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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 Wednesday, August 7, 2013.

 

Joshua Alexander            Possession of Cocaine-Class D Felony

Possession of Paraphernalia-Class A Misdemeanor

Visiting a Common Nuisance-Class B Misdemeanor

 

David Austin                      Receiving Stolen Property-Class D Felony

 

Ronald Berthold               Possession of Marijuana-Class A Misdemeanor

(Enhanced to D Felony Due to Prior Convictions)

Public Intoxication-Class B Misdemeanor

 

Frank Elsperman              Operating a Vehicle While Intoxicated-Class C Misdemeanor

(Enhanced to D Felony Due to Prior Convictions)

 

Beverly Greenwell         Neglect of a Dependent Resulting in Bodily Injury-Class C Felonies (Two Counts)

Operating a Vehicle While Intoxicated-Class C Misdemeanor

(Enhanced to D Felony Due to Prior Convictions)

Operating a Vehicle While Intoxicated Endangering a Person

with a Passenger less than 18 Years of Age-Class D Felony

False Informing-Class B Misdemeanor

 

Frank Jackson                    Possession of Methamphetamine-Class D Felony

Resisting Law Enforcement-Class A Misdemeanors (Two Counts)

 

Tracy King                           Operating a Vehicle While Intoxicated-Class C Misdemeanor

(Enhanced to D Felony Due to Prior Convictions)

 

Kayla Mangold                  Neglect of Dependent-Class C Felony

Maintaining a Common Nuisance-Class D Felony

 

 

Amber Martin                   Dealing in Methamphetamine-Class A Felony

Maintaining a Common Nuisance-Class D Felony

Possession of Paraphernalia-Class A Misdemeanor

 

Jennifer Majors                Unlawful Possession or Use of a Legend Drug-Class D Felony

Possession of Paraphernalia-Class A Misdemeanor

 

Robert Myers                    Dealing in Methamphetamine-Class A Felony

Maintaining a Common Nuisance-Class D Felony

Possession of Paraphernalia-Class A Misdemeanor

(Habitual Offender Enhancement)

 

 

Matthew Pedigo              Operating a Vehicle with an ACE or .15 or More-Class A

Misdemeanor

(Enhanced to D Felony Due to Prior Convictions)

Operating a Vehicle While Intoxicated-Class C Misdemeanor

(Enhanced to D Felony Due to Prior Convictions)

 

Stephen Rainey                Possession of Methamphetamine-Class D Felony

Receiving Stolen Property-Class D Felony

 

Teddy Roy                           Theft-Class D Felony

Possession of Methamphetamine-Class D Felony

 

Tevin Woodruff               Dealing in Methamphetamine-Class B Felony

Conspiracy to Commit Dealing in Methamphetamine-

Class B Felony

Neglect of Dependent-Class C Felony

Dealing in a Look-a-Like Substance-Class C Felony

Maintaining a Common Nuisance-Class D Felony

Criminal Recklessness-Class B Misdemeanor

(Habitual Offender Enhancement)

 

Theresa Alexander         Theft-Class D Felony

 

Jeffrey Bates                     Theft-Class D Felony

Receiving Stolen Property-Class D Felony

(Habitual Offender Enhancement)

 

Henry Boclair                    Maintaining a Common Nuisance-Class D Felony

Possession of Paraphernalia-Class A Misdemeanor

 

Harold Byer                        Child Molesting-Class C Felony

Attempted Child Molesting-Class C Felony

 

 

James Smith Jr                  Battery Resulting in Bodily Injury-Class A Misdemeanor

(Enhanced to D Felony Due to Prior Convictions)

 

Genean Young                  Theft-Class D Felony

 

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.

 

 

911 Gives Hope to award grants to local charities

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EPD PATCH 2012

On Friday August 9th at 10:00am, the 911 Gives Hope Board of Directors will be awarding grants to several local charities. The event will be held at the Guns and Hoses Gym in the basement of the Old Courthouse. The public and the media is invited.

