SPONSORED BY DEFENSE ATTORNEY IVAN ARNAEZ.
DON’T GO TO COURT ALONE. CALL IVAN ARNAEZ @ 812-424-6671.
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SPONSORED BY DEFENSE ATTORNEY IVAN ARNAEZ.
DON’T GO TO COURT ALONE. CALL IVAN ARNAEZ @ 812-424-6671.
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I am please to accept the endorsement by the Fraternal Order of Police for Vanderburgh County Commissioner. I thank the FOP for the opportunity to be interview for this endorsement and am honored that they have chosen me as the best candidate for Commissioner.
I have enjoyed working with the FOP in the past on the consolidation issue and look forward to working with them in the future for the benefit of all Vanderburgh county residents.
I am extremely honored and humbled by the political endorsement by the Fraternal Order of Police Political Action Committee. I want to thank them for their belief and trust in me as I aspire to carry on the conservative and fiscally responsible principles that have made the County Council’s budgetary process so successful over the last two years. As a past president and member of the F.O.P. since 1972, the daily risks that officers take to protect the public they serve, are always in my thoughts. May all of you continue your duties with due diligence, stay safe and remember the thin blue line is forged in steel.
Fraternally, Pete Swaim, Vice President Vanderburgh County Council and Council Member of District 4
SPONSORED BY DEFENSE ATTORNEY IVAN ARNAEZ.
DON’T GO TO COURT ALONE. CALL IVAN ARNAEZ @ 812-424-6671.
Catch the latest edition of the “Indiana State Police Road Show†radio program every Monday morning at your convenience.
Download the program from the Network Indiana public website at www.networkindiana.com. Look for the state police logo on the main page and follow the download instructions. This 15 minute talk show concentrates on public safety and informational topics with state wide interest.
The radio program was titled “Signal-10†in the early sixties when it was first started by two troopers in northern Indiana. The name was later changed to the “Indiana State Police Road Show†and is the longest continuously aired state police public service program in Indiana.
Radio stations across Indiana and the nation are invited to download and air for FREE this public service program sponsored by the Indiana State Police Alliance and Cops for Kids, a subsidiary of the Indiana State Police Alliance.
This week’s show features Cyndee Booth, Executive Director at Child Advocates. Miss Booth discusses the Child Advocates program in Indianapolis and throughout Indiana.
By John Krull
TheStatehouseFile.com
INDIANAPOLIS – A federal judge in southwest Indiana just dropped the other shoe in the same-sex marriage debate.
Judge Richard Young ruled that the state of Indiana must recognize the marriage of an Indiana lesbian couple. Nicole Quasney and Amy Sandler wed in Massachusetts last year.
John Krull, publisher, TheStatehouseFile.com
John Krull, publisher, TheStatehouseFile.com
Quasney now is in the final stages of a fight with terminal ovarian cancer.
The judge determined that Quasney’s condition merited emergency action from the court and issued a temporary restraining order compelling Indiana to recognize the marriage. That means that Sandler and the couple’s two children will find issues of visitation and inheritance easier, less expensive and less complicated.
Commentary button in JPG – no shadowAdvocates for banning same-sex marriage in Indiana tried to take what comfort they could from the fact that Young’s ruling was temporary – issued for only 28 days.
The other signs, though, couldn’t have been reassuring to gay marriage opponents.
The judge questioned whether Indiana’s current ban on same-sex marriages violated the U.S. Constitution’s equal protection and due process clauses. Even more significantly, Young said that there was a reasonable likelihood that Quasney and Sandler would prevail on the merits of their case.
That isn’t exactly news.
The U.S. Supreme Court signaled that the days of same-sex marriage bans could be coming to an end when it struck down the federal defense of marriage act last summer. The court’s ruling said that the federal ban presented Fifth Amendment problems that likely were insurmountable.
At the time, the nation’s highest court left state bans on gay unions untouched.
That encouraged activist social conservatives in Indiana and elsewhere to continue their fights to get gay marriage bans grafted into state constitutions.
The judge’s ruling makes clear that their quest always was quixotic. Even if they had won the political fight at the state level – which they didn’t – they always were likely to lose the legal war.
The proponents for House Joint Resolution 3 – the proposed Indiana constitutional amendment banning both gay marriages and civil unions – said that the measure was needed precisely because of lawsuits like Quasney’s and Sandler’s.
But HJR 3 couldn’t have made any difference in that suit. If a federal gay marriage ban violates the Fifth Amendment, then so does a state one.
Nor would any state have been granted the right to violate the equal protection and due process clauses of the U.S. Constitution. The question of whether any state government had the right to overrule the U.S. Constitution was settled – decisively – 150 years ago in the Civil War.
Judge Young’s ruling makes clear in a couple of ways how costly Indiana’s fight over same-sex marriage has been.
