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The Arts Council Announces Winners of the Mayor’s Arts Awards at Upcoming Press Conference

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The Arts Council of Southwestern Indiana will announce the winner of the 2015 Mayor’s Art Award and 11 other arts awards at a 10:00am press conference on June 23rd, 2015. The award winners will have an opportunity to speak about the work that they have done for the arts in the community. Mayor Lloyd Winnecke will be present to announce the prestigious Mayor’s Art Award winner. The press conference will take place at the Bower-Suhrheinrich Foundation Gallery, located inside the Arts Council of Southwestern Indiana at 318 Main Street in downtown Evansville.

 

The Arts Council’s annual Mayor’s Arts Awards honor individuals, groups, and institutions that have made significant contributions to the advancement of the arts in Evansville and the surrounding counties. The winners will be honored at the Mayor’s Arts Awards gala on Thursday, August 20th, 2015 at 6pm.

 

To reserve your seat at the press conference, please contact Reva Bourgasser at reva.bourgasser@artswin.org or call the Arts Council of Southwestern Indiana at (812) 422-2111. To keep updated with the Mayor’s Arts Awards, visit artswin.org or “like” the Arts Council of Facebook. Tickets will be available to the public following the scheduled press conference.

 

Our mission: Enhancing the quality of life and supporting economic development through advocacy and promotion of the arts, arts education, and arts organizations in Southwestern Indiana.

AG Zoeller named ‘Attorney General of the Year’ by national AG group 

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Zoeller’s leadership team also earns high honors

INDIANAPOLIS – The National Association of Attorneys General (NAAG) honored Indiana Attorney General Greg Zoeller with its 2015 Kelley-Wyman Award, also known as “Attorney General of the Year” Award during its annual conference.

The Kelley-Wyman Award is the association’s highest honor given each year to the state attorney general who exemplifies and helps forward the objectives of NAAG. It is named in honor of former Michigan Attorney General Frank Kelley and former New Hampshire Attorney General Louis Wyman.

“Greg (Zoeller) certainly demonstrates the collegial and collaborative efforts that NAAG strives to facilitate among its membership,” said Mississippi Attorney General Jim Hood, the outgoing president of NAAG, during the award presentation. “He has distinguished himself among his peers by consistently advancing the direction, leadership and purpose of NAAG.”

AG Hood recognized Zoeller’s numerous leadership roles within NAAG. Zoeller serves as chair of the NAAG Midwestern Region and is a member of the NAAG Executive Committee. He is also chair of the Tobacco Committee and Federalism/Preemption Committee, as well as an active member of the Consumer Protection, Human Trafficking, and Training committees.

“It is an honor to receive this award from my fellow state attorneys general,” Zoeller said. “The training, collaboration and resources NAAG facilitates is instrumental to my work as attorney general of Indiana and has helped me and my staff immensely in defending and protecting Hoosiers. It has been a worthwhile endeavor to work cooperatively with our national association that serves consumers in our state and other states.”

Zoeller was selected to receive this award by a committee of state attorneys general. As one attorney general noted in a recommendation, “Greg Zoeller represents the highest examples of an attorney’s general sense of justice, fairness and strength.”

Zoeller’s leadership staff was also honored by NAAG this year. Staci Schneider, Chief of Staff for the Indiana Attorney General’s Office, received the Senior Staff of the Year Award. This award is given each year to a management-level AG staff member who has provided exceptional service to NAAG and the attorneys general through exemplary leadership, expertise and achievement.

“Staci is a modest force in the AG community, and a capable manager and leader,” said Idaho Attorney General Lawrence Wasden during the award presentation. “Since she started in her chief of staff role in 2009, Staci’s professionalism, communications expertise, and strategic planning have had a significant and far-reaching impact not only in her office, but also within NAAG.”

Schneider previously served as Communications Director in former Indiana Attorney General Steve Carter’s administration before becoming Chief of Staff for AG Zoeller’s office.

NAAG represents 56 state and territorial attorneys general. This year’s awards were presented during its annual Summer Meeting, held June 16-18.

 

Jackson Kelly Welcomes Jonathan C. Luedloff to the Firm  

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EVANSVILLE, Ind. – June 22, 2015 – Jackson Kelly PLLC is pleased to welcome Jonathan C. Luedloff to the Firm.