Updated from 2010: The Executive Inn Dilemma When Valuations and Costs are Miles Apart

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Joe Wallace

By Joe J. Wallace

Update: On Monday Mayor Winnecke announced a plan to start a downtown hotel by giving an out of town developer a gift of $37.5 Million with $20 Million of that amount as a direct supplement for the hotel itself. The article below is republished from 2010 as a reminder that planning and competence back in 2008 when the first of four rounds of half-baked announcements were made could have avoided the 5 years of false starts and embarrassments for the City of Evansville. In the end the subsidy of $20 Million was predicted to the penny by the article in the CCO years ago. Please recognize that at the time there was hope that the Ford Center would bring enough business downtown to attract a developer without a subsidy. Alas that did not happen and here we are in 2013 being asked to write a check for $20 Million as if it were 2008. In short valuations have not changed at all. The question of real interest is why the people of Evansville will not be 50% shareholders in this hotel as they are being asked to make an investment of 50% of the capital right up front.

Original Article: We all have encountered a time in life when there is something that we desire that just isn’t worth the cost associated with acquiring that object of our affection. It may be a toy for a child, an automotive accessory for a young man, that perfect pair of shoes, or an overpriced bauble of success for a captain of industry. The choice of whether to knowingly and deliberately overpay for what one desires in all of these cases has personal consequences but fortunately these consequences are only personal.

In decisions where taxpayer’s money is involved the consequences are distributed over the population at large, yet the decisions always seem to be made by the few or the one. Such a decision is facing the City of Evansville. The City-County Observer accurately predicted months ago that the Executive Inn would have to be torn down and that the financing for the project would not be secured.

Last week, The City of Evansville came face to face with what I will refer to as the Executive Inn Dilemma when Browning Investments of Indianapolis announced that they will be returning the Executive Inn to the City of Evansville on Monday August 17, 2010 at a meeting of the Evansville Redevelopment Commission. The reasons given were cost overruns due to some structural issues with the building and the fact that they have not been able to secure financing for the project after exhausting their options over many months.

Upon hearing this I did what I always do when curiosity gets the best of me and dug out some books from graduate school and did a little research on the internet. Given the conditions that David Dunn articulated to Dan Shaw of the Courier Press for a 250 room hotel, with rooms that rent for $120 per night, and an average occupancy of 60%, I used these initial conditions and assumed a 3% growth rate for the next 10 years. These assumptions lead to a value for the proposed hotel in the range of $18M to $22M with the variation coming from the efficiency range assumptions of the overall operation.
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Browning is on record from its 2008 announcement that a three star hotel of this size will cost around $35M to complete and that the recently disclosed problems will add several million dollars to the price tag. It is safe to conclude that undertaking this task will require a budget of at least $40M to complete.

A dilemma is a problem offering at least two solutions or possibilities, of which none is practically acceptable. One in this position has been traditionally described in America as being “between a rock and a hard place”. Here is the Executive Inn Dilemma:

• The Centre is Currently Losing Convention and Entertainment Revenue
• When the Arena is Built, Both will continue to Suffer Financially with no Convention Hotel
• Taxes from the Hotel are Committed to Pay off the Arena Bonds
• The Taxpayers were Promised a Three Star Hotel Financed Privately
• The Convention Hotel will Cost $40M+
• The Convention Hotel on Completion will have a Value of $20M +/- 10%

What Are We Going to Do???

First, given the value vs. cost proposition it is highly unlikely that there is going to be a white knight with deep pockets come to the rescue and take on a project that has a high probability of many years of losses and an instant $20M negative hit to the company balance sheet. For the same reason that a solid business like Browning could not find a way to make this happen, other for-profit entities will be quite bearish when deliberating on such an investment.

