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Vanderburgh County Felony Charges

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nick herman

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, April 03, 2014

 

David Schini                       Theft-Class  D Felony

 

 

Caitlin Hodges                  Theft-Class D Felony

Criminal Trespass-Class A Misdemeanor

 

 

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

Claims at Hotel Groundbreaking are NOT TRUE

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pinochio
In an interview for an article in Evansville Living Magazine’s December 2013 issue, HCW CEO Richard Huff stated clearly that “we (HCW) has made application (for a Hilton Doubletree franchise) and totally expect to be approved”. On March 21, 2014 Dunn Hospitality received notice from the Hilton organization that an application had been filed and that they had until April 4, 2014 to respond to that application with a request for an impact report. Shortly afterward Dunn Hospitality did exactly that as both of their franchise agreements with Hilton specifies that they have a right to do.

The contents of the letter and the article in Evansville Living’s December issue make it quite clear that Mr. Huff’s statement to Evansville Living regarding the application was not true. It also confirms that Mayor Winnecke, HCW, and others knew on March 10th when they arranged for a groundbreaking and press conference that HCW had not even applied for a franchise? HCW claimed at that event that they had their financing in place and even pointed to a group of people who were doing the financing. Unless this group of bankers or investors was willing to grant loan approval without a franchise agreement that statement could not have been true.

Mr. Huff is attributed in the Evansville Living article to have stated that before being contacted by Hunden to bid on the project that he “didn’t even know where Evansville was” and that “his wife has never been to Evansville”. He is furthermore quoted as stating that Evansville City Council President John Friend’s requests for financial information to vet the developer was “ridiculous” and that “their record speaks for itself” lending credibility to the assertions that HCW’s response to a request for a business plan being “we are the business plan”.

The link below provides the process for getting a Hilton franchise, the letter of notification to Dunn Hospitality, and the Evansville Living article with the claim of having filed the application for a franchise circled in red.

Mayor Lloyd Winnecke stated recently that Hilton would not grant a franchise without final loan approval. After several examinations of the franchise agreements for both the Hilton Garden Inn and Doubletree brands, several people have concluded that the Mayor’s statement is not true.

Hotel, Notification of Competing Franchise

EPD Activity Report: April 3, 2014

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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.

EPD Activity Report: April 3, 2014

Commentary: The NRA and basic math

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By John Krull
TheStatehouseFile.com

INDIANAPOLIS – In a few days, the National Rifle Association will come to Indiana for its big annual meeting.

John Krull, publisher, TheStatehouseFile.com

John Krull, publisher, TheStatehouseFile.com

Gov. Mike Pence and the state’s lawmakers decided to mark the occasion by giving the gun lobby a gift – a new state law that allows gun owners to bring their weapons to school.

Commentary button in JPG - no shadow(If this annual meeting is successful and the gun lobby decides to come back to Indiana, presumably the governor and state legislators will move to the next item on the NRA wish list – a state law requiring Hoosier pre-schoolers to pack heat when they toddle off to daycare.)

A lot of people and groups opposed the whole “bring your guns to school” idea. The Indiana State Teachers Association, the Indiana Association of School Principals, Indiana Association of Public School Superintendents, Indiana School Boards Association, Indiana Urban School Association, and the Children’s Coalition of Indiana didn’t like it.

Initially, I agreed with the folks who didn’t like the new law.

But then I realized that, if allowing NRA members to bring their guns to school was the only way to get them to continue their educations, it was a small price to pay.

They could start by taking a refresher course in math. They seem to struggle with simple things like counting and comparing numbers.

The author of the “bring your guns to school” bill, Rep. Jim Lucas, R-Seymour, likes to point out that guns are not nearly the danger that automobiles are. Lucas proclaims himself a proud NRA life member and supporter. He says, correctly, that more than 32,000 Americans died in automobile-related incidents in 2011 – a number so significant and so threatening to public safety that, among other things, it justifies limiting drivers’ First Amendment rights to text while they’re behind the wheel.

Guns, Lucas says, accounted for “only” 8,583 deaths in that year, so we Americans really don’t have an issue when it comes to guns.

The problem with Lucas’s reckoning is that those 8,583 deaths were only a sliver of the number of gun-related deaths in the United States in 2011.

According to the Centers for Disease Control, nearly 32,000 Americans died in gun-related incidents in 2011 – basically the same “huge” number as were killed by automobiles that year.

To keep his gun number low, Lucas opted to ignore the number of gun-related suicides and accidental deaths. To make it a fair comparison, Lucas should have included all the gun-related deaths – or limited his cars-to-guns comparison to people who were killed by others.

What Lucas did wasn’t a case of comparing apples to oranges. It was a case of comparing apples to door knobs.

