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 Evansville man arrested for assault with a knife

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

 

Evansville Police arrested 55 year old JOSEPH FLOYD on several charges after he assaulted his estranged wife and another man.
Police were called to 616 W Tennessee at 6:00pm Wednesday. Officers spoke to Tina Floyd and were told that Joe Floyd had assaulted her and a friend, Dan Belwood.
During the investigation, police determined Jospeh Floyd had punched his wife and assaulted Belwood when he tried to intervene. Joe Floyd also hit Belwood in the head with a brick and then stabbed him with a knife. Belwood underwent surgery and is expected to survive.
Officers found Joe Floyd at another residence and arrested him for Aggravated Battery level 3 Felony, Criminal Confinement level 3 Felony, and Battery level 5 Felony.

 

Vanderburgh County Recent Booking Records

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

EPD Activity Report

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

EPD Activity Report

Catch the Latest Edition of “The Indiana State Police Road Show”

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 Indiana - Catch the latest edition of the “Indiana State Police Road Show” radio program every Monday morning at your convenience.

 

This week’s show features Sergeant Eric Dunn, of the Operations Section. Sgt. Dunn discusses the ISP Youth Camp Services and the preparation for the upcoming second annual Indiana Troopers Youth Services golf outing scheduled for April 29, at Arrowhead Golf Course in Greenfield.

 

Download the program from the Network Indiana public websites atwww.networkindiana.com.  Look for the state police logo on the main page and follow the download instructions. The ISP Road Show can also be viewed via YouTube.

 

Go to https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCu5Bg1KjBd7H1GxgkuV3YJA or visit the Indiana State Police website at http://www.in.gov/isp/   and click on the YouTube link. This 15 minute talk show concentrates on public safety and informational topics with state wide interest.

 

The radio program was titled “Signal-10” in the early sixties when it was first started by two troopers in northern Indiana. The name was later changed to the “Indiana State Police Road Show” and is the longest continuously aired state police public service program in Indiana.

 

Radio stations across Indiana and the nation are invited to download and air for FREE this public service program sponsored by the Indiana State Police Alliance and Cops for Kids, a subsidiary of the Indiana State Police Alliance.

 

“Walk a Mile in Her Shoes,

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“Walk a Mile in Her Shoes,

The International Men’s March to Stop Rape, 

Sexual Assault & Gender Violence”

April 7, 2015 at the University of Southern Indiana

Inspired by the old saying, “You can’t understand a person’s experience until you’ve walked a mile in their shoes,” men will literally walk one mile in women’s high heeled shoes on April 7, 2015 on the University of Southern Indiana campus to protest rape, sexual assault & gender violence.  Men, women and children are invited to participate in the Walk planned by Albion Fellows Bacon Center and USI’s Sexual Assault and Gender Violence Prevention Group. Vanderburgh County Sheriff Dave Wedding, Vanderburgh County Prosecutor Nick Hermann, Evansville Police Department Chief Billy Bolin, and other men are going to walk in high-heeled shoes to raise awareness about rape.

Registration for the Walk will begin at 5:00 p.m. at Mitchell Auditorium in the Health Professions building on USI’s campus.  This year’s walk will feature a local male volunteer who will discuss why he has taken the steps he does to help make a difference.  After the walk, Wedding, Hermann, and Bolin will pledge with students and community members to make a difference.  Men, women, and children are invited to participate.

 

The Walk is organized by Albion Fellows Bacon Center and the University of Southern Indiana Sexual Assault/Gender Violence prevention group and sponsored by a number of USI campus organizations, including Fraternity and Sorority Life of USI, USI Student Government Association SOS Grants, and Student Housing Association of USI.  Community sponsors include Holly’s House, Fraternal Order of Police #73, Lampion Center, YWCA, Boyd Electric and SouthWest Graphix among others.

A woman is raped every 90 seconds in America.  Albion Fellows Bacon Center provided sexual assault services to 552 primary and secondary victims in 2014.  Albion is a non-profit agency serving victims of domestic and sexual violence.   We provide emergency shelter, a 24-hour crisis line, short-term individual crisis counseling, support groups, and legal and medical advocacy to victims, their friends and family.  All of the services are free of charge.  For more information about this event or how to get involved, please contact Christina Wicks at Albion Fellows Bacon Center, 812-422-9372 or by email at christina.wicks@albionfellowsbacon.org.  More information about the national Walk a Mile in Her Shoes: The International Men’s March to Stop Rape, Sexual Assault & Gender Violence can be found on the internet at www.walkamileinhershoes.org.

