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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.

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

Holly’s House announces 2015 Board of Directors.

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Holly’s House, a local child and adult victim advocacy center, has announced their 2015 Board of Directors. Elected Officers are: President, Kathy Boyd, Boyd Electric. LLC; 1st Vice President, Tim Huelsing, South Central Media; 2nd Vice President, Jonathan Boyd, Fifth Third Bank; Treasurer, Micah Prellwitz, Harding, Shymanski & Company; Secretary, Sacha Armstrong, Kiplinger & Gray, LLP; Past President, Jackie Russell, Old National Wealth Management. Board members are: Sarah Dauer, Shoe Carnival; Sarah Flamion, Exact Target; Amanda Gonterman, Vectren Corporation; Elissa Hewins, Federal Social Security Office; Mary MacCauley, Berkshire Hathaway Realty; William J. Millikan, M.D., St. Mary’s Medical Group, LLC; Katie Perkins, Edward Jones; Chris Pugh, Evansville Police Department; Sam Tanoos, Allstate Insurance Company; Mike Wingo, Toyota Motor Manufacturing of Indiana. Holly’s House President Emeritus and Co-Founders are Detective Brian Turpin, Sexual Violence Unit, Evansville Police Department, and Holly Dunn Pendleton, Motivational Speaker/Advocate and spokesperson for the organization.

The Holly’s House Board of Directors jointly governs the affairs of, and shares best practices with the organization.

Holly’s House is a non-residential victims’ advocacy center providing services for victims of child abuse, domestic violence and sexual assault in southwest Indiana. The mission of the organization is to empower victims of intimate crime and abuse by providing support, promoting justice and preventing violence. For more information, please visit www.hollyshouse.org.

Work Zone Awareness Week Brings Attention to Safety

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In partnership with the Indiana Department of Transportation (INDOT) the Indiana State Police is sharing this important traffic safety related message.

INDIANAPOLIS – Governor Mike Pence is proclaiming March 23-27, 2015 as Work Zone Awareness Week in Indiana. Work Zone Awareness Week marks the ceremonial start to highway construction season and intends to draw awareness to motorist and worker safety.

More than $1.3 billion will be invested in construction projects to build and maintain Indiana’s highways in 2015. As INDOT increases its focus on preservation, drivers will see more work on existing state highway roads and bridges. INDOT’s goal is to maximize both the safety and mobility of motorists and workers while maintaining as much access as possible to businesses, residents and emergency services.

INDOT is dedicated to continuously improving work zone safety for workers and motorists. Last year, 11 people were killed and more than 600 people were injured in Indiana highway work zones. Most of these injuries and deaths are caused by rear-end collisions, following too closely or making improper lane changes.

Slow down and avoid distractions

Highway work zones leave no room for distractions and require attentive, cautious driving habits. Do not use cell phones while driving, especially in a work zone. Several studies show drivers using a phone are four times more likely to be in a crash. Other distractions, anything other than driving, can be just as dangerous.

Motorists face fines of up to $1000 for speeding, up to $5000 for driving recklessly or aggressively, and up to $10,000 and/or a prison sentence of up to eight years for injuring or killing a worker. These fines are used to fund additional Indiana State Police work zone patrols.

Pay attention to signs

Indiana State Police have 11 white pickup trucks patrolling in and around highway work zones across Indiana. The pickup trucks resemble typical vehicles normally seen in and around highway construction zones. Motorists are urged to comply with posted and reduced speed limits in construction zones to promote safety for the highway workers as well as the motoring public. Motorists that speed or drive recklessly may meet troopers driving the special pickup trucks or other police vehicles.

Know before you go

Motorists can learn about highway work zones and other traffic alerts at indot.carsprogram.org, 1-800-261-ROAD (7623) or 511 from a mobile phone. Information about projects and restrictions is also available at www.INDOT.IN.gov, by following INDOT on social media, and subscribing to receive INDOT email updates.

ON RELIGION AND MORALITY

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The answer is yes according to a new study, “Morality in Everday Life,” which I read about in the Daily Mail.

Nate Beeler / Columbus Dispatch

Daniel Wisneski and Wilhelm Hofmann, the study’s lead authors, recruited 1,252 adults between ages 18 and 68 using Craigslist, Facebook, Twitter and other outlets. Participants downloaded an app to their smartphones that allowed researchers to text them five times a day. The participants then reported any moral or immoral acts — things they did themselves, witnessed or heard about — and rated how intensely they felt about those acts on a scale of 0 to 5.

