Indiana State Police, U.S. Marshal’s Service and Vanderburgh County Sheriff’s Office teamed up last night to arrest two Tennessee fugitives wanted for a shooting incident involving a Montgomery County Sheriff’s Office Investigator.Last Wednesday, February 19, Jacob Hammond, 22, of Dover, Tenn., allegedly fired multiple shots at a Montgomery County Sheriff’s Investigator while fleeing from the site of a meth lab. The investigator was not injured. A felony arrest warrant for attempted murder was issued for Hammond’s arrest. An arrest warrant was also issued for Amber Lehman, 29, of Cumberland City, Tenn., for a probation violation. Investigators believe that she was traveling with Hammond.Yesterday evening, the U.S. Marshal’s Service received information that Hammond and Lehman were possibly in the Evansville area. At approximately 10:00 last night, officers found a silver 2002 Chevrolet Tracker with Tennessee plates in the Economy Inn parking lot located at 701 North First Avenue in Evansville. Officers spotted Hammond and another male near the vehicle. When officers approached the two men, Hammond failed to comply with their orders. Hammond was taken into custody after a Vanderburgh County Sheriff’s K-9 was deployed. Officers also found two handguns on Hammond. He was taken to Deaconess Hospital where he was treated and later released for a dog bite. The other male, Jonathan Buckner, 38, of Cumberland Furnace, Tenn., was arrested after officers found meth making material inside their vehicle.Officers received information that Lehman was in one of the hotel rooms. After refusing to open the hotel room door, officers forced their way into the room and arrested Lehman without further incident. All three were taken to the Vanderburgh County Jail where they are being held without bond. Arrested and Charges: • Amber Lehman, 29, 300 Gunso Ridge Road, Cumberland City, Tenn. • Jonathan Buckner, 38, Cumberland Furnace, Tenn. Media Note: Investigating Agencies: Indiana State Police, U.S. Marshal’s Service and Vanderburgh County Sheriff’s Office.
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Fugitives Wanted out of Tennessee for Shooting Incident Arrested in Evansville
Bill would boost payouts for charity gambling
By Olivia Covington
TheStatehouseFile.com
INDIANAPOLIS – Charities would be able to host more lucrative gambling events to raise money for their organizations and communities under a Senate bill heard in the House on Wednesday.
Senate Bill 166 would raise caps on charity gambling events in Indiana.
Sen. Jean Leising, R-Oldenburg, who authored the bill, said both Ohio and Kentucky have already eliminated their charity gambling caps. She said Indiana needs fewer restrictions on its prizes to stay competitive.
Current law allows charitable organizations to host two bingo events each year in which the total prizes do not exceed $10,000. But SB 166 would raise that cap to $30,000.
And the bill would increase total pull tab, punchboard and tip board prizes from $5,000 to $25,000. The individual prizes would be raised from $599 to $15,000.
Leising said charity gambling revenue currently brings in $400 million to the state each year.
But, Leising said, “we are not trying to compete with casinos and racinos.â€
Representatives from the American Legion and gaming organizations said they support the bill because they want Indiana to remain competitive in the industry.
Former American Legion Commander Butch Miller said money the organization gets from charitable gaming events is given back to the community through donations to schools or the honor guard. He said the American Legion is preventing local governments from having to provide those funds.
The committee did not vote on the bill.