The first is the political one. The fight over HJR 3 was an ugly and painful one that pitted Hoosier against Hoosier. It divided families, friends and communities.
The judge’s ruling makes it clear that the only votes that count now in the debate over same-sex marriage belong to the nine people who sit on the U.S. Supreme Court.
That means we Hoosiers tore into each other for no good reason.
But the more important cost is the human one.
Nicole Quasney is dying. In her last days, she and her spouse are fighting to have their union recognized and to hold their family together.
One of the loudest voices for banning same-sex marriages, Indiana Sen. Mike Delph, R-Carmel, wrote in an oped column, “No one with a soul wants someone harmed or discriminated against for being gay.â€
But, as Judge Young has determined, that is precisely what a ban on same-sex marriage has done to Nicole Quasney and Amy Sandler. At a time when all their energies should be focused on making Quasney’s last days as comfortable as possible, on saying goodbyes and of preparing their children for the trials ahead, they instead have to fight in court to have the same rights extended to other Hoosiers. At a time when they most need the strength and support that being part of a family provides, they have to fight for the right just to be a family.
The courts now are sending signals that such discrimination isn’t legal or constitutional.
And many other Hoosiers wonder how any soul ever could have thought that such treatment was just or kind.
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.
By Paige Clark
TheStatehouseFile.com
INDIANAPOLIS – Graduation rates remained relatively unchanged from 2012 to 2013 but the state’s top educator said she still sees signs of progress.
The Indiana Department of Education released 2013 graduation rate data Wednesday that showed a graduation rate statewide of 88.7 percent.
However, the data also showed that the state’s non-waiver graduation rate of 81.72 percent had inched up from 80.46 percent in 2012. That rate measures the number of students who passed without educators waiving a key requirement.
Non-waiver data is necessary for federal reporting. Also, education officials say it helps give a more accurate reading of the number of students passing their end of course assessments.
“There is some encouraging information in this release,†said Indiana Superintendent Glenda Ritz. “While the overall graduation rate is largely the same as it was in 2012, when you dig into the data it becomes clear that more of our students are graduating without a waiver and passing their end of course assessments.
“This is a crucial step in ensuring that our students graduate from high school both college and career ready,†she said.
Six schools achieved a 100 percent graduation rate: Ben Davis University High School, Crispus Attucks Medical Magnet High School, Signature School Inc., North Daviess Junior-Senior High School, 21st Century Charter School of Gary and Medora Junior & Senior High School.
Nearly 200 schools had higher graduation rates in 2013 than the previous year. Ben Davis University High School and Signature School had 100 percent graduation rates for the third and fourth straight years respectively.
About 170 high schools had lower graduation rates in 2013.
Paige Clark is a reporter for TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.
This Thursday, April 24th, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce Foundation is hosting a Hire our Heroes Veterans Event in Evansville at the National Guard Armory. The job fair will give local veterans and military spouses the opportunity to network and meet potential employers. Registration for job seekers and employers, along with other details, can be found below.
Job Seeker and Employer Registration website
Hire our Heroes Evansville website
When: Thursday, April 24th, 2014
10 a.m. to 1 p.m.
Where: 3300 E. Division Street
Evansville, IN 47711
National Guard Armory
At 8:30 a.m. prior to the event, there will also be a workshop for veterans and other military job seekers that focuses on tips for writing a resume, navigating hiring events, military skill translation and interviewing. You can register for this workshop here.
I am excited to know that our local, Hoosier veterans and military spouses will have the opportunity to benefit from this event. Veterans sacrifice so much for our freedom and learn many valuable skills from their military experience. Allowing them the chance to apply these skills in pursuit of their dreams and to provide for their families is the least we can do for them.
Our health spending problem is all about prices
Nexium is a bright, purple pill that treats heartburn. It’s the second best-selling drug in the United States right now. Americans spent $6.2 billion buying millions of Nexium prescriptions in 2013 alone.
But we probably didn’t have to: while Americans pay an average of $215 for a Nexium prescription, the Dutch get the exact same purple pill for $23. In England, Nexium costs $42 and in Spain the price is $58.
If the United States paid what the Netherlands paid for Nexium, we would have spent $663 million on the drug in 2013 rather than $6.2 billion.
There’s nothing different about the Nexium that we buy in the United States and the pill that the Dutch buy – except that, in the United States, we’re terrible at negotiating a good deal on pretty much any medical service.
“It’s exactly the same product but, in terms of the American patient, you’re just paying double or more the price for no more health gain,” says Tom Sackville, chief executive of the International Federation of Health Plans.
His group published Thursday its annual looking at international variation in health care prices. For all but one item they studied, from Nexium to MRI scans to bypass surgery, the United States is always the most expensive. The one exception is cataract surgery, where the United States pulled off the somewhat impressive feat of being the second-most expensive country after Australia.
