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Commentary: Jim Irsay, the man at the center of the spectacle

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By John Krull
TheStatehouseFile.com

INDIANAPOLIS – He’s just a guy.

Over the years, I’ve run into Indianapolis Colts owner Jim Irsay a few times.

John Krull, publisher, TheStatehouseFile.com

John Krull, publisher, TheStatehouseFile.com

I don’t know him well, but I’ve been impressed the times I’ve been around him. He seemed like a sharp guy, a man with charm, smarts and drive.

Commentary button in JPG - no shadowPerhaps the best of those occasions was when I got to attend a sneak peak at the Indianapolis Museum of Art of the exhibition of Jack Kerouac’s original manuscript of “On the Road,” which Irsay had bought for $2.43 million. Years ago, I taught a course on Kerouac and the Beat Generation, so I have an understanding and appreciation for the novel. A few minutes conversation with Irsay about the writer revealed that, while the Colts owner may be a billionaire and an NFL powerhouse, he also was just a guy who loved a book and knew it well.

Just a guy.

When Jim Irsay was stopped for erratic driving near his home late Sunday night and police found four different controlled substances in his car, the chatter went into overdrive. There was speculation about what this would mean for the Colts, for the National Football League and for Indianapolis’s bid to host another Super Bowl.

There was not much thought given to what it might mean for the man.

From left, former Colts center Jeff Saturday, Colts owner Jim Irsay and Mark Miles, who headed up the city's previous Super Bowl bid, talk during an announcement that the city will compete to host the game again in 2018. Photo by Jesse Wilson, TheStatehouseFile.com

From left, former Colts center Jeff Saturday, Colts owner Jim Irsay and Mark Miles, who headed up the city’s previous Super Bowl bid, talk during an announcement that the city will compete to host the game again in 2018. Photo by Jesse Wilson, TheStatehouseFile.com

We tend to think of wealth, power and prominence as forces that insulate human beings from trouble and misfortune. We tend to think that people with money, influence and fame can’t have doubts, can’t have weaknesses, can’t stumble, and can’t fall.

We tend to forget that a guy like Jim Irsay is, in fact, just a guy.

Right now, he seems to be a guy who’s dealing with some difficulties.

He’s going through a divorce. He and his estranged wife, Meg, married when he was 21. They have been separated for a decade, but it’s no easy thing to put an end to a marriage that has lasted for more than 30 years, produced children and, for all of his adult life, helped define who Jim Irsay is.

He also has some health troubles, a back and hip that don’t work quite the way they used to – typical stuff for middle-aged guys. Particularly middle-aged guys who used to be jocks and subjected their bodies to repeated poundings.

Colts owner Jim Irsay said at an announcement in 2012 that he would support and participate in another Super Bowl bid for Indianapolis. Photo by Kendra Rhonemus, The Statehouse File.

Colts owner Jim Irsay said at an announcement in 2012 that he would support and participate in another Super Bowl bid for Indianapolis. Photo by Kendra Rhonemus, The Statehouse File.

And he’s has a history, a father who had his own struggles with substances, a sister and a brother who died young, a fight with his stepmother over who would control the family business, which just happened to be a world-famous sports franchise.

And then there’s Jim Irsay’s own history, which is well-publicized. He’s admitted that he had a problem with prescription drugs in the past, one that brought him to the edge of serious legal trouble, but he’s said he dealt with it.

While it’s important to note here that Irsay hasn’t been convicted of anything – and if he can produce prescriptions for the four controlled substances, the felony charges go away – the notion that his drug problem was something he could put in the past tense might be part of the issue.

The really nasty thing about addiction is that it never goes away. Every day is another day to fight, another opportunity to slip and fall.

Perhaps Irsay has taken another stumble.

He certainly wouldn’t be the first guy to do so.

The difference between Jim Irsay and a lot of other guys is that hundreds of thousands of people are fans of his football team and the city is banking heavily on again landing the biggest event in the world of sports.

For those reasons, Irsay doesn’t get to make his mistakes in obscurity.

