Officers arrived and saw 20 year old Justin Curlee remove a gun from his waistband and toss it into a nearby yard.
The gun was recovered and Curlee was arrested for possession of a handgun without a permit.
Rick McKee / Augusta Chronicle
By Tom Purcell
I don’t know why everyone is so up in arms that alleged newsman George Stephanopoulos donated $75,000 to a private foundation co-owned and operated by a woman who hopes to be president.
Georgie has been a partisan pit-chihuahua his entire career.
The little guy cut his teeth managing “bimbo eruptions†when Bill Clinton was running for president. His job was to destroy and discredit anyone who could make his boss look bad. (Good thing for Monica Lewinsky’s sake that her scandal broke after Georgie left.)
“The War Room,†a documentary that included his behind-the-scenes spin-doctor work, helped bring him fame. He used that fame to do good things for the world, right?
No, he used it to write a 1999 tell-all book that exposed embarrassing insider details about the Clintons — in return for a $3 million advance.
In 1996, the little guy was hired by ABC News as a political analyst and pundit. Fair enough. Political experience is helpful when explaining politics to the public.
But within three years, he became an “objective†reporter for the network. Now he is chief anchor and “leads the network’s coverage on all major live events and breaking news around the world.â€
He abandoned his hyperpartisan ways to become a thoughtful, objective newsman?
Well, he gave it a shot.
But while moderating a presidential debate with Mitt Romney in 2012, he asked this question:
“Gov. Romney, do you believe that states have the right to ban contraception? Or is that trumped by a constitutional right to privacy?â€
It was a ridiculous question but Georgie pressed Romney for an answer. The exchange helped Democrats frame a false narrative — that Republicans want to ban contraception — that helped gin up lots of aggrieved voters and get them to the polls.
Some political analysts wonder if that’s why Georgie asked it. Certainly, an objective newsman could never do such a thing, right?
In 2009, Politico reported that Georgie participated in daily Democrat conference calls with Democrat political advisers Rahm Emanuel, Paul Begala and James Carville.
Imagine if it was discovered that a Fox News anchor did likewise with Republican political advisers. Our objective big-network journalists would surely report on that one.
In any event, I don’t know why there is such a hue and cry about a big-network newsman giving money to a foundation co-owned and operated by a lady vying to be president. My only complaint is that the little fellow didn’t disclose the information on his own.
We all know what team he and other “objective†big-network journalists are rooting for. According to an Indiana University survey, “The American Journalist in the Digital Age,†80 percent of journalists who align with a party are Democrats.
So one-sided have some of our journalists become, they don’t have any idea that they are favoring one political side over the other.
They go out of their way to dig up dirt on Republican presidential candidates — they had to dig long and hard to report that Romney allegedly hazed a fellow student in high school and once put his dog in a crate on the roof of his station wagon.
They reported the “scandalous†Romney stories with straight faces, never realizing how silly they looked.
The real tragedy is that there are many hardworking journalists who report with integrity and honesty, and their reputations are hurt by people like Georgie.
The days when news organizations went out of their way to separate hard reporting from the taint of politics is long over. That is why political hit men can transform themselves into “objective†news anchors in only a couple of years and be rewarded with multimillion-dollar contracts.
That says more about the sorry state of American journalism than it does about Georgie.
Terre Haute, Ind. – Today the Indiana Prescription Drug Abuse Prevention Task Force supported a training program that will educate Indiana State University (ISU) campus law enforcement on the use of intra-nasal naloxone for opiate/heroin overdose emergencies. The event was hosted by ISU, in conjunction with the Rural Health Innovation Collaborative.
Indiana Attorney General Greg Zoeller, who co-chairs the task force, said ISU is the first institution of higher learning in the state to embrace this opportunity.
Last year, Zoeller supported the passing of Senate Enrolled Act 227 which gives legal immunity to first responders who administer Naloxone, a life-saving treatment that counteracts the effects of a prescription painkiller or heroin overdose. Today, law enforcement agencies across the state that have implemented Naloxone into their standard equipment have helped to save countless Hoosier lives. The Attorney General’s Office is aware of at least 138 times law enforcement officers have saved Hoosier lives by administering Naloxone since the law passed in 2014. Additionally, the Indianapolis Emergency Medical Services (EMS) estimates that its responders have used Naloxone on victims nearly 1,000 times during the same time frame.
