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EPD to debut “Life on The Beat” community outreach program October 22nd

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The Evansville Police Department will be hosting their first “Life on The Beat” program on Wednesday, October 22.The program will be held at Fairlawn School from 6:00pm-8:00pm.
Life on The Beat will be an opportunity for residents to play an active role in reality based scenarios. However, they will be asked to play the role of the police officer. This will give people a different perspective on why police officers do the things they do.
The goal of the program is not to teach everyone how to be a police officer. The goal is to open the lines of communication between citizens and law enforcement. Following each scenario, there will be an open discussion. Those discussions will help dispel misconceptions and shed some light on our profession.
The program is open to the public and is free to attend. You do not need to pre-register. There is not an age limit to attend, but scenario participants must be at least 18 years of age or older.

Several community events causing road closures on Saturday, October 18th

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“Voegel-Spring Park Association Block Party” on October 18th, 2014 from 11:00 a.m. until 8:00 p.m. Closing North Kelsey Ave between Columbia Street and Oregon Street.

“Central High School Marching Band Regionals” on October 18th, 2014 from 6:00 a.m. until 10:00 p.m. Closing Old Post Road from Berry Lane to First Ave.

“ICEMEN OPENER EVENT” for October 18th, 2014 from 10:00 a.m. until 1:00 a.m. October 19th, 2014. Closing Main Street from 5th Street to 6th Street.

“March for Jesus” October 18, 2014 from 12:45 pm until 4:30 pm. Begin at Riverside & Ohio St. Walk on sidewalk of Riverside Drive to Kids Kingdom.

House Republican 2015 Legislative Agenda

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Accountability is our Responsibility
House Republicans Release 2015 Legislative Agenda

Indiana House Speaker Brian C. Bosma (R-Indianapolis), along with members of the House Republican Caucus, unveiled the 2015 House Republican Legislative Agenda this week.

The House Republican caucus outlined their plan to increase accountability for all Hoosiers while strengthening Indiana in four major categories: Budget, Education, Ethics and Public Safety.

“As elected leaders, we must be accountable to Hoosiers – accountability is our responsibility. I look forward to working together this legislative session to address these issues,” said Speaker Bosma.

Click here to read the full press release.


Click here to watch a video of the House Republican 2015 Legislative Agenda

To see further details of the 2015 Legislative Agenda, click here.

EVSC Board of School Trustees Candidates’ Forum to be held on October 28, 2014

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The Evansville Teachers Association, Evansville Area Council PTA, League of Women Voters, and Voices for Public Schools are partnering to host an EVSC Board of School Trustees Candidates’ Forum on Tuesday, October 28 from 6-8 PM in the Browning Room at the Central Library downtown. During the moderated forum, audience members will have the opportunity to ask questions of the candidates and hear their responses. District 1 candidates Chris Kiefer and Jan Stricklin, District 2 candidates Mike Duckworth and Andy Guarino, and at-large candidates Bix Branson, Doug Chinn, Rance Ossenberg, Tony Ricketts, and Patty Swanson have all accepted the invitation to participate in the forum. The forum is open to the public.

VANDERBURGH COUNTY FELONY CHARGES

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SPONSORED BY DEFENSE ATTORNEY IVAN ARNAEZ.
DON’T GO TO COURT ALONE. CALL IVAN ARNAEZ @ 812-424-6671.
Below is a list of felony cases that were filed by the Vanderburgh County Prosecutor’s Office on Thursday, October 16, 2014

Lamont Barnes          Carrying a Handgun without a License-Level 5 Felony

Keith Davis               Possession of a Narcotic Drug-Level 6 Felony

James Dixey                 Resisting Law Enforcement-Level 6 Felony
Operating a Vehicle as an Habitual Traffic Violator-Level 6 Felony
Resisting Law Enforcement-Class A Misdemeanor

Logan Fisk                       Theft-Level 6 Felony

Mark Head                     Operating a Vehicle While Intoxicated-Level 6 Felony

