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Vanderburgh County Recent Booking Reports
Commentary: David Letterman moves on
By John Krull
TheStatehouseFile.comÂ
INDIANAPOLIS – Nearly 30 years ago, I spotted David Letterman at a store in Indianapolis.
It was when he was still on the climb – back before the move to CBS, before his epic (and losing) battle with Jay Leno to succeed
John Krull, publisher, TheStatehouseFile.com
Johnny Carson on “The Tonight Show,†back when he was the brash young troublemaker who wasn’t happy unless he was kicking television’s fourth wall down.
I’d liked his humor from the beginning, the mockery and self-mockery he used to deflate pomposities, including his own. The whole premise of his programs, after all, was that they were television shows and shouldn’t be taken too seriously.
Three decades later, I still laugh at a running joke he rolled out about Walter Mondale, Jimmy Carter’s vice president and the 1984 Democratic presidential candidate. In person, Mondale is bright and charming, but on TV he generated an excitement level that registered somewhere between porridge and oatmeal.
Letterman said that was because people didn’t know the real Mondale, who had a fascinating history. Then, taking a riff from the old Johnny Cash song, he said that Mondale once had “shot a man in Reno just to watch him die.â€
The whole idea was so absurd – and so funny. I laughed until I rolled off the sofa.
For at least a week after that, every time Letterman made reference to Mondale, he said, “you know, the presidential candidate who shot a man in Reno just to watch him die.â€
Every time, it cracked me up. In just a few words, Letterman managed to puncture not just Mondale’s placid dullness but that of the blow-dried and carefully coiffed political world itself – and give a hint of the endless and surreal scrambling just below the settled surface.
And there, three decades ago, Letterman was at a small shop in Broad Ripple, not far from where he grew up and went to high school. He was with his then-girlfriend and writing partner Merrill Markoe.
I thought about going over to introduce myself and tell him how much I enjoyed his show, but something stopped me.
He and Markoe clearly were in the middle of a spat. They weren’t loud about it or undignified in any way, but all the signs were there. They were leaning in close and talking in hushed tones. Their brows were furrowed, their shoulders tensed and their lips pursed. Markoe kept tapping Letterman’s forearm with her forefinger, almost as if she were pounding out a drum solo.
Yup, they were having a fight.
Much as I wanted to go over and shake his hand and tell him that it was great to see a guy from Indiana doing so well, I couldn’t help but put myself in his position. I couldn’t help but think how difficult it would be to break off in the middle of an argument with your significant other to smile, shake hands and be gracious with a total stranger.
So I hung back. Minutes later, Letterman and Markoe left the store, still quietly bickering. They broke up not long after.
Flash forward to now. Just a few days ago, Letterman announced he would retire in 2015.
His announcement produced a well-deserved wave of tributes and accolades. He was lauded as a man who revolutionized late-night television and a broadcasting hall-of-famer.
At the heart of that success was the quality that prompted me to respect his space so he could have a fight with his girlfriend without interruption all those years ago – an ability to elicit empathy. We laughed at his jokes, forgave his missteps, worried over his health troubles and overlooked his occasional cantankerousness because he seemed like one of us, just another Hoosier with a sharp wit who happened to step onto the big stage.
I missed my chance to shake Letterman’s hand 30 years ago. If I had it again, I’d tell him the truth – that I still laugh occasionally at jokes he’s probably forgotten he even told.
And I’d tell David Letterman that, thanks to him, I’ll always think of Walter Mondale as the political candidate “who shot a man in Reno just to watch him die.â€
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.
Indiana State Police Reminds the Public About the Dangers of Meth Lab Trash
SPONSORED BY DEFENSE ATTORNEY IVAN ARNAEZ.
 DON’T GO TO COURT ALONE. CALL IVAN ARNAEZ @ 812-424-6671.
