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Officer Shooting Information

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SPONSORED BY DEFENSE ATTORNEY IVAN ARNAEZ.
DON’T GO TO COURT ALONE. CALL IVAN ARNAEZ @ 812-424-6671.
EPD PATCH 2012

The EPD internal investigation into the April 22nd Officer involved Shooting of a man armed with two knives has been completed. The actions of the officers involved have been determined to be reasonable based on the facts of the case.
Officers David M Smith and Aaron McCormick were dispatched to 2039 Pollack for a harassment report. Just prior to their arrival, they were told that the suspect was at the house and had two knives. When the officer arrived they saw Terry Daugherty outside of the house. Daugherty fled from the officers and told them they would have to shoot him. As he was running, Daugherty took the protective sheaves off of the large knives and refused to drop the knives.
Daugherty attempted to get into 2045 Margybeth , but was unsuccessful. The officers were able to contain him in the driveway and repeatedly told Daugherty to drop the knives. Daugherty refused to drop the knives or surrender. Officer Smith fired two rounds from his handgun. Daugherty was struck once and then dropped the knives as we went down to the ground.
Daugherty was treated at the scene for a single gunshot would. He is currently at a local hospital under police guard.
Daugherty had been arrested for Strangulation and Domestic Violence against the same caller on April 16. After his release from jail on bond, Daugherty was admitted to a local hospital for a after he tried to commit suicide by cutting his wrist. After those incidents, he told family members he would not go back to jail. He also made statements the day of the shooting that he was going to die when the police got there.
Based on his actions, his history, and his comments before and immediately after being shot, investigators believe Daugherty was trying to commit suicide by cop.
Both officers have returned to full duty.

State board approves K-12 standards despite opposition

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By Lesley WeidenbenerLesley-Stedman-Weidenbener-mug-The-Statehouse-File1-306x400
TheStatehouseFile.com

INDIANAPOLIS – The State Board of Education approved math and language arts standards on Monday that will guide curriculum in K-12 schools starting this fall.

The bipartisan board voted 10-1 – with conservative Andrea Neal the lone no vote – after a string of opponents asked the board to postpone action so the standards could be rewritten. They argued the guides are too close to Common Core, a controversial set of standards they will replace and that have been adopted in most states across the nation.

“Please, please step back,” said Mary Jane Curtis, a grandmother from Carmel, who said her son has been bringing home Common Core instructional materials that are confusing. “Don’t feel rushed. This is a big mistake.”

Cheryl Ferguson, a pediatrician from Fishers, said the standards are too prescriptive about what students must learn at each level, without allowing for normal development differences among children. “You can’t expect all kindergarteners to know how to read at the end of kindergarten,” which she said is included in the new standards.

And she said the long list of required learning for the youngest students “crowds out the need for children to learn to play.”

But a majority of board members and the education staff who helped guide development of the standards say they are rigorous and will provide local districts across the state with the information they need to make good decisions about curriculum and materials.

The standards are a combination of Common Core, the state’s previous standards and work from other states and subject matter experts. They represent the skills or knowledge a student should know – without assigning a method for teaching that skill.

Board member Brad Oliver said he tried to look past the politics and controversies of Common Core and focus on whether the standards “reflect the most critical skills our children need” to succeed.

“It seems that fear sometimes can outpace fact. And I’ve heard a lot of fear and I understand that,” he said. “One of the fears I have is that politics has been interjected into this discussion to the point that it’s shaded our ability to actually think clearly about what’s in front of us.”

The State Board of Education in 2010 approved Common Core as the state’s standards and began phasing in the change. So did 40-some other states. But after President Barack Obama’s administration endorsed the standards and teachers and parents began seeing curriculum materials meant to dovetail with them, some conservatives started expressing concern.

That led the General Assembly to vote last year to pause the implementation of Common Core and this year’s vote to ban it. Meanwhile, state education officials launched a process for creating what Republican Gov. Mike Pence has repeatedly called Hoosier standards created by Hoosiers.

But on Monday, some critics said the standards are just cut-and-paste versions of Common Core. And others accused education officials of relying too much on expertise from outside the state.

Neal rattled off a list of math experts that have criticized the standards. “It is malpractice to adopt math standards that make no sense to mathematicians,” she said.

And she complained that the language arts standards don’t detail the specific literature and historical documents that students should be required to study and lump together different forms of writing, including poetry, fiction, drama, nonfiction and other forms.

“In a standards document written by Hoosiers for Hoosiers, you would expect to see names of revered Hoosier authors,” she said. “Yet there’s no mention of James Whitcomb Riley, Booth Tarkington, Jean Stratton Porter or Kurt Vonnegut.”