At a conference committee meeting on the “bring guns to school” law, Lucas repeatedly said that people opposing the measure had manipulated data to support their arguments. Critics charged that he was bullying those offering testimony he didn’t like.

Maybe Lucas’s motives were misinterpreted. Given his own determined and selective numerical cherry-picking, it’s possible that Lucas intended his statements about witnesses’ data manipulation as a compliment from one practitioner of the art to another.

Once Lucas and his fellow NRA members have finished with basic counting, perhaps they could move on to story problems.

For example, they could try to answer this one: The United States leads the developed world in the number of gun-related deaths by a wide margin. In fact, America records 20 times – that’s 2000 percent – the number of gun-related deaths per 100,000 people than the average of the world’s other developed countries.

If America’s NRA-crafted policies of free and unfettered gun flow – bring your guns to school – isn’t part of the problem, then what is?

Is it that Americans are 2000 percent more evil than the rest of the developed world?

Or are we 2000 percent more careless than people in other developed nations?

Or is that, in giving a special interest group like the NRA such a disproportionate voice in our laws and public policies, we Americans are 2000 percent more gullible than citizens of other developed countries?

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.

Vanderburgh County Recent Booking Records

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 SPONSORED BY DEFENSE ATTORNEY IVAN ARNAEZ.
 DON’T GO TO COURT ALONE. CALL IVAN ARNAEZ @ 812-424-6671.
STEVEN LEE LOEHMANN
Race: White / Sex: Male / Age: 38
Residence: 206 SYCAMORE ST NEWBURGH , IN
Booked: 4/3/2014 11:58:00 PM
CHARGE BOND AMT
TRAFFIC-ACCIDENT HIT & RUN /ATT/PROP [CM] 50
OMVWI-REFUSAL 0
OMVWI [AM] 0
TRAFFIC-DRIVING W/LIC SUSP PRIOR INF [AM] 100
TRAFFIC-OP W/O INS / PRIOR [CM] 50
OTHER AGENCIES CHARGES 0
Total Bond Amount: NO BOND
LAYAHNNA DENISE BOND
Race: Black / Sex: Female / Age: 21
Residence: 1616 JACKSON AVE EVANSVILLE , IN
Booked: 4/3/2014 9:22:00 PM
CHARGE BOND AMT
NARC-POSS SCH I,II,III (OTHER) [DF] 0
Total Bond Amount: NO BOND
DARION LAMAR BAILEY
Race: Black / Sex: Male / Age: 28
Residence: 651 CROSS ST EVANSVILLE, IN
Booked: 4/3/2014 9:00:00 PM
Released
CHARGE BOND AMT
CRIMINAL RECKLESSNESS [DF] 0
FAILURE TO APPEAR-ORIGINAL CHARGE MISD 0
CRIMINAL MISCHIEF INSTITUTIONAL [AM] 0
Total Bond Amount: $0
CARL OWEN YONTS
Race: White / Sex: Male / Age: 31
Residence: 1505 W LOUISIANA ST EVANSVILLE, IN
Booked: 4/3/2014 6:28:00 PM
CHARGE BOND AMT
WRIT OF ATTACHMENT 1000
SEX OFFENDER-FAILURE TO REG PRIOR CONVICTION [CF] 10000
Total Bond Amount: $11000
TASHI TASHAY HOWARD
Race: Black / Sex: Female / Age: 25
Residence: 840 JACKSON AVE EVANSVILLE, IN
Booked: 4/3/2014 5:35:00 PM
CHARGE BOND AMT
FAILURE TO APPEAR-ORIGINAL CHARGE MISD 250
FAILURE TO APPEAR-ORIGINAL CHARGE MISD 250
FAILURE TO APPEAR-ORIGINAL CHARGE MISD 250
FAILURE TO APPEAR-ORIGINAL CHARGE MISD 250
Total Bond Amount: $1000
NICHOLAS DEWAYNE KEMPER
Race: White / Sex: Male / Age: 33
Residence: 923 N SECOND AVE EVANSVILLE, IN
Booked: 4/3/2014 4:35:00 PM
CHARGE BOND AMT
WRIT OF ATTACHMENT 500
FAILURE TO APPEAR-ORIGINAL CHARGE MISD 250
Total Bond Amount: $750
CINDY MICHELLE RATH
Race: White / Sex: Female / Age: 49
Residence: 100 OSSI EVANSVILLE, IN
Booked: 4/3/2014 3:32:00 PM
CHARGE BOND AMT
TRESPASS [AM] 100
Total Bond Amount: $100
WARREN PAUL INGRAM
Race: White / Sex: Male / Age: 56
Residence: 1320 S FAIRLAWN AVE EVANSVILLE, IN
Booked: 4/3/2014 12:03:00 PM
CHARGE BOND AMT
PETITION TO REVOKE PROBATION 0
Total Bond Amount: NO BOND
DARIUS ANTWAIN STATEN
Race: White / Sex: Male / Age: 41
Residence: 2947 JEFFERSON AVE EVANSVILLE , IN
Booked: 4/3/2014 10:23:00 AM
CHARGE BOND AMT
WRIT OF ATTACHMENT 100
WRIT OF ATTACHMENT 100
WRIT OF ATTACHMENT 100
WRIT OF ATTACHMENT 100
WRIT OF ATTACHMENT 100
WRIT OF ATTACHMENT 100
Total Bond Amount: $600
TERRENCE JAMAR LEWIS
Race: Black / Sex: Male / Age: 32
Residence: 2700 LODGE AVE EVANSVILLE , IN
Booked: 4/3/2014 8:43:00 AM
CHARGE BOND AMT
FAILURE TO APPEAR-ORIGINAL CHARGE MISD 250
FAILURE TO APPEAR-ORIGINAL CHARGE MISD 250
FAILURE TO APPEAR-ORIGINAL CHARGE MISD 250
COURT ORDERED CONFINEMENT 0
Total Bond Amount: $750