Secondly, If it is determined that Evansville must have a hotel right now, then the City of Evansville and Vanderburgh County, that owns the Centre are going to have to consider finding some way to arrange for financing for the Convention Hotel. This could come in the form of a bond issue to cover the construction with a leaseback agreement with an operator, a combination loan and grant to a developer, or a combination of other creative financing alternatives. The bottom line is that the City of Evansville probably can find a way to do this. The $40M question then becomes, is it prudent for the City of Evansville to pay $40M for something that has a value of $20M? As odd as it may seem, the answer is maybe. The aggregate economic benefit to the Arena, the Centre, and other Downtown tax generating businesses may just justify this.

The third option as pointed out so eloquently by Mizell Stewart in his Sunday editorial is to wait and see if the Arena delivers on the economic impacts that were so highly touted in the meetings that lead to the decision to build it. It is quite reasonable given the hyperbole surrounding the $128M Arena that it will have a $20M positive impact on the investment potential for a Convention Hotel. If that is the case, in a couple of years a private entity will eagerly embark upon this project.

I did a few more iterations on my valuation routine and here is what is needed to make a 250 room hotel achieve a value of $40M. The Convention Hotel will need to command between $250 and $300 per night and achieve an 80% – 90% occupancy rate. If the Arena can create commercial success that allows the rack rate to double and the occupancy to increase by 50% over the current assumptions, private investors will find this project attractive. That is no small requirement as Evansville has never been considered to be a market for $300 rooms.

Could the Executive Inn Dilemma have been avoided? No, but it could have been known before any shovel struck the ground for the Arena or any wrecking ball hit the Big E. The value calculations did not just appear. The value resulting from the assumptions that have been published has not changed in the last two years. There have been rumors of structural problems with the Executive Inn for many years. A test to have assessed that could have been done. It may have been done. The construction cost has also not changed dramatically. I must conclude that the Executive Inn Dilemma was unavoidable.

What is baffling though is why the analysis and the structural testing were not done three years ago when the planning process was begun. They could have been. If they had been, there may very well be a Convention Hotel under construction right now ready for a fall 2011 opening along with the Arena. A little more planning and testing could have avoided the anxieties of the last week along with any ire that the citizens of Evansville may feel if another bond issue is undertaken.

Evansville has created another classic paradox. Situations like this where the right hand does not know what the left hand is doing are known as Condorcet’s paradox or a paradox of voting. This is where a group of separately rational individuals or project managers may have preferences that are irrational in the aggregate.

Right now, the Big E has got to come down. The prospect of having this rotting reminder standing there looking like a scene from Will Smith’s “I am Legend” where he would capture zombies for medical research is just not an option. The people of Evansville and Vanderburgh County will have nearly $200M invested in the Centre and the new Arena. Both are showcase facilities and deserve to have something of class adjacent to them even if it is just a memorial garden or a park for the time being.

Notes for the Curious: I have included two websites below that are good tutorials on valuation methods and the equations used to reach valuations. For those who are curious and mathematically inclined valuation is a good skill to have as the same principles apply to parking garages, rental properties, and lease based capital equipment. Enjoy!!

http://www.hvs.com/Bookstore/HotelValuationTechniques.pdf
http://www.entrepreneur.com/tradejournals/article/120350582.html

Public Meeting Schedule Released Regarding Downtown Hotel Project: Mayor Winnecke to Make His Plans Known

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Hotel Project Public meetings announced for month of August to share details

(EVANSVILLE, IN) – Members of the Evansville Redevelopment Commission (ERC) voted today to adopt a resolution approving a project development agreement with developer HCW of Branson, MO, for the Downtown Convention Hotel Project. The vote took place at a special ERC meeting.

Evansville Mayor Lloyd Winnecke said he is very pleased with the ERC’s action. He called today’s vote “a critical step” that clears the way for an ordinance approving funding for the project to be presented at the Evansville City Council meeting for first reading Monday, August 12, at 5:30 p.m.