Instead, she said the standards focus too much on skills and technology instead of knowledge.

But board member David Freitas – after asking education staff a series of questions about the standards – said they set “high expectations of what Hoosier students need to know and be able to do in each grade.”

“They are built on a solid foundation of research-based best practices,” he said. “They thwart unnecessary and unwanted intrusion in our schools by the federal government. And they rightly cede curriculum authority to local school leaders and communities in selecting their own instructional materials.”

The Department of Education is now preparing a list of recommended instructional materials teachers can use to implement the new standards. But at Freitas’ urging, the board voted to ensure that the list come back before the board for approval before they can be distributed to schools.

Higher Doses of Antidepressants Linked to Suicidal Behavior in Young Patients: Study

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st. marys logo

They were twice as likely to try to hurt themselves if they were prescribed more than recommended dose

By Brenda Goodman
HealthDay Reporter
MONDAY, April 28, 2014 (HealthDay News) — When prescribing antidepressants for teens and young adults, doctors should not start with high doses of the drugs because it might raise the risk of suicidal behavior, new research suggests.

The study, which was published online April 28 in the journal JAMA Internal Medicine, found that younger patients who began treatment with higher-than-recommended doses of antidepressants were more than twice as likely to try to harm themselves as those who were initially treated with the same drugs at lower, recommended doses.

“If I were a parent, I definitely wouldn’t want my child to start on a higher dose of these drugs,” said study author Dr. Matthew Miller, associate director of the Injury Control Research Center at the Harvard School of Public Health in Boston.

The research is likely to inform an ongoing debate in psychiatry — whether or not it’s safe to prescribe antidepressants to children and young adults.

In 2004, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration issued a public warning about the risk of suicide in kids and teens treated with a class of antidepressants called selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs).

The warning followed a government review that found youngsters who took the drugs were twice as likely to try to harm themselves as those who took inactive “placebo” pills. The agency expanded its black box warning on the drugs in 2007 to include adults younger than age 25.

More recent research has challenged the idea that antidepressants are dangerous for kids and young adults, however.

A review published in 2007 in the Journal of the American Medical Association concluded that the benefits of taking antidepressants outweighed the potential harms to teens and young adults.

Another study published in 2007 in the American Journal of Psychiatry showed that while youth prescriptions for SSRIs have dropped by 22 percent since the FDA’s black box warning, suicides in children and teens have increased. Some experts cite the finding as proof that the FDA’s warning was short-sighted and the drugs actually prevent youth suicides.

But no studies have looked at suicide risk by drug dosage, as the latest study did.

For the research, the study authors pulled information from a large prescription claims database. The study included more than 162,000 patients aged 10 to 64 with a diagnosis of depression who started taking an SSRI medication between 1998 and 2010.

Researchers restricted their analysis to three of the most commonly prescribed antidepressants, Celexa, Zoloft and Prozac. And they separated users into those who started at the recommended dosages of those medications, or those who were prescribed higher-than-recommended doses of the drugs.

The normal doses were 20 milligrams per day for Celexa, 50 milligrams per day for Zoloft and 20 milligrams per day for Prozac. Patients who were initially prescribed more than one drug were excluded from the study.

Nearly 18 percent of patients in the study were started on doses that were higher than those, in conflict with current medical guidelines.

Then researchers checked patients’ medical records to see how many had committed acts of deliberate self-harm within a year of starting their medications.

Among those younger than 24, patients on higher doses harmed themselves at roughly twice the rate of those on lower doses. During the study period, there were 32 incidents of self-harm for every 1,000 young patients taking high doses while there were only 15 such incidents per 1,000 patients taking recommended doses.

The researchers further estimated that doctors would see one additional case of self-injury for every 136 younger patients treated with higher-than-recommended doses of antidepressants. And the risk of suicide attempts seemed to be highest in the first 90 days on the medications.

The investigators found no significant increase in the risk of self-harm by drug dosage for people over the age of 25, however, suggesting the effect was age-dependent.

And there was no increase in suicide risk in kids and teens treated with recommended drug dosages.

The study was observational, which means that researchers can’t say for sure that drug dosage was the only thing that made young patients more likely to hurt themselves.

Dr. David Brent, who holds an endowed chair in suicide studies at the University of Pittsburgh, said he thinks there might also be something about the patients themselves that prompted doctors to start them on a higher dose in the first place.

