Vanderburgh County Recent Booking Records
EPD Activity Report
Governor Pence Signs Regional Cities Initiative Bill
Indianapolis – Governor Mike Pence today signed HEA 1403, the Regional Cities Initiative, which creates a framework for neighboring communities to work together to promote economic development on a regional basis in order to attract talent and investment. The bill, which was part of the Governor’s agenda for the 2015 legislative session, also creates the Regional Cities Fund that will help leverage public and private investment in areas that will drive economic development. The Governor signed the bill at the Indiana Economic Development Corporation’s Board of Directors’ meeting today.
“Indiana is the best place to grow a business in America. To continue to attract new investment and talent across our state, we must grow locally and think regionally,†said Governor Pence. “The Regional Cities Initiative will encourage collaboration among Hoosier communities to develop ways to bolster investment, attract talent, and continue Indiana on a pathway to economic growth and success. I appreciate the efforts of the Indiana legislature to achieve this important legislation for the benefit of both Hoosiers and our economy as a whole.â€
The Governor also signed a number of other agenda bills that are geared toward strengthening Indiana’s economy:
- HEA 1303, which provides highly-skilled professionals a voluntary alternative to licensing, eliminates arbitrary barriers to employment, and reduces costs for consumers by giving them the information they need to make better choices about services they buy and people they hire.
- SEA 441, to simplify the tax code, which will reduce the paperwork burden for Hoosiers and incentivize investment in Indiana.
- SEA 412, which requires electric utilities to file energy efficiency plans with the Indiana Utility Regulatory Commission in order to ensure more affordable and reliable energy for Hoosiers.
“As we look to the future of Indiana, it is imperative that we advance innovative ways to strengthen our state,†said Governor Pence. “The bills I signed today continue our work in this regard through less regulation, a simpler tax code, and more affordable energy for bothHoosiers and the businesses that operate in Indiana. I am grateful to the Indiana General Assembly for authoring and supporting these bills which will go far in growing Indiana’s economy.â€
The Governor also signed non-agenda bill SEA 436, which establishes a statewide exemption of business personal property taxes for taxpayers with less than $20,000 in assessed value in a county, eliminating the tax for 50 percent of all filers.
Arrests made in connection with pest control trailer theft
Police had a heightened concern in the case because the trailer contained hazardous chemicals used to fumigate buildings. The trailer and the chemical tank were located in Rural Saline County Illinois.
Investigators from the Evansville Police department, Indiana State Police, FBI, and the Southern Illinois Drug Task Force were involved in the investigation and recovery of the stolen items.
Arrested were:
Bret Stinson 25
Jennifer L. Manning 30
New magistrates approved for 7 counties
Marilyn Odendahl for www.theindianalawyer.com
Seven Indiana counties have been given approval to appoint new magistrate judges to their local courts. Gov. Mike Pence signed of House Enrolled Act 1110 May 5.
The version of the new law that emerged from conference committee late in the 2015 session of the Indiana General Assembly slipped through the Senate by a 46-0 vote and through the House of Representatives by a 69-23 vote.
In addition to providing more magistrates, the law expands the judicial officers’ abilities, allowing them to approve and accept criminal plea agreements, approve settlements in civil matters, and approve decrees of dissolution, settlement agreements and any other agreements in domestic relations or paternity actions.
Also, the law requires the judge of any city or town court be an attorney licensed in Indiana. However, any non-lawyers currently serving as a city or town judge will be allowed to remain on the bench.
St. Joseph County is getting a comparative bounty of magistrates. The law allows St. Joseph Circuit Court to appoint one full-time magistrate, bringing the court’s total to three full-time magistrates. The St. Joseph Superior Court can now appoint two additional magistrates, giving that court a total of four full-time magistrates.
St. Joseph Circuit Judge Michael Gotsch said the Circuit Court plans to put the new magistrate in the county’s civil protection order court. The high-volume court has been relying on senior judges to help with the caseload. The new magistrate will preside over hearings and assist with the petition review process.
Gotsch is hopeful that having the extra magistrate to hear testimony and ask questions will lower the number of petitioners who ultimately withdraw their requests for protective orders.
The Northern Indiana county knew, prior to going to the Legislature, that asking for three new magistrates was a significant request, Gotsch said. The local courts and government officials worked to put the infrastructure in place before making the trip to the Statehouse. The staff is available to be assigned to the new judicial officer, and the former jail, which is attached to the city-county building, has been renovated to include additional handicap-accessible courtrooms.
In addition to the new magistrates for St. Joseph County, the law allows:
• Clark Circuit Court to appoint a third full-time magistrate;
• Greene Circuit and Superior courts to jointly appoint one full-time magistrate;
• Madison Circuit Court to add a second full-time magistrate;
• Marion Superior Court to appoint four additional full-time magistrates;
• Porter Circuit Court to bring on a full-time magistrate;
• Vanderburgh Circuit Court to add a second full-time magistrate.
