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CCO Compared to Fox News by Courier Editor

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It has been reported to the City County Observer that in a morning meeting of an Evansville based Green River Kiwanis Club that Courier and Press Editor Tim Ethridge who was speaking was asked a question from the audience regarding the CCO. Mr. Ethridge is then quoted as saying that “there are people who like Fox News and there are people who like the other networks. The CCO is like Fox News, we have our audience and they have theirs”.

Attendees have confirmed that approximately 60 people in attendance.

The CCO would like to thank Mr. Ethridge for comparing us to the primetime broadcast that has more viewers than all of the other competitors combined as shown in the recent ratings below. We try very hard to show both sides of every issue without hiding from our own position as Fox News advertises that it does with it’s “fair and balanced” mantra.

We do take exception to being lumped into a category considered by many to be extreme right wing. If one were to examine our past opinions one would find that we have opined with the left on may occasions.

The CCO is for the most part a Libertarian leaning publication with a tendency toward a “live and let live” philosophy with conservative fiscal constraints. There are exceptions and we do not always agree but if we were to adopt a mantra it would be “maximum freedom at minimum cost with practical common sense prevailing”. We think that makes for GOOD PUBLIC POLICY which we will always advocate for.

At any rate we are truly flattered to be compared to the most successful news network in America by the editor of a Scripps-Howard publication.

Most Recent Prime Time Ratings:

Fox: 2,049,000
MSNBC: 964,000
CNN: 347,000
HLN: 269,000
CNBC: 201,000

It appears that Fox has more viewers than all of the other competitors combined.

VANDERBURGH COUNTY FELONY CHARGES

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VANDERBURGH COUNTY FELONY CHARGES

This feature is sponsored by Chris Walsh For Vanderburgh County Clerk. Chris Walsh is a veteran county administrator that strongly supports our local law enforcement professionals . Chris is a candidate that possess a non-partisan attitude with a consumer friendly demeanor. Chris also stands against unification of city and county governments.

This ad paid for by the committiee to elect Walsh Clerk, Kelly Walsh, Treasurer

Evansville, IN – Below is a list of felony cases that were filed by the Vanderburgh County Prosecutor’s Office on Tuesday, July 31, 2012.

Brian Baumgartner Domestic Battery – Class D Felony

William Cross Attempted Burglary – Class C Felony
Criminal Mischief – Class A Misdemeanor

Eric Ford Public Nudity – Class B Misdemeanor
(Enhanced to a Class D Felony due to Prior Convictions)
Battery – Class B Misdemeanor

Jason Galloway Battery Resulting in Bodily Injury – Class D Felony
Resisting Law Enforcement – Class A Misdemeanor

Christopher Gilmore Attempted Burglary – Class C Felony
Criminal Mischief – Class A Misdemeanor

Marco Mann Theft – Class D Felony (Habitual Offender Enhancement)

Coty Morgan Unlawful Possession or use of a Legend Drug – Class D Felony
Possession of Paraphernalia – Class A Misdemeanor

Stephanie Powers Possession of a Controlled Substance – Class D Felony

Michael Pritchett, Jr. Possession of a Controlled Substance – Class D Felony (Two Counts)
(Habitual Offender Enhancement)

Lacey Waters: Theft – Class D Felony

For further information on the cases listed above, or any pending case, please contact Carly Settles at 812.435.5688 or via e-mail at csettles@vanderburghgov.org.

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

Class Range
Murder 45-65 Years
Class A Felony 20-50 Years
Class B Felony 6-20 Years
Class C Felony 2-8 Years
Class D Felony ½ – 3 Years
Class A Misdemeanor 0-1 Year
Class B Misdemeanor 0-180 Days
Class C Misdemeanor 0-60 Days

IS IT TRUE August 1, 2012

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The Mole #??

IS IT TRUE August 1, 2012

IS IT TRUE that the following good news about the City of Evansville cemeteries was brought to you very much through the efforts of Mr. Jordan Baer who took it upon himself to write “a grave injustice” that was published by the CCO and on his personal blog?…that young people with the heart and intellect to take on problems instead of joining the bandwagon like Jordan does are the key to the future of Evansville?…that some well meaning young people seem to be “good old boys” in training but that is not Jordan at all?