Olivia Covington is a reporter for TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.Â
Vanderburgh County Recent Booking Records
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Area Content List
INCIDENT BULLETIN
- THEFT-FROM MOTOR VEH [DF]
- Victim: DONALD T ROGGE
- Race: White / Sex: Male / Age: 61
- Location: 6112 HAMILTON DR EVANSVILLE, IN
- Reported: 2/21/2014 9:15:40 PM CST
- Occurred: 2/20/2014 8:00:00 PM CST
- On 2/21/14, Vanderburgh County Sheriff`s Deputies were dispatched to 6112 Hamilton Dr in reference to a theft report. I arrived on scene and spoke with Donald Rogge Jr, the victim. Donald advised that between 2000 hours on 2/20/14 and 0800 hours today, someone had stolen items from his truck, which had been left unlocked. Donald stated that when he opened his truck, he noticed that there were CDs scattered throughout the front seat. Donald continued looking and also noticed that a pair of leather work gloves and two CDs had also been stolen. Donald advised that he did not want to make a report but wanted to notify us of the incident. This report is for documentation purposes only and can be closed out as such. [02/21/2014 21:14, ENILSSEN, 1504]
NEWS
- DUMPING AND LITTERING: OUR COMMUNITY CAN DO BETTER
- 2.22.2014
- Â Story in Courier about dumping in our county. It is very sad and completely unacceptable and costly….READ MORE
EPD Activity Report: February 22, 2014
Pence names two to utility commission
By Jessica Wray
TheStatehouseFile.com
INDIANAPOLIS – Gov. Mike Pence named two new members Friday to the Indiana Utility Regulatory Commission.
Angela Weber of Franklin and Carol Stephan of Indianapolis will both begin serving on the commission in early March.
The IURC is a fact-finding body that hears cases brought by customers and utility companies. The organization exists to “ensure the utilities provide adequate and reliable service at reasonable prices.â€
Weber currently works for Ice Miller and has previously worked for the Indiana Department of Education and the Marion County Prosecutor’s Office. Stephan has worked for the Indiana Department of Workforce Development, the state attorney general and as general counsel for the state Office of Utility Consumer Counsel.
Both have previously worked for the IURC.
“I extend my utmost appreciation to the Indiana Utility Regulatory Commission nominating committee for their diligence, integrity and commitment to public transparency throughout this process,†Pence said.
Members of the nominating committee are Chair Gwen Horth, Eric Scroggins, John Blevins, Larry Buell, Win Moses, Michael Evans and Michael Mullett.​
Commentary: The education of a racist
By John Krull
TheStatehouseFile.com
 INDIANAPOLIS – Scott Shepherd tells me the story of how he became a racist – and then how he stopped being one.
At one time, he was a serious, determined and dangerous racist. He was a high-ranking official in the Ku Klux Klan and he ran for
John Krull, publisher, TheStatehouseFile.com
public office in Tennessee twice as a white supremacist. He didn’t win in his campaigns for governor and state representative, but he acknowledges that he did a lot of damage along the way.
Shepherd and I are talking on the radio, along with race relations expert and author Daryl Davis. Davis, a black man, has made a practice of establishing relationships with white supremacists and attempting to lead them away from the path of racial animosity. He’s had success. He’s persuaded more than a few dragons and wizards to renounce their racist ways.
Davis and Shepherd both have interesting stories to tell, but I find myself pitching more of the questions Shepherd’s way.
Maybe it’s because, in these angry, angry times, I want to try to understand what makes someone adopt hate as a lifestyle, a passion, a mission.
When Shepherd tells his story, that story’s pedestrian nature makes it clear how well-trod the path to bigotry is.
He was born in Mississippi in 1959. His hometown – Indianola – was the birthplace of the White Citizens Council, a racist organization dedicated to preserving and promoting segregation.
Integration came to Indianola when Shepherd was in elementary school, but the fuse for his rage already had been lit long before the classrooms were desegregated. He came from a troubled family – one that struggled with alcohol and dysfunction.
When Indianola’s schools were integrated, the white families in the community who had money sent their children to an all-white private school. Shepherd’s family didn’t have money. He went to a public school that was overwhelmingly black.
Every school day was a reminder not just of the changes in the South’s racial politics, but also of just how far down on the social totem pole Shepherd and his family sat. Each day was yet another reason to feel resentment about his life and everything around him.
He drifted to the KKK because the organization meshed with his stored grievances, the well-stoked fires of anger he carried within him. Being part of the Klan made him feel “welcome,†as if he “belonged somewhere,†he says.
He rose in the ranks and worked hard at baiting, belittling and tormenting blacks, Jews, immigrants and just about anyone who wasn’t just like him and his friends.