favorable spring weather coming our way, people are taking advantage by walking, jogging and bike riding on our local roadways. The potential exists that some people may come across trash left behind by those who have manufactured methamphetamine (meth). The Indiana State Police Meth Suppression Section wants to remind citizens that this trash may contain chemicals that are toxic, flammable, corrosive, and acidic. The combination of these chemicals could cause an explosion, fire or burns if they come into direct contact with the skin. The Indiana State Police Meth Suppression Section, have identified some points for the public to keep in mind. • Meth cooks are using a variety of containers to manufacture their product. A popular container is the one and a half gallon gas can. These cans appear to be new and have been found along the roadside by unknowing people who believe that they have found a new gas can and end up with a working meth lab. • Other Items to be aware of include battery casings, Ziploc style bags, empty blister packs, and containers (pop-bottles, jars, etc.) that contain a granular material. They may or may not have a tube extending out of the top depending on whether it is a hydrochloric gas generator (HCL) or a one pot reaction. Both of these are extremely hazardous. • Be aware of any type of cylinder found in an odd place (middle of a field, ditch line, wooded area) that has a modified valve. The valve will typically be modified in some way and will have a bright blue color to it. These cylinders are used to store or transport anhydrous ammonia, which is an extremely dangerous gas when direct contact or inhalation has occurred. If someone comes across this type of trash, they should not handle it. Instead, contact the local Indiana State Police Post, which can be found at the following link: http://www.in.gov/isp/2382.htm . Any questions or concerns about meth can be directed to the Meth Suppression Section at (877) 855-METH or online at www.meth.in.gov.For full details, view this message on the web. |
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Arts Council sends out call for Inspired by Women
The Arts Council of Southwestern Indiana, in partnership with The Women’s Hospital, present the Inspired by Women juried exhibition. Currently, there is a call for entries at artswin.org/inspired-by-women. The deadline to enter work is April 25th by 4:00pm. The opening reception will be on Thursday, May 15th, from 5 p.m. – 7:30 p.m. on the third floor of The Women’s Hospital. The Arts Council staff will present the awards at approximately 6:15pm. This free event will be held at 4199 Gateway Boulevard in Newburgh.
The Inspired by Women all-female exhibition will showcase pieces of original artwork from artists in the region, including southwestern Indiana, southern Illinois and Kentucky. The public can view the artwork May 15th – June 12th, Monday – Friday from 8 a.m. – 6 p.m. on the third floor of The Women’s Hospital.
Winners will be announced during the reception on May 15th. The public is welcome to attend the free reception. For more information about this exhibition or other Arts Council events, call 812-422-2111 or visit their website at www.artswin.org.
Exhibit Calendar:
Exhibit Dates: May 15 – June 12
Opening Reception: May 15th, 5-7:30pm
Art Drop-off: May 14th (8am-4pm) at The Women’s Hospital (3rd Floor)
Art Pick-up: June 13th (8am – 4pm) at The Women’s Hospital (3rd Floor)
Media Links:
Prospectus Link http://artswin.org/inspired-by-women
Facebook Event Page http://www.facebook.com/events/244141069103553/
YouTube Video http://youtu.be/2-KvtdvgTeo
Official IU News Release about Med School Decision
April 11, 2014
News Release
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. — The Indiana University Board of Trustees has selected Skanska U.S. HealthRealty to build a multidisciplinary academic medical education and research center in downtown Evansville that will expand the IU School of Medicine’s presence in the city and dramatically increase medicine- and health-related educational opportunities for students in southwestern Indiana and northwestern Kentucky.
The $69.5 million, 170,000-square-foot project, which IU President Michael A. McRobbie recommended to the trustees today from among proposals at four locations in the Evansville area, includes $35 million in incentives from the city of Evansville.
The facility could be completed in late 2017 and will house programs from the IU School of Medicine and the IU School of Dentistry, as well as Ivy Tech Community College, the University of Southern Indiana and the University of Evansville. It is expected to serve as many as 1,800 students.
“Each of the proposals for this facility were extremely strong, making the recommendation difficult and reflecting the keen interest and outstanding level of support this project has generated from across the Evansville region,†McRobbie said. “Ultimately, however, the focus of our evaluation turned on what was in the best interest of our students and other parties who will benefit most from this facility.
“The centrally located downtown site, which is in close proximity to all the city’s major medical facilities, was the clear preference of our students and also received strong support from our academic and hospital partners. While the academic quality of the programs created by this expansion is our paramount concern, it is our hope that this project also will play an important role in the continued economic development of Evansville’s downtown.â€
McRobbie also praised the city’s leadership for its commitment to the downtown location through the creation of a Tax Increment Financing District that will provide $35 million in funding for the project. The facility will be in a six-block area and adjacent to a planned convention hotel. Evansville officials have estimated that the new School of Medicine facility could have an annual economic impact of as much as $340 million by 2020.
“This multi-institutional academic health science education campus will have a profound impact on the future of medicine, medical education and economic development throughout the region and beyond,†said Dr. Jay Hess, dean of the IU School of Medicine and vice president for clinical affairs at the university. “The educational and clinical partners involved in this project will play an important role in filling an acute need for physicians and other health care providers, improving access to the best possible patient care in a dramatically changing environment.â€
Established in 1972, the IU School of Medicine-Evansville is one of eight IU regional medical schools across Indiana. IU School of Medicine-Evansville was originally divided into two campuses that were consolidated into the current location on the University of Southern Indiana campus in 1994. The program will begin offering four-year medical education for the first time this summer and currently enrolls 46 students.
With the completion of the project, the School of Medicine’s facilities in the city will be consolidated into the downtown location. The new medical school complex will be adjacent to the main downtown Deaconess Clinic, close to Deaconess Hospital’s downtown campus and a short drive to St. Mary’s Medical Center, the Deaconess Gateway and Women’s Hospital in east Evansville.