Participants filed 13,240 reports, describing everything from arranging adulterous encounters (immoral) to giving a homeless man a sandwich (moral). Researchers spent weeks reviewing the comments and identified six moral principles: care for others, fairness, liberty, loyalty, authority and sanctity. Researchers also found that the participants’ judgment reflected two other moral behaviors: honesty and self-discipline.

“They found that conservatives were more likely than liberals to report acts involving sanctity and respect for authority, and liberals were more likely than conservatives to talk about fairness,” according to Science magazine, which published the study.

But their findings on religious people were interesting. According to the Daily Mail, religious people in the study had more pride and joy when they committed moral acts and were more disgusted with themselves when they committed immoral acts — overall religious people were just as moral or immoral as nonreligious people.

It is certainly true that nonreligious people can be very principled and that regular churchgoers can be crooks in their business dealings.

But what is different about many religious people is they have a framework and a community to help them lead more moral lives and seek redemption and forgiveness when they slip up — they have a methodology, if you will, to help them navigate good and bad.

Greek philosophers had names for what is good. They believed that prudence, temperance, courage and justice were virtues that all people longed for and should strive to master.

And while we’re striving for good, we need to fight the bad: excessive pride, envy, gluttony, lust, anger, greed and sloth. These are known as the seven deadly sins — activities I save for the weekend.

Religion can help us navigate good and evil. I have certainly found this to be the case with Catholicism, my religion.

We Catholics have a lot of guidance to help us navigate what’s moral and immoral. We have the Bible, which offers plenty of instructions. We have the Ten Commandments, which, as columnist George F. Will once noted, are not called the Ten Suggestions.

We have coaches we can go to — people who have been educated and trained to help others understand their religion and use it to achieve good outcomes. A good coach can help an individual improve his performance — just as true in spiritual matters as it is in athletics.

Harvard University Moral Psychologist Fiery Cushman told science that a weakness of the study is that it is based on subjective, rather than objective, assumptions. It’s based on the view that the participants have of themselves, which “may color how they report their own behavior.”

Whatever the case, it’s not really so complicated to me. We all long for beauty and detest ugliness. We all long to become good and root out evil. And, in a general sense, I think many people who practice their faith have a slight advantage at being more moral by being part of something much larger than themselves — a community that is struggling to do good and avoid bad.

To paraphrase the great Dear Abby, church is not a museum for saints, it’s a hospital for sinners.

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©2014 Tom Purcell. Tom Purcell, author of “Misadventures of a 1970’s Childhood” and “Comical Sense: A Lone Humorist Takes on a World Gone Nutty!” is a Pittsburgh Tribune-Review humor columnist and is nationally syndicated exclusively by Cagle Cartoons Inc. For info on using this column in your publication or website, contact Sales@cagle.com or call (805) 969-2829. Send comments to Tom at Purcell@caglecartoons.com.

The Price of Raising Political Money

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BY MARK SHIELDS

Mark A. Hanna was a wealthy Cleveland businessman who shrewdly laid out the winning strategy and personally, out of pocket, paid all the costs required to secure the 1896 Republican presidential nomination for his fellow Ohioan William McKinley. Sometime after McKinley’s election and re-election to the White House, Hanna, based upon his personal experience, offered this timeless insight: “There are two things that are important in politics. The first is money, and I can’t remember what the second one is.”
The New York Times’ Binyamin Appelbaum has become the latest in a growing number of scholars to argue that political money is not that influential in deciding the winners of congressional elections or even in affecting how the winners, once in office, will vote on policy. We should, Appelbaum writes, be less anxious about cash in campaigns because “over the past year, Americans spent more on almonds than on selecting their representatives in Congress.”
To borrow the immortal phrase of Hollywood’s Sam Goldwyn, “gentlemen, include me out.” Forget the wealthy campaign donors, who — please take my word for it — almost always write their checks not out of altruism but fully expecting a “return” on their “investment.” Instead, think about the typical House candidate, who — just to cover the costs of her campaign — has to raise an average of $18,000 a week, 52 weeks a year, every year. Beyond raising that war chest, if a congressman hopes to rise to a position of leadership within the House or to win appointment to a powerful House committee, then he has to raise money for his party’s campaign committee.
This means going to a cramped cubicle at party headquarters and, several days a week, turning into a telemarketer, calling a list of people, most of whom you don’t know, and begging for money. Because you are provided the information on a sheet, you know what the potential check writer’s legislative and policy priorities are. You emphasize how your voting record is in harmony with the potential contributor’s values, and you are careful to avoid any potential areas of disagreement.
Because the member of Congress does this for hours on end every week, it means that the member is not spending his time meeting with and listening to his constituents or mastering a subject or getting to know personally his congressional colleagues and potentially collaborating on the public’s business.
Beyond all that fundraising lies more fundraising. Why? Because of the legitimate fear that a misnamed “independent” committee, underwritten by anonymous big money, could spend millions against any at-risk incumbent, baselessly defaming and possibly destroying him politically for being sympathetic to child pornographers or worse. The one insurance policy many members of Congress believe they have against that career-threatening “nuclear option” is to stockpile millions in their personal campaign accounts — which means more hours putting the arm on everyone who lobbies you on any issue from school lunches to bridge repairs.
The casualties of the endless cycle of fundraising are, too often, the independence, integrity and ideals of those who become its prisoners, and sadly, there’s an even greater loss of public trust and confidence in our own self-government.
To find out more about Mark Shields and read his past columns, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.
COPYRIGHT 2014 MARK SHIELDS
DISTRIBUTED BY CREATORS.COM

