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Judges affirm drug dealer’s convictions but vacate portion of sentence

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Jennifer Nelson for www.theindianalawyer.com

The 7th Circuit Court of Appeals rejected a man’s claims that his convictions stemming from his involvement in a drug dealing operation should be overturned, but the judges did vacate the conditions of his supervised release Friday.

The FBI obtained a warrant to search several homes involved in suspected drug activity, including a home in Sawmill Woods Court that was only in the name of Booker T. Sewell’s wife. Authorities believed Sewell was involved in a multi-state drug trade. When authorities arrived to execute the search warrant, Sewell admitted that he had marijuana in the house, money in the dishwasher and a gun under his bed. He claimed his wife did not know about the gun.

The search turned up evidence of drug dealing involving marijuana and cocaine. Sewell was charged and later convicted of being a felon in possession of a firearm and maintaining a place for the purpose of distributing controlled substances.

The federal court attributed between 15 to 50 kilograms of cocaine to Sewell and sentenced him to concurrent terms of 360 and 240 months in prison. He also was ordered to serve three years of supervised release, pay a special assessment and forfeit more than $20,000 recovered during the search of the home.

In United States of America v. Booker T. Sewell, 14-1384, Sewell claimed the warrant to search the home was issued without probable cause, but the judges disagreed. The FBI agents’ affidavit “convinces us that the magistrate judge had a substantial basis for his probable-cause finding. Three primary factors produce this result: (1) the recorded conversations; (2) the corroborating evidence; and (3) the reasonable inferences drawn therefrom. These factors weave together a stout fabric of probable cause, rightly resulting in the magistrate judge’s issuance of the warrant,” Judge Michael Kanne wrote.

There was also sufficient evidence to support that Sewell possessed the gun, not his wife, and to support the amount of drugs attributable to him. But the judges did vacate the portion of his sentencing involving supervised release based on recent decisions in United States v. Thompson, handed down in January, and United States v. Siegel, 753 F.3d 705 (7th Circ. 2014).

The general rule with regard to conditions of supervised release now requires that they are to fit the particular circumstances of the defendant being sentenced, Kanne wrote, but that was not the case for Sewell. For example, he was ordered to obtain a GED when he already has one and told to not use mood-altering substances. The conditions must be defined in a way that puts defendants on notice of proscribed behavior.

The case is remanded for further proceedings.

JROTC Field Day

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JROTC Field Day

Saturday, March 14, 8 a.m.-3:30 p.m.

EVSC’s Harrison High School gymnasium and outdoor locations around school (depending on weather)

 

Background:  The EVSC’s Junior Reserve Officer Trainer Corps program (located at Harrison High School) is host to this area’s Field Day Events Competition on Saturday.  Eleven teams. Totaling about 350 JROTC students from Indiana and Kentucky will be participating. EVSC will have more than 100 students organizing the event and competing.   Competitions will include volleyball, basketball and track and field events (like a 100 mile relay run, litter carry with over 100 pounds, etc).  An awards ceremony is planned at the end of the event in the gymnasium.  The event is open to the public.

 

EXCUSES OR EXPLANATIONS?

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Gavel Gamut

By Jim Redwine

(Week of 16 March 2015)

The March 04, 2015 Investigation of the Ferguson Missouri Municipal Court and Police Department by the United States Department of Justice Civil Rights Division involved hundreds of personal interviews and took seven months to complete. It concluded there was a failure of the Municipal Court, the police department and the city government to administer equal protection and due process to the citizens of Ferguson.

Numerous recommendations for needed change were made based upon an analysis of the causes of numerous injustices. A major finding was the historical discrimination against African Americans. The Report was published a week before two police officers were shot from ambush while on duty during a demonstration outside the police station. A full-blown investigation of these crimes has been launched, but, as of the writing of this article, no one has been arrested.

These cowardly actions are now a part of Ferguson’s, and America’s, long history of violence and injustice arising out of what President Obama has called the legacy of slavery.

Most Americans have knowledge of our Constitution’s legalization of slavery, the great struggle to end it and that unfortunate vestige of slavery, segregation, both by circumstance and by law. The Department of Justice report on Ferguson referred to segregation’s history as a root of today’s problems.

