5
Deanna and Denny Holtzclaw, Carmi, Ill., son, Gannon Taylor, Jun. 5
Sara and Daniel Hall, Newburgh, Ind., son, Cooper Stalion, Jun. 5
Danielle and Bob Trapp, Mount Carmel, Ill., son, Jason Paul, Jun. 5
Alyssia Johnson and Eric Weber, Rockport, Ind., daughter, Lailynn Fae, Jun. 5
Whitney Letterman and Jared Spradley, Evansville, son, Kolsen Dean, Jun. 5
The Power of Plain Language
By Tom Purcell
“ObamaCare is being challenged at the Supreme Court again? What now?”
“Ah, yes, you speak of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, which the then-Democrat-controlled Congress passed on a party-line vote back in 2009. It’s been the subject of lots of confusion and lawsuits ever since.”
“I thought the Supreme Court ruled on ObamaCare in 2012.”
“That ruling had to do with the constitutionality of the Affordable Care Act’s individual mandate. The federal mandate requires individuals to purchase health insurance — but the Supreme Court ruled, 5-4, that this requirement is OK because it is really a tax.”
“Congress may be incompetent in many areas, but it sure is good at creating new taxes.”
“Well, a ruling is expected this month in the case now before the Supreme Court, which has to do with health-insurance subsidies. When the bill was written in Congress, four simple words were put in: ‘established by the state’ The idea was that subsidies would only be available to people who purchase insurance in a market exchange established by their state.”
“Why would the drafters of the bill include a term like that?”
“Some suggest it was done to force states to set up ObamaCare market exchanges or risk losing federal subsidies that help those who can’t afford ObamaCare — no small number of people — afford their premiums. But 34 states still refused to set up exchanges.”
“Which means?”
“Well, since 34 states refused to set up ObamaCare exchanges, the federal government stepped into those states and set up federal exchanges that provide ObamaCare customers with federal subsidies to help them purchase ObamaCare policies. The IRS, the federal agency tasked with enforcing ObamaCare, decided to ignore the four words, ‘established by the state,’ even though they are plain as day in the law. So various states and local governments filed suits.”
“So, what happens if the Supreme Court rules that only the state-run exchanges can receive federal subsidies?”
“It means that 34 states that run only federal exchanges will no longer receive federal subsidies. Some 6.5 million people in these states will lose their subsidies and, analysts believe, many will drop their coverage due to the high costs.”
“That sounds like a disaster in the making.”
“It could lead to a ‘death spiral’ in which healthy people, who by law can now get coverage if they ever do get ill, will simply stop paying for it. They’ll buy it if they get sick. That means the people who keep their policies are more likely to be those with current health issues. Costs could spiral out of control.”
“The politicians might take some heat for that. Do you think Republicans in Congress are willing to take that heat?”
“According to The Hill, ‘House conservatives are hinting at support for a temporary extension of Obamacare subsidies if the Supreme Court cripples the law, even as they set up a working group to develop their own plan.’ They are hoping there will be a Republican president in 2017 and they will then be able to reform or replace ObamaCare.”
“It’s a heck of a mess, isn’t it?”
“Yes, it is. This is why the wiser analysts in the country pleaded with our politicians not to attempt to reform one-sixth of the U.S. economy in one fell swoop. It is why we asked that our representatives read the bill before voting on it — not pass it to find out what was in it, as Democrat Nancy Pelosi, who was then House speaker, suggested.”
“What we are finding isn’t very pretty.”
“That’s right, and it’s likely to get a lot worse before it gets better. It’s amazing, the power that our plain-written words can have over an entire country.”
Martin Found GuiltyÂ
 Vanderburgh County Superior Court, Myles K Martin Jr. was found guilty of Carjacking – Level B Felony, Robbery – Level C Felony, Resisting Law Enforcement – Level D Felony and Resisting Law Enforcement – Class A Misdemeanor.
Martin was arrested in March of 2014 after carjacking a woman by pointing a gun at her and ordering her out of her vehicle.
Martin was also found guilty of being a habitual offender, for which he will receive another 10-30 year sentence.
Superior Court Judge Robert Pigman will sentence Martin on July 15 at 1:00. Martin faces between 16-50 years in the Indiana Department of Corrections.
For further information on the case listed above, or any pending case, please contact Kyle Phernetton, Director of Public Relations at 812.435.5688 or via e-mail at kphernetton@vanderburghgov.org.
2015 Digitized Exhibit Registration
Digitized is an exhibit presented by the Arts Council of Southwestern. The exhibit aims to showcase digital artists and the array of digital media available for artistic creation in our modern world. This is a juried exhibit. This year’s juror is Matt Wagner, President of Evansville Design Group and award-winning Evansville-based graphic designer.