When Shepherd was running for governor of Tennessee as an avowed racist, he got pulled over while driving under the influence.
He had to go into treatment as a way of avoiding harsher legal penalties. The treatment forced him not just to confront his drinking and substance problems, but other issues, too.
“I learned that the problem wasn’t all the other people I blamed,†he says. “The problem was Scott Shepherd.â€
He renounced his racist views and began working to achieve racial reconciliation. When he encounters people he tormented in his earlier days, he tries to make amends.
“I know I’ll never make right what I did, but it’s important to try,†he says.
I ask Davis, who has spent a quarter-century studying white supremacist groups, how common stories like Shepherd’s are – stories that lead to bigotry and hate.
“All too common,†Davis almost sighs.
People veer to racist organizations, he explains, when they are unhappy with their lives and change seems to overwhelm them. They look for people to blame for their misery – people they don’t think are like them.
Both Davis and Shepherd say the key is simple but hard: Getting racists to stop looking at types and get them started seeing people, individual human beings. It’s intensive work and it has to be done on a person-to-person level.
Doing the work that way takes a lot of time, but there’s a good reason to step up the pace.
Membership among the KKK and other hate groups is growing rapidly.
Davis and Shepherd explain at least one of the reasons: There’s a black man in the White House, which has made a lot of already unhappy and angry people even more unhappy and angry.
That makes for a fertile field of racists from which to grow a good crop of racists.
John Krull is director 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.
Pence names new head of banking agency
TheStatehouseFile.com
INDIANAPOLIS – Gov. Mike Pence has appointed Dennis Bassett to be a the director of the Department of Financial Institutions, a cabinet-level position in his administration.
“I’m confident he will serve Hoosiers with the highest integrity,†Pence said.
Basset has had four decades of experience in managing financial institutions. Most recently, Bassett was the chairman of JPMorgan Chase Indiana, where he served from 2005 until he retired in 2013.
He also served as the Indiana chief executive officer for Bank One, Indiana president of Huntington Bank and senior vice president and manager of large corporate banking for the Midwest division at First Chicago NBD.
“Dennis Bassett’s breadth and depth of knowledge is incomparable,†Pence said.
Erika Brock is a reporter for TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.
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Commentary: Delph shouldn’t make a solo trip to the woodshed
By John Krull
TheStatehouseFile.comÂ
INDIANAPOLIS – So, Indiana Sen. Mike Delph, R-Carmel, took a trip to the woodshed.
John Krull, publisher, TheStatehouseFile.com
The Indianapolis NBC affiliate WTHR reported that Delph met with Senate leaders a few days after his epic Twitter-fueled self-immolation. During a three-day rant on social media that concluded with an emotion-heavy but substance-free press conference, Delph lashed out at timid evangelical church leaders, liberals, the media and just about everyone else who didn’t agree completely with him that Indiana’s constitution should ban gay Hoosiers from marrying or entering into civil unions.
More important, he railed about legislative leaders he thought weren’t truly conservative or lacked the courage of their convictions – which most observers read as shots at the Senate leadership in general and Senate President Pro Tempore David Long, R-Fort Wayne, in particular.
Long and the leadership apparently didn’t like being the objects of Delph’s ire.
Following Delph’s rant, Long and the leaders decided to punish Delph in various ways.
Two of the punishments are straightforward.
Delph’s seat on the Senate floor will be moved away from the Republican leadership and put next to Democrats. (Perhaps moving Delph’s desk and chair to Mars was discarded as too expensive an option.)
And Delph also will lose his position as ranking member of the Senate Judiciary Committee.
The other two raps on the wrist carry with them some delicious irony.
Delph will lose his press secretary. (That’s not much of a punishment. There isn’t much evidence that he was listening to the one he had, anyway.)
And he’ll be stripped of his position as Senate Assistant Majority Floor Leader of Communications. (I’ve asked this before but I’ll ask it again here: When real life is this strange, why do people bother writing fiction?)