Christopher Mosby       Disorderly Conduct-Level 6 Felony
Operating a Vehicle While Intoxicated-Class C Misdemeanor

Lindsey Norris               Auto Theft-Level 6 Felony
Stephen Rudisill           Domestic Battery-Level 6 Felony
Resisting Law Enforcement-Class A Misdemeanor
Battery-Class B Misdemeanor

Austin Taylor               Burglary-Level  4 Felony
Theft-Level 6 Felony

Katherine Utley           Causing Serious Bodily Injury when Operating a Motor Vehicle While
Intoxicated-Level 6 Felony
Becky Edwards          Theft-Level 6 Felony

Michael Kempf              Auto Theft-Level 6 Felony

Dejwane Smith              Unlawful Possession of a Firearm by a Serious Violent Felon-Level 4 Felony
Intimidation-Level 6 Felony

Brandon Stevenson  Auto Theft-Level 6 Felony
Resisting Law Enforcement-Class A Misdemeanor

Michael Turpin            Theft-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.

UNANIMOUS FOR MURDER, A NOVEL CHAPTER SEVEN

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GAVEL GAMUT
By Jim Redwine
(Week of 20 October, 2014)

UNANIMOUS FOR MURDER, A NOVEL
CHAPTER SEVEN

Judge Eagleson drove slowly into the courthouse parking lot. He knew the only topic would be the murders of Arnold and Lorena Dalton. But he and his staff had other important matters to address.
As he exited his vehicle he completed the ritual he had unintentionally started after first learning of the events of October and November 1878. He found he had to look at the southeast quadrant of the village square where the old jail and the locust trees used to stand. And he could not avoid wondering every time if old Dan Harrison was still where the outhouse used to be.
But that was then and this was now and people would be looking to Eagleson to provide stability. A loss of such a promising young couple as the Daltons would cause the county shock and fear. This was not a place that expected or accepted interference with the myth of bucolic bliss. With the Ohio River on the south, the Wabash River on the west and miles of fertile farmland as a surrounding buffer, the conservative, virtually pure white Christian citizens of the extreme southwestern tip of Indiana relied on uninterrupted sameness.
Eagleson knew he should concentrate on reassuring his staff and the community, but as he noted with self-disdain, his mind often called forth unrelated clutter even at moments of intense stress. Instead of focusing on preparing for a possible grand jury or analyzing an application for a search warrant of some suspect’s home, Eagleson’s mind served up Posey County’s most famous doctor victim murder case. It had occurred almost two hundred years before young Dr. Dalton was drowned in his bathtub.
Eagleson tried to suppress his musings from 1990 when he had first published his theory that Mark Twain had used the 1818 Posey County murder of young Dr. Thomas Moore Parke as the inspiration for the murder of Dr. Robinson, “so young and promising”, by Injun Joe in Tom Sawyer. The similarities of Twain’s fictional small hometown of St. Petersburg to Mt. Vernon and the grave robbing plot that led to both murders was striking. Eagleson’s familiarity with the Posey County case and his long time affinity for the writings of Samuel Clemens worked in tandem on Eagleson’s perception. And now, when he needed to be on task, he could not set aside the comparison among young doctors Robinson, Parke and Dalton.
John Eagleson had tried to exorcise this quirk of having nonsense or unrelated matter pop into his head at times that called for serious thought. But after years of failing to seal out extraneous notions including often insipid humor at such events as funerals and murder trials, he had settled for the ability to keep his oblique thinking to himself and his expression sober. For now he must gird his loins up about him and face the plethora of questions others assumed he could answer.
“Good morning, Judge. I guess you heard?”
“Isn’t it awful?”
“Who would want to hurt such a nice couple?”
“What do you think Judge, was it robbery? You knew Lorena was pregnant?”
“I just can’t believe it.”
And these comments did not even get Eagleson past the Clerk’s Office. He still had a worried court staff to reassure.
“Good morning, Judge. Did the prosecutor contact you over the weekend? Are they going to need an initial hearing today?”
“Judge, do I need to get the summonses out for a Grand Jury? How many do you want me to call?”
Eagleson proceeded up the four flights of stairs, thirteen each, to his chambers on the top floor of his one hundred and thirty-eight year old courthouse. Another of his bemused thought infarctions that frequently popped up was the number of steps equaling four rendezvous with fate. As the Nineteenth Century masterpiece exuded symbolism, the Judge doubted this was coincidence. And when he had discovered his great, great grandfather had helped build the Italianate edifice, he connected with his ancestor’s gallows humor.
