EPD Activity Report
SPONSORED BY DEFENSE ATTORNEY IVAN ARNAEZ.
DON’T GO TO COURT ALONE. CALL IVAN ARNAEZ @ 812-424-6671.
Don’t Let the Warm Weather Leave You Snakebitten
If bitten, call 911 but keep the snake away from the ER
SUNDAY, May 25, 2014 (HealthDay News) — The arrival of warm weather means that snakes will be making their appearance, so you should take steps to prevent snakebites, an expert says.
The University of Alabama at Birmingham recently treated its first snakebite case of the season, noted Dr. Janyce Sanford, chair of the university’s department of emergency medicine.
“That is a usual pattern. As soon as the weather starts to warm up, snakes begin to get active and we begin seeing a bite or two. Still, we only see a few each spring, and people have a much greater chance of being stung by a bee or wasp or being bitten by a tick than being bitten by a snake,” Sanford said in a university news release.
If you’re in the woods or near rivers and creeks, keep an eye out for snakes and wear boots and long pants, she warned. It’s also a good idea to carry a cellphone.
“Get to an emergency department as quickly as you safely can, and that can often be accomplished by calling 911,” Sanford said. “Snap a picture of the snake with the cell phone if possible, but leave the snake behind. The last thing we need in a crowded emergency room is a snake, dead or alive.”
Emergency doctors do not need to see the snake that caused the bite. A large number of bites are dry — with no venom injected — or are from nonpoisonous snakes, Sanford noted. By monitoring the wound for a few hours, doctors can tell if venom is present, and appropriate antivenin can then be given to the patient.
Most snakebites are not fatal. Those at higher risk include the elderly, very young children and people with underlying medical problems, Sanford said.
More information
The U.S. National Library of Medicine has more about snakebites.
Vanderburgh County Recent Booking Reports
|
||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||
|
Commentary: At last, healthy signs
By Dan Carpenter
TheStatehouseFile.com
Gov. Mike Pence’s new health insurance proposal is potentially – potentially – good news, and there’s more good news in the reaction of some of his prominent critics, who’ve elected to accentuate the positive rather than dwell on the faults.
Faults are not hard to find. An expanded Healthy Indiana plan as laid out by Pence would be more cumbersome, more given to surprises and less generous and even less respectful toward the working poor than the broadening of Medicaid, a huge federal gift that many states, some headed by Pence’s fellow Republicans, have taken and run with.
Commentary button in JPG – no shadowWhether the state’s homegrown alternative is accepted or rejected by the federal government, months already have been lost by hundreds of thousands of uninsured Hoosiers and the hospitals that must carry those who don’t choose to go untreated. Many more months will evaporate as Pence and the feds perform their kabuki dance over Healthy Indiana, which the state was given till Dec. 31 to continue in its current, profoundly limited, form.
Still, the wall appears to have come down, even if the debris from it frustrates access to Pence on the part of those who’ve pledged to work with him to break the political stalemate that’s keeping Indiana stuck in the station. Obamacare will continue to be the anathema that rallies the GOP primary troops and applies the litmus test to presidential hopefuls such as Pence; but under whatever cover they can muster, the men and women in charge of vital services to the needy in their sovereign states are acknowledging that the Affordable Care Act is reality, is working, and is the best, essentially the only, deal in town.
Pence has been accused from the right of accepting Obamacare in everything but name and slapping some Hoosier lipstick on the pig. The more eager-to-please advocates on the other side submit that he’s at least gotten into the neighborhood of expanded Medicaid – close enough, perhaps, that the feds can get him to the point of the feds’ satisfaction. The cynics on that other side offer the worst-case scenario: that he’s bought more time, time the ailing needy in Indiana can’t afford, and will hold the Alamo with national attention until national office no longer beckons.
I prefer to think that the train is chugging, that the momentum fueled by moral obligation and no-brainer economics will not be stopped, and that Pence in some form of collaboration with Washington and the Indiana health-care industry will see his signature accomplishment as governor emulate that of the president whose name he dares not speak except in vain. Delicious irony, that. Then he can do his best Mitt Romney in the primary debates and insist he’s come up with a homegrown health-care plan that the party ought to adopt. And that’s fine, Governor. Whatever. Just get this thing done. People are dying.
