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Zoeller, other AGs press Congress to fund critical human trafficking programs

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greg zoeller

INDIANAPOLIS – Indiana Attorney General Greg Zoeller and 46 other attorneys general today urged Congress to fund programs targeting human trafficking in the U.S.

Congress re-upped the Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act (TVPRA) in March, but has yet to appropriate monies to fund its many programs including victim services. Zoeller and Washington Attorney General Bob Ferguson co-sponsored a letter, signed by attorneys general from across the country, and sent it to Congressional committee leaders who oversee the federal funding.

Human trafficking is tied as the second largest and fastest growing criminal industry in the world, just behind illegal drugs, according to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Zoeller said children are often targeted as victims and the majority of sex trafficking victims in the U.S. are U.S. citizens.

“Law enforcement, government agencies, local task forces and victim services organizations are in tremendous need of funding due to the complex and resource-intensive nature of human trafficking cases,” Zoeller said. “While we understand the fiscal challenges our country faces, much of the progress made in the fight against human trafficking is at risk of being lost without these federal dollars.”

Established in 2000, the TVPRA greatly increased U.S. efforts to protect human trafficking victims, assist survivors, improve prevention methods and successfully prosecute human traffickers. Human trafficking victims often experience severe trauma that requires intensive therapy and rehabilitation. In addition, criminal cases of human trafficking and slavery are often complicated and involve lengthy legal proceedings requiring additional resources for prosecutors and investigators. Many of these victims require comprehensive case management provided by victim service organizations to see them through their recovery and help them navigate the legal system.

Ferguson and Zoeller serve as co-chairs of the National Association of Attorneys General (NAAG) Standing Committee on Human Trafficking. In 2011, state and territorial attorneys general prioritized efforts to combat human trafficking.

Zoeller serves as the co-chair of the Indiana Protection for Abused and Trafficked Humans task force. The task force has trained more than 7,300 persons including law enforcement, cab drivers, first responders, medical professionals and others so that they can identify human trafficking victims and know how to respond.

For more information about the Attorney General’s human trafficking prevention efforts visitwww.in.gov/attorneygeneral. For a copy of the letter visit http://www.naag.org/sign-on_archive.php.

 

Hoosiers students give back: Part 1 of 2

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Every year around this time, I pause and reflect on how thankful I am for all life’s small blessings. I’m thankful for my family, health and of course my dog, Mercury. Many people like to show how thankful they are this time of year by giving back to their community or to those less fortunate. Even more special are when children realize how much they are blessed and decide to give a little back.

Students all around Posey and Vanderburgh counties from kindergarten to seniors in high school have been hard at work this holiday season trying to make Christmas a more special time for families in need. I would like to highlight and recognize some of them for all their hard work and efforts to give back. This week, I will focus on high schools and middle schools.

Mater Dei High School in Evansville successfully put together a food drive for local pantries this past Thanksgiving and immediately began to look towards the Christmas season. Mater Dei has an enrollment of 505 students that are split up into 21 homeroom classes. Each homeroom has adopted a family in the community and has been collecting items to surprise the family closer to Christmas. The Key Club, National Honor Society and Student Council at Mount Vernon High School have also been very busy. All three organizations are doing canned food drives while the Key Club is collecting clothes for At the Cross mission, which is located in Mount Vernon.

Meanwhile at Mount Vernon Jr. High School, the student council is currently doing a canned food drive of their local food pantries for the Christmas season. Currently, they have about 5,000 items that have already been donated and are still collecting more. Students are also bringing in toys for the Salvation Army’s Toy Town and are a designated donation spot for the community to drop off toys for the organization. The Mt. Vernon Jr. High Builder’s club is raising money for this event as well.  The student council at James E. Thompkins Middle School has been raising funds for Toys for Tots, while the Parent Teacher Student Association (PTSA) has been helping out by selling candy canes with all of the money raised going to Toys for Tots. Also, the sixth grade Quest class has decided to collect toiletry items for those in need.