“I am guessing that, assuming it was not just medical error, that there was something that the physicians were responding to — either greater severity or that the patient had had a history of needing higher doses to respond in the past,” said Brent, who wrote a commentary on the study, but was not involved in the research.

But the Harvard researchers don’t think that’s the case.

Miller said the team looked closely at the data to try to find differences that might explain why some patients were prescribed higher doses of the drugs.

Among the factors they considered were how recently patients were diagnosed with depression, where they were diagnosed as inpatients or outpatients, and whether they also had anxiety or a history of suicide attempts.

There were almost no differences between the patient groups, other than the dose of antidepressants they were initially prescribed, the study authors indicated.

The researchers even performed a statistical test to calculate the likelihood that there was some ghost factor they missed that might account for the differences. The test showed that was unlikely.

Brent agreed, adding that the research should encourage doctors to go low and slow with antidepressants in young patients, as clinical guidelines recommend, increasing the dose only as needed.

Response to Sheriff Eric Williams Announcement By Kirk Byram

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Kirk2-1I like everyone was surprised by Sheriff Eric Williams’s announcement. I wish Sheriff Williams all the best in his new job. 
 
Sheriff William’s departure does not change my campaign. My opponent is still the same person with the same record and issues. He still has to run against me and prove to the voters he is qualified to be sheriff. My opponent still has to earn the job. I am sure he will soon want to have several debates and joint appearances so the people of Vanderburgh County can see who is the most qualified to keep them and their families safe.

Suspect in $2,000 cologne theft has been indentified

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EPD PATCH 2012

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

The woman wanted for questioning in an April 9th $2,000 cologne shoplifting case has been identified. The woman contacted EPD after her imaged was shown on various media outlets earlier today.

The investigation into the theft is continuing.

Pinnacle Entertainment Names Ward Shaw Vice President & General Manager of Ameristar Casino Resort Spa St. Charles

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Ward Shaw11564 (1)

Pinnacle Entertainment (NYSE: PNK) today announced the appointment of Ward Shaw to Vice President and General Manager of Ameristar Casino Resort Spa St. Charles and Chris Plant to Vice President and General Manager of River City Casino & Hotel in South St. Louis County.

“I couldn’t be more elated to join the exceptional team at Ameristar St. Charles, which coincidentally, is about to celebrate its 20th anniversary,” said Ward Shaw, Vice President and General Manager, Ameristar Casino Resort Spa St. Charles. “This beautiful property has consistently been one of the top performers in Missouri and I look forward to building upon its long-standing reputation of excellence.”

In their new roles, Shaw and Plant will be responsible for the overall direction of the Pinnacle St. Louis properties, including hotel and casino operations, human resources, finance, marketing, security/surveillance, purchasing, food and beverage. Most recently Shaw served as General Manager of River City Casino & Hotel and Plant served as Regional Vice President of Finance and Accounting, including responsibilities over River City Casino & Hotel.

“I am honored to have served in several roles at Pinnacle Entertainment over the past 17 years and I look forward to focusing on the continued growth and success of River City,” said Chris Plant, Vice President and General Manager, River City Casino & Hotel.

Shaw is a graduate of Vanderbilt University where he attended on a Naval ROTC scholarship. After four years as a naval officer and Navigator onboard USS Roanoke in the Western Pacific (AOR-7), he attended Indiana University’s Kelley School of Business, where he completed a master’s degree in Business Administration.

Plant is a graduate of Menlo College, where he earned his undergraduate degree in Business Administration. He began his career in public accounting with KPMG LLP in 1987 and earned his Certified Public Accountant license.

 

About River City Casino & Hotel

7663A12River City Casino & Hotel, which opened in March 2010, is St. Louis’ newest gateway to an exciting entertainment experience. Located approximately 10 miles south of downtown St. Louis, in the community of Lemay, the multi-use complex includes a 90,000-square-foot casino with the best slot machines and table games, including poker, several restaurants and other amenities.

An $82 million expansion, completed in August 2013, includes a 200-room hotel, a 14,000 square-foot multi-purpose event center and a 1,600-space covered parking structure. River City Casino & Hotel is located at 777 River City Casino Blvd., St. Louis, MO 63125. Call 888-578-7289 or visit www.rivercity.com or for more information.

About Ameristar Casino Resort Spa St. Charles

Located just west of Lambert-St. Louis International Airport in historic St. Charles, Mo., Ameristar Casino Resort Spa St. Charles offers an exceptional gaming and entertainment experience in the St. Louis metropolitan area. The property features a 130,000-square-foot casino, AAA Four Diamond full-service luxury suite hotel with 400 well-appointed rooms, an indoor-outdoor pool; seven dining venues, 12 bars, an entertainment venue, a full-service luxury day spa and a 20,000-square-foot conference center.