And, for those reasons, we sometimes forget that there’s a human being at the center of the sports franchise and the spectacle.

We forget that Jim Irsay is just a guy – a guy going through a rough patch.

He’ll either deal with his difficulties, make peace with his past and handle his health problems or he won’t – and he’ll continue to stumble.

In that way, Jim Irsay is just like the rest of us.

He’s just a guy.

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.

Democratic candidate for auditor focuses on marriage tax policy

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By Antonio Cordero
TheStatehouseFile.com

INDIANAPOLIS – Democratic auditor candidate Mike Claytor stood in front of the Indiana Department of Revenue on Thursday to talk about one of his main campaign goals: Equal rights for same-sex married couples.

Claytor, an accountant, focused on the tax policy set by the state Department of Revenue – and confirmed by the General Assembly – establishing that same-sex couples legally married in other states would not be allowed to file joint tax returns in Indiana. That’s even as those couples will be allowed to file federal tax returns jointly for the first time.

Instead, couples in Indiana will be required to file separate individual tax returns. That means same-sex married couples will need to start with a minimum of five different tax return forms, while heterosexual married couples only need two, Claytor said.

“Our state tax policy should not discriminate,” he said. “Filing your tax return should be an easy, streamlined process.”

Claytor is a candidate for the Democratic nomination for state auditor. The party’s nominee will be chosen at a convention this summer and no other Democrats are running.

Earlier this month, the General Assembly voted to keep Indiana’s tax system as is – despite the federal changes – to comply with the state law that doesn’t recognize same sex marriages performed in other states.

On Thursday, Claytor said that the Indiana Department of Revenue has not provided a worksheet to help same-sex couples file their taxes as Wisconsin and Michigan did. So Claytor created a worksheet to facilitate the transfer of information from the federal tax form to the state one. People interested can find it at www.claytor4auditor.com/worksheet.

“This worksheet will begin the process of alleviating some of the headache, by allowing couples to fill out four forms instead of five. I hope this helps, but we can’t stop here. We must encourage our state officials to rescind this discriminatory practice entirely,” Claytor said.

But Bob Dittmer, a spokesman for the Indiana Department of Revenue, said the agency’s website — www.in.gov/dor/ – has plenty of information to help same-sex couples navigate the tax situation.

Dittmer said Indiana’s decision not to comply with the federal marriage rules won’t cost same-sex couples more money.

Claytor encouraged people who support equal rights to voice their concerns about the issue to Gov. Mike Pence.

“During this legislative session, we saw an all-out attack on equal rights,” Claytor said.

He also pointed to House Joint Resolution 3 – a proposed constitutional amendment to ban same-sex marriage – as an example. He said it was the “focus of too much attention and reinforced legal discrimination in Indiana.”

A spokeswoman for state Auditor Suzanne Crouch referred questions about the issue to the Indiana Department of Revenue.

 Antonio Cordero is a reporter for TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College students.

EVSC Journalism Panel Discussion

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John Wells, journalism teacher at Reitz High School, is hosting a panel discussion for young women in the area who are interested in pursuing a career in journalism. The students, who are students at Reitz, Harrison, Princeton and South Spencer, will have the opportunity to hear from professionals in the field about their story, how they got a job in media, and the challenges that females face going into journalism. Students also will have lunch and a casual networking session.

 

Professionals included in the panel discussion are:

  • Kayla Moody – WEHT
  • Chelsea Schneider, Megan Erbacher & Jesse Hellman (intern) – Courier and Press
  • Erin Gibson – USI
  • Diana Hadley – Franklin & IHSPA

 

Academy Sports + Outdoor coming to The Promenade

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safe_image.phpIt is with great pleasure that The Promenade announces that Academy Sports+Outdoors has purchased an 8-1/2 acre site at The Promenade along Burkhardt Road at the Columbia intersection.  The new store will be over 71000 SQ. FT.  and will bring approximately 150 jobs to the area.  