Board of School Trustees of the EVSC will meet in executive session

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EVSC

The Board of School Trustees of the Evansville Vanderburgh School Corporation will meet in executive session at 3:30 p.m. on Monday, April 7, 2014, in the John H. Schroeder Conference Centre at the EVSC Administration Building, 951 Walnut, IN 47713, Evansville, IN. The session will be conducted according to Senate Enrolled Act 313, Section 1, I.C. 5-14-1.5-6.1, as amended. The purpose of the meeting is for discussion of collective bargaining, (2)(A);  initiation of litigation or litigation that is either pending or has been threatened specifically in writing, (2)(B); purchase or lease of property, (2)(D); and job performance evaluation of individual employees, (9).

The regular meeting of the School Board will follow at 5:30 p.m. in the EVSC Board Room, same address.

 

Safety Tips For Driving During High Water Conditions

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

With the heavy springtime rainfall the state is receiving there is the possibility of high water and flash flooding on rural highways in some areas. Flash flooding can occur even after just a few minutes of heavy rainfall. The Indiana State Police offers the following flood safety tips.

•Always carry a cell phone and charger.
•Pay attention to local media reports and heed warnings issued by the National Weather Service.
•Never drive around barricades at water crossings.
•Be especially careful at night and early morning as it can be difficult to see water and it’s depth across the roadway.
•Reduce your speed in rain and NEVER enter flowing water. Driving through water creates less tire contact with the road surface (hydroplaning) and increases your chance of crashing.
•Driving through water affects your brakes reducing their effectiveness until they dry out.
•If you end up in water, immediately abandon your vehicle, exit through a window and climb on top of your car. Call 9-1-1 from there and wait for help to arrive. Ride the top like a boat, as vehicles will often float for several minutes.
•Be aware that road erosion can occur anytime there is running or standing water on a roadway.
•Remember it only takes six inches of water to reach the bottoms of most car doors and one foot of water to float most vehicles.

If you find yourself stranded in water, act fast. Get yourself and everyone in your vehicle out of their seatbelt and out a window onto the roof of the car. Remember; call 9-1-1 AFTER you reach the top of your vehicle. Indiana State Police divers advise to only swim for it if you absolutely have to, and don’t swim against the current. Make sure you’re a survivor, NOT a victim.

The attached photo is of Indiana State Police Divers demonstrating the proper way to exit a vehicle that has crashed into the water.
-30-Contact Information:
John Bowling
765-778-2121
jbowling@isp.in.gov

For full details, view this message on the web.

Proposal To Regulate E-Cigarettes Expected Soon, FDA Says

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By  April 3, 2014ecigarette361
While critics of e-cigarettes raise concerns about everything from exploding devices to poisoning risks to marketing and advertising to minors, there are currently no specific federal regulations on these products. That is likely to change soon, says the head of the FDA.

U.S. Food and Drug Administration Commissioner Margaret Hamburg told senators at a Congressional budget hearing today that a proposed rule that would establish FDA authority over e-cigarettes should be ready for release “very soon,” Reuters reports.

Currently, the proposal is being examined by the White House’s Office of Management and Budget to assess its potential economic impact.

Public health advocates and lawmakers have been pressing for regulations since the products came on the market as an alternative to traditional cigarettes.

“Four years and four months to get the first draft over to OMB is unacceptable,” Sen. Jeff Merkley of Oregon says.

Hamburg told senators that criticism of the FDA’s slow response to establish regulations is fair.