Calendar:Â
Pre-Registration Deadline:Â July 2nd, 4pm
Artwork Drop-off:Â July 6th
Notification Email: July 8th by 4pm (Please add andrea.adams@artswin.org to your email contacts to prevent any messages about the exhibit from going into spam or junk folders)
Artwork Pick-up Non-Accepted:Â July 9th
Opening Reception:Â July 10th, 5-7pm
Exhibit Dates: July 10th – July 30th
Accepted Artwork Pick-up:Â July 31st
Â
Cash, credit & debit, and checks accepted. Checks made payable to:
Arts Council of Southwestern Indiana, 318 Main St. Ste. 101, Evansville, IN 47708
> Non-Refundable Entry Fee: ARTSWIN Members FREE for your first entry $15.00 for second entry Non-members $25.00 for up to two entries
Get your ARTSWIN Membership today and save on your entry fee!
> ARTSWIN Individual Membership $35/yr
> ARTSWIN Student Membership $20/yr
> ARTSWIN Household Membership $50/yr
Eligibility & Guidelines
- Framed dimensions including frame cannot exceed 60†in any direction.
- Submissions must be appropriately matted, framed and securely wired. No sawtooth hangers.
- Artwork should be assembled and ready for hanging at the time of delivery, no exceptions.
- All submitted art must have been completed within the last 2 years.
- Entry(s) cannot have been displayed in ANY Arts Council juried exhibition or have won a cash reward in ANY regional exhibition.
- Artist must sign hold harmless agreement at the time artwork is delivered.
- Accepted art MUST remain on display for the entire duration of the show.
- All sales generated from Digitized will be subject to the 35% commission policy, established by the Arts Council. Each artist should price their work accordingly, if the piece is for sale.
Justices decline to make bright-line rule on admission of coverage limits
Jennifer Nelson for www.theindianalawyer.com
The Indiana Supreme Court affirmed the admission of a couple’s uninsured motorist policy limits at a trial in which the couple sued its insurer to recover under that provision. But in doing so, the justices declined requests by the Indiana Trial Lawyers Association and the Defense Trial Counsel of Indiana to adopt a bright-line rule on the admission of coverage limits.
The trial court allowed the jury to hear evidence that the motorist policy for Jerry Earl included a $250,000 limit under his uninsured motorist coverage. The jury then returned a verdict in favor of the couple against State Farm – $175,000 to Earl’s estate and $75,000 to his widow, Kimberly. Earl was severely injured while riding his motorcycle on I-65 in southern Indiana when a tractor-trailer entered his lane, causing him to swerve and strike the median. He was covered by the State Farm policy and his wife was also able to sue for loss of consortium. While the lawsuit was pending, Earl died from an unrelated illness.
State Farm moved to exclude any evidence of the coverage limit on the grounds it was irrelevant to damages. The insurer and amici DTCI and the Insurance Institute of Indiana asked the Supreme Court to create a rule that coverage limits are irrelevant to the determination of tortious damages and are therefore inadmissible. The Earls, along with amicus ITLA, argued for a rule that coverage limits are relevant to the underlying contract claim and therefore “must†be admitted.
“We decline either side’s invitation to take such a rigid approach; instead, we think it more appropriate to rely on our trial courts to exercise their discretion in determining what evidence is probative in the particular case before them. And, on these facts, we find the court was within that discretion,†Justice Mark Massa wrote in State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company v. Kimberly S. Earl and the Estate of Jerry Earl, 35S05-1408-CT-562.
The justices found the admission of the coverage limit contained within the insurance policy was relevant background information that would help the jury understand the relationship between the Earls and State Farm and the basis for the lawsuit itself. Massa noted that State Farm did not deny liability.
The Indiana Court of Appeals reversed the ruling in favor of the Earls, but the justices aligned themselves with Judge Patricia Riley’s dissent regarding whether the jury’s award of the exact value of the coverage limit is conclusive evidence that its admission amounted to substantial unfair prejudice. Riley wrote, “The more appropriate inference is that the jury followed the trial court’s instructions and, in light of the overwhelming evidence, arrived at the policy limit.â€
“We understand State Farm’s concerns about a coverage limit’s potentially harmful influence on the calculation of actual damages,†Massa wrote. “Accordingly, our decision today does not stand for the proposition that coverage limits are always admissible. We can foresee instances where the insured’s injury is so minor and the coverage limit so large it gives rise to a legitimate concern that the jury will inflate its award, a concern that would be heightened if, for example, plaintiff’s counsel repeatedly emphasized the limit despite its relatively low probative value. In this case, however, we do not have such a concern, and we conclude the trial court did not abuse its discretion in admitting the evidence.â€