IS IT TRUE several City County Observer Moles have told us that Mayor Winnecke has stated that he is going to appropriate $25,000 to each of the City of Evansville cemeteries over the next year to start getting the headstones into presentable condition?…we are pleased to hear that the Mayor made this decision so quickly after the state of the cemeteries were exposed by the CCO and several members of the Evansville City Council?…we would also like to commend Councilmen Friend and Lindsey for their positions on this issue from day one, and Councilwoman Robinson for taking the time to go to the Oak Hill cemetery and see for herself what neglect has done to it?…if there is one thing that Mayor Winnecke and this City Council seem to converge on it is keeping up appearances?…that Mayor Winnecke and several members of the Council dutifully continue to pick up garbage in some Evansville neighborhood nearly every week?…these kinds of things take time and it is commendable that this activity is becoming a part of the routine?…it is also disturbing that it is necessary for groups to continually have to clean up the same darn neighborhoods over and over?…for every Mayor Winnecke or Missy Mosby in this world who really will pick up garbage every week there are 1,000 slop hogs who toss their refuse into the streets as if it were their private garbage can?…that only when Evansville is mostly made up of those who will never litter can diligent public servants make a sustainable visual difference?

IS IT TRUE after the recent fallout over the state of two of Evansville’s oldest graveyards that the City Council seems poised to do something about the problem of broken and leaning headstones? …that if the wrong thing is done out of political expedience it could create more problems from a preservation perspective? …that the New Hampshire Old Graveyard Association, an entity dedicated to, “promot[ing] correct methods of identifying, recording, maintaining and preserving…old graveyards” has on its website very clear guidelines for preserving broken headstones and repairing leaning ones? …that one of the recommended methods for headstones with vertical or multiple fractures is to lie the stone prostrate on a bed of gravel encased by landscaping timbers? …that this solution does no more harm to the stone, protects it from mowing equipment, and provides the best drainage which is essential to preventing further cracking and erosion? …that one of the acknowledged drawbacks to such a solution is that the timbers will eventually rot away? …that an Evansville company, Green Tree Plastics, creates a landscaping timber made from completely recycled plastic that will not rot or fade? …that the Council would do well to consider the New Hampshire Old Graveyard Association’s recommendations when implementing any solutions for broken and leaning headstones as well as the inclusion of Green Tree products?

http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~nhoga/preservation.htm#Repair

IS IT TRUE the City of Evansville has met the first deadline of producing a report for the EPA proposing exactly what, when, how, and hopefully how much it will cost to eliminate the mandated separation of the toilet sourced contents of the sewer and rainwater runoff?…this report is rumored to be quite large and should be uploaded to the City of Evansville website as early as today?…in the interest of saving some trees, the CCO encourages our interested readers to read this document electronically and avoid printing a document that may take two reams of paper?

IS IT TRUE the Financial Forecast Center is on the record as predicting that the unemployment rate will remain unchanged at 8.2% through August but will then start increasing to 8.6% by the end of the year?…they project that the Dow Jones Industrial Average will finish the year at 11,410, down 12% from where it closed yesterday?…they also project that the average 30 year mortgage will bottom in August and start rising until ending the year at 3.82%?…that a combination of rising unemployment and interest rates accompanied by an across the board contraction in stock prices is not a combination that will make for an economic recovery of any kind?

Lugar, Mourdock bury hatchet

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Senator Richard Lugar
Indiana Sen. Dick Lugar and the man who unseated him in a bitter Republican primary, Richard Mourdock, have apparently buried the hatchet.

In an act rife with symbolism, Lugar graciously introduced Mourdock — the tea party-backed state treasurer who ended Lugar’s four-decade reign in the Senate — during a closed-door meeting of Senate Republicans on Tuesday.

Their May primary contest was contentious, with Mourdock painting the two-time Foreign Relations Committee chairman as a Washington insider who had lost touch with his native Hoosier State (Lugar and his wife sold their Indianapolis home and moved to the Washington, D.C. area in 1977).

But upon learning Mourdock would be dropping by Tuesday’s GOP luncheon, Lugar asked National Republican Senatorial Committee Chairman John Cornyn if he could personally introduce Mourdock. Mourdock repaid the favor, praising the 80-year-old Lugar’s lifetime of public service to Indiana and the country.

“My own comments on the night of the election were that I asked Hoosiers to support Treasurer Mourdock,” Lugar told POLITICO in a brief interview after the lunch. “I indicated I would be very pleased to have the opportunity to introduce him.”

While it’s customary for Senate leaders to invite newly-nominated candidates to attend weekly policy lunches, the act signified that the GOP is unified behind Mourdock as he heads into the November general election against Democratic Rep. Joe Donnelly.

During the lunch in the Senate’s Lyndon B. Johnson room, Mourdock was seated between Lugar and Indiana’s other senator, Republican Dan Coats. Republican National Committee Chairman Reince Priebus sat on the other side of Lugar.

Lugar was “incredibly, incredibly gracious,” Mourdock told reporters upon leaving the lunch.