Under the heading “Historical Background” the following was reported:

Until the 1960s, Ferguson was a “sundown town” where African Americans were banned from the City after dark. The City would block off the main road from Kinloch, which was a poor, all-black suburb, “with a chain and construction materials but kept a second road open during the day so housekeepers and nannies could get from Kinloch to jobs in Ferguson.”51 During our investigative interviews, several older African-American residents recalled this era in Ferguson and recounted that African Americans knew that, for them, the City was “off-limits.” 

There are millions of Americans alive today who remember and lived under discrimination by law and by fact, de jure and de facto as it used to be termed. I am one of those Americans. As a child growing up in Oklahoma I personally experienced “Whites Only” and “No Coloreds Allowed” for restrooms, restaurants, water fountains, schools, public transportation, movie theaters and most everywhere. Some of the most segregated places were churches, including the one in which I was baptized.

Many of the convoluted attempts to keep the races separate (but equal) were so ludicrous they would have been comical if not so wrong. In 1948 Ada Lois Sipuel Fisher, an African American (called Colored then) woman wanted to attend Oklahoma University’s Law School. Now, you might think if any institution would abhor denial of equal protection it would be a law school. However, the Oklahoma State Board of Regents ruled all Oklahoma educational institutions must keep the races separate.

After the United States Supreme Court ruled O.U. must admit Ms. Sipuel Fisher, the State of Oklahoma created a one-person law school at the all-Negro college in Langston, Oklahoma. After another law suit, a federal court ruled this illegal so Oklahoma University allowed her to attend the law school, but forced her to sit in a special chair marked “Colored” that was chained off from the rest of the class and guarded to keep white students away from her. She also had a separate table in the cafeteria.

O.U. took a similar approach with George W. McLaurin who in 1950 wanted to seek a PhD in education. At first he was denied admission, but after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled O.U. had to admit him, he was forced to sit at a desk just outside the classroom door, had a special desk in the library and had to eat at a separate table in the cafeteria.

I am pretty sure my great-great-grandfather who was wounded at Chickamauga and Shiloh while fighting for the Union would not have expected situations such as Ferguson to exist over 150 years after “The Great Struggle”. In fact, after my high school was integrated in 1957, I figured the “War of Northern Aggression” as my seventh grade teacher called it was finally over.

I was wrong.

Suspect in early morning chase was wanted on Felony warrant in Posey County

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

Police have identified the suspect in the early morning pursuit and crash as 22 year old Kyle J. Miller of Posey County.
Miller fled from an officer who attempted to pull him over for displaying a false license plate on the car he was driving.
The pursuit ended when Miller collided with a truck at Hwy 41 and Virginia.
Miller has an active Felony Petetion to Revoke Probation warrant out of Posey County. The charges related to the warrant include Intimidation and Resisting Law Enforcement.
Miller was taken to a local hospital for treatemt. His current condition is unavailable.
A female passenger in the car was also injured. Her name and condition are not being released at this time.

 

Driver seriously injured in wreck while fleeing from police

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

A man was seriously injured in a wreck at Hwy 41 and Virginia around 2:25 Friday morning. The wreck happened when the man was fleeing from officers who tried to pull him over for a license plate violation.
The officer attempted to stop the suspect at the intersection of Virginia and Edgar St. The suspect sped away and ran multiple red lights as he continued eastbound on Virginia. The suspect was able to distance himself from the officer until he ran the red light at Hwy 41 and Virginia. He collided with a pickup truck that was pulling a trailer. The trailer dislodged from the truck and struck a passenger van.
The driver and passenger in the truck were uninjured. There were 7 people in the van that were taken to area hospitals for treatment. The suspect was taken to a local hospital for serious injuries. His female passenger was also injured. She has provided police with a name of the driver, but police have not been able to confirm his identity at this time.

 

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

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.

EPD Activity Report

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 Wednesday, March 11, 2015

Seth Ande                      Carrying a Handgun without a License-Level 5 Felony

Operating a Motor Vehicle after Forfeiture of License for Life-Level 5 Felony

Possession of Marijuana-Class B Misdemeanor

 

Charles Capshaw    Operating a Vehicle with an ACE of .08 or More-Level 6 Felony

Matthew Goodin         Intimidation-Level 6 Felony

Resisting Law Enforcement-Class A Misdemeanor

Kiana Green            Operating a Vehicle as a Habitual Traffic Violator-Level 6 Felony