I am so proud of all of these students who are setting an example for the rest of the community and reminding us all what this special time of year is all about. Giving a little can go a long way in making someone’s holiday season a little brighter. If you would like to help out any of these schools in their efforts, please give the school’s main office a call. Next week, I will continue to highlight the efforts of elementary school students who are hard at work to make sure everyone in Posey and Vanderburgh counties have a very special Christmas.

Indiana State Police Investigate Traffic Incident, INDOT Worker Seriously Injured

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Vanderburgh County – A 48-year-old Indiana Department of Transportation employee was seriously injured this afternoon while working along S.R. 62 approximately 300’ west of Boehne Camp Road.

According to Master Trooper Bob Helfrich, Indiana Department of Transportation (INDOT) was dumping a load of rock in the driving lane in order for a track hoe to pick up small amounts to place in the ditch adjacent to the westbound lanes. INDOT had the driving lane closed to traffic. At approximately 11:45 a.m., a one-foot diameter rock rolled from the closed driving lane into the passing lane. A grain truck traveling west struck the rock with its tire. The rock bounced back toward the driving lane striking INDOT employee Michael Chasteen, 48, of Evansville. He was taken to Deaconess Hospital with a serious leg injury.

Investigating Officer: Master Trooper Bob Helfrich, Indiana State Police

Assisting Agency: Vanderburgh County Sheriff’s Office 

VANDERBURGH COUNTY FELONY CHARGES

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nick herman

 

Below is a list of felony cases that were filed by the Vanderburgh County Prosecutor’s Office on Monday, December 16, 2013

 

Doinique Johnson                           Theft-Class D Felony

 

Jose Kempf                                        Burglary-Class C Felony

Theft-Class D Felony

Public Intoxication-Class B Misdemeanor

(Habitual Offender Enhancement)

 

Jeromy Nelson                                 Burglary-Class C Felony

Theft-Class D Felony

(Habitual Offender Enhancement)

 

Scott Wilson                                      Burglary-Class C Felony

Theft-Class D Felony

(Habitual Offender Enhancement)

 

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.

 

IS IT TRUE December 18, 2013

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Mole #3 Nostradamus of Local Politics
Mole #3 Nostradamus of Local Politics

IS IT TRUE December 18, 2013

IS IT TRUE that Mayor Winnecke and the Evansville Redevelopment Commission have agreed that January 23, 2014 shall be the day that elected officials and dignitaries will gather before a pile of fresh dirt at the corner of MLK and Walnut to don their golden hardhats and pierce the fresh dirt with golden shovels to officially break ground on the new downtown convention hotel?…this event is scheduled while design decisions are still being made for the structure and before there has been any announcement regarding the approval of a loan to complete the project by HCW of Branson, Missouri?…this announcement was also made on a day that Old National Bank was honored for an investment of $14 Million (up from $11.5 Million from private investors) that will result in ONB having naming rights for THE CENTRE?…the decision of ONB to put $14 Million into this project if that is really the case is a matter for the shareholders of that public company to deal with?…with the Ford Center that the City of Evansville spending $127 Million to build only to see the naming rights sell for $400,000 per year it is a stretch to imagine how a market analysis of the naming rights for THE CENTRE could possibly exceed $150,000 per year?…this project is something that we can start to believe in when detail drawings are approved for construction, permits are issued, and irrevocable loan approval has been secured by HCW?

IS IT TRUE the other requirement to start to get optimistic that this is reality will happen when the ONB dollars are placed in an escrow account as City Councilman John Friend demanded before voting for the City of Evansville to issue the $20 Million in bonds needed to complete the financing of the project?…the CCO shall be watching Councilman Friend very closely when this circus rolls into town?

IS IT TRUE that with respect to the RFP for the IU Medical Center it will be interesting to see exactly how bidding laws will be complied with?…the City of Evansville is expecting responses to its RFP by early January that does not provide sufficient time to comply with competitive bidding laws?…similarly the January 31, 2014 deadline in the IU RFP is too short of a time for a formal RFP process to be carried out?…we wonder if there is immunity from such laws for public medical schools?…in the absence of immunity we wonder just who the chosen construction company will turn out to be?