Dan Carpenter is a freelance writer, contributor to The Indianapolis Business Journal and author of “Indiana Out Loud.â€
Commentary: In homage to those who served
By John Krull
TheStatehouseFile.com
They stand, one by one, as their names and ranks are called, old warriors at home in the embrace of family.
The old warriors, my father among them, listen as the school’s head recites their years of service. For many of them, time has left its marks. Their faces are etched with lines and their hair is a thin gray going to silver. Their postures are a little more stooped. Their gaits can be unsteady when they walk.
Commentary button in JPG – no shadowIn some cases, it has been nearly 70 years since they first heard the bugle’s call.
They are back now to pay their respects both to fallen comrades and to family.
Each year at my son’s school the sixth grade has a Memorial Day program at which the school honors both the alumni who lost their lives in this country’s service and the service of grandparents, parents, aunts, uncles, siblings and cousins of current students.
The program begins with instrumental versions of patriotic songs, then a call of the roll when the aged veterans stand to be recognized. As each name is called, the veteran and the sixth-grader to whom the veteran is related stand.
When the last name is read, the applause that sweeps the auditorium is prolonged, emphatic and heartfelt.
As the crowd claps for them, my father and the other veterans stand with their heads bowed. As applause pounds on, my son stares at his grandfather, his eyes wide with wonder.
From there, the program moves to first a recitation of the poem “In Flanders Field†and then a version set to music, with the sweet voices of the sixth-grade choir adding poignancy to the lyrics:
We are the Dead. Short days ago
We lived, felt dawn, saw sunset glow,
Loved and were loved, and now we lie
In Flanders fields.
Take up our quarrel with the foe:
To you from failing hands we throw
The torch; be yours to hold it high.
If ye break faith with us who die
We shall not sleep, though poppies grow
In Flanders fields.
For much of the song, my father keeps his eyes locked upon his grandson, who sings from the back row. As the song reaches its end, Dad bows his head once more.
Dad enlisted in the U.S. Army at the end of World War II. He was in the Engineer Corps and spent the bulk of his time in service in the Aleutian Islands. He didn’t fight Nazis, the Italians or the Japanese, but rather boredom, confusion and loneliness.
We tend to sentimentalize the experiences of the Americans who grew up in my father’s era by calling them “the greatest generation†– as if we can minimize the disruption war and other hardships brought to their lives by saying something nice about them. It is as if by calling them great we can pretend they didn’t feel frightened or desperate or depressed when they were pulled away from family and friends and sent off to serve with the uneasy knowledge that they might not come back.
I have a photo of my father when he first entered the army, when he was just a few years older than my son is now. In the picture, Dan looks young, fit, innocent – and so much like my son that it both bewilders me and breaks my heart.
I look at my young son, whose life’s focus now is on playing as much baseball as he can with his friends – a passion he shares with his grandfather – and I wonder what it cost my Dad to go away as he did.
And I wonder what it cost so many others who went away and did not come home.
The sweet voices sing and recite, each word a tribute to sacrifice, and at the end the sixth grade class thanks the veterans who are their grandparents, parents and relatives for serving.
And as that thanks is offered, a single word is thought but not spoken by the others in attendance.
Amen.
John Krull is director of Franklin College’s Pulliam School of Journalism, host of “No Limits†WFYI 90.1 Indianapolis and publisher of TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.
Fifth Annual Honoring Women Veterans Conference at UE Set for June 14
The annual Honoring Women Veterans Conference at the University of Evansville is set for Saturday, June 14 from 8:30-3:30 p.m. in Eykamp Hall in UE’s Ridgway University Center. This is a day of education, fun and camaraderie for women who have served and currently serve in the United States military. The deadline for women veterans to register for this free conference is Friday, May 30.
This is the fifth year for the conference that has in the past drawn participants who ranged in age from 18 to 103 years old. Some attendees have traveled from as far away as Oklahoma and Washington, D.C. to attend this event.
The day’s activities will include informative sessions on military benefits, networking and career information, and an afternoon of facials, manicures, messages and more.
