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Nationally-syndicated cartoonist to lecture

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Cartoonist John McPherson will present “A Behind the Scenes Look at the Funny Pages” at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday, February 26, in Rice Library’s lower level auditorium, (RL 0017) at the University of Southern Indiana.

 

“Close to Home,” McPherson’s internationally-syndicated cartoon strip, appears in more than 700 newspapers, includingThe Washington Post, The Los Angeles Times, The Tokyo Times and The Hanoi Daily News. He has published more than 20 collections of his cartoons and has an award-winning line of greeting cards, a yearly block calendar, and numerous other licensed products.

 

Born and raised in Painted Post, New York, McPherson graduated from Bucknell University in 1983 with a bachelor’s degree in mechanical engineering and worked as a design engineer for seven years.  During this period, he took up cartooning and moonlighted his way to a thriving free-lance cartooning career as a regular contributor to The Saturday Evening Post, Campus Life, Yankee, Marriage Partnership, and more than 30 other national magazines.

 

In 1990, McPherson left his engineering job and began freelancing full-time. Zondervan Publishing, which published his first two books, sent the books to Universal Press Syndicate, which offered him a contract for international newspaper syndication.

 

“Close to Home” started running in newspapers on November 30, 1992. Through the strip, McPherson shows the oddities, idiosyncrasies, and inconsistencies that make us human. Readers relish his oddball characters embroiled in awkward situations at work and in home and family life.

 

“A Behind the Scenes Look at the Funny Pages” is hosted by the USI College of Liberal Arts. For more information, contact Chuck Armstrong, instructor in graphic design, at carmstro@usi.edu.

 

Catch the Latest Edition of “The Indiana State Police Road Show”

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SPONSORED BY DEFENSE ATTORNEY IVAN ARNAEZ.

 

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

ISP 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 Executive Director of the Indiana Intelligence Fusion Center, Indiana State Police Captain Jeff Wardlow. Captain Wardlow discusses the Indiana Intelligence Fusion Center and its functions as well as offering information on the services and assistance that can be provided to various agencies.

IS IT TRUE, FEB. 25, 2014-FREEDOM OF INFORMATION REQUESTS FROM AIRPORT AUTHORITY FOR WORK PROVIDED BY MAYOR”S LEGAL COUNSEL

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IS IT TRUE We received many inquiries over the last several months from our readers concerning the accurate accounting of  all City of Evansville legal work mandated by the Mayor’s office?  …we have been told by several county and city officials alike that we may be surprised to find out the real costs to out source all city legal work mandated by the Mayor’s office over the last several years?
IS IT TRUE the City Council approved about $600,000 for the Mayor’s legal counsel for the  for this year?  …this figure doesn’t include any general liability claims work, workman comp issues, bond council work, Evansville Airport Authority District work and ERC contracts?

 

IS IT TRUE recently the City County Observer presented the Evansville Airport Authority District with a “Freedom of Information” request asking for the following information?  …our request stated the following:  Please provide the City County Observer with copies of checks or a listing of all payments made to all attorneys for legal services, including litigation, provided on behalf of the Evansville Airport Authority District during 2012 and 2013?  …the attached legal payments link made to the Mayor’s legal counsel by the Evansville Airport Authority District isn’t part of the annual budgets approved in 2012 and 2013 by City Council for legal fees paid to the Mayor’s legal counsel?

 

IS IT TRUE  posted below is the link with legal payments made to the Mayor’s legal counsel  provided to us by the Evansville  Airport Authority District? … we feel this information will be extremely helpful for City Council to discuss and decides either to continue to out source or require the legal work of the city to be done in house?

Click here for legal payments link made to the Mayor’s legal counsel for 2012 and 2013 by the Evansville Airport Authority District:   airport2

Injunction denial stands in Notre Dame contraception case

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Dave Stafford for www.theindianalawyer.com

A divided 7th Circuit Court of Appeals panel affirmed denial of a temporary injunction sought by the University of Notre Dame to block enforcement of the contraception mandate contained in the Affordable Care Act.