IS IT TRUE that The Daily Kos that is a left wing liberal blog has reported yet another unintended consequence of the Affordable Care Act aka ObamaCare?…this one is referred to as ESTATE RECOVERY?… estate recovery will be forced on millions of people who might have otherwise gone without insurance?… reason for estate recovery is that millions more Americans get health insurance by expanding Medicaid and implementing premium assistance (subsidies)?…when a person is found to be eligible for Medicaid, they will be automatically enrolled into their state’s Medicaid program?…those forced into Medicaid will, due to the federal law, also be forced into estate recovery?…their estates will be partly or fully taken over by the federal or state government when they die to recover the costs associated with providing these people with insurance under Medicaid?…under such a situation a perfectly healthy person of limited means who was forced onto Medicaid by ObamaCare could have their entire estate confiscated by the government upon their death due to having been forced into a system they wanted no part of and received no benefits from?…this is the ultimate death tax brought to you by the Democrat Party of 2010 that voted for this without bothering to read and understand it?

Breaking News – Indiana Supreme Court clears hurdle for Rockport coal-to-gas plant

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timthumb.php-2By Lesley Weidenbener

TheStatehouseFile.com

INDIANAPOLIS – The developers of a controversial coal-to-gas plant planned for Rockport say the Indiana Supreme Court has handed them a decisive victory in a battle over whether a deal to build it complied with state law.

But a utility company that’s been fighting the project argues the opposite.

The 5-0 ruling appears to eliminate a significant hurdle for Leucadia National, the plant’s developer, which had all but given up the project after legislative action made it likely it would need a new review.

The Supreme Court’s decision essentially makes that need for review moot, said Leucadia project manager Mark Lubbers.

“We won a complete and total victory,” Lubbers said. Still, company officials weren’t ready to talk Tuesday about when or if they’ll move forward with the plant.

Instead, Lubbers pointed to an April 30 statement in which the company said that even if it won in the courts, “only a clear reversal of position by the governor would enable the project to go forward.”

The statement came just after Gov. Mike Pence had said he would sign a bill into law that was meant to provide a new review of the project.

On Tuesday, a spokeswoman for Pence didn’t elaborate on the governor’s position on the plant or the decision. “We are reviewing the case, the contract and the relevant law,” said press secretary Kara Brooks.

The $2.8 billion Indiana Gasification project is the result of a sort of public-private partnership brokered by the company with the administration of former Gov. Mitch Daniels, for whom Lubbers had once been a top adviser.

The state wouldn’t take any ownership in the plant. Instead, under the deal signed by the Indiana Finance Authority, the state would purchase synthetic natural gas produced by the plant for 30 years at a fixed price and then resell it in the marketplace. The state would then pass the savings – or the losses – onto natural gas customers in the state.

Daniels argued that, over time, the cost of the synthetic fuel produced by the plant would be cheaper than natural gas. And meanwhile, the plant would use Indiana coal and provide jobs to Hoosiers.

But opponents – consumer groups and some utilities, including Evansville-based Vectren Energy – argued the state struck the deal before an explosion of shale gas extractions led the price of natural gas to plummet. The opponents say the deal is no longer a good one for Hoosiers.

Vectren Vice President Mike Roeder said the arrangement “is a loser in virtually all scenarios into the future. Given the fundamental changes that have occurred in the natural gas market since this project was proposed and the dated financial information in the contract, the project must be reviewed.”

At issue in the court case, though, was the wording of the state’s contract with Leucadia. The Indiana Utility Regulatory Commission approved the deal in 2011 but the Indiana Court of Appeals reversed that decision the following year, saying the contract included a clause that violated state law.

The Indiana Finance Authority and the Rockport developers agreed to drop that language from the contract, but that raised questions about whether the revised document would need another round of regulatory review.

Then earlier this year, the General Assembly passed a law that required such a review – but only if the Indiana Supreme Court had agreed with the lower court ruling or found the contract invalid.