They Come to Bury Conservatism

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BY L. BRENT BOZELL AND TIM GRAHAM

The media have developed a predictable and equally annoying habit every presidential election cycle. We hear the Republicans are going to be crushed by pandering too much to conservatives. The Democrats are firmly moderate and need a push from the left so they don’t forget their “compassion.”
So it was with Ronald Reagan and Jimmy Carter 35 years ago. So will it be in 2016, no matter who is nominated.
Republican primary voters have nominated moderates in every election cycle since Reagan ’88, but not because they are moderates. Instead, the moderates survive the usual conservative circular firing squad exercise; or, as was the case with both father and son Bush, the moderates ran as conservatives. How did the moderates who ran as moderates fare? Ask Presidents Dole, McCain and Romney.
And yet those same tired voices in the press soldier on, still claiming ridiculously that a moderate Republican is the solution to the GOP’s woes.
The media elites who have no concept of the GOP’s base will not stop insisting conservatives should be ignored. Predictably, both sides of the pundit table at the “PBS NewsHour” on Feb. 27 identified the annual Conservative Political Action Conference as the place where Republican candidates and ideas go to die.
Liberal analyst Mark Shields said conservatives have an “unelectable message,” which is pretty much what he’s been saying for the past half a century, no matter how many times conservatives win, including the last two midterms. Faux-conservative New York Times columnist David Brooks expressed horror. “There’s conservatives, and then there’s conservatives, and then conservatives, and then way over on the other side of the room is CPAC … this is like the hardest of the hardcore.”
On ABC’s “This Week” on March 1, NPR’s Cokie Roberts insisted, “I think the person that won at CPAC was John Kasich. He didn’t show up, and I think that’s the wisest thing for anybody to do.” Minutes later, the former Republican pollster Matthew Dowd ridiculously claimed Reagan would be booed today at CPAC.
Earth to Dowd: It is pollsters like you who would never, ever have found a job on a Reagan campaign.
Back in January on “This Week,” Roberts argued, “Republicans should stay out of Iowa altogether. What happens to them is that they get pushed so far to the right in those venues that it gives them a terrible time in the general election.”
What about the Democrats?
On Feb. 22, “This Week” celebrated “Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont, as unabashedly progressive as Ben & Jerry’s. … Sanders rails against the corrupting influence of money in politics. He stands for economic justice. … He’s not just for raising the minimum wage, he wants to double it.”
ABC reporter David Wright acknowledged Sanders calls himself a socialist, and suggested he might be Don Quixote tilting at the Clintons’ windmill. Then ABC found a voter who said, “Hey, more power to him. He’s going to get that windmill straightened up for sure.”
Every summer, the radical left has a “Netroots Nation” conference, but you won’t find the media elites lining up to proclaim that the leftist attendees are too extreme and potentially damaging to the Democrats. The radicals at the Daily Kos started a “Yearly Kos” convention in 2006, then renamed it “Netroots Nation” in 2008. Their 2007 conference attracted seven of the eight Democratic presidential candidates.
Last July, Vice President Biden and Sen. Elizabeth Warren each spoke to the gathering in Detroit, but no one on the networks found that dangerous, or even interesting. Put “Netroots Nation” into the Nexis database, and you get nothing ever on ABC or CBS, a brief CBS mention in 2013, and a brief PBS mention in 2010.
So let’s review: “Ultraconservatives” are perennially ruinous to Republican political victories, but there’s no such thing as ultraliberals in the Democratic Party. Every candidate to the right of Jeb Bush is doomed in a general election, and if he should win the nomination, he’ll be inevitably dismissed as going “too far to the right” to be electable.
The best advice for GOP candidates: Listen carefully to these journalists. Then do the opposite.
L. Brent Bozell III is the president of the Media Research Center. Tim Graham is director of media analysis at the Media Research Center and executive editor of the blog NewsBusters.org. To find out more about Brent Bozell III and Tim Graham, and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.
COPYRIGHT 2015 CREATORS.COM