Academy is known throughout the South and Midwest U.S. for its wide selection of products including golf, team sports, casual and athletic footwear and apparel, hunting, fishing, camping, patio, bbq, recreation and leisure products from top brands such as Nike, Adidas, Under Armour, Columbia and much more.

The Promenade is a mixed use, lifestyle development providing high quality housing, retail, and office in a healthy, walkable community.  The Promenade is one of the four sites currently under consideration for the IU School of Medicine and the collaborative medical education campus as well as a new 224 unit apartment community (The Havens of Promenade) and will be a fantastic location for the newest Academy Store.  We look forward to their success and welcome them to The Promenade, Evansville, and Southwestern Indiana.

One Book One Community Announces 2014 Selection

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The One Book One Community Committee is pleased to announce that In the Garden of Beasts: Love, Terror and an American Family in Hitler’s Berlin by Erik Larson is the book selection for 2014.

 

Erik Larson is a master of narrative non-fiction and this work, In the Garden of Beasts, is a vivid portrait of the American ambassador and his family in Berlin during the first years of Hitler’s reign.  The book transports the reader back to a time of intolerance, uncertainty and a turning point in history – all from the perspective of a father and daughter who find that the exciting, optimistic Germany they experience is undergoing a quietly sinister transformation.  Larson has crafted a gripping, deeply-intimate narrative, which the New York Times hailed as “By far his best and most enthralling work of novelistic history….Powerful, poignant…a transportingly true story.”  Larson’s other books include The Devil in the White City, Isaac’s Storm, Lethal Passage, Thunderstruck and The Naked Consumer.

 

Erik Larson to Speak Oct. 28

One Book One Community will host author and historian Erik Larson on Tuesday, October 28 at 7:30 p.m. at the Victory Theatre, where he will speak about his books. This event is free and open to all.

 

In the Garden of the Beasts is available in a variety of formats for loan through the Evansville Vanderburgh Public Library (EVPL) or for purchase at Barnes & Noble.  Library discussion groups will soon be underway as southern Indiana prepares to read the same book and listen to Larson when he visits in October.

 

About One Book One Community

One Book One Community is a reading program to develop a community built around the shared experience of people reading and talking about the same book.  Bringing people together to discuss ideas in books can play an important role in breaking down barriers between people, cultures and economic and educational backgrounds.

 

The EVPL is joining with local media, schools, universities, book stores, businesses and other libraries to promote a culture of reading in Southwestern Indiana. In 2014, One Book One Community is excited to also partner with The Committee to Promote Respect in Schools (CYPRESS) whose mission is to encourage teaching about the Holocaust in area schools because of its lessons of tolerance and respect for diversity.  This year marks the 70th anniversary of World War II, and CYPRESS is partnering with several organizations to raise awareness and recognize this important milestone anniversary.

 

 

Christopher Compton Felony Charges Filed

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Christopher Compton

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

 

This afternoon, official charges have been filed against Christopher Compton as a result of an incident on March 17, 2014.

 

Compton has been charged with Three (3) Counts of Felony Murder and Ten (10) Counts of Arson. Compton is also charged as a habitual offender.

 

The State of Indiana has also filed a motion seeking life without parole for Compton. We are able to amend all charges up to Thirty (30) days of the Omnibus Court date. We are still conducting an investigation and we are constantly examining evidence in this case.

 

Under Indiana law, all criminal defendants are considered to be innocent until proven guilty by a court of law. 

 