Governor Pence to Detail Public Health Emergency Declaration Tomorrow

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Will Also Visit Batesville Tool & Die, Morel Company

Indianapolis – Tomorrow, Governor Pence will hold a press conference to announce the details of his Executive Order declaring a public health emergency in Scott County. Later in the afternoon, he will visit and tour Batesville Tool & Die and Morel Company. Details below.

Thursday, March 26:

10:00 a.m. EDT – Governor Pence to hold press conference on the details of his Executive Order declaring a public health emergency in Scott County
Statehouse – Room 101, 200 W. Washington Street, Indianapolis

12:45 p.m. EDT – Governor Pence to visit, tour Batesville Tool & Die
*Media are welcome to attend.
Batesville Tool & Die, 177 Six Pine Ranch, Batesville

1:45 p.m. EDT – Governor Pence to visit, tour The Morel Company
*Media are welcome to attend.
The Morel Company, 100 Progress Drive, Batesville

First Lady Karen Pence to Offer Remarks at Hoosier Heroine Essay Contest Award Ceremony

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Indianapolis – Tomorrow, First Lady Karen Pence will offer remarks at the Hoosier Heroine Essay Contest Award Ceremony. Students in grades 6-9 were invited to write essays as part of this contest. Details below.

 

Thursday, March 26:

 

11:00 a.m. EDT – First Lady Karen Pence to offer remarks at Hoosier Heroine Essay Contest Award Ceremony

*Media are welcome to attend.

Statehouse – North Atrium, 200 W. Washington Street, Indianapolis

 

Bucshon & Bera: Doctors’ prescription to secure Medicare: SGR reform

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 By Reps. Ami Bera (D-Calif.), M.D. and Larry Bucshon (R-Ind.), M.D. 

 

Despite how it sometimes looks from outside the halls of the Capitol, there are members of Congress, from both sides of the aisle, who are working together to make big, bold decisions for the future of the country. After all, that’s why people like us wanted to serve. We both ran for Congress because we wanted to work to put people before politics to solve this country’s problems, and we believed that medical professionals must be an integral part of the conversation regarding healthcare policy. As members of Congress from opposite parties, we don’t agree on every issue in health care, but we do agree on the fundamental idea that the patient should be at the center of our healthcare decisions.

That’s why we believe a permanent fix to Medicare’s fatally flawed formula for reimbursing Medicare health care providers, the Sustainable Growth Rate (SGR), is so important. Developed by Washington in 1997, this formula has seen 17 short-term patches over the last decade, threatening access to health care for millions of Medicare patients and, costing taxpayers $150 billion. However, now it looks like a broad, bipartisan consensus on real reforms that will ensure access to quality care for seniors and help us protect the Medicare promise is within our grasp.

Last year, we made unprecedented progress toward a bicameral and bipartisan agreement that unfortunately fell short within the political process. It’s imperative that this week Congress finishes the job by passing the SGR Repeal and Medicare Provider Payment Modernization Act of 2015.

As physicians, we understand why a permanent solution for SGR is necessary. Under the current formula, cuts are indiscriminate and across the board; high-quality, cost-effective doctors are penalized just as much as those who are inefficient. For more than a decade, the financial uncertainty caused by the SGR has left many doctors no choice but to reduce the number of Medicare patients they see and to delay investments in new equipment and innovative practice. Meanwhile, one out of every four Medicare patients is struggling to find a primary care physician. The Washington solution has become the problem.

Permanent SGR reform will not only ensure seniors access to care, but also has the potential to transform how we deliver health care to improve it while also lowering costs.

Models that allow physicians to coordinate care as a team to reduce costs, and to bundle payment by ailment rather than per procedure, are just two examples of innovative approaches that would be rewarded with this new reform. With SGR reform, no longer will health care only be about how many patients doctors see, how many tests and procedures they order, or how much they charge for these things. Instead, it will be about patient outcomes: fewer hospital readmissions, higher patient satisfaction, and fewer medical errors, to name a few.