The law removes the authority of the Sullivan Circuit and Superior judges to jointly appoint a full-time magistrate and mandates that the term of the current full-time magistrate ends by July 1, 2016.
Also, the measure urged the Legislative Council to create an interim study committee to examine how many judges are needed in Pulaski County.
According to a fiscal study of the law by the Indiana Legislative Services Agency, each new magistrate will be receiving $158,135 in annual compensation which includes salary and benefits. The total impact on the state budget will be $1.58 million in fiscal year 2016 and $1.74 million during the fiscal years of 2017, 2018 and 2019.
Greene Superior Judge Dena Martin is hoping to have a new magistrate in place by the end of the summer. She anticipated the incoming judicial officer would be assigned to hearing child support cases.
“We’re hoping it will help us with our caseload,†Martin said, adding the magistrate will “help the court be able to get (the cases) on the docket a lot sooner.â€
Nestled in the southwestern part of the state, Greene County has seen a spike in violent crime which has impacted the courts’ already crowded docket. This has forced some proceedings, like an all-day hearing for a divorce, to be scheduled a couple of months later on the court’s calendar.
“We’re excited and looking forward to serving our citizens better,†Martin said of the getting the magistrate.
Governor Pence Signs Common Construction Wage Repeal Bill
Indianapolis – Today, upon signing HEA 1019, the common construction wage repeal bill, the Governor issued the following statement. The legislation will remove the common construction wage statute and allow the market to determine wages.
“Wages on public projects should be set by the marketplace and not by government bureaucracy. By repealing the common construction wage, our state is putting hard-working taxpayers first, lessening the burden on cash-strapped local governments and schools, and opening doors of opportunity for small businesses across our state. This legislation is a great victory for hard-working Hoosier taxpayers, and I am pleased to sign it into law.
“I am grateful to the members of the Indiana General Assembly, especially Speaker Brian Bosma, Senate President Pro Tem David Long, Representative Jerry Torr, and Senator Carlin Yoder for their work on this legislation opening doors of opportunity for Hoosier small businesses and protecting the hard-earned dollars of Hoosier taxpayers.â€
 McGary, Bosse, and Harrison collaborate to produce School House Rock
for elementary students Thursday, May 7 – Noon
McGary Middle School
McGary was awarded the Arts Council of Southwestern Indiana collaborative grant in 2014-15. Along with Benjamin Bosse High School’s choir , and Harrison High School’s  choir, we will be performing the musical for third grades from Glenwood, Fairlawn, and Caze Elementary Schools at 12:00 on May 7th.
The McGary Advanced Drama classes have participated in this production in many phases, from learning choreography, to building sets, to sewing costumes and make up application.
This production was made possible by collaborating with high school choir directors  Lauen Fendrich and  Carrie Aiken. Since ISTEP testing was an issue for all grade levels involved, Bosse and Harrison produced music videos to some of the popular Schoolhouse Rocks songs, while McGary students will be performing, dancing, and singing to others.
WHAT IF SCOTUS RULES IN FAVOR OF GAY MARRIAGE?
By Susan Stamper Brown
During a reception hosted by the group “Freedom to Marry,†White House senior advisor Valerie Jarrett praised President Obama for his huge part in accelerating the gay marriage cause heard by the Supreme Court of the United States (SCOTUS) last week. “The arc of the moral universe,†said Jarrett, “bent a little faster than even we thought it would.†The “moral arc†regarding gay marriage cannot be bent without harmful consequence, but you’d never know that listening to Ms. Jarrett.
Indeed. The arc is bent — by intensely motivated activists pulling on it with all their might, demanding SCOTUS re-define the definition of marriage to include same-sex couples. What’s next? When anger motivates, enough is never enough.
The bigger danger, though, is the resulting potential loss of freedom, something one of our Canadian neighbors, William Whatcott, fully understands. Speaking up about his Christian views regarding homosexuality and abortion by way of graphically honest pamphlets led to six arrests in Saskatchewan, 20 in Ontario, a six-month jail stint for protesting too close to an abortion clinic in Toronto and a $17,500 fine from the Saskatchewan Human Rights Tribunal for distributing material deemed “hateful.â€
On February 28, 2013, the Supreme Court of Canada ruled against Whatcott. Justice Marshall Rothstein wrote Canadians’ right to freedoms of speech and religion are unlimited except when it is conveyed via “hate speech.†Maybe a bit contradictory, given the words “unlimited†and “except†are mutually exclusive and the definition of hate speech is dependent upon those in power.