Ungethiem Political Fundraiser Attracted Large Crowd

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bruceOver 130 supporters of Bruce Ungethiem for County Commissioner attended a fund raiser Saturday night at the Armstrong Recreational Center. They were treated to a catered dinner and a live auction that included everything from signed Don Mattingly baseballs to a home made quilt.
A good time was had by all as the auctioneer kept things lively as he added comedy to the bidding. One person was quoted on face book as saying ” Political fundraisers shouldn’t be this much fun”
The fundraiser exceeded expectations and Bruce thanked the people who came as well as the people who donated items and the committee who planned and made the night such a success.
The crowd cheered as Bruce talked about the success of the CORE group he co- chaired in defeating the consolidation referendum. They also cheered when Bruce mentioned that he had lobbied the State legislators to change the law to require a separate threshold vote on all future consolidation efforts.
The next fundraiser is a bar-B-Q on April 5th at the lakeside cabin at Burdette park. For more information contact Bruce on face book or by email at bungethiem@yahoo.com
FOOT NOTE:  WE HEAR THAT MARSHA ABELL HAD A POLITICAL FUNDRAISER RECENTLY  THE CITY COUNTY OBSERVER SHALL POST HER  FUNDRAISER ARTICLE THAT IS SENT TO US BY HER  WITHOUT OPINION, BAIS OR EDITING.   WE SHALL ALSO POST ANY ARTICLES CONCERNING OTHER POLITICAL CANDIDATES EVENTS WITHOUT OPINION, BAIS OR EDITING.

 

Will Illinois Elect a Reform Governor to gut public sector unions as Wisconsin and Michigan did?

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Public-sector unions took a big hit in Illinois Tuesday evening as a gubernatorial candidate they have poured millions of dollars into defeating seized victory in the state’s Republican primary. And now, in one of the few governor’s races Republicans see as a pickup opportunity this year, private-equity millionaire Bruce Rauner is poised to give Illinois governor Pat Quinn a run for his money and has a real shot at becoming the state’s first Republican governor in over a decade.

Rauner set unions on edge during the primary campaign, criticizing their leaders and pledging to reform the state’s bankrupt pension system. “The government-union bosses are at the core of our spending problem in Illinois,” he said in a primary debate, arguing public unions create a “conflict of interest for the taxpayers” and have made a mess of the state fisc.

Rauner’s targets didn’t take it lying down: The American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees, the Illinois Education Association, the Illinois Federation of Teachers, and the Democratic Governors Association spent north of $3 million attacking him and trying to divert votes to one of Rauner’s primary opponents, state senator Kirk Dillard.

That’s far more than Democrats spent — $1.2 million — trying to steer Republican votes to Todd Akin in the 2012 Senate primary in Missouri, where Akin was viewed as the weakest candidate to take on vulnerable Democrat Claire McCaskill.

In the Illinois race, Dillard not only received money and support from some Democrats, but he also earned the endorsement of one big union. “My advice is that, if you are a suburban or downstate Democrat or independent and you care about public education, you should vote in the Republican primary for Kirk Dillard,” Illinois Education Association president Cindy Klickna told union members. The union also sent pamphlets to its members urging them to support Dillard. Almost twice as many votes were cast in the Republican primary this year than the Democratic one — though Democratic incumbent Pat Quinn was essentially unopposed, the healthier GOP turnout suggests some union members may have crossed the aisle to cast votes. Rauner beat Dillard 40 percent to 37.

Rauner’s aggressive talk about the state’s “corrupt union bosses” occurs against the backdrop of Republican reforms that have rocked its neighboring states.

In Wisconsin, governor Scott Walker fought and won a major battle to curb the collective-bargaining rights of the state’s public-sector unions; in Michigan, governor Rick Snyder led the fight to pass a right-to-work law that protected workers from paying compulsory union dues; and in Ohio, governor John Kasich passed a broad law limiting collective-bargaining rights that was overturned in a referendum a year later.

Illinois unions are petrified that a Rauner victory could bring similar reforms to President Obama’s home state, where Democrats have maintained control of the governor’s office and both legislative chambers for over a decade. “Illinois is the last holdout for labor power,” says a senior Rauner adviser. “It has the highest unemployment rate and the worst pension labor debt. Rauner is taking this fight on. None of the other Republicans are willing to do that because they fear the power of labor.”

John Tillman, the president of the conservative Illinois Policy Institute and a longtime Rauner friend, says that Rauner’s victory should send a message to Republicans in left-leaning states around the country. When a Republican “puts a flag in the ground” on labor issues, he says, voters in blue states can be persuaded. He says he considered Tuesday’s primary a “fight for the soul of the Republican party.” The question at issue, Tillman says, was whether the GOP would side with the taxpayers who fund the government or a “union-backed Republican” who could have “split the Republican party in half.”

