Home Blog Page 6195

Public libraries closed Monday

1

The Evansville Vanderburgh Public Library will be closed Monday, January 19 in observance of Martin Luther King, Jr. Day.

Download eBooks, eAudiobooks, music and more anytime at www.evpl.org.

Burglary Ring Uncovered: Arrests Made

0
SPONSORED BY DEFENSE ATTORNEY IVAN ARNAEZ.
DON’T GO TO COURT ALONE. CALL IVAN ARNAEZ @ 812-424-6671.
The Vanderburgh County Sheriff’s Office has arrested three individuals in connection with a series of residential and commercial burglaries. These burglaries occurred throughout 2014 in the northeastern portion of Vanderburgh County. Entry was forced and items such as tools, televisions, jewelry and guns were taken during the burglaries.

During the investigation into the burglaries, Sheriff’s detectives noted similarities in the manner of entry, the items taken and the geographical area in which the crimes were occurring. Some of the information provided to our investigators by the public corroborated information we learned during the course of the investigation. One victim even used social media to help solicit leads for our detectives to follow-up on. A break in the case occurred when a Vanderburgh County resident observed a suspicious vehicle parked in front of his house. The license plate number the resident obtained from that vehicle led our detectives to one of the suspects. Further leads were developed from evidence recovered at the crime scenes.

Detectives were able to determine that Jeffery Scott Brooks was the ringleader of the group of people who committed the burglaries. While still a suspect in Vanderburgh County, Mr. Brooks was arrested by an Indiana Conservation Officer in Gibson County on January 07, 2015. The Indiana State Police investigated and later filed Burglary charges against him. At the time of his arrest, Mr. Brooks was already on probation for a February 2014 Conspiracy to Deal Methamphetamine case.

Sheriff’s detectives executed seven (7) search warrants on multiple residences based on probable cause developed during the investigation. Multiple items of stolen property were recovered as well as other evidence linking the suspects to the burglaries. Some of the suspects cooperated with investigators and provided evidence which implicated other ring members. The information developed showed that Mr. Brooks was the leader of the other suspects, who individually participated in some but not all of the burglaries.

Sheriff’s detectives believe the group was collectively responsible for committing over twenty burglaries. Most of the residential burglaries occurred in the McCutchanville area. The commercial burglaries occurred in the area of SR 57 and Baumgart Road as well as the Daylight area. Detectives are in the process of identifying the ownership of the recovered property and will be contacting the owners as they are determined.

Warrants will be sought for Jeffery Brooks’ arrest on multiple charges. At least two other suspects have been identified and charges are anticipated. Additional charges against those already in custody are expected to be filed as well.

Sheriff Dave Wedding stated, “This case demonstrates the value of having good neighbors who keep an eye out for each other. The open lines of communication between neighbors and to the Sheriff’s Office were instrumental in bringing about the resolution of this case. Between this investigation and the unrelated equipment theft ring that was dismantled earlier this month, our detectives have been working non-stop. I am proud of the work our deputies have done and grateful for the help we received from members of this community.”

Arrested:

Matthew Bryant Dormeier (pictured above), 26, Evansville.  Burglary as a Level 5 Felony, Theft as a Level 6 Felony – $1,000.00 bond

Justin Michael Rider (pictured above), 24, Evansville.  Burglary as a Level 5 Felony (2 counts), Theft as a Level 6 Felony (2 counts) – $10,000 bond

Richard Dewayne Chaffin (pictured above), 51, Evansville.  Burglary as a Level 4 Felony (4 counts), Theft as a Level 6 Felony (4 counts) – $50,000 bond

Jeffrey Scott Brooks (pictured above), 41, Evansville.  Arrested in Gibson County. Multiple Burglary and Theft charges to be filed in Vanderburgh County

-END-

Councilman Friend Accepts Position with Gail Riecken Campaign

45

Yesterday 5th Ward City Councilman John Friend, CPA has confirmed to the City County Observer that he will not seek another term as 5th Ward City Councilman. The prominent but sometimes out spoken Democrat is not retiring from local politics, though. He will be serving as Treasurer of State Representative Gail Riecken’s campaign for Mayor of Evansville.