March 23rd Police Merit Commission Agenda

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OPEN SESSION

Monday, March 23, 2015

EXECUTIVE SESSION AT 2:00 p.m.

OPEN MEETING TO FOLLOW

Personnel and Training Conference Room

CALL TO ORDER:

ACKNOWLEDGE GUESTS:

APPROVAL OF MINUTES:        March 9, 2015 (Brooks, Hegeman, and Cook,)

APPROVAL OF CLAIMS:       Yes

PROGRESS REPORTS:

Progress reports for probationary officers:

Sgt. Loren Martin – SWILEA – 4 officers in the academy

Sgt. Sam Smith – FTO program – 6 officers in field training

MERIT AWARDS:   Officers Blake Hollins, Joshua Brewer, and Herbert Adams for their actions on February 1, 2015 in subduing a violent subject with a sword.

DISCIPLINE:           15-PO-10 – Officer Steve Shemwell, 10 day suspension.

Appeal Received – Set date for hearing

REMINDER: Next meeting is Monday, April 13th at 2:00pm.

ADJOURNMENT:

 

EXECUTIVE SESSION

Civic Center 

Monday,  March 23, 2015

2:00 p.m.  Personnel & Training Conference Room 

An executive session and a closed hearing will be held prior to the open session.

The executive session and hearing are closed as provided by:

I.C. 5-14-1.5-6.1(b)(5)

To receive information about and interview prospective employees.

I.C. 5-14-1.5-6.1(b)(6)(A)

With respect to any individual over whom the governing body has jurisdiction to receive information concerning the individual’s alleged misconduct.

I.C. 5-14-1.5-6.1(b)(9)

To discuss a job performance evaluation of individual employees.  This subdivision does not apply to a discussion of the salary, compensation, or benefits of employees during a budget process.

Immediately following the Executive Session, a regular Open Session will be held.

Dr. Bucshon & Senator Coats to Host Evansville Job Fair  

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Eighth District Congressman Larry Bucshon, M.D. will host an Evansville Job Fair with U.S. Senator Dan Coats in coordination with the City of Evansville, WorkOne Southwest Indiana, and the Southwest Indiana Chamber of Commerce on Wednesday, April 1.  The event, which will be held at the CK Newsome Center, will provide job seekers the opportunity to meet with employers that are hiring in Evansville and the surrounding area and is open to the public.

 

The first hour of the event (1:00 P.M. – 2:00 P.M. CT) will be reserved for veterans of the U.S. Armed Services who wish to interact with employers.  The general public may attend the job fair beginning at 2:00 P.M. CT.

 

Dr. Bucshon and Evansville Mayor Lloyd Winnecke are expected to offer remarks at 2:00 P.M. CT. A member of Senator Coats’ staff will also be present.

 

WHO:                   Congressman Larry Bucshon, M.D. (IN-08)

                               Evansville Mayor Lloyd Winnecke
WHAT:                Evansville Job Fair

 

WHEN:                 Wednesday, April 1st, 2015 from 1:00 P.M. to 5:00 P.M. CT

 

WHERE:             CK Newsome Center – 100 Walnut Street Evansville, IN 47713

 

Over 350 Evansville area employers were invited to attend from a vast array of industries.

 

Employers who wish to participate in the event can register by filling out the employer registration form athttp://bucshon.house.gov/job-fair-registration.

 

More information on the Evansville Job Fair can be found at http://bucshon.house.gov/event/evansville-job-fair.

 

WINE TALK – Better With Age

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BY ROBERT WHITLEY

It is often said that wine improves with age. Over the holidays I had a number of opportunities to test this oft repeated cliche. For the record, let me say unequivocally that some wines do and many don’t.