That seemed so likely that Leucadia pulled the plug on the plant shortly after the legislation passed, despite having invested some $27 million in development. “We have been disappointed by the state’s breaking its commitment to the plant and the project,” Leucadia spokesman Mike Murphy said in April. “They have changed the rules in the middle of the game.”

But on Tuesday, the state’s highest court appeared to uphold the authority of the Indiana Finance Authority and Leucaida to resolve what it called a “definitional issue” in the contract. “Thus the issue is moot,” the court said.

That means the law requiring a second look at the contract won’t kick in, Lubbers said.

But Vectren officials disagreed, saying they believe the court decision means the Indiana Utility Regulatory Commission will need to review the contract, Roeder said.

The law passed earlier this year “now applies and, if the project is pursued by the developer, will govern consumer protection of any new contract.”

Even if that’s not true, Leucadia’s path to building the plant is not totally open. The Indiana Finance Authority still has one final sign off on the project. And it’s not clear how the Pence administration will approach that decision.

Also, Leucadia needs a loan guarantee from the U.S. Department of Energy to move forward.

The Indiana Supreme Court’s decision came just about three months after it heard oral arguments in the case. The review had been controversial because one of the state’s newest justices – Mark Massa – declined to recuse himself even though he had been Daniels’ general counsel when the Rockport deal was under consideration. Massa is also friends with Lubbers.

EVSC Students Advance to State Marketing Competition

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EVSC

 

Thirty-two students from the Evansville Vanderburgh School Corporation qualified for the 2014 Indiana DECA Career Development Conference in Indianapolis in March after competing in the district competition at Ivy Tech last weekend.  More than 150 students from Evansville, Mt. Vernon, and Washington competed at the district event.

 

Students earn the right to advance to the state level by placing in the top five in their respective events.  Each event required students to take a 100-question test covering basic business, marketing, economics, and specialized area concepts.  In addition, students had to demonstrate their ability to “think on their feet” and apply their marketing knowledge and presentation skills through role playing and case study presentations.  The state competition will be in the same format, except students will have to perform two role plays or case studies instead of one.

 

More than 1,400 DECA students from across Indiana will compete at the state level.  The top three in each event will qualify for the International DECA Career Development Conference at the beginning of May in Atlanta, Georgia.

 

Students from the EVSC who are advancing to the state competition include:

 

Student                                                             Place     Event                                                                 School

Haley Grubbs                                                   2nd        Accounting Applications                               Reitz

Alex Luecke                                                      2nd        Hotel Lodging                                                  Bosse

Megan McNamara                                         2nd        Retail Merchandising                                     Reitz

Olivia DeVoy & Casey Birge                          2nd        Financial Services Team                                Reitz

Morgan Wright & Dalton Morrow              2nd        Travel and Tourism Team                             Reitz

Lee Walker                                                       3rd         Accounting Applications                               Reitz

Kennedy Kolb                                                   3rd         Business Financial Series                Reitz

McKayla Seyffarth                                          3rd         Business Services Marketing                        Reitz

Ryan Nolan                                                      3rd         Food Marketing                                              Reitz

Sam Rutledge                                                  3rd         Hotel Lodging                                                  Reitz

Miaja King                                                        3rd         Quick Serve Restaurant                                 Bosse

Alex Norton                                                     3rd         Retail Merchandising                                     Bosse

Jordan Loving & Phoenix Thomas               3rd         Financial Services Team                                Bosse

Makenzie Christian & Sammi Jo Morrow  4th           Buying & Merchandising Team                    Reitz

Cory Simmons                                                 3rd         Sports and Entertainment Series                 Central

MaKayla Seyffarth                                          3rd         Business Services Marketing                        Reitz

Taylor Babbs                                                    4th         Restaurant and Food Service                       Reitz

Fae Wirtjes & Anna Harl                                4th         Hospitality Services Team                             Reitz

Megan Keown & Kayla Knapp                      4th         Marketing Communication Team               Central

Nicole Chandler & Emily Kiel                        4th         Travel and Tourism Team                             Reitz