His skills as a CPA and past successful political fundraiser skills make him a welcome addition to the “Riecken For Mayor” campaign committee. Many well-known Democrats are hailing Mr. Friend’s decision to join the “Riecken for Mayor” campaign as a major step toward solidifying the level of party unity that they believe will sweep them to victory in November. Political insiders also consider Councilman Friends announcement to be a positive political bomb shell for the “Gail Riecken For Mayor” campaign.
Mr. Friend has assured the City County Observer that he will continue to use his forensic accounting background to continue to monitor the City of Evansville deficit spending habits in his last year on City Council. He also will be working to pass an ordinance that will assure proper vetting of firms who receive public funding, in order to prevent more problems for the City of the kind that arose from failure to vet EarthCare and, more recently, the City and HCW failed Downtown Hotel project.
In addition to that effort and fulfilling his City Council duties, he shall be undertaking the Herculean task of handling the finances of what promises to be one of the hardest-fought and historic Mayoral contests in this city will ever see. Political insiders in both parties have acknowledged that the Winnecke campaign has amassed an impressive political war chest, and it holds the fundraising advantage because of incumbency. Many Riecken supporters acknowledge that Mayoral candidate Gail Riecken Campaign Chairman, attorney Mike Woods and Councilman John Friend, CPA have their work cut out for them, but are optimistic about the prospects of them funding a winning campaign, based on initial reactions from both large and small donors.
Mr. Friend stated “he is extremely pleased that he shall be in a key position to help raise campaign funds needed to help elected Evansville first female Mayor in the 200 plus year history of Evansville”.
This is developing story and we shall bring any updates as they happen.
 
            Please take time and vote in todays “Readers Poll”.

Copyright 2015 City County Observer. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

RECYCLE DAY

0
Date: 1/17/2015 8:00 AM – 12:00 PM
Location: 4-H Center
201 E Boonville-New Harmony Rd

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*

Dates & Locations subject to change.

Vanderburgh County Recent Booking Records

0

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 January 16, 2015

0

SPONSORED BY DEFENSE ATTORNEY IVAN ARNAEZ.

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

EPD Activity Report

Arts Council sends out Call to Artists for Black and White exhibit, Art Noir

0

The Arts Council is pleased to present the annual exhibit Art Noir, a black and white juried exhibit. The Arts Council will be accepting artist registrations through January 27th. Art Noir will open with a reception on February 13thfrom 5-7pm, and will run through March 13th at the Arts Council of Southwestern Indiana’s Bower-Suhrheinrich Foundation Gallery, located at 318 Main Street in downtown Evansville. This year’s juror is Diane Albin from Owensboro, KY. View the juror’s work at www.behance.net/dalbin.

The exhibit calendar and award information is listed below. For more information and to view the full prospectus, please visit www.artswin.org.

Exhibit Calendar:

Registration Deadline: January 27th

Artwork Drop-off: February 6th

Juried: February 9th

Artist Notification Email: February 10th

Non-accepted Pick-up: February 11th

Opening Reception: February 13, 5-7pm

Exhibit Closes: March 13th

Artwork Pick-up: March 13th

*All dates work within the Gallery’s regularly scheduled hours (10am-4pm), with the exception of the opening reception on February 13th (5-7pm).

 

Awards:

Best of Show: $300

1st Place- $200

2nd Place- $150

3rd Place- $50

Juror: Dianne Albin, Owensboro, KY www.behance.net/dalbin

“We are constantly changed by life, and as an artist I am challenged not only to respond to what is most obvious, but also to those deeper, richer aspects that most define what it means to be human.”

Location and Contact Information:

Arts Council of Southwestern Indiana

318 Main St. Ste. 101

Evansville, IN 47708

(812) 422-2111

info@artswin.org

artswin.org

Teen injured in stage collapse loses challenge of tort liability

0

Jennifer Nelson for www.theindianalawyer.com

A Cincinnati girl who was injured when a concert stage collapsed in 2011 at the Indiana State Fair and later declined to settle with the state lost her challenge that the tort claim caps are unconstitutional, ruled the Indiana Court of Appeals Wednesday.