Delph reportedly accepted the punishment but has promised another statement next week.
Oh, joy.
As political punishments go, this one is pretty severe. Delph’s Senate Republican colleagues are saying to him:
We don’t want you to hang around us, we don’t want people to think you’re one of us and, most important, we don’t want you to talk.
Good luck with that last one.
The GOP leaders opted to make Delph go sit in the corner primarily because he broke the Mafia-like seal of secrecy by which most political caucuses, Republican or Democratic, operate. What gets said in the caucus meeting stays in the caucus meeting. No one speaks outside the family – er, caucus.
And that’s part of the problem.
Because so much of Delph’s Twitter outburst and press conference veered from idiosyncrasy to self-aggrandizement, the fact that he may have had at least one valid point got lost in the mix.
Reasonable people can disagree about whether House Joint Resolution 3 even should have been part of the legislative process this year. Given that such measures face constitutional challenges almost everywhere and the outcome is in doubt, the prudent thing from the start probably would have been to wait to see what the outcome of the litigation would be before engaging again on the issue.
But the fact is that the state’s leaders didn’t choose to wait. They made HJR 3 a top priority – shifting it from one House committee to another to make sure that it made to the floor and taking other extraordinary measures to force the state’s citizens to confront the issue.
Then, when it became clear that HJR 3 could be a political liability for them, GOP leaders in the Senate decided to shut down the public conversation they helped create.
And the most important meeting, discussion and decision involving an issue the state’s leading Republicans pushed Hoosiers to consider took place behind closed doors, away from public scrutiny, under vows of silence.
That isn’t the way the process of self-government is supposed to work.
So, Mike Delph got taken to the woodshed – for transgressions that merited punishment.
But Delph’s not the only one involved in this mess who should have his hand slapped.
Not by a long shot.
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.
County surveyor not entitled to additional compensation, rules court
The Indiana Court of Appeals has denied the Gibson County surveyor’s claims that under statute, he is entitled to a higher salary and additional compensation for referencing corners in the county.
Michael W. Stevenson took office in 2005 when he was not a licensed surveyor, but obtained his license in June of that year. The prior surveyor had been licensed. Stevenson’s initial salary was $36,170.
In 2006, he sought a pay increase of 1.5 times what he currently made since he was now licensed, based on I.C. 36-2-12-15(b). This statute requires a licensed surveyor be paid 1.5 times the amount of an unlicensed surveyor. The county council instead added a note to the budget indicating the salary for an unlicensed surveyor would be 1.5 times less than what Stevenson made. Stevenson made this request each budget year through 2012, and was denied each time.
In 2009, he sought additional compensation for referencing all 1,959 corners in Gibson County. Statute says the surveyor receives $4 per corner referenced. This compensation was also denied, leading to the current lawsuit.
In Michael W. Stevenson v. County Commissioners of Gibson County, Indiana, Bob Townsend, Don Whitehead, Gerald Bledsoe, County Council of Gibson County, Indiana, Tony Wolfe, Jeremy Overton, et al., 26A01-1212-PL-540, the Court of Appeals found no abuse of discretion in the trial court’s decision, which held the council met its statutory obligations by establishing the lower salary for the unlicensed surveyor instead of increasing Stevenson’s salary.
There was also no error in finding he is not entitled to $35,580 in additional compensation for seven years of unpaid corner references he allegedly completed. The COA rejected his claims that to receive compensation he is required to only “have a book of records†and “sit there and draw the money.â€
The statute requires the surveyor check and reference at least 5 percent of all corners in the county each year, meaning perform a physical inspection and note the condition of the monument and references in order to be compensated.
IS IT TRUE….WEEKEND

IS IT TRUEÂ we hear that City Councilman Jonathan Weaver is planning to sponsor an ordinance that shall define the relationship of a legal marriages or civil unions? Â …if Weaver’s “Civil Union” ordinance is approved by city council it would pave the way for city employees and their same sex civil union partners to be eligible for city insurance coverage?