Brandon Johns                                                5th         Principles of Marketing                                 Reitz

Nicole Grayson & Alexus Medina 5th         Buying & Merchandising Team                    Bosse

Watez Phelps & Kenyatta Fox                      5th         Hospitality Services Team                             Bosse

 

IS IT TRUE December 17, 2013

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Mole #3 Nostradamus of Local Politics
Mole #3 Nostradamus of Local Politics

IS IT TRUE December 17, 2013

IS IT TRUE that the City of Evansville received the RFP [request for proposal] from Indiana University to construct the medical school that it hopes to attract to downtown Evansville?…that on page 8 of the RFP it is stated the developer must provide evidence of ten years of experience, the developer must provide the legal structure, i.e. corporation, partner, limited liability company, the developer’s management structure, the major shareholders, members, or partners, resumes of the key individuals in addition to references?… THE DEVELOPER MUST ALSO SUBMIT INFORMATION REGARDING THEIR FINANCIAL CAPABILITIES EVIDENCED BY THEIR FINANCIAL STATEMENTS, INCLUDING A COPY OF A CURRENT OR MOST RECENTLY AUDITED FINANCIAL STATEMENT OR EACH OF THE FIRMS PART OF A CONSORTIUM AND EACH MAJORITY OWNER THEREOF, I.E. PERSONAL FINANCIAL STATEMENTS, TOGETHER WITH BANKING REFERENCES AND CONTACT INFORMATION AND DESCRIPTION OF ANY MONETARY CLAIMS MADE AGAINST ANY DEVELOPER OR MEMBER OF A CONSORTIUM OF FIRMS BY ANY COLLEGE OR UNIVERSITY?…during the hotel debate, Evansville City Councilman John Friend, the finance chairman requested the same information from the proposed hotel developer and was labeled “an obstructionist, an unreasonable man, openly asked, how dare him to ask for such information?”…”How will we ever attract developers to our fair city if we are demanding such data” was also used as an excuse to tar and feather Friend for asking for personal financial records?… we wonder if the “HOTEL AT ANY PRICE” crowd believes that Indiana University is being an obstructionist by requesting the same information that Councilman Friend requested during the great hotel debate?

IS IT TRUE that the City of Evansville has proven time and time again that it has no concept of the meaning of the word VETTING, how to VET, or even the will to VET correctly when they have a plan openly published for their use?…the news that IU is asking for the very things that the powers that be in Evansville were either ignorant of or lacked the courage to ask for proves again that the VETTING process in Evansville needs to be outsourced to protect the people of this town from its own government?…at least we now know that IU knows what they are doing?

IS IT TRUE that by the time most people read this the golden hardhat and shovel day should be announced for the groundbreaking of the hotel?…this news is reportedly to be coming from today’s report before the Evansville Redevelopment Commission?…we do hope this announcement is for real but offer some cautionary advice?…if this announcement is not accompanied by the news that a) HCW has loan approval for their part of the deal, and b) that the $11.5 Million that ONB is aggregating from certain high net worth individuals that the hotel project is still not assured of going forward?…if this announcement does not come with the proven news that these two financial milestones have been met then we wonder what the announcement was made for anyway?…with a six month delayed audit, the still reconciliation of the books still up in the air, and the judgment day for the Earthcare Energy loan looming during the next couple of months, making early announcements may have the purpose to distract?…we certainly hope today’s announcement is based on reality and it not just another seasonal feel good announcement?

IS IT TRUE Evansville’s own and former Bosse High basketball star JaQuan Lyle who decommitted from Rick Pitino’s University of Louisville Cardinals was in the national news recently?…this time Lyle who is playing is last year of high school ball at a private academy in West Virginia was named as one of only three of the nation’s top 100 prep stars that are not yet signed to play college ball?…in the article Lyle is quoted as stating he is still looking for the right fit for himself?… two schools mentioned as on Lyle’s radar were UCONN and Memphis?…we wish JaQuan good fortune in his basketball and education related future?