About Pinnacle Entertainment
Pinnacle Entertainment, Inc. owns and operates 14 casinos, located in Colorado, Indiana, Iowa, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri and Nevada. In addition, Belterra Park Gaming & Entertainment Center, in Cincinnati, Ohio, will open spring of 2014. Pinnacle holds a majority interest in the racing license owner, as well as a management contract, for Retama Park Racetrack outside of San Antonio, Texas.

PET OF THE WEEK

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Jay

Jay is a 1-year-old male English spot mix! He’s been at shelter the longest, and now has lots of younger bunnies to compete with. $30 adoption fee includes carrier and NEUTER! Please contact the Vanderburgh Humane Society at (812) 426-2563 or visit www.vhslifesaver.org.

Experiences meeting tomorrow @ Tin Man

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voice

You’re Invited!
Experiences Meeting
4/29/14 @ Tin Man 6 pm
1430 W Franklin Street, Evansville, IN 47710

We have heard your visions of our community, specifically in the flower pot of Experiences and its sub themes (below). Now it’s time for action!

Each of the Experiences sub themes has a project manager assigned to them and in small groups (YOU) will be designing project plans, creating tasks and assignments, and scheduling future meetings to get your project completed.

Sub themes and project areas notes from previous meeting:
Art
Music
Active
Food/Beverage

Scavenger Hunts

Teen Fun
Health/Nutrition
If you are interested in taking action in any of these sub themes, we encourage you to attend!
UPCOMING VOICE MEETINGS:

BAM (Big Action Meeting): 6/16/14 @ EVPL Central branch 6pm
(Introduction of projects and updates + Celebration)

www.evansvillevoice.com

IS IT TRUE APRIL 29 2014-COMMISSIONER KIEFER ENDORSES MONTRATELLE

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IS IT TRUE that the campaign manager initially selected by Marsha Abell to run her campaign is no longer in that capacity because of  unexpected family commitments?   …we hear that Carol McClintoch is trying to fill in as temporary campaign chairman for the remainder of the primary campaign?

IS IT TRUE we watched  Vanderburgh County Commissioner candidate Marsha Abell appearance on Channel 7  Brad Byrd T V show last night.  …we wonder why Ms. Abell didn’t accept an invitation by Mike Woods to appear on the City County Observer and Woods and Woods Tri-State Voices Show?  …we also wonder why Ms. Abell choose not to answer 13 political survey questions submitted to her and Bruce Ungethiem by the City County Observer concerning political issues about local county government?  …we were extremely interested in reading Ms. Abell’s response to CCO survey questions about nepotism and political patronage appointments?

IS IT TRUE we shall watch with interest when candidate for County Commission Bruce Ungethiem appears on Channel 7  Brad  Byrd show this coming Wednesday evening to answers questions about local county governmental issue?  …we hope Mr. Byrd will ask Mr. Ungethiem his opinions about political patronage and nepotism?

IS IT TRUE we hear  Maingate Bar has officially closed?  …that a sign is posted on the front  door stating that it will open in the near future under new management?  …we can’t wait to hear who the new management team will be?

IS IT TRUE that County Commissioner Joe Kiefer has undermined  Vanderburgh County GOP Party Chairmen Wayne Parke political strategy by officially endorsing John Montrastelle for County Council?  … the letter posted  below  was mailed to 3,000 register republicans by mail today speaks for itself?

Dear friend,

It has been an honor serving our community since the year 2000. In 2014, I was blessed to be selected to serve as the President of the Board of County Commissioners. I love and enjoy public service and believe good people can have a positive impact on our community – that is why I am writing you today.

John Montrastelle has been a friend of mine and my family’s since I was a child in the 1970’s. In a few days, John will be on the ballot to become your County Councilman, because he too, wants to better serve our community. Like me, John desires to be involved in local government so he can be a conscientious and effective voice for the citizens of Vanderburgh County.

Several years ago I recommended to the County Commission that we appoint John to serve on the Evansville Visitors & Convention Bureau board. Since then, John has served exceptionally on our behalf and is now serving as the President of the ECVB for the 3nd year.

I am asking you to vote for John on May 6th for County Council. He is dedicated, hardworking, and his business acumen will lend itself perfectly to helping our county face its many financial challenges. His leadership skills will help guide the county and assist me in my job as a County Commissioner.

Please accept this as my personal endorsement to elect John Montrastelle to the County Council!

Your friend,

Joe Kiefer