Christopher Greene       Operating a Vehicle While Intoxicated-Level 6 Felony

Phillip Mertell           Possession of Methamphetamine-Level 6 Felony

Possession of Paraphernalia-Level 6 Felony

Possession of Marijuana-Class B Misdemeanor

Ikeem Minor         Operating a Vehicle as an Habitual Traffic Violator-Level 6 Felony

Possession of Marijuana-Class B Misdemeanor

Greta Neu                       Neglect of Dependent-Level 6 Felony

Possession of Paraphernalia-Level 6 Felony

Possession of Marijuana-Class B Misdemeanor

Jessie Phillips          Possession of Methamphetamine-Level 6 Felony

Possession of Paraphernalia-Class A Misdemeanor

Possession of Marijuana-Class B Misdemeanor

Cassandra Puckett      Operating a Vehicle with an ACE of .15 or More-Level 6 Felony

Lacey Sisk                    Possession of Methamphetamine-Level 6 Felony

Possession of Marijuana-Class B Misdemeanor

Spencer Young               Battery Against a Public Safety Official-Level 5 Felonies (Two Counts)

Intimidation-Level 6 Felonies (Two Counts)

Resisting Law Enforcement-Class A Misdemeanor

Criminal Trespass-Class A Misdemeanor

Timothy Albin Jr         Dealing in Synthetic Drug or Synthetic Drug Lookalike Substance-Level 6 Felony

Gregeory Allison       Neglect of Dependent-Level 6 Felony

Possession of Paraphernalia-Level 6 Felony

Possession of Marijuana-Class B Misdemeanor

Mark Bainbridge      Child Molesting-Level 1 Felony

Edward Byrd III        Strangulation-Level 6 Felony

Intimidation-Level 6 Felony

Michael Candler           Operating a Vehicle as an Habitual Traffic Violator-Level 6 Felony

Johnna Mosby           Unlawful Possession of Syringe-Level 6 Felony

Possession of Narcotic Drug-Level 6 Felony

Possession of Paraphernalia-Level 6 Felony

Marques Wilson       Domestic Battery-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

New Playground and Memorial to Donna the Hippo Opens at Mesker Park Zoo & Botanic Garden

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 Thanks to the generosity of Harold A. Wanninger, Mesker Park Zoo & Botanic Garden has a new playground for visitors to enjoy, making Mr. Wanninger’s parting goal to provide “a place for all children to play” a reality.  Welcoming guests into this new play area is a familiar face to generations of zoo visitors – Donna the hippo.

When planning the new playground, zoo staff and zoo supporters recognized an opportunity to honor the zoo’s most famous resident, Donna the hippo, who passed away in 2013 at the age of 61. Kentucky artist Raymond Graf crafted a bronze sculpture of Donna and one of her offspring to honor the memory of this beloved creature.  Part of the sculpting process involved reviewing multiple photographs of Donna and consulting with a zookeeper who spent over 30 years caring for her.   Recognized as the “world’s oldest hippopotamus,” Donna spent more than 50 years as a resident of Mesker Park Zoo & Botanic Garden and gave birth to eight offspring, all of whom she outlived.

Zoo Director Amos Morris said, “There are a lot of very personal memories within the 87-year history of this zoo, and maybe when folks bring their kids or grandkids to this playground they’ll share those special memories.”  Morris added that the zoo strives to connect people to nature and that includes young visitors enjoying outdoor play.

Morris said he is grateful for the efforts of many, including staff, volunteers, the Evansville Zoological Society and in-kind donors whose efforts and generosity made the project a reality.  “This zoo is truly a community legacy.  This investment will create happy zoo memories for a new generation to treasure and that’s something we can all get behind,” Morris said.

Established in 1928, Mesker Park Zoo & Botanic Garden is Indiana’s first zoo. The facility is open 365 days per year and welcomes more than 180,000 visitors annually.  For more general zoo information, visit www.meskerparkzoo.com.

 

RECYCLE DAY

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Date: 3/14/2015 8:00 AM – 12:00 PM
Location: Old Walmart west parking lot
4595 University Drive
Evansville, Indiana

ITEMS TO BRING:  Please be sure items are clean and sorted.

 

Aluminum cans

Metal food cans

Cardboard

Catalogs/magazines

Newspaper

Junk Mail

Glass containers

#1 thru #7 plastic containers – no Styrofoam or plastic bags

 

Vanderburgh County Residents Only

 

*weather permitting*