The most disappointing older wine during my recent trials was a 2003 Rombauer Chardonnay from the Napa Valley. In its youth the Rombauer chard was no doubt rich, complex and pleasing to those who enjoy a ripe, buttery California chardonnay.
At 11 years old it was oxidized and flabby, with little redeeming quality.
The most impressive older wine through the trials was a 1998 Chateau St. Jean Cinq Cepages, a Bordeaux-style red blend from Napa’s Spring Mountain District. At 16 years old it was still going strong, with excellent color, plenty of primary fruit and the beginnings of mature secondary aroma. Another 16 years would have been no problem for this wine.
So it begs the question: What to look for in a wine you hope will improve with age?
Reds, for example, derive much of their staying power from antioxidants that are present in the grape skins, seeds and stems. Because reds have more contact with the skins (which also accounts for their color), they tend to age better than whites.
Whites, on the other hand, are capable of tremendous improvement with age. Their secret seems to be a high level of acidity, which can be present in both lean whites and whites made in a riper style, such as riesling or chenin blanc.
Lean whites that can improve with age include dry semillon from Australia, Rioja blanco made primarily from the viura grape and Old World-style chardonnays harvested at lower levels of potential alcohol.
Reds that age well tend to be robust, with ample tannin, such as Bordeaux, California cabernet sauvignon, Barolo and Barbaresco and some of the finer Tuscan reds.
The beauty of wines that improve with age is the evolution of flavors that may be present but difficult to discern when a wine is young. As age-worthy wines approach maturity, they exhibit mellowness and refinement that is pure magic in the glass.
This, dear reader, is why some choose to cellar certain wines for decades, always with the hope they will pull the cork at the perfect moment.
Best Value
Wines are rated on a 100-point scale. Wines are chosen for review because they represent outstanding quality or value, and the scores are simply a measure of this reviewer’s enthusiasm for the recommended wine.
Casillero del Diablo 2013 Cabernet Sauvignon Reserva, Chile ($11) — Casillero del Diablo is an entry-level wine produced by Concha y Toro, Chile’s largest and perhaps most important wine company. This it has access to reliable grape sources on a regular basis, which is an important factor at this price point. The 2013 cab offers a burst of juicy red fruit, with a slightly herbal note that is far from off-putting. In its price range it is a star among inexpensive cabernets. Rating: 85.
Tasting Notes
Smith-Madrone 2012 Chardonnay, Spring Mountain District ($32) — Smith-Madrone may be more renowned for its cabernet sauvignon and riesling, but its chardonnay takes a back seat to no one. Spring Mountain is no stranger to world-class chardonnay, either, with Stony Hill, the neighboring vineyard, long holding sway among California chardonnay producers. This vintage of Smith-Madrone shows a toasty note on the nose, with a lemon oil nuance that is present in most great California chardonnays. With a stony mineral quality as well, this is one of the finest chardonnays I’ve yet tasted from this top-notch Napa Valley winery. Rating: 95.
Charles Heidsieck Brut Reserve Champagne, France ($65) — Charles Heidsieck’s Brut Reserve is among the finest non-vintage bruts (excepting the handful of multi-vintage tete de cuvee Champagnes), owing largely to its exceptional stock of reserve wines that make up the blend. The style is toasty and rich, but without losing its all-important backbone and structure. Rating: 94.
Stuhlmuller Vineyards 2012 Cabernet Sauvignon, Alexander Valley ($38) — This gem of a cabernet vineyard in the heart of the Alexander Valley produces some of the most robust, mouth-filling cabernet sauvignon made in California. The 2012 is ripe, lush and full-bodied, showing a floral nose with a hint of spice. On the palate the layered dark-fruit aromas show exceptional intensity, and the mouthfeel is rich and luxurious. As you would expect from an Alexander Valley cab, the tannins are supple and smooth. Tremendous bang for the buck. Rating: 93.
Allegrini 2011 Palazzo Della Torre, onese, Italy ($23) — This unique wine is consistently one of the stars of the Allegrini lineup. A single-vineyard estate wine from Verona, Palazzo della Torre is a blend of two indigenous grapes, corvina and rondinella, which are the workhorse grapes of Valpolicella and Amarone. A small portion of the blend is made from grapes that have been dried, which concentrates the sugars and intensifies body and flavor. The powerful, regal Amarone, for example, is made from dried grapes. The result here is a rich, layered red that exhibits both power and elegance. It is beautifully balanced at 13.5 percent alcohol by volume. The flavor profile shows dark cherry and black currant aromas. The tannins are smooth. The finish is long. The price is exceptional given the quality. Rating: 93.
Follow Robert on Twitter at @wineguru. To find out more about Robert Whitley and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate website at www.creators.com.
COPYRIGHT 2015 CREATORS.COM

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.

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