Notre Dame failed to convince the District Court for the Northern District of Indiana to grant an injunction blocking enforcement of the mandate. The Affordable Car Act allows religious institutions such as Notre Dame to sign a form opting out of paying for contraception, but insurers must provide such services to women at no cost to them.

Circuit Judge Richard Posner wrote for the majority joined by Judge David Hamilton in University of Notre Dame v. Kathleen Sebelius, 13-3853, that it was unclear what Notre Dame was asking the court to do, since a requirement that it provide a form opting out didn’t trigger provision of contraceptive services.

“If the government is entitled to require that female contraceptives be provided to women free of charge, we have trouble understanding how signing the form that declares Notre Dame’s authorized refusal to pay for contraceptives for its students or staff, and mailing the authorization documents to (insurers), which under federal law are obligated to pick up the tab, could be thought to ‘trigger’ the provision of female contraceptives.”

But Circuit Judge Joel Flaum would have reversed and granted the injunction, believing that Notre Dame has a strong case under the Religious Freedom Restoration Act – a position on the likely outcome the majority cautioned against reaching in an interlocutory appeal.

“I conclude that Notre Dame has shown a likelihood of success on the merits, and that it has met the other requirements for a preliminary injunction,” Flaum wrote. “I would therefore reverse the district court’s order denying relief.”

The Minimum Wage is No Friend to the Poor

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The debate over raising the federal minimum wage to $10.10 an hour from the current $7.25 heated up last week with the publication of a Congressional Budget Office study, which estimated that total employment would likely be reduced by “500,000 workers” if the hike were implemented.

While the CBO’s scenario made sense, a truly substantive debate about the minimum wage would start with the merits of abolishing it altogether, while seeking to help poor people through more direct means. Instead of decreeing that the unskilled can’t accept certain low-wage offers, thereby condemning many to joblessness, allow them to consider all of the potential options. But to the extent that low-paid workers are part of poor families—and many are not—help them in other ways.

Ironically, Nobel laureate economist Joseph Stiglitz, an advocate of hiking the minimum wage and critic of the CBO report, sensibly opined in his textbook Economics that “the minimum wage is not a good way of trying to deal with problems of poverty.” His point: Since many minimum-wage workers aren’t poor, this is yet another case of the government trying to solve a problem with a blunt instrument. The same CBO study he criticized bears him out, estimating minimum-wage workers’ median family incomes at $30,000, which shows that most live in families well above the poverty line, given that many have multiple workers.

BECAUSE ON-THE-JOB TRAINING is the most effective kind, the best way for people to better themselves materially is through working. A National Bureau of Economic Research study, “Minimum Wage Effects in the Longer Run,” concluded that the “longer-run effects” of “diminished training and skill acquisition” are “likely more significant” than the harm done by the minimum wage in the short run through reduced employment.

Jobs that provide even little or no wage—like unpaid internships—sometimes offer the best on-the-job training. A Wall Street Journal story early last year pointed out that Democratic politicians like Minnesota Sen. Al Franken “advocate…a higher wage floor,” except in their congressional offices, where all the internships are unpaid. Franken is quoted as pointing out that “interns will receive unique career development opportunities”—wise words, although honored in the breach when it comes to Franken’s support of wage floors for others.

Critics will respond that abolition of wage minimums will cause rampant exploitation. All-powerful employers will set the wages of the low-skilled at subsistence, while the prices they charge customers will be as high as ever. However, the critics might be surprised to learn that the share of hourly workers earning the federal minimum wage or less has fallen significantly over the long term. While the inflation-adjusted federal minimum in 1980 was about the same as in 2010, Bureau of Labor Statistics data show that the share of workers at the federal minimum or less has plummeted, from 15.1% in 1980 to 6% by 2010, and to 4.7% by 2012—a trend that tends to belie the idea of employer omnipotence.