“As I said to [the senators] in my response, those of us from Indiana often wonder what it means to be a Hoosier, what does that word mean?” Mourdock said.

“And I’ve come to think that being a Hoosier means you always have great hospitality, you have an enormity of grace about you and you’re always looking to the future with a sense of optimism, and [Lugar] displayed all those things today.

“He’s a great Hoosier,” Mourdock added.

Coats said Tuesday’s display of Hoosier hospitality represented not only a symbolic but also a practical step forward for the party.

“It was a very important symbol of how we’ve come together to support a Republican running for office,” Coats told POLITICO. “I’ve gotten the sense that Senator Lugar has reached out to him in friendship, and Richard has acknowledged receipt of that, and I’m very pleased with what took place today.”

Revised Park Board Agenda – 8/1/2012

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BOARD OF PARK COMMISSIONERS

REGULAR MEETING
KEVIN WINTERNHEIMER CHAMBERS
ROOM 301, CIVIC CENTER COMPLEX
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 1, 2012
12:00 NOON

REVISED AGENDA

1. CALL TO ORDER

2. MINUTES July 11 & 18, 2012

3. CONSENT AGENDA
a. Request Re: Approve and Execute Landscape Maintenance License with SWIMGA for
Sunrise Park. – Johnson
b. Request Re: Approve and Execute Independent Skating Pro Agreement with George Ann
Griffin-Atkinson for Swonder Ice Arena. – Crook
c. Request Re: Approve and Execute Independent Skating Pro Agreement with Catherine
Niemeier for Swonder Ice Arena. – Crook
d. Request Re: Approve and Execute Independent Skating Pro Agreement with Christin
Thompson for Swonder Ice Arena. – Crook
e. Request Re: Approve and Execute Independent Skating Pro Agreement with Sarah Laine
for Swonder Ice Arena. – Crook
f. Request Re: Approve and Execute Independent Skating Pro Agreement with Brianna
Linenburg for Swonder Ice Arena. – Crook
g. Request Re: Approve and Execute Independent Skating Pro Agreement with Judi Hardesty
for Swonder Ice Arena. – Crook
h. Request Re: Approve Participation by Swonder Ice Arena in the Gold Value Coupon
Book. – Crook

4. OLD BUSINESS N/A

5. NEW BUSINESS
a. Request Re: Award Proposal for Roberts Stadium Demolition Asbestos Investigation. – Dave
Rector/Denise Johnson
b. Request Re: Any Other Business the Board Wishes to Consider and Public Comments.

6. REPORTS
a. David Wagner, C.K. Newsome Community Center
b. Denise Johnson, Executive Director

7. ACCEPTANCE OF PAYROLL AND VENDOR CLAIMS

8. ADJOURN

UE Students Headed to Mongolia for Business, Engineering Projects

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Eight University of Evansville students will spend their last days of summer break halfway across the world, participating in business and engineering projects in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia.

From August 8-19, students in UE’s Schroeder Family School of Business Administration and College of Engineering and Computer Science will work with the nonprofit organization G.O. Ministries on several projects in Mongolia, from expanding local craft businesses to finding sustainable heat sources for buildings.

In Mongolia, students will conduct on-the-ground research and collect data to use in their senior capstone projects. Once completed in May 2013, their finished work — including building designs and business plans — will be delivered to G.O. Ministries and implemented by the organization.

Once the group arrives in the Mongolian capital of Ulaanbaatar (population 1.2 million), the UE business students will be tasked with helping two local craft businesses grow and increase their revenue. The businesses employ Mongolian men and women to produce silver jewelry and leather goods.

Civil engineering majors will examine two existing buildings and develop plans to refurbish them into a housing facility for G.O. Ministries volunteers and a factory/training center for the craft businesses.

Mechanical engineering students will research alternative, sustainable forms of heating the two buildings, currently heated by Soviet-era central steam heat.

Assistant professor of mechanical engineering John Layer and associate professor of management Pete Sherman will accompany the group. Layer facilitated the partnership between UE and G.O. Ministries after he traveled to Haiti and the Dominican Republic on a short-term mission trip. He saw opportunities for UE students to be involved in the design and planning phase of the organization’s projects, which include building schools, churches, and housing. He has since led two groups of engineering students to the Dominican Republic, where they designed a three-story building in 2008 and developed a solar water heater in 2010.

“In Mongolia, 36 percent of residents live in poverty, and one in five is unemployed,” said Layer. “When students experience and serve a vastly different culture, they often return home with an increased sense of social responsibility and a passion for using their skills and knowledge to help others. They see the impact they can have on the world, and they start the academic year with a new motivation.”