Doctors have led the charge to stay focused on this path of value-based care and to move mostly away from the costly and outdated fee-for-service system. That’s why when we learned about a proposal to replace bundled payments for complex procedures, such as heart surgeries, with a costly fee-for-service system, we brought together more than 50 of our colleagues from both parties to express our concerns about the harm this change would cause. Like most doctors, we got into the profession to care for patients, not to focus on billing codes, and we want to make sure that all seniors in the Medicare system get the full attention and care from their physician that they deserve, without worrying about additional copays. We’re glad to see this addressed, and that members from both parties recognize that the first step in addressing many of our health care challenges has to be a payment system that aligns quality metrics and incentivizes high-value care. Similarly, SGR repeal and reform is exactly the kind of challenge that cannot be a victim of Washington D.C. politics. We must not fail to meet this challenge.

We know what it’s really like in the exam room, and the real consequences that inadequate and uncertain Medicare payments have on patient care. Our seniors and their physicians should not have to continue to bear the consequences of Congress’ failure to fix a problem Congress created. This time we can’t let politics get in the way of progress. With 49 million patients enrolled in Medicare and another 10,000 baby-boomers aging in each day, we have a responsibility to seize this historic occasion to pass a bipartisan SGR repeal and to right the Medicare system once and for all. 

Bera. has represented California’s 7th Congressional District since 2013. He sits on the Foreign Affairs and the Science, Space and Technology committees. He is a doctor of internal medicine and former chief medical officer of Sacramento County, California. Bucshon. has represented Indiana’s 8th Congressional District since 2011. He sits on the Energy and Commerce Committee. He is a cardiothoracic surgeon.

Termination of parental rights waiting period requires no services

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Dave Stafford for www.theindianalawyer.com

Parents of children removed from the home for 15 of the prior 22 months before a hearing on termination of parental rights may not argue that a lack of services during that time tolls the waiting period, the Indiana Court of Appeals ruled Wednesday.

“On this question of first impression, we hold that Indiana Code Section 31-35-2-4(b)(2)(A)(iii) simply requires the DCS to demonstrate compliance with the statutory waiting period — namely, that a child has been removed from a parent for fifteen of the most recent twenty-two months immediately prior to the termination hearing,” Judge Edward Najam wrote in In the Matter of the Termination of the Parent-Child Relationship of J.W., Jr., A.W., and D.D., Minor Children, T.D., Mother, and J.W., Sr., Father v. Ind. Dept. of Child Services, 82A04-1408-JT-380.

“That statute does not condition the waiting period on whether the DCS provided or otherwise made available any type of services to the parent. As such, we affirm the trial court’s termination of the Parents’ parental rights.”

Najam wrote that the parents in this case had been homeless, unemployed and admitted they were in no position to care for their children. The trial court also found the parents had failed to cooperate with or participate in family aid services, visitation, or provide drug screens.

“In sum, we cannot say that the trial court’s finding that the DCS satisfied its burden to show that the Children had been removed from the Parents for fifteen of the twenty-two months immediately prior to the termination hearing is contrary to law or otherwise clearly erroneous,” the court concluded.

VANDERBURGH COUNTY FELONY CHARGES

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 Below is a list of felony cases that were filed by the Vanderburgh County Prosecutor’s Office on Tuesday, March 24, 2015

Jurel Bennett             Obstruction of Justice-Level 6 Felony

Resisting Law Enforcement-Class A Misdemeanor

Anfernee Crawford       Battery Resulting in Serious Bodily Injury-Level 5 Felony

Rachel Schmidt            Resisting Law Enforcement-Level 6 Felony

Operating a Vehicle with an ACE of .08 or More-Class C Misdemeanor

Kevin Langston           Battery on a Person less than 14 Years Old-Level 5 Felony

Battery in the Presence of a Child –Level 6 Felony

For further information on the cases listed above, or any pending case, please contact Kyle Phernetton at 812.435.5688 or via e-mail at kphernetton@vanderburghgov.org

Under Indiana law, all criminal defendants are presumed to be innocent until proven guilty by a court of law