“I do believe that very soon I will be able to call you, and say the deeming rule is out,” she said.

The FDA isn’t exactly known for its swiftness. In 1977, the agency proposed a ban on penicillin and other antibiotics in farm animals. It wasn’t until 35 years later and a court order that the agency got around to seriously considering that proposal.

Since 2009, the FDA has had authority to regulate cigarettes, smokeless tobacco and roll-your-own tobacco, as well as the power to deem other tobacco product within its jurisdiction.

Still, e-cigarette companies believe they should be exempt from FDA regulations, contending it would stifle innovation, damage small business and hurt consumer trying to quite smoking.

Those in favor of regulations say the delay presents a risk to children who may be attracted to the product’s sweet flavors.

Last month, the New York Times explored one of the deadliest attributes e-cigarettes pose: liquid nitrogen. When ingested or absorbed even small amounts of the toxin could prove deadly.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released a new report [PDF] today that show the number of calls to poison centers involving e-cigarette liquid containing nicotine rose from one per month in September 2010 to 215 per month in February 2014.

“We do feel that this in an area that requires greater attention, action and concern,” Hamburg says of the increased poisonings.

E-cig rule coming ‘very soon,’ U.S. FDA chief says [Reuters]

Rep. Sullivan’s first bill signed by Gov. Pence

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Sullivan_BillSigning

STATEHOUSE – House Enrolled Act (HEA) 1286 authored by State Representative Holli Sullivan (R-Evansville) was signed into law by Governor Pence.

HEA 1286 requires the Indiana Department of Transportation (INDOT), the Bureau of Motor Vehicles (BMV), the Indiana Finance Authority and Purdue University to provide annual reports to the Joint Study Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure Assessment and Solutions regarding the condition of Indiana’s transportation network and infrastructure.

“This legislation is centered on government transparency,” said Rep. Sullivan. “The information gathered from these reports will give the study committee better insight into the needs of the transportation systems in Indiana and allow them to make more informed decisions. To great effect, this was practiced in last year’s summer study committee with the BMV and INDOT.”

“As the Crossroads of America, we need to continue setting a precedence of high standards and constant improvement for our roads and bridges and everything in between,” said Rep. Sullivan.

The annual reports will be submitted by Aug. 1st of 2014 and 2015.

Dr. Bucshon Votes to Protect Hoosier Wages, Hours at Work

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220px-Larry_Bucshon,_official_portrait,_112th_Congress

 (Washington, DC) –On Thursday, the House passed H.R. 2575, the Save American Workers (SAW) Act.  H.R. 2575 repeals the 30-hour definition of “full-time employment” in the Affordable Care Act, commonly referred to as ObamaCare, and restores the traditional 40-hour definition protecting hourly wages for American workers.

Following the passage of H.R. 2575, Congressman Larry Bucshon, a physician from Southern Indiana, stated:

“I consistently hear from individuals, businesses, school corporations, and local governments here in the 8th District that they are struggling under provisions in the ACA.  One in particular, the 30 hour workweek definition, is estimated to put over 2.6 million Americans at risk of seeing their hours and wages cut.

 “During the worst economic recovery since WWII, we should be helping Americans find work, not making it more difficult.  Unfortunately, the ACA puts employees at a disadvantage. It’s hard to find or keep a full-time job when the government penalizes employers for giving workers more than 30 hours of work.  How can hardworking Hoosiers care for their families when the ACA is putting jobs, wages, and hours on the line? It’s unfair and simply does not make sense.

“By repealing the 30 hour definition in the ACA, we are restoring the wages and hours the law puts at risk. This bill has bipartisan support in both chambers of Congress and from the American people. I sincerely hope the Senate will act immediately to send this bill to President Obama’s desk.” 

Yesterday, Dr. Bucshon took to the House floor during debate of H.R. 2575 to discuss the impact the 30 hour provision is having on Hoosier school districts and to urge his colleagues to support the legislation.

Bucshon stated, “The vast majority of these employees already receive health insurance either through their spouse or other sources and many of them have worked for their school corporation for many years. 

He continued, “School Corporations don’t have the luxury of raising taxes to pay for these provisions of the Affordable Care Act. They aren’t a major business that can raise their prices.  School corporations simply can’t afford the Affordable Care Act. These Hoosiers work every day with students and because of this provision in the Affordable Care Act, our students will suffer.”

BACKGROUND:

H.R. 2575, the Save American Workers Act, passed with a bipartisan vote of 248 to 179.  More information on the bill can be foundhere.

In June of 2013, Bucshon joined the Indiana Congressional Delegation to send a letter to Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius warning that schools would be forced to cut workers’ hours to avoid the ObamaCare penalty.