Moreover, the proposed hike of nearly 40%, to $10.10 from $7.25, implies a current 40% exploitation rate. But if such huge margins really are being made from minimum-wage labor, one can only wonder why there’s no evidence that businesses paying the minimum are any more profitable than those paying much more. So maybe the conventional explanations do apply: Most businesses are price-takers, and most of us get paid according to the approximate value of our marketable skills.

Some workers have difficulty boosting those skills, however, even after years in the workplace. While BLS data show that about half of those earning the minimum or less are under 25, the other half includes people with “minimum-wage careers.” But the case for helping them is very different from saying that the government should continue to micromanage the labor markets.

A recent University of California, Berkeley, Labor Center study, “Fast Food, Poverty Wages,” shows that low-wage workers already get substantial government subsidies, such as food stamps and the earned income tax credit. The authors propose supplementing those programs with government-mandated wage hikes. But as conventional economics says, that would only worsen the poor’s plight.

Source: Gene Epstien

Half of Nations Uninsured Citizens are in Just 116 Counties

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A new study conducted for The Associated Press shows that the Obama administration is best off focusing on signing up uninsured Americans in a relatively narrow geographic area: Half of non-senior adults without insurance live in just 116 of the nation’s 3,143 counties.

Map of uninsured Americans

VANDERBURGH COUNTY FELONY CHARGES

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 SPONSORED BY DEFENSE ATTORNEY IVAN ARNAEZ.
 DON’T GO TO COURT ALONE. CALL IVAN ARNAEZ @ 812-424-6671nick herman
Below is a list of felony cases that were filed by the Vanderburgh County Prosecutor’s Office on Friday, February 21, 2014. 

Cassandra Mossberger Theft-Class D Felony

Possession of Paraphernalia-Class A Misdemeanor

(Enhanced to D Felony Due to Prior Convictions)

(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.