The court considered various cases including one suggesting that certain practices cannot be separated from a person’s identity, therefore “condemnation of the practice is a condemnation of the person.†Additionally, Justice Rothstein defined hate speech as targeting a particular group as “a menace that could threaten the safety and wellbeing of others, makes references to respected sources (in this case the Bible) to lend credibility to negative generalizations, and uses vilifying and derogatory representations to create a tone of hatred.â€
Jesus Christ himself could’ve been charged with hate speech crimes in Canada having defined marriage as between a man and woman, called people hypocrites, serpents, sinners and vipers while referencing scripture.
And we’re not far off from that now in the U.S. as we await the SCOTUS decision this June. Clearly, free speech is not on the minds of intolerant activists who recently castigated two gay hotel proprietors, Ian Reisner and Mati Weiderpass, who did the unthinkable by hosting a quaint reception for presidential hopeful Sen. Ted Cruz in April to discuss foreign policy. Activists threatened a boycott to punish the two for sharing snacks and conversation with what they perceive as the enemy. Given the unmitigated backlash, the two relented. And repented, apologizing on Facebook for “hurting the gay community†although Mr. Reisner said they “spent most of the time talking about national security issues…regarding the defense of Israel to ISIS and Iran.†Oh, the irony, that a discussion mostly about how a potential President Cruz’s foreign policy might protect Americans from the real enemy, rather than an illogically perceived one.
One thing is for sure – even if SCOTUS rules in favor of gay marriage, the real “moral arc†remains constant. What is deemed legal is not necessarily right in the eyes of the One who created the laws of the universe. Justice Kennedy rightly questioned the appropriateness of the Court to abandon the definition of marriage. He said marriage “has been with us for millennia†making it “very difficult for the court to say, ‘Oh well, we know better.’†We do know better, but the wide-eyed optimist I no longer am can only hope that those in power protect what is not really theirs to unravel. Anyhow, research shows that traditionally married people live longer, are healthier, happier, and have more satisfying sex. I guess God knew what he was doing when he created Adam and Eve.
IS IT TRUE May 7, 2015
IS IT TRUE that Tuesday’s  post-election unity gesture by Councilman John Friend to Jonathan Weaver didn’t turn out well?..Some thought that John may have hurt his finger earlier in the day and was just showing how he hurt his finger. In reality, however, .Mr. Friend and Mr. Weaver’s conversation quickly turned very personal and insulting?  …this face to face gathering quickly turned negative when Mr. Weaver called Mr. Friend a liar to his face?  …Mr. Friend made an in your face vagal comment to Weaver that was followed by a one finger gesture?  …this conflict between Friend and Weaver has been brewing for a long time?  …we aren’t surprised that Mr. Friend finally expressing his active dislike for Weaver?  …that Mr. Friend is one of many whom Mr. Weaver have offended since he has been in elected office?  …we predict that Mr. Weaver has experienced the one finger gesture before and shall again in the future?
IS IT TRUE that we some offer are sincere congratulations to each and every winner and look forward to a great campaign ahead. Special congratulations go to Alex Burton, the newcomer to politics and to Connie Robinson who received the highest win percentage of any candidate.
 IS IT TRUE the City County Observer had special invited guests on its Tri-State Voices show this week?  …our special guests were Jordan Vandenberg from Channel 25 News and Zach Evans from the Courier and Press.  …They gave a recap to the election and some insightful thoughts to what we could expect in the next several months.
VANDERBURGH COUNTY FELONY CHARGES
 Below is a list of felony cases that were filed by the Vanderburgh County Prosecutor’s Office on Monday, May 04, 2015
Victor Bell                   Dealing in Synthetic Drug or Synthetic Drug Lookalike Substance-Level 6 Felony
Possession of Paraphernalia-Class A Misdemeanor
Devontae Clardy          Kidnapping-Level 6 Felony
Donna Robertson          Theft-Level 6 Felony
Criminal Trespass-Class A Misdemeanor
Richard Rodney            Domestic Battery-Level 6 Felony
Debra Wollner               Theft-Level 6 Felony
Criminal Trespass-Class A Misdemeanor
                                          Invasion of Privacy-Class A Misdemeanor
Nina Anzalone              Possession of Methamphetamine-Level 6 Felony
Possession of Paraphernalia-Class A Misdemeanor
Morgan Blair                 Auto Theft-Level 6 Felony
Tracy Hobgood             Dealing in Synthetic Drug or Synthetic Drug Lookalike Substance-Level 6 Felony
Possession of Methamphetamine-Level 6 Felony
Derrick Wagner            Resisting Law Enforcement-Level 6 Felony
Operating a Vehicle with an ACE of .15 or More-Class A Misdemeanor
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