“This trip to Mongolia,” Layer added, “is truly the kind of life-transforming educational experience we’re proud to offer at UE.”

The University of Evansville wishes to thank the Institute for Global Enterprise in Indiana and the Kern Family Foundation for their generous support of this educational experience.

Supreme Court ruling guides final State brief in immigration suit

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Supreme Court ruling guides final State brief in immigration suit

AG: Warrantless arrests pre-empted; challenge now awaits court’s decision

INDIANAPOLIS – The United States Supreme Court’s ruling striking down Arizona’s immigration law as unconstitutional means portions of Indiana’s immigration law dealing with warrantless arrests cannot be defended, Attorney General Greg Zoeller said today in a legal brief filed in federal court.

Zoeller noted that the Supreme Court’s ruling in the Arizona v. U.S. case makes it clear that state laws authorizing local law enforcement officers to make warrantless arrests of people for immigration violations are unconstitutional. Portions of Senate Enrolled Act 590, Indiana’s immigration law that is now under legal challenge, are preempted, or overridden, by federal law, Zoeller said.

“The Supreme Court made clear that immigration enforcement is a federal government responsibility. States are frustrated by the unwillingness of the executive branch to enforce current immigration laws and inability of Congress to make reforms. As Indiana’s Attorney General, I had an obligation to defend this Indiana statute passed prior to the recent Arizona decision, but I have sworn to uphold the Constitution and my legal conclusion now is that certain portions of the state law cannot stand,” Zoeller said.

Shortly after the Legislature passed Senate Enrolled Act 590 into law in 2011, the ACLU plaintiffs filed a legal challenge to it, Buquer v. Indianapolis, in U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Indiana, in Indianapolis. The plaintiffs in June 2011 obtained a preliminary injunction that blocked two challenged portions of the law from taking effect. As lawyer for the State, the Attorney General’s Office defended the statute from the challenge.

Senate Enrolled Act 590 permitted local officers to make warrantless arrests based on immigration court removal orders, federal notice-of-action forms, 48-hour detainer requests or for being a foreign person who was indicted or convicted of an aggravated felony. The U.S. Supreme Court recently struck down as unconstitutional similar language in Arizona’s law. Because that is now the binding legal precedent, similar portions in Indiana’s law with one exception cannot remain standing either, Zoeller said.

In the State’s legal brief filed today in the Buquer case, Zoeller recommended the U.S. District Court strike down three of the four warrantless arrest provisions of the law that the Supreme Court has now said are unconstitutional. (The exception: Other statutes already allow local police to confine someone on a detainer for 48 hours at a federal agency’s request.)

SEA 590 also contains a provision making it an infraction in Indiana to use or accept a foreign nation’s consular identification card as ID for any public or private purpose. This portion, which the ACLU plaintiffs also challenged, remains under the U.S. District Court’s preliminary injunction of June 2011. The U.S. Supreme Court ruling in the Arizona case was silent on the use of consular ID cards. Zoeller said consular ID is a unique issue but since the Arizona decision does not apply to it, Indiana’s recommendation is that the State should have the right to define what identification is reliable and acceptable for government purposes, including licensed occupations. Indiana will leave it up to the federal court to decide the issue in the Buquer case.

The Attorney General’s Office operates the state’s Identity Theft Unit in the Consumer Protection Division. Given the concern that consular ID could be forged and used to commit fraudulent transactions, Zoeller also said he also will recommend the 2013 Legislature revise that part of the statute to improve its effectiveness.

In the Buquer case, the U.S. District Court permitted each side additional time to file legal briefs to take into account the June 25 ruling in the Arizona case. With the filing of the State’s response brief today, the State’s litigation in the Buquer case is now largely concluded and the Attorney General’s Office will await a ruling from the federal district court.

“My office has defended the Indiana law the Legislature has passed from the legal challenges the plaintiffs filed for as long as possible. But once the U.S. Supreme Court struck down the Arizona law, its decision is final; and we should defend the challenged portions only when we have a good-faith basis to do so. To disregard the Supreme Court’s guidance would not serve justice and would not be a good use of taxpayer resources, since the State could be ordered to pay the challenger’s attorneys fees,” Zoeller said.

Separately, the Attorney General’s Office also is defending a second legal challenge to SEA 590, Union Benefica Mexicana v. State, in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Indiana in Hammond. Those plaintiffs challenged different provisions of SEA 590 that allow the State to sue employers who employ illegal workers to recoup unemployment benefits, and require that individuals seeking day-labor jobs complete individual attestation of employment forms. SEA 590 says that if police have probable cause to believe an individual has not completed this form, they are required to submit a complaint to the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) office.