 

Luedloff joins the Firm as an attorney in the Land and Natural Resource Development Practice Group in the Evansville, Indiana, office. His practice focuses on real estate, banking and industry regulations. He regularly handles commercial real estate transactions and estate/probate matters.

 

Prior to joining Jackson Kelly, Luedloff served as general counsel for a title company, a supervising attorney for a large real estate firm, a manager of a title company and as a title insurance agent.

 

Luedloff received his Juris Doctor from the University of Arkansas School of Law. He earned his Bachelor of Business Administration from the University of Central Arkansas where he also received his Bachelor of Science in psychology. He is licensed to practice in Indiana and Arkansas and the Eastern and Western District Courts of Arkansas. Luedloff is a member of the Indiana and Arkansas Bar Associations, the Indiana Land Title Association and the Evansville Bar Association. He is also a Notary Public for the State of Arkansas and the State of Indiana and is a licensed Indiana title insurance agent.

 

Client Focus, Industry Insight, National Reputation. Jackson Kelly PLLC is a national law firm with more than 175 attorneys located in twelve offices throughout Pennsylvania, Ohio, West Virginia, Kentucky, Indiana, Colorado and the District of Columbia. With a focus on companies working in and around the energy industry, the Firm works with its clients to help resolve their operating challenges by teaming to develop and implement strategies that minimize risks, quickly and effectively. Focusing on clients’ industry-specific needs, the Firm serves a wide variety of corporate and public clients and enjoys a national reputation in business, labor and employment, litigation, government contracts, tax, safety and health, permitting, natural resource and environmental law. The Firm’s clients and peers recognize its commitment to providing superior client service as Jackson Kelly has repeatedly been selected as a Go-To Law Firm for the Top 500 Companies in the U.S. and is regularly named to BTI’s Client Service A-Team.

Riecken Criticizes Mayor Winnecke For Lack Of Transparency And Accountability‏

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Riecken Criticizes Winnecke for Lack of Transparency and Accountability

June 22, 2015. – Evansville, IN

n a video released today, Democratic mayoral candidate Gail Riecken calls on Mayor Winnecke to stop spending tax dollars the city doesn’t have.

Riecken states “With each passing year, our General Fund starts out with less money than the year before.  Our city credit card is becoming maxed out.  We cannot continue to borrow future money to pay the city’s bills today. This type of action is unsustainable. “

Riecken also calls on the Mayor for transparency and accountability, as the Mayor refused a visit to the City Council to answer questions about the hotel. Riecken says the Mayor shows a lack of respect to the citizens of Evansville for not presenting his budget plan before the August hearings and pledges, as mayor, to present her fiscal priorities prior to the official meeting so citizens can have input.

“I pledge to you that, as mayor, I will lay out my fiscal priorities prior to the official budget hearings, so all Evansville citizens can have an opportunity to look at, question, and give input on it,” says Riecken.

The You Tube video can be seen here: https://youtu.be/ndnUWnKI0Eo

Paid for by Gail Riecken for Mayor, Mike Woods Chairman

Teen’s arrest did not violate 4th Amendment

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Jennifer Nelson for www.theindianalawyer.com

The Indiana Court of Appeals upheld a teen’s adjudication for carrying a handgun handed down after police arrested the occupants of the car he was riding in after smelling burnt marijuana during a traffic stop. The judges unanimously held the officers had probable cause to arrest the car’s occupants, including the teen.

An Indianapolis Metropolitan Police officer pulled over a car with very dark tinted windows. He smelled burnt marijuana from inside the car, where K.K. was a passenger in the back seat. The three occupants denied that any drugs or weapons were present, and the three were briefly patted down and handcuffed. Another officer believed K.K. was acting nervous and conducted another pat down and found a loaded handgun in his pocket.

K.K., who was 17 at the time, was adjudicated as a delinquent child for committing what would be Class A misdemeanor dangerous possession of a firearm if committed by an adult.

In K.K. v. State of Indiana, 49A02-1410-JV-687, he argued that the odor of burnt marijuana emanating from the car did not provide probable cause for the officers to arrest him and the other two occupants, which led to the search of K.K. and the discovery of the gun.