Rauner, who made millions in private equity, has portrayed himself as a political outsider who can transcend the corruption that’s marked Illinois politics for decades and whose business acumen will come in handy in Springfield. In January, the state had the country’s third-highest unemployment rate — 8.7 percent — and its unfunded pension liability, which stands at $100 billion, is the largest in the nation

“We have to be bold, tough, and fundamentally change government,” one Rauner ad says. “Lobbyists run the government for special interests, and career politicians let it happen — powerful union bosses and trial lawyers on the Democratic party . . . and a large part of the Republican party too.”

On the stump, Rauner is straightforward, even cheeky. Given his success in private equity, he’s often been compared to his party’s 2012 presidential nominee, even getting tagged the “Mitt Romney of Illinois.”

“I am a very different person from Mitt Romney,” he told the Chicago Sun-Times. “I drink beer. I smoke a cigar. I use a gun. I ride a Harley. My grandparents lived in a double-wide trailer. I’m a salesman. He’s an analyst.” He describes himself as a feisty guy and calls Scott Walker and Mitch Daniels his political mentors.

There are indications that Illinois voters are itching for a change. A Capitol Fax/We Ask America poll taken last month had Quinn trailing all of his potential GOP challengers. He was behind Rauner by eight points, 47 to 39 percent. A November survey from Democratic firm Public Policy Polling found just 34 percent of Illinois voters approving of the job Quinn’s done, versus 34 percent disapproving.

“I really want to transform Illinois government because this state is failing the taxpayers and the children,” Rauner told the Chicago Tribune last month. In a typically impolitic riff, he continued: “It’s going to take steel backbone to get it done. Because I don’t care about a political career. I certainly don’t need a job. Getting reelected is not on my top-ten list. I’ll be willing to do things that politicians won’t do. Because I don’t care who I upset.”

His friend Tillman puts it this way. “Barack Obama said he wanted to transform the country. Bruce Rauner said he wants to transform Obama’s home state, and the unions know that that is the beginning of a rebirth of pro-growth, pro-free-enterprise policies, and a movement.”

Source: NRO

Arrest made after homemade bombs found in Evansville home, suspect had threatened to kill an EPD Officer

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

 epdepd  Evansville Police arrested 48 year old Franz Corvette Costello on multiple charges after he made threats to kill a member of the EPD Meth Suppression Unit.  Costello has been investigated by the Meth Suppression Unit 3 times in the last year. He served 5 months in jail after being convicted of possession of precursors stemming from a March, 2013 arrest. He was investigated twice in February of 2014.  On Tuesday March 18th, A concerned citizen notified police that Costello was telling people he was going to kill one of the Meth Suppression unit members. The citizen knew Costello was building homemade bombs and provided cell phone pictures of the devices.  An arrest warrant was issued for Costello on drug charges from one of the February cases. Police also obtained a search warrant for his house based on the statements and pictures of the homemade bombs.  On Wednesday at 1:30pm, the EPD SWAT took Costello into custody outside of his house at 916 N Governor. The SWAT Team made entry into the house and removed two other people from the house.  Members of the EPD Bomb Squad then entered the house and located 3 homemade bombs. Two were in a bag next to Costello’s bed and one was under his pillow. The devices were converted motor type fireworks that had been modified into homemade “fragmentation grenades”. The devices were packed with deck screws, lead shot, and gunpowder. The devices were wrapped in duct tape, had fuses attached to them, and were ready to be detonated. The devices were cable of killing someone and causing property damage. The Bomb Squad was able to disassemble all  3 devices at the scene.  Officers also found meth and drug paraphernalia in the house.  The two people removed from the home were not charged with any crimes.  Costello was charged with: Possession of a Destructive Device with Intent Class A Felony Possession of Meth Class D Felony Possession of Syringe Class D Felony Possession of Drug Paraphernalia Class A Misdemeanor                                                                                                                             For full details, view this message on the web.