The total cost of the project is $74 Million. The City would contribute $20 million toward the hotel and $17.5 million toward ancillary components, such as Sky bridges, Parking Garage, Retail Building, infrastructure and streetscape improvements and renovations to The Centre. Mayor Winnecke said he is confident the County will be contributing to the project.

The project is projected to create 831 jobs during construction and 235 permanent onsite jobs when the hotel and retail complex opens. The public investment will not impact property taxes and instead will be paid for using a combination of revenues from the Downtown TIF, Food and Beverage Tax, Innkeepers Tax and Riverboat Gaming. HCW will not receive tax abatement.

A series of public meetings have been scheduled throughout the city at various times and days to give the community an opportunity to hear details of the Downtown Hotel Project and ask questions. Mayor Winnecke plans to seek final approval of the deal at the September 9 City Council meeting and break ground on the project by late 2013.

Hotel Public Meeting Schedule

Tuesday, August 13th at 6:00 pm Red Bank Library, Howard Room 120 S. Red Bank Rd., 47712

Wednesday, August 14th at 6:00 pm McCullough Library, 5115 Washington Ave., 47715

Saturday, August 17th at 1:00 pm Concordia Lutheran Church, 2451 Stringtown Rd., 47711

Monday, August 19th at 6:00 pm Dexter Elementary School, Auditorium 917 S. Dexter Ave., 47714

Wednesday, August 21st at 10:00 am, Central Library, Browning Room B 200 S.E. M.L. King Jr. Blvd., 47708

Wednesday, August 21st at 6:00 pm North Park Library 960 Koehler Dr., 47710

Grandmother Arrested for DUI with 2-Year-Old Granddaughter

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user29376-1375975150-media1_898a8e_192_240_PrsMe_-1

Vanderburgh County – Wednesday night, August 7, at approximately 11:00 p.m., Trooper Wes Alexander was driving his patrol car northbound on St. Joseph Avenue south of Mohr Road when the driver of a 2003 Chevrolet Tahoe drove left of center and nearly struck his patrol car. Trooper Alexander immediately turned around and stopped the driver, who was identified as Tamara A. Tevault, 49, of Evansville. Tevault’s two-year-old granddaughter was also in the vehicle. Further investigation revealed Tevault had taken Clonazepam, Hydrocodone and a morphine pill earlier. Due to her state of intoxication, she was arrested and taken to the Vanderburgh County Jail where she is currently being held without bond.

Redevelopment Commission Approves Downtown Hotel Project

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City of Evansville Seal

Members of the Evansville Redevelopment Commission (ERC) voted today to adopt a resolution approving a project development agreement with developer HCW of Branson, MO, for the Downtown Convention Hotel Project. The vote took place at a special ERC meeting.

Evansville Mayor Lloyd Winnecke said he is very pleased with the ERC’s action. He called today’s vote “a critical step” that clears the way for an ordinance approving funding for the project to be presented at the Evansville City Council meeting for first reading Monday, August 12, at 5:30 p.m.

The total cost of the project is $74 Million. The City would contribute $20 million toward the hotel and $17.5 million toward ancillary components, such as Sky bridges, Parking Garage, Retail Building, infrastructure and streetscape improvements and renovations to The Centre. Mayor Winnecke said he is confident the County will be contributing to the project.

The project is projected to create 831 jobs during construction and 235 permanent onsite jobs when the hotel and retail complex opens. The public investment will not impact property taxes and instead will be paid for using a combination of revenues from the Downtown TIF, Food and Beverage Tax, Innkeepers Tax and Riverboat Gaming. HCW will not receive tax abatement.

A series of public meetings have been scheduled throughout the city at various times and days to give the community an opportunity to hear details of the Downtown Hotel Project and ask questions. Mayor Winnecke plans to seek final approval of the deal at the September 9 City Council meeting and break ground on the project by late 2013.