‘PROVIDERS AND PHARMACEUTICALS ARE ESSENTIALLY TAKING ADVANTAGE OF THE AMERICAN PUBLIC’
The IFHP report undercuts a common misconception about American health care: that it’s more expensive because we use more of it. Americans actually tend to use slightly less health care than people living elsewhere. We go to the doctor less, for example, and have fewer hospitals per capita than most European countries.
Americans spend more for health care largely because of the prices.
Most other countries have some central body that negotiates prices with hospitals and drug manufacturers. Sackville, who used to work for Britain’s health care system, recalls that it would have a unit of 14 people whose whole job was getting drug manufacturers to give the country a better deal on prescription medications.
That unit of 14 is essentially buying in bulk for a country of 63 million people – and can successfully ask for steep discounts in return.
The United States doesn’t have that type of agency. Every insurance plan negotiates individually with hospitals, doctors and pharmaceutical company to set their own prices. Insurers in the United States don’t, as these charts show, get a bulk discount. Instead, our fragmented system means that Americans pay more for every type of health care that IFHP measured.
“You could say that American health care providers and pharmaceuticals are essentially taking advantage of the American public because they have such a fragmented system,” Sackville. “The system is so divided, its easy to conquer.”
How much are we getting taken advantage of? Here are a few charts that show the big disparities between what we pay for health care in the United States and what people pay elsewhere for the exact same drugs and services.
 FOP  PRESS RELEASE April 17, 2014
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 Wednesday, April 16, 2014
Jennifer Anders Theft-Class D Felony
Evan Broshears Operating a Vehicle with an ACE of .08 or More-Class C Misdemeanor
(Enhanced to D Felony Due to Prior Convictions)
Aaron Carnahan Possession of a Schedule II Controlled Substance-Class D Felony
Operating a Vehicle While Intoxicated-Class C Misdemeanor
Rachel Cook Possession of Methamphetamine-Class D Felony
Possession of Paraphernalia-Class A Misdemeanor
Roxanne Decorrevont Theft-Class D Felony
Richard Kasinger Intimidation-Class D Felony
(Habitual Offender Enhancement)
Christopher Kuhen Dealing in Marijuana-Class D Felony
Possession of Marijuana-Class D Felony
Operating a Vehicle While Intoxicated-Class C Misdemeanor
Anthony Martin Unlawful Possession or Use of a Legend Drug-Class D Felonies
(Two Counts)
Shawn Mason Domestic Battery-Class D Felony
Intimidation-Class D Felony
Interference with the Reporting of a Crime-Class A Misdemeanor
Rodriquez Mathis Possession of Marijuana-Class A Misdemeanor
(Enhanced to D Felony Due to Prior Convictions)
Dealing in a Synthetic Drug or Synthetic Drug Lookalike Substance-
Class D Felony
Resisting Law Enforcement-Class A Misdemeanor
(Habitual Substance Offender Enhancement)
Jasone Parsons Operating a Vehicle as an Habitual Traffic Violator-Class D Felony
Obstruction of Justice-Class D Felony
Resisting Law Enforcement-Class A Misdemeanor
False Informing-Class B Misdemeanor
Norman Schmidt Attempted Theft-Class D Felony
Criminal Mischief-Class A Misdemeanor
Kevin Shelton Theft-Class D Felony
Ebony Shemwell Theft-Class D Felony
Melinda Sigers Possession of Methamphetamine-Class D Felony
Possession of a Schedule II Controlled Substance-Class D Felony
Dejwane Smith Operating a Vehicle While Intoxicated-Class C Misdemeanor
(Enhanced to D Felony Due to Prior Convictions)
Resisting Law Enforcement-Class D Felony
Resisting Law Enforcement-Class A Misdemeanor
Mark Theriault Possession of Methamphetamine-Class D Felony
Possession of Paraphernalia-Class A Misdemeanor
Misty Whitehead Possession of Methamphetamine-Class D Felony
Possession of Marijuana-Class A Misdemeanor
Possession of Paraphernalia-Class A Misdemeanor
Zachary Collins Criminal Confinement-Class D Felony
Domestic Battery-Class A Misdemeanor
Possession of Paraphernalia-Class A Misdemeanor
Diana Ellmers Theft-Class D Felony
Clarence Hall Intimidation-Class C Felony
Domestic Battery-Class A Misdemeanor
Resisting Law Enforcement-Class A Misdemeanor
Michelle Hershberger Arson-Class B Felony
Joseph Isbell Dealing in Methamphetamine-Class A Felony
Richard Johnson Resisting Law Enforcement-Class D Felony
Criminal Recklessness-Class A Misdemeanor
Kimberly Noah Theft-Class D Felony
Jason Opperman Dealing in Methamphetamine-Class A Felony
Unlawful Possession of Syringe-Class D Felony
(Habitual Substance Offender Enhancement)
Cheyenne Yates Attempted Escape-Class C Felony
Resisting Law Enforcement-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