“I am very pleased with the support that the academic, medical and broader community-at-large have consistently shown for expanding medical education in southwestern Indiana and northwestern Kentucky,†said Dr. Steven Becker, associate dean and director of IU School of Medicine-Evansville. “I look forward to continuing this important work with our academic and health care partners to create a world-class educational experience for our students.â€
Today’s decision by the trustees is the culmination of a review process that began in the summer of 2013 with an agreement among the four academic institutions that will house programs in the new facility. Indiana University issued a request for proposals in December 2013 and began reviewing the four qualifying proposals in February.
With the site selection complete, IU will now request the release of $2 million in funding from the Indiana Commission for Higher Education and the Indiana State Budget Committee, which was set aside in the state’s 2013 budget to be used for design planning. The three state-funded academic partners — IU, University of Southern Indiana and Ivy Tech — are expected to make a broader funding request from the state for construction of the facility during the 2015 legislative session, and if the money is appropriated and released, construction could begin by late next year.
All four academic partners will participate in programming at the facility and in the planning of their respective interior spaces. IU will coordinate the design and architecture work on the project.
IU Trustee Patrick Shoulders, an Evansville resident and partner in the law firm Ziemer Stayman Weitzel & Shoulders in the city, hailed the decision to expand medical education in Evansville as a positive for both IU and the region.
“This medical education campus has transformative potential for our area, and I am extremely pleased that IU is using its great resources, along with those of our educational partners, to make this happen,†Shoulders said. “Southwestern Indiana has long been the only region of the state without a large IU presence, and with this decision, we begin to remedy that omission.â€
Source: Indiana University
Downtown Evansville Chosen for IU Medical School
The trustees of Indiana University have voted unanimously to enter negotiations to establish a medical school campus in downtown Evansville.
The City of Evansville as part of its bid for downtown offered IU a $35 Million incentive to place the facility in downtown Evansville, making the downtown bid the least expensive option for IU.
Evansville Mayor Lloyd Winnecke who vowed to “fight like the dickens” for downtown Evansville, indeed did find a way to craft a proposal that was deemed to be the most favorable by the trustees.
The net cost to IU for this $69 Million project will be reduced to $34 Million after the $35 Million incentive is taken into account. This projects financing mirrors the $34 Million of incentives offered to HCW to construct a $71 Million hotel, apartment, and parking structure complex adjacent to the new medical school.
This is a developing story.
IS IT TRUE April 11, 2014

IS IT TRUE that in just over three hours the meeting of the Indiana University Trustees where the vote for the location of the medical school will be held and streamed live for all to see in real time?…the Indiana lotto officials could have made a mint if they had opened up a gambling opportunity for the people of greater Evansville to have placed bets on what the location will be?…each site seems to have its positive attributes and they have been discussed ad nauseum?…there are some differences that have surfaced with respect to the cost to fully implement each proposal?…the proposal for downtown Evansville comes in at $87 Million or 45% higher than the second highest cost which is the Warrick County proposal of $60 Million?…USI comes in 3rd in cost with a range given of $50 Million to $60 Million?…the most frugal of the proposals is the one from the private development known as The Promenade at $47 Million?
IS IT TRUE as it has already been acknowledged that all of the proposals conform to the requirements set forth in the RFP, some people are saying if this selection were done without political bias The Promenade would be selected as the site of the IU Medical School on the basis of cost?…The Promenade is also in the City of Evansville as the downtown site is but will cost roughly HALF OF DOWNTOWN EVANSVILLE’s proposal?…as the infrastructure of the east side is newer and fully functioning The Promenade would have less uncertainty associated with the implementation?…uncertainty as the pilings problems found on the hotel site ALWAYS LEAD TO INCREASED COSTS making the $87 Million subject to increase as the soils beneath downtown Evansville reveal more secrets that must be mitigated?…those who think this decision will be made on the basis of POLITICS are betting on a downtown Evansville selection despite the higher cost, lack of infrastructure, and sketchy housing opportunities for the supposed 2,000 students the campus will serve?…those who are betting on practical but political are betting on Warrick County?…those who are crossing their fingers for fairness, no politics, and practicality are betting on The Promenade, and few people think USI has the best solution at any cost because of the distance to teaching beds?
IS IT TRUE that the Civic Center Moles tell us that Mayor Winnecke has invited a gallery of people to be his guest at the announcement leading many to think it is in the bag for downtown Evansville?…in three hours we will know the answer. Â If the downtown site is selected we would like to personally congratulate the Mayor for pulling a rabbit out of the hat? Â …that the Mayor and his staff really worked hard on getting this project approved and really deserves credit for a job well done?