He opened the heavy, solid walnut door to his chambers and stepped into refuge and history. The furniture represented an unbroken legacy from 1816 to the computer on his golden poplar desk. Hand hewn cabinets by German American craftsmen containing artifacts of famous Posey County legal matters made the room a working museum. Eagleson recognized his long-time tenure there was but another passing through as that of the earlier judges who had made and preserved this sanctuary. But he could not fight off the non-sequitur thought that he was just another antique, albeit one not as comely as the furniture. Enough! Perhaps he should return to the disagreeable task at hand.
Eagleson hated meetings. They invariably ended up with one or two people taking on whatever the problem might be while the rest of the group, in this case, Eagleson’s staff, would have simply wasted another hour of their lives. However, he knew he had to gather the staff to reinforce the few rules he used to run the court: No talking out of school and absolute neutrality as to cases, the parties and attorneys involved. He called for his long time court reporter and asked her to assemble the staff in the courtroom.
When he entered his courtroom the staff was seated in the jury box. His four female court reporters, four probation officers, and his new bailiff waited until he spoke.
“Let’s make sure no one talks about any of our matters including the Dalton situation. Okay? That’s all. Thanks.”
The bailiff and one of the female probation officers were still sitting in the jury box after the rest of the staff had returned to their work.
“Judge, is that it?” asked the bailiff.
“Yeah, that’s all. Just do your jobs and don’t try to be a cop or a media shill.”
Eagleson had hired the huge young African American after his long-time former bailiff had decided to hang it up and work on his golf game full time.
“Jack, this was your first jury trial. I know you spent the week with Mrs. Dalton and probably got to know her. I hope you aren’t too upset.”
“Yeah, Jack, I assume the judge told you what he told me last month when I was hired. ‘Keep court matters secret and show up for work regardless of the weather.’ But, Judge, are all your staff meetings so long? I didn’t have time to finish my vitamin drink.”
Eagleson looked at his new probation officer as she rose gracefully and extended to her full height of six feet. Eagleson had been impressed by her resume that indicated she had played basketball at Northeastern Oklahoma Junior College in Tonkawa, Oklahoma. And her olive complexion and black hair indicated she might be of Native American ancestry. Eagleson smiled to himself to think he may have hired the Posey Circuit Court’s first African American and first Native American both within the same month.
Unfortunately for them, that was also the month of a salacious rape trial and now a double murder that included the foreperson of the jury. Well, welcome to his world. Maybe their youth would defend them from the slime that sometimes oozed out of the legal environment. Eagleson remembered how little such things had affected him as a young lawyer. He had remained detached from the people whose lives he was processing. But now it seemed he was constantly impacted by the flotsam and jetsam he used to merely observe. Perhaps this new generation was made of different stuff than the leftovers from the 1960’s.
“Frances, you and Jack will soon learn nothing worthwhile comes out of any meeting. It always comes down to one or two people carrying the load so why kid ourselves and waste everyone’s time. Unfortunately, the Judicial Commission can make all of our lives miserable with their arcane, inane rules that they never seem to understand do not apply well to rural jurisdictions such as ours. So, from time to time, I have a meeting to remind myself of the realities of running a court in Posey County with a Sword of Damocles dangling from Indianapolis. I will be upstairs.”
Eagleson climbed the stairs to his chambers on the third floor, shut the door and stared at the stack of files on his massive antique desk. Being the circuit judge in a small rural county meant each day he had to address numerous diverse matters. Before he could synthesize last week’s rape case and yesterday’s murders, he would have to process this week’s ad hoc mixture of probate, domestic relations, juvenile and civil plenary matters as well as the constant interruptions from phone calls and staff questions. Though it seemed each case required special expertise, the judge had come to the cynical conclusion all it took to be a good judge was the ability to sign one’s name and the courage to accept the responsibility for doing so. As he often replied when asked about being judge, “Well, it’s better than having a real job.”
Unfortunately, every now and then it became a real job, and this looked like it might be one of those times. How was he going to maintain perspective and objectivity on his upcoming cases with the specter of Damon Grange and the murdered Daltons encroaching upon his every thought? One way was to immerse himself in the fat file that contained the pleadings for the next criminal case that was set to begin in one week; the State of Indiana versus Malcolm Settles ought to get him back on track.