EPD opens registration for the fall Citizen’s Academy

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EPD PATCH 2012

 

The Evansville Police Department will be hosting the 2013 Fall Citizen’s Academy beginning on September 10th.
Registration is now open for anyone over 14 years of age who wishes to attend. The sessions will be held every Tuesday night for 10 weeks, ending on November 12th. The sessions will be held at EPD Headquarters at 15 NW Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd.
You can register online at www.evansvillepolice.com by clicking on the ‘Citizen’s Academy” link. You can also register by contacting Debbie Baird at 812-436-4948 or by email at dbaird@evansvillepolice.com.
The goal of the EPD Citizen’s Academy is to give members of the community an inside look at the various units of the police department and to create a better understanding and
communication between citizens and police through education.
Some of the presentations include K-9, Traffic Unit, SWAT, Bunco Fraud, Sex Crimes, and a Round Table discussion with Mayor Winnecke, Chief Bolin, and Prosector Hermann.

ERC Rubber Stamps Hotel Agreement, City Council is Next in Line for Approval

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Evansville Mayor Lloyd Winnecke
Evansville Mayor Lloyd Winnecke

This morning the Evansville Redevelopment Commission voted 4 – 0 to approve the proposal to hand an out of town developer a $37.5 Million gift to build a Doubletree Hotel in downtown Evansville where the Executive Inn once stood. The total cost of the project will be $74 Million and include a hotel, supporting infrastructure, restaurant and retail space, a parking garage, and an apartment building. The ERC’s vote came only 72 hours after the Mayor announced his support for the project at a news conference in the empty lot next to the Ford Center.

Next up in the approval cycle is the Evansville City Council that will hear the first reading next Monday night. The second and third readings along with the vote on funding were set by the Mayor for September 9th. This gives the City Council 3 weeks to complete whatever vetting they deem as necessary before voting on whether or not to borrow $37.5 Million to donate to the developer.

It is also expected according to Mayor Winnecke that the County Commissioners will be refinancing the bonds for The Centre to contribute to the cause as well. No amount has been assigned for the County to contribute at this time but it has been stated that the funds will have to come from refinancing The Centre.

This is the fourth time a development agreement has been announced as approved by the ERC and comes over 5 years after former mayor Weinzapfel triumphantly announced that he had secured the commitment of Browning Investments to complete a 4-Star hotel without public support for $42 Million on the word that a downtown arena would be built? That deal and two later deals all fell apart for reasons from financing difficulties to inexperience in the lodging industry.

This ERC vote comes during a week when it was revealed that the Mesker Amphitheatre is dilapidating rapidly from lack of maintenance, the public pools were closed early to save $72,000, and a 76% sewer rate increase is being drafted for a September vote. The final vote on the sewer rate increase is being considered for a time after the vote on funding for the hotel is completed.

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 Tuesday, August 6, 2013.

 

Darin Dietsch                                Operating a Vehicle with an Ace of .15 or More-Class A Misdemeanor

(Enhanced to D Felony Due to Prior Convictions)

Operating a Vehicle While Intoxicated-Class C Misdemeanor

(Enhanced to D Felony Due to Prior Convictions)

 

Luther Easley                              Possession of a Schedule IV Controlled Substance-Class D Felony

Resisting Law Enforcement-Class A Misdemeanor

False Informing-Class B Misdemeanor

 

Nolan Hillenbrand                       Possession of a Schedule II Controlled Substance-Class D Felony

Possession of a Schedule IV Controlled Substance-Class D Felony

Unlawful Possession or Use of a Legend Drug-Class D Felonies

(Two Counts)

 

Sara McBride                                Possession of a Schedule II Controlled Substance-Class D Felonies

(Two Counts)

Possession of a Schedule III Controlled Substance-Class D Felony

Possession of Marijuana-Class A Misdemeanor

 

Charles Collier                              Operating a Vehicle as a Habitual Traffic Violator-Class D Felony

 

Shane James                                  Theft-Class D Felony

Battery Resulting in Bodily Injury-Class A Misdemeanor

(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.