Jordyn Polet was one of dozens injured when high winds moved through Indianapolis, causing the stage to collapse prior to a concert. Seven people were killed. The state settled with all victims, except Polet, and those settlements exhausted the $5 million tort cap. She was initially offered $1,690.75 for her injuries, but she declined. After she decided to sue, the Indiana Legislature appropriated an additional $6 million to compensate the victims. Because she did not settle, Polet was not entitled to any of that money.

The trial court denied her motion for partial summary judgment on the state’s affirmative defense it was immune under the ITCA. She argued in J.P. et al. v. Mid American Sound, et al., 49A04-1405-CT-207, that the limits on the state’s aggregate tort liability as applied to her violate the state constitution’s open courts and equal privileges guarantees.

Regarding her open courts claim, Polet characterizes herself as “a claimant with a valid, accrued cause of action authorized by statute,” but who “has no practical means of asserting it” just because she declined a settlement offer she felt was inadequate and because the state paid the maximum amount of its liability to others.

The state notes Polet was not precluded from pursuing a claim; in fact, she did and the state offered her a settlement. It was not lack of access to the courts that prevented Polet’s recovery – it was the statutory limit on the state’s liability.

“The constitution does not preclude the General Assembly from modifying or eliminating a common law tort, but Section 12 requires legislation that deprives a person of a complete tort remedy must be a rational means to achieve a legitimate legislative goal,” Judge Melissa May wrote. “The ITCA aggregate liability cap is a rational means to achieve a legitimate legislative goal, and we cannot find its application to Polet unconstitutional.”

The appeals court also found that Polet was not in a class of persons treated unequally compared to other claimants seeking relief under the ITCA. In limiting the amount recoverable by individual and by incident, the ITCA applies equally to all claims and all incidents. Both categories defined by Polet – people who are victims of the state’s negligence that results in injuries to multiple people and people who are the sole victims of the state’s negligent acts – are subject to the individual and aggregate caps. Therefore, there is not a classification in this case that implicates the equal privileges clause, May wrote.

COA reverses sentence based on a ‘suspect enhancement’

0

Jennifer Nelson for www.theindiana;lawyer.com

Finding that a judge was clearly influenced by a jury’s not-guilty decision on another drug charge when he sentenced a defendant for cocaine possession, the Indiana Court of Appeals ordered the man’s sentence reduced.

Corey Phelps was charged with Class A felony dealing in cocaine and Class C felony possession of cocaine. The jury only found him guilty of the Class C felony. At sentencing, Marion Superior Judge Daniel Pflum stated that if Phelps had had a bench trial, he would have found the defendant guilty of dealing in cocaine, as Phelps was “clearly” guilty. The judge then sentenced Phelps to eight years, the maximum sentence for possession of cocaine.

“Here, the State does not dispute that the trial court expressed disagreement with the jury verdict. Instead, the State argues the trial court appropriately enhanced Phelps’s sentence by relying on other proper aggravating circumstances. We believe, however, that the presence of aggravating circumstances justifying an enhanced sentence does not wash away the stain left by a trial court’s blatant disagreement with the jury verdict at sentencing,” Judge Margret Robb wrote in Corey Phelps v. State of Indiana, 49A02-1401-CR-30.

The appearance of fairness and the need to promote public confidence in the integrity of the judicial system are considerations carrying as much weight as any other, Robb continued, noting the sentence in this case is suspect.

Instead of ordering Phelps to be sentenced to the advisory sentence of four years, the COA remanded for the trial court to sentence him to six years and to correct the order of

Pet of the Week

0

My name is Baylor! I’m about a year old, female, and I’m very affectionate. I am a beautiful cat that even gets along well with other felines! You can take me home spayed, microchipped, and vaccinated for only $30! Visit www.vhslifesaver.org for adoption details!