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.
WILLIS LEE WILHITE
Race: White / Sex: Male / Age: 47
Residence: UNK NORTH PARK APARTMENTS EVANSVILLE , IN
Booked: 2/24/2014 4:17:00 PM
CHARGE BOND AMT
FAILURE TO APPEAR-ORIGINAL CHARGE MISD 1000
Total Bond Amount: $1000
JANESSA NICOLE MOORE
Race: White / Sex: Female / Age: 28
Residence: 1719 BELVIDERE DR EVANSVILLE , IN
Booked: 2/24/2014 2:40:00 PM
CHARGE BOND AMT
FAILURE TO APPEAR-ORIGINAL CHARGE MISD 250
Total Bond Amount: $250
TRAVIS ANDREW THACKER
Race: White / Sex: Male / Age: 29
Residence: 216 PERRY ST VINCENNES, IN
Booked: 2/24/2014 2:12:00 PM
CHARGE BOND AMT
FAILURE TO APPEAR-ORIGINAL CHARGE FELONY 0
Total Bond Amount: NO BOND
NICHOLAS WAYNE COLLINS
Race: White / Sex: Male / Age: 27
Residence: 625 SLEEPY FLS EVANSVILLE , IN
Booked: 2/24/2014 11:35:00 AM
CHARGE BOND AMT
PETITION TO REVOKE PROBATION 0
Total Bond Amount: NO BOND
TRAVIS STEVEN FRIZZELL
Race: White / Sex: Male / Age: 26
Residence: 4300 SPRING VALLEY RD EVANSVILLE, IN
Booked: 2/24/2014 11:20:00 AM
CHARGE BOND AMT
PETITION TO REVOKE PROBATION 0
Total Bond Amount: NO BOND
JAKIYA T RAPIER
Race: Black / Sex: Male / Age: 22
Residence: 318 W GEIGER ST MORGANFIELD, KY
Booked: 2/24/2014 11:06:00 AM
CHARGE BOND AMT
RESIST LAW ENFORCEMENT [DF] 2000
TRAFFIC-RECKLESS DRIVING AT UNREASONABLE HIGH/LOW SPEED 0
Total Bond Amount: $2000
JASON EUGENE MITCHELL
Race: Black / Sex: Male / Age: 36
Residence: 1505 N THIRD AVE EVANSVILLE , IN
Booked: 2/24/2014 10:37:00 AM
CHARGE BOND AMT
FAILURE TO APPEAR-ORIGINAL CHARGE MISD 250
FAILURE TO APPEAR-ORIGINAL CHARGE MISD 250
WRIT OF ATTACHMENT 500
Total Bond Amount: $1000
NICHOLAS ALLEN MARTIN
Race: White / Sex: Male / Age: 19
Residence: 629 S FARES AVE EVANSVILLE , IN
Booked: 2/24/2014 10:11:00 AM
CHARGE BOND AMT
NARC-DEALING (OTHER) SCH I, II, III [BF] 0
NARC-DEALING MARIJUANA >30 GRAM [DF] 0
NARC-POSS SALVIA OR SYNTHETIC CANNABINOID <2 GRAMS [AM] 100
Total Bond Amount: NO BOND
ANDREW JAMES MILLER
Race: White / Sex: Male / Age: 30
Residence: 612 N ELLIOTT ST EVANSVILLE, IN
Booked: 2/24/2014 9:27:00 AM
CHARGE BOND AMT
PETITION TO REVOKE PROBATION 0
Total Bond Amount: NO BOND
IVAN JACOB HONSTEIN
Race: White / Sex: Male / Age: 33
Residence: 1420 E MISSOURI ST EVANSVILLE , IN
Booked: 2/24/2014 7:40:00 AM
Released
CHARGE BOND AMT
WRIT OF ATTACHMENT 250
Total Bond Amount: $250
KEVIN WAYNE PHILLIPS
Race: White / Sex: Male / Age: 36
Residence: 2124 RHEINHARDT AVE EVANSVILLE , IN
Booked: 2/24/2014 7:14:00 AM
CHARGE BOND AMT
THEFT OTHER >200 <100,000 [DF] 500
Total Bond Amount: $500
HUNG JOHN EDWARDS
Race: White / Sex: Male / Age: 40
Residence: 2125 PINESHORE CT EVANSVILLE , IN
Booked: 2/24/2014 6:49:00 AM
CHARGE BOND AMT
TRAFFIC-RECKLESS DRIVING AT UNREASONABLE HIGH/LOW SPEED 50
OMVWI-B A C .08 <1.5 [CM] 0
Total Bond Amount: NO BOND
RYAN HAIRE
Race: White / Sex: Male / Age: 28
Residence: 2601 KINGS CT EVANSVILLE, IN
Booked: 2/24/2014 5:15:00 AM
Released
CHARGE BOND AMT
PETITION TO REVOKE PROBATION 0
Total Bond Amount: $0
ANTHONY EUGENE MANN
Race: White / Sex: Male / Age: 58
Residence: 2839 SOUTHEAST BLVD EVANSVILLE , IN
Booked: 2/24/2014 2:07:00 AM
CHARGE BOND AMT
ALC-PUBLIC INTOX [BM] 250
DISORDERLY CONDUCT [BM] 0
Total Bond Amount: $250
CHARLES LEE CLARK
Race: White / Sex: Male / Age: 42
Residence: 1120 COVERT AVE EVANSVILLE , IN
Booked: 2/24/2014 1:40:00 AM
Released
CHARGE BOND AMT
OMVWI [CM] 250
OMVWI-B A C .15% OR MORE [AM] 0
Total Bond Amount: $250
CHAD ALAN RATLIFF
Race: White / Sex: Male / Age: 35
Residence: 10108 BELMONT CT EVANSVILLE, IN
Booked: 2/24/2014 1:10:00 AM
CHARGE BOND AMT
WRIT OF ATTACHMENT 0
OMVWI [AM] 250
OMVWI-B A C .15% OR MORE [AM] 0
OMVWI-PRIOR OR PASSENGER <18 IN VEH [DF] 0
TRAFFIC-ACCIDENT HIT & RUN /FIXED OBJECT [BM] 0
Total Bond Amount: $250
JOHN EUGENE BOWEN
Race: White / Sex: Male / Age: 27
Residence: 2837 C ST EVANSVILLE, IN
Booked: 2/24/2014 1:05:00 AM
CHARGE BOND AMT
FC-FRAUD-CREDIT CARD [DF] 1000
FAILURE TO APPEAR-ORIGINAL CHARGE MISD 200
FAILURE TO APPEAR-ORIGINAL CHARGE MISD 200
FAILURE TO APPEAR-ORIGINAL CHARGE FELONY 0
FC-FRAUD-CREDIT CARD [DF] 0
FC-FRAUD-CREDIT CARD [DF] 0
FC-FRAUD ALL OTHER [DF] 0
Total Bond Amount: NO BOND
MICHAEL SCOTT DEBES
Race: White / Sex: Male / Age: 28
Residence: 11050 COPPERLINE RD E EVANSVILLE, IN
Booked: 2/23/2014 11:00:00 PM
Released
CHARGE BOND AMT
OMVWI [AM] 250
Total Bond Amount: $250
SUZANNE CAROLE DAY
Race: White / Sex: Female / Age: 34
Residence: 2923 DEARBORN ST EVANSVILLE , IN
Booked: 2/23/2014 8:52:00 PM
CHARGE BOND AMT
NARC-POSS MARIJUANA, HASH OIL, HASHISH [DF] 3000
NARC-POSS METHAMPHETAMINE > 3 G [CF] 0
TRAFFIC-DRIVING W/LIC SUSP PRIOR INF [AM] 0
Total Bond Amount: $3000
RACHEL NICOLE COLLINS
Race: White / Sex: Female / Age: 30
Residence: 625 SLEEPY FALLS EVANSVILLE , IN
Booked: 2/23/2014 8:19:00 PM
CHARGE BOND AMT
FAILURE TO APPEAR-ORIGINAL CHARGE MISD 0
FAILURE TO APPEAR-ORIGINAL CHARGE MISD 0
NARC-LEGEND – POSS [DF] 500
NARC-POSS METHAMPHETAMINE [DF] 0
Total Bond Amount:

EPD Activity Report: February 23, 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: February 23, 2014

Unequal protection and due process claims fail because juvenile was not sentenced

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indianalawyer

Marilyn Odendahl for www.theindianalawyer.com

The Indiana Court of Appeals rejected a teenager’s claim of unequal treatment and violation of his due process rights because he incorrectly referred to the juvenile court’s disposition order as a sentence.

TLC, the teenager, was given home placement and later placed in several youth treatment facilities for his behavioral problems. After he hit his mother and put her in a headlock, the state filed a delinquency petition against him, alleging that he committed the offenses of battery and criminal mischief, both Class B misdemeanors if TLC had been an adult.

The juvenile court subsequently awarded wardship of TLC to the Indiana Department of Correction.

TLC appealed, arguing, in part, that the juvenile court erred in “sentencing him.” He said he received unequal treatment under the law and his due process rights were violated.

The Court of Appeals noted TLC incorrectly asserted he was sentenced. It pointed out that the juvenile court issued a dispositional order rather than a sentence because it provided for treatment rather than punishment.

In regard to TLC’s other claims, the Court of Appeals noted he did not present any evidence supporting his unequal protection and due process rights arguments.

Also, the COA found TLC presented no evidence that he was treated any differently than the other juveniles under similar circumstances, so his equal protection argument fails.

“In sum, all of TLC’s claims are based on the false premise that TLC received a sentence, which he did not,” Judge John Baker wrote in In the Matter of TLC, a Child alleged to be a Delinquent Child v. State of Indiana, 60A01-1308-JV-377. “Thus, TLC has no sentencing claim on appeal. The juvenile court tried home placement without monitoring, home placement with monitoring, Southwest, Valle Vista, and the Gibault facilities, all before turning to the DOC. For all these reasons, we conclude that the juvenile court’s placement and disposition of TLC was consistent with the logic and effect of the facts and circumstances before it. Thus, TLC’s claim fails.”