The appellate judges relied on Edmond v. State, 951 N.E.2d 585, 591 (Ind. Ct. App. 2011), Bell v. State, 13 N.E.3d 543, 544-45 (Ind. Ct. App. 2014), and Lessley v. City of Madison, Indiana, 654 F.Supp.2d 877 (S.D. Ind. 2009), to support their decision that probable cause existed to arrest the occupants of the car in which K.K. was a passenger.

“K.K. suggests that the Edmond decision requires that, for probable cause to exist, the officer must not only smell marijuana emanating from the vehicle, but, in addition, the defendant driver must be alone in the vehicle when the smell is detected, and the officer must detect it on the individual’s person or breath. To the extent that Edmond could be interpreted to require the presence of all of these factors, we respectfully decline to follow it. In our view, whether the defendant is alone and whether the odor of marijuana – burnt or raw – is also present on an individual or his breath are factors to be considered in the analysis, not bright-line prerequisites necessary for probable cause to exist,” Judge James Kirsch wrote.

Since the judges found the arrest was supported by probable cause, the trial court did not abuse its discretion in allowing the firearm to be admitted into evidence because it was discovered pursuant to a lawful search incident to K.K.’s arrest.

St. Mary’s Hospital for Women & Children Birth Records

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Crystal and Matthew Nolan, Norris City, Ill., son, Evan Raymond, Jun. 13

Jennifer and Benjamin Titzer, Chandler, Ind., daughter, Allie Jo, Jun. 14

Chrystal and Adam Mehringer, Evansville, son, Cecil William Ray, Jun. 14

Haley and Clayton Jamison, Carmi, Ill., daughter, Carsyn Mae, Jun. 14

Mashell and James Kirchhoff, Evansville, Destiny Lynn, Jun. 14

Sabrina and Todd Stephens, Bridgeport, Ill., son, Preston Grant, Jun. 15

Alescia Colvin and Jason Bradshaw, Princeton, Ind., son, Carson Robert Walker, Jun. 15

Savannah and Nicholas Birkla, Evansville, daughter, Isabella Joy, Jun. 15

Rebecca Christmas and Eric Risley Jr., Hazleton, Ind., daughter, Rhaylen Nicole, Jun. 16

Aaliyah Armstead and Dariontae Logan , Evansville, son, De’Shawn Tyreke, Jun. 16

Desirae Duran and Brandon Ellis, Evansville, daughter, Isabella Marie, Jun. 16

Elisha and Nicholas Dewig, Evansville, son, Henry Mason, Jun. 16

Taylor Hansen and Kyle Coomes, Evansville, son, Kylor Christian, Jun. 16

Jennifer and Kevin Claycomb, Newburgh, Ind., daughter, Elizabeth Jane, Jun. 16

Tricia and Andrew Venditti, Chandler, Ind., son, Gavino Antonello, Jun. 17

Jessica and Steven Trevino, Evansville, son, Noah James, Jun. 17

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.
 
 

EPA Seeks Input on Modernizing the Risk Management Plan (RMP) Rule

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WASHINGTON – The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) invites small businesses, governments, and not-for-profit organizations to participate as Small Entity Representatives (SERs) for a Small Business Advocacy Review (SBAR) Panel. This panel will focus on the Agency’s development of a rule that proposes to modify the current Risk Management Plan (RMP) regulation to reduce the likelihood of accidental releases of toxic and flammable substances at chemical facilities, and improve emergency response when those releases occur. This aligns with Executive Order 13650 entitled Improving Chemical Facility Safety and Security (EO 13650) that President Obama signed on August 1, 2013. EO 13650 directs the federal government to carry out a number of tasks whose overall aim is to prevent chemical accidents. These tasks include: improving operational coordination with state and local partners; enhancing Federal agency coordination and information sharing; modernizing policies, regulations and standards; and working with stakeholders to identify best practices.

The panel will include federal representatives from the Small Business Administration (SBA), the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), and EPA. The panel members ask a selected group of SERs to provide advice and recommendations on behalf of their company, community, or organization to inform the panel members about the potential impacts of the proposed rule on small entities.

EPA seeks self-nominations directly from the small entities that may be subject to the rule requirements. Other representatives, such as trade associations that exclusively or at least primarily represent potentially regulated small entities, may also serve as SERs.