The Attorney General’s Office is working to bring awareness that the Naloxone antidote will cause no lasting harm, even if the medication was used on a person not suffering from an overdose, to overcome some law enforcement concerns of unintended consequences in administering the drug.
“The rise in prescription drug and heroin overdoses is a result of the opioid addition epidemic in Indiana and across the United State and college campuses are certainly not immune. I hope that other law enforcement and first responders in Indiana will follow suit and we can continue to build knowledge and save Hoosier lives,” said Attorney General Zoeller.
Zoeller is grateful to ISU and other law enforcement agencies across the state that have administered Naloxone programs and saved lives. He urges others to follow their lead and take advantage of the resources on BitterPill.in.gov. The website contains a toolkit to assist law enforcement and other first responders in setting up community Naloxone training programs.
Joining Zoeller at the training today was Senator Jim Merritt, co-author of the Indiana Lifeline Law, which gives underage individuals legal immunity from crimes like minor consumption if they call for medical help in an emergency situation. The goal of this law is to make sure no one hesitates to call for help if a friend has had too much to drink because they fear getting arrested. Last year, as a result of the rising rate of heroin-related deaths, Indiana legislators expanded the Lifeline Law to address drug use as well as alcohol abuse. The Lifeline Law now encourages first responders and law enforcement officers to carry and administer Naloxone.
In 2012, Zoeller launched the task force made up of state legislators, law enforcement, members of the medical community, health officials, pharmacists, state and local agencies and education providers. The goal of the task force is to significantly reduce the abuse of controlled prescription drugs and to decrease the number of deaths associated with these drugs in Indiana.
Following the creation of the Task Force, the Attorney General’s Office launched a statewide public awareness campaign highlighting the dangers of prescription drug abuse which included radio, television, print and the website, www.Bitterpill.IN.gov.
Below is a list of felony cases that were filed by the Vanderburgh County Prosecutor’s Office on Tuesday, May 26, 2015
Leeann Blunk                  Battery with  Moderate Bodily Injury-Level 6 Felony
Clifton Fletcher              Criminal Recklessness-Level 5 Felony
Criminal Gang Activity-Level 6 Felony
Carrying a Handgun Without a License-Class A Misdemeanor
Ronald Embry            Operating a Vehicle as an Habitual Traffic Violator-Level 6 Felony
Corderro Sanders         Possession of Altered Handgun-Level 5 Felony
Carrying a Handgun Without a License-Class A Misdemeanor
Kelly Wickware Jr          Criminal Recklessness-Level 5 Felony
Criminal Gang Activity-Level 6 Felony
Carrying a Handgun Without a License-Class A Misdemeanor
IS IT TRUE that Evansville Police Department SWAT team and police officers did a masterful job in the  apprehension of a man who has been accused of vandalizing Doggy Day care facility on the Southside of Evansville?  …we hope this serves as a notice to anyone who threatens our police officers that they will be arrested?  …we are glad this situation was resolved without any major injury to Jason A Porter and hope he will be provided with some much needed mental help assistance?
IS IT TRUE if both Mayoral candidates wants to make a “Good Public Policy” statement that the voters can support here it is? … they need to commit to a new ordinance stating that any active Union representative will not be allowed to serve any board or commission that have union employment contract or eligible to bid on any proposed union construction contracts?
IS IT TRUE our friends in the police department tell us that the City Council should pay special attention to the financial activities of the City of Evansville State and Federal Drug Forfeiture fund during the last 3 years? …they tell us this fund had about $750,000 worth fund activity over the last 3 years?  … they would like City Council do a  review of this fund in order to insure that the police department have purchased things of substance with the money?
IS IT TRUE we hope the voters will not forget the debacle called EARTHCARE and the unsecured loan of $200,000 that now is in default?
IS IT TRUE we hear that a couple of City Council members may not be totally pleased with City Council Attorney Scott Danks legal performance?  …we are pleased with Mr. Danks performance and he should be retained as City Council attorney for another year?
IS IT TRUE we wonder what is the status of the lawsuit between former City Councilman and  Fire Chief Keith Jarboe and the City of Evansville?
IS IT TRUE we hear that former City Clerk candidate Misty Hart is considering filing a law suit against Courier and Press writer Tom Langhorne for defamation of her character?
IS IT TRUE if both Mayoral candidates would like to get the serious attention of the voters they need to commit to the establishment of an in-house Law Department? Â …Its estimated that having an in-house Law Department would save the taxpayers many hundred of thousands of dollars per year?