Vectren extends apologies for billing, meter reading error

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Vectren is making customers aware of a billing issue that is beginning to surface in Evansville-area media and social media channels. About 7,000 customers in southwestern Indiana have experienced 2 to 4 consecutive months of estimated reads over the summer. Beginning in August/September – and continuing on through this past week, actual meter readings were obtained – as such, customers are currently experiencing higher-than-normal bills that reflect these actual reads.

Why are the estimated bills higher than normal?
Unfortunately, an issue was discovered where estimated bill amounts were lower than they should have been. As such, when the actual read is occurring, the energy consumption from the hottest months of the year was not accurately accounted for in the estimates from months prior.

Why are there consecutive months of estimates?
Estimated meter readings can occur; often because of weather issues, inability to access the meter or other unforeseen circumstances. However, up to 4 months of consecutive estimates is not common. Vectren began the process of changing meter reading vendors this summer. The prior vendor’s contract expired Aug. 31. Unfortunately, the route completion performance of the prior meter reading contractor suffered as their contract came to an end.

What has Vectren done to communicate with/help customers?
Once the issue was discovered in early September, Vectren put a formal communication plan in place. This included delivering a bill message to all impacted customers and directly calling the approximately 400 customers who would be seeing a bill increase of $250 or more. Vectren apologized to these customers for the inconvenience, as this was no fault of the customer. Vectren is providing options for payment arrangements whereby affected customers can pay any unmanageable amounts in smaller increments over a period of time (with no interest, nor fees).

Please know steps are in place to ensure this won’t be repeated again, including correcting the artificially-low estimated bill calculation and quickly onboarding a new meter reading vendor to minimize the number of estimated reads in the future.

http://www.vectren2.com/evision/statement%20on%20estimated%20bills.pdf

Vanderburgh County Recent Booking Reports

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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 October 17, 2014

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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

Old National Bank presents “Boo at the Zoo” at Mesker Park Zoo & Botanic Garden

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Boo at the Zoo kicks off this Friday, October 17, 2014 and runs Friday through Sunday over two consecutive weekends. This annual “not-so-scary” Halloween themed event is popular with families as attendees are encouraged to dress in costume as they explore the Treat Trail on zoo grounds. The event also offers live entertainment including Magic Shows, Storytelling, Photo Ops, Moonlite Tram, Animal Encounters, Tent of Terror and new this year- Crocosaurus.
The zoo will have last admittance at 2 p.m. for regular zoo visitors during the two weekends of the event. Gates re-open at 5 p.m. for Boo at the Zoo ticketholders. Advanced ticket purchase is recommended to avoid entry lines. Tickets are $6.00 for zoo members age one and up and $8.00 for non-members age one and up. Tickets can be purchased at the zoo gift shop during normal zoo hours or online at www.meskerparkzoo.com. Boo at the Zoo runs October 17-18 and October 24-26. The event runs from 5 to 8 p.m. on Friday and Saturday and 5 to 7 p.m. on Sunday.

Mesker Park Zoo & Botanic Garden is open 365 days a year. For additional information on Mesker Park Zoo & Botanic Garden, including details on zoo membership and admission prices, visit www.meskerparkzoo.com.