IS IT TRUE after this selection show is over there is no more excuse for the Evansville City Council to sit on their thumbs and keep the loan approval for Earthcare Energy in play?…if this issue is not addressed on Monday 4/14/2014 the City Council are just as delusional as GAGE, Mayor Winnecke, and some of the other subjects of the Wizards of Oz who came to town on a mission over two years ago and left with $200,000 of taxpayer dollars with apparently no strings attached?
IS IT TRUE Health and Human Service Secretary Kathleen Sebelius will resign from President ObamaÂ’s Cabinet on Friday and the White House has confirmed it?…the cat got out of the bag on Thursday night ahead of the normal Friday afternoon news dump?…it will be interesting to see if Sebelius leaves office under the banner of “MISSION ACCOMPLISHED” or with a scapegoat sign attached to her?…Sebelius was appointed to do a job she was clueless about doing and has proceeded to prove just how bad it is to appoint people to lead efforts they know nothing about by messing up just about everything she touched and not even having the sense to know it was messed up?…she will still be the poster child for the congressional election of 2014 even if President Obama has lost his affections for her?
VANDERBURGH COUNTY FELONY CHARGES
Below is a list of felony cases that were filed by the Vanderburgh County Prosecutor’s Office on Thursday, April 11, 2014
Phillip Johnson                Sexual Battery-Class D Felony
Laura Ellington                 Invasion of Privacy-Class A Misdemeanor
(Enhanced to D Felony Due to Prior Convictions)
Justin McCraw                 Domestic Battery-Class D Felony
Victor Reyes                     Rape-Class B Felony
Battery Resulting in Bodily Injury-Class A Misdemeanor
Corey Trueblood             Neglect of Dependent-Class D Felony
Elmer Wallace                 Possession of Methamphetamine-Class D 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 considered to be innocent until proven guilty by a court of law
EPD Activity Report: April 11, 2014
Federal judge grants same-sex marriage status to one couple – for now
By Jacob Rund
TheStatehouseFile.com
INDIANAPOLIS – U.S. District Court Judge Richard Young ruled Thursday that a same-sex couple’s marriage is legal – at least temporarily.
The case, Baskin v. Bogan, addressed end-of-life issues facing a lesbian couple from southern Indiana.
Plaintiffs Nikole Quasney and Amy Sandler, represented by the law firm Lambda Legal, requested the case be heard on an emergency basis due to Quasney’s battle with terminal ovarian cancer.
Thursday’s ruling provides the couple with a 28-day restraining order, instructing the state to temporarily recognize their out-of-state marriage.
In 2013, Quasney and Sandler were legally married in the state of Massachusetts. However, Indiana law does not currently recognize same-sex marriages and withholds from those couples certain rights given to married heterosexual couples.
Under the law, Sandler would have limited visitation rights if Quasney were to be hospitalized. Also, if Quasney were to pass away, Sandler would not be recognized as her primary beneficiary – creating financial complications for Sandler and the couple’s two children.
“They’re married, they love each other and they are doing their best to protect their family,†Paul Castillo, staff attorney for Lambda Legal, said in a statement. “The local hospital defers to state law to determine whether a couple is validly married, and Niki worries that she won’t be able to be with Amy when it counts. Niki also wants to make sure Amy has the protections of a surviving spouse under Indiana law.â€
Due to their newly obtained restraining order, the couple would be granted – during the 28-day period – the same end-of-life privileges given to heterosexual couples in Indiana.
According to the Evansville Courier & Press, Young also questioned the constitutionality of Indiana’s marriage law.
“The courts finds, as applied to (Quasney and Sandler), Indiana’s law, which prohibits the recognition of same-sex marriages even if the marriage is lawful in the place where it is solemnized, likely violates the United States Constitution’s equal protection clause and due process clause,†Young said.
A written order had not been issued by late Thursday afternoon.
According to the Attorney General’s office, five legal challenges to the marriage statute are assigned to Young.
Young’s ruling Thursday only applies to Quasney and Sandler and does not affect the marriage status of any other same-sex Hoosier couple.
“County clerks in Indiana will be notified that there is no change in legal requirements for granting marriage licenses as a result of this TRO. County clerks still are prohibited by law from issuing marriage licenses to same-sex couples,†the Attorney General’s office said in a statement.
The office also stated that the “temporary restraining order is in effect only until May 8 and the court will schedule a preliminary injunction hearing soon on the plaintiffs’ request to extend the order indefinitely.â€
“We are so relieved. We are so thankful that we can move forward and concentrate on being with each other,†Quasney said in a statement released by Lambda Legal. “Our time together and with our daughters is the most important thing in the world to me. I look forward to the day when all couples in Indiana have the freedom to marry.â€
Jacob Rund is a reporter for TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.