Please take time and vote in todays “Readers Poll”. Also we just posted the current City County Observer TRI-STATE VOICES TV show for you’re viewing pleasure.
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Indianapolis –Governor Mike Pence issued the following statement regarding Indiana’s April unemployment rate of 5.4 percent, a 0.4 percent drop. In addition, the state is only 7,800 jobs shy of the state’s peak employment of 2,612,600 private sector jobs in early 2000.
“With more than 10,000 new jobs for Hoosiers added in April and an employment growth rate doubling that of the nation’s, Indiana’s economy continues to gain momentum. Since day one, we have worked to create an environment where businesses can grow and Hoosiers can thrive. With historic employment levels on the horizon and companies repeatedly choosing our state for investment, Indiana is proving once again that we are a state that sets the bar high for growth and opportunity.â€
Jennifer Nelson for www.theindianalawyer.com
An Indiana Court of Appeals judge found it troubling that a member of a medical review panel that unanimously found defendants breached their duty of care to a patient could later issue an affidavit in which he changed his mind relating to a doctor accused of medical malpractice.
Siblings Kathy and John Siner sued Kindred Hospital of Indianapolis, Dr. Majid Mohammed and several others for medical malpractice after their mother, Geraldine Siner, died. Geradline Siner, who suffered from Alzheimer’s disease and could no longer care for herself, had been admitted to Kindred Hospital. John Siner told the hospital repeatedly that his mother was to be a full code patient, but Kindred’s Ethics Committee decided to make her a No Code/Do Not Resuscitate patient. The siblings then moved their mother to Methodist Hospital, where she was immediately treated for a collapsed lung, infection and septic shock. Geraldine Siner died while at Methodist.
A medical review panel, which included Dr. James Krueger, unanimously determined that the defendants failed to comply with an appropriate standard of care and that their conduct may have been a factor of some damages, but not the death, of Geraldine Siner.
In the Siners’ medical malpractice complaint, Krueger submitted an affidavit in which he said he was able to further review the mother’s medical records after the panel issued its opinion and believed that the hospital and Mohammed met the standard of care because they defaulted to the judgment of IU Pulmonary and Critical Care, which directed Geraldine Siner’s care during her hospitalization at Kindred.
The defendants filed for summary judgment, which the trial court granted.
In Kathy L. Siner, Personal Representative of the Estate of Geraldine A. Siner, Deceased, and John T. Siner, prior Enduring Power of Attorney and Medical Representative of the Deceased v. Kindred Hospital Limited Partnership, et al., 49A05-1404-CT-165, the Court of Appeals reversed regarding the hospital, finding an affidavit from the Siners’ expert, Dr. Timothy Pohlman, that the negligent DNR order “more likely than not resulted in damages and suffering†creates a material issue of fact. The majority noted it found Krueger’s affidavit suspect but irrelevant to its decision.
The majority affirmed summary judgment for Majid because the only evidence designated by the Siners was the medical review panel’s opinion, which said the defendants’ conduct “may†have been a factor in damages to Geraldine Siner.
Judge James Kirsch dissented on this issue.
“I find it troubling that a single member of a Medical Review Panel can undermine the work of the panel of which he was a part by an ex parte and conclusory affidavit executed months after the fact without procedural safeguards,†Kirsch wrote.
Disregarding Krueger’s affidavit, the medical review panel issued its opinion that Majid failed to comply with the appropriate standard of care, Kirsch wrote, and that process should not be “impeached or undermined months after it is concluded by an affidavit from a member of the panel†issued without the procedural safeguards mandated by statute.
A disagreement this past Memorial Day between two employees at the McDonald’s located on US 41 at E. Mt. Pleasant Road culminated in an arrest for intimidation. Mr. Michael Lee Hicks was upset with a fellow employee for allegedly spreading false rumors about his brother’s girlfriend (both of whom also work at the same McDonald’s). Mr. Hicks threatened to bring a handgun to work and shoot the victim and several other people at the restaurant.
When interviewed by sheriff’s deputies, Mr. Hicks admitted to making the threats. Mr. Hicks’ explained that he would never have followed through with the threats and denied even owning a handgun. Mr. Hick’s was taken into custody and transported to the Vanderburgh County Confinement Center.
ARRESTED:
Michael Lee Hicks (pictured above), 20, of Evansville. Intimidation as a Level 6 Felony.