The day’s guest speaker will be Lt. Col. (Ret.) Janis Nark, a 26 year Army Corp veteran and motivational speaker. A combat nurse in Vietnam and during Desert Storm, she became a professional motivational speaker following her retirement from the Army. Nark is a published author in more than 12 books, including four editions of Chicken Soup for the Soul. She has shared the podium with such dignitaries as General Colin Powell and President Bill Clinton. As a speaker, she has stories of laughter and tears, and knows and relates to stress and change.
The University of Evansville is proud to host the Honoring Women Veterans Conference and to celebrate the dedicated women who have served our country. UE has been consistently ranked by US News and World Report as a top Midwestern university and voted “Military Friendly” by GI Jobs Magazine.
Military veterans may register online at www.evansville.edu/veteransaffairs or by calling the Vet Center at 812-473-5993 or UE Coordinator of Veteran Affairs Cherie Leonhardt at 812-488-2141.
Majority finds man entrapped to patronize prostitute
Jennifer Nelson for www.thweindianalawyer.com
The Indiana Court of Appeals reversed a misdemeanor conviction for patronizing a prostitute, with two judges ruling the state was unable to rebut the man’s entrapment defense by showing he had a history of trying to buy sex.
Kenneth Griesemer was convicted of Class A misdemeanor patronizing a prostitute based on his interaction with an undercover detective posing as a prostitute on Washington Street in Indianapolis. He saw her, circled back in his car and asked the detective if she needed a ride. Detective Tabatha McLemore declined, saying she was trying to make money. She asked how much money he had and then told him what she would perform for $20. She said he could pick her up down the street, where he was arrested by police. During this interaction, Griesemer simply nodded in response to McLemore’s questions.
Griesemer argued in Kenneth Griesemer v. State of Indiana, 49A04-1308-CR-382, that his conviction should be reversed because he was entrapped. The judges found he established police inducement, so the burden of proof shifted to the state to demonstrate that the conduct was not the result of police efforts or that Griesemer had a predisposition to commit the crime.
The state argued Shelton v. State, 679 N.E.2d 499, 502 (Ind. Ct. App. 1997), supports that police merely afforded Griesemer an opportunity to commit a crime, so the state may not have induced his criminal behavior. In Shelton, two brothers were charged with road hunting for stopping their vehicle on the side of the road and shooting at a deer decoy set up by police.
“We cannot, however, hold that the facts herein are analogous to those in Shelton. Detective McLemore was not merely standing on the side of the road dressed like a prostitute. She was the first to mention money, a sex act, and the possibility of exchanging the two. ForShelton to be analogous, the deer decoy would have needed a sign or recording announcing to passers-by that they were welcome to shoot at the deer for twenty dollars,†Judge Melissa May wrote. “As the deer decoy contained no such explicit invitation to commit criminal behavior, we decline the State’s invitation to follow Shelton. Detective McLemore’s question and statements were sufficient to induce Griesemer to commit patronizing a prostitute.â€
The state did not present any evidence to demonstrate Griesemer was predisposed to patronizing a prostitute, so it did not rebut his defense of entrapment, the majority held.
Chief Judge Nancy Vaidik dissented, writing, “I believe that the State proved that Griesemer was predisposed to commit the offense because the State established that Griesemer was not reluctant to commit the offense.â€
She did not agree with the majority’s suggestion that in order to demonstrate predisposition, the state needed to show Griesemer has a history of patronizing prostitutes or is familiar with the jargon of the prostitution business.
Stephanie Brinkerhoff-Riley To Be Aired On ME TV
This weeks show special guest will be Stephanie Brinkerhoff-Riley 3rd Ward City Council member. She explains in detail why see decided to release a recording to the public concerning the SBOA exit conference. The Tri-StateVoices show was created by the City County Observer, recorded and edited by Wood and Woods law firm and produced by ME TV TRI-STATE.
The shows host is well known lawyer Mike Woods. The Tri-StateVoices program features current topics and issues of importance to this region. This public affairs program is 30 minutes in length. The City County Observer ,Woods and Woods, Tri-StateVoices show will air on ME TV TRI-STATE each Sunday at 11:30 am and can viewed on the following TV Channels: Channels 36.1 and 20.1. WOW 105. Insight -186 and Time Warner -3 and 14. If you miss the TRI-STATE VOICES show on ME TV TRI-STATE you may view it on the City County Observer newly creative “MOLE TV†video channel located on this site.