The federal court stayed the Union Benefica Mexicana case after the plaintiffs filed suit so the State does not have the opportunity to respond, and that court has issued no injunction. Zoeller noted the two provisions being challenged here already satisfy the requirements of the Supreme Court’s Arizona decision and so his office will continue to defend SEA 590 in that case.

Still other provisions of SEA 590 were not challenged in either the Buquer or Union Benefica Mexicana lawsuits. E-Verify is a federal database familiar to many businesspeople. Under SEA 590, if a company wishes to do business with the State, it must use the federal E-Verify database to establish that its employees are eligible to work. The Supreme Court did not address E-Verify in the Arizona case, and in a separate case the Supreme Court has said states are permitted to require such employer verification. Zoeller said there is no legal obstacle to the State requiring state contractors to use E-Verify.

Emphasizing the State’s lawyers have devoted much time and effort into vigorously defending SEA 590, Zoeller said he will advise law enforcement and Legislature on how next to proceed.

“The people’s elected representatives in the Indiana General Assembly made a sincere effort to respond to local concerns about illegal immigration when they were faced with the federal government’s dereliction of its responsibility. Whatever its flaws, this Indiana legislation was not an ‘anti-immigrant’ bill, it was an anti-illegal-immigration bill, focused on process, not individuals, and it was consistent with Hoosiers’ decency and their respect for the Constitution and the basic rights of all people. The states are the victims of federal inaction, and I call upon those in Washington DC to fulfill their duties and stop putting states in the difficult position of attempting to enforce immigration when the Supreme Court has said that is a federal government responsibility,” Zoeller said.

Noting that the Attorney General’s Office has made it a point to legally challenge the federal government in cases of federal overreach, Zoeller underscored the importance of maintaining a proper balance between federal and state authority. “We don’t want the federal government to overstep their authority, and we as the State should not overstep ours,” the Attorney General added.

VANDERBURGH COUNTY FELONY CHARGES

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VANDERBURGH COUNTY FELONY CHARGES

This feature is sponsored by Chris Walsh For Vanderburgh County Clerk. Chris Walsh is a veteran county administrator that strongly supports our local law enforcement professionals . Chris is a candidate that possess a non-partisan attitude with a consumer friendly demeanor. Chris also stands against unification of city and county governments.

This ad paid for by the committiee to elect Walsh Clerk, Kelly Walsh, Treasurer

Evansville, IN – Below is a list of felony cases that were filed by the Vanderburgh County Prosecutor’s Office on Monday, July 30, 2012.

Joel Doughty Dealing in Methamphetamine – Class B Felony
Possession of Methamphetamine – Class D Felony

George Heid Criminal Confinement – Class D Felony
Battery Resulting in Bodily Injury –Class A Misdemeanor

Scarlett Kelley Theft – Class D Felony

Danny Powers, II Battery Resulting in Bodily Injury –Class D Felony
Interference with the Reporting of a Crime – Class A Misdemeanor

For further information on the cases listed above, or any pending case, please contact Carly Settles at 812.435.5688 or via e-mail at csettles@vanderburghgov.org.

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

SENTENCE CHART
Class
Range
Murder
45-65 Years
A Felony
20-50 Years
B Felony
6-20 Years
C Felony
2-8 Years
D Felony
½ – 3 Years
A Misdemeanor
0-1 Year
B Misdemeanor
0-180 Days
C Misdemeanor
0-60 Days

GM Fires Marketing Chief but Adds Jobs in Brazil

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President Barack Obama

GM Fires Marketing Chief but Adds Jobs in Brazil

In separate announcements this week General Motors (NYSE: GM) has announced the sudden resignation of the Chief of Marketing Joel Ewanick and that it has increased its number of employees at its Brazilian operations.

The official word according to GM, is that Ewanick “failed to meet the expectations the company has for its employees”.

GM’s U.S. market share has fallen sharply, to just 18.1% in the first half of 2012 — down from almost 20% a year ago. Combined with the company’s ongoing troubles in Europe, that has taken a lot of the wind out of GM’s turnaround sails and has hit the automaker’s stock price hard.

GM stock is trading at $19.71 today up slightly after flirting with the 52 week low of $18.72. The break even point for the people of the United States to recover the money allocated by the Obama Administration is $53 per share. Considering that the US government owns over 500 Million shares if the shares were sold at today’s price the taxpayer’s would be asked to absorb a loss of nearly $17 Billion.

Adding that to the previous $15 Billion permanent loss on the bankruptcy of the mortgage unit of Ally Bank the losses to the taxpayers of the United States now stand at $32 Billion on the Obama Administration’s $82 Billion bailout of GM.

Losses to private investors and pension funds are not included in these calculations.