FOOTNOTE: EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT: Information was provided by the EPD and posted by the City-County-County Observer without opinion, bias, or editing.
FOOTNOTE: EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT: Information was provided by the EPD and posted by the City-County-County Observer without opinion, bias, or editing.
Evansville sent out Parker Brahms and he was met by Gateway’s bats early. Gateway found three runs in the opening frame before Brahms sat down the final three batters of the inning. He was chased in the second inning.
Jackson Malouf appeared in his first professional game and looked solid in a tough situation. He worked through traffic in the second and allowed two runs, both of which were unearned. Gateway used some shaky defense to jump ahead 9-0. Malouf worked three total innings, striking out four while not allowing a walk.
Colin Murphy entered in the fifth but worked through some early hiccups. He allowed two runs in the fifth to give Gateway an 11-0 lead, but escaped the inning with a double play.
Evansville got on the board in the fifth after a leadoff single from Logan Brown, followed by a two-out RBI single from Ellis Schwartz. L. Brown singled again in the seventh, followed by JJ Cruz and Schwartz to load the bases. David Mendham hit a two-out RBI single to plate two and cut into the gateway lead, 11-3.
Murphy went 3.1 innings, striking out three and allowing one more run in the eighth, but looked good in the long relief appearance. Jon Beymer entered to mop up the end of the eighth and the ninth, and worked a clean 1.2 innings. The Otters couldn’t find any runs in the ninth and fell by a final of 12-3.
The bottom four in the lineup accounted for most of the offense tonight, getting six of the team’s eight hits in the ballgame.
The Otters are back at Bosse tomorrow night for the Christmas in July sponsored by Old National Bank and Santa Clothes Club, with a specialty jersey auction and postgame fireworks, presented by Santa Clothes Club and Big Kabooms Fireworks. First pitch is scheduled for 6:35 p.m. CT and gates open at 5:30 p.m..
INDIANAPOLIS – Governor Mike Braun held a signing ceremony to celebrate energy wins for Hoosiers during the 2025 legislative session.
Governor Braun’s energy agenda is built on unleashing Indiana’s energy capacity reliably and affordably with an all-of-the-above strategy that includes nuclear energy.
“As demand for electricity accelerates, the country will soon be divided into states that can meet this demand and those that can’t. We are stepping up to the challenge, expanding our energy portfolio, deploying nuclear energy, and innovating to power Indiana’s economy into the future, with affordability and reliability always at top of mind.” – Governor Mike Braun
The centerpiece of this mission is embracing nuclear technology: a clean, carbon-free, always-on workhorse for energy generation. Indiana has the legislative framework and workforce talent pipeline to support small nuclear reactor, or SMR, nuclear facilities, and three bills signed today will help power Indiana’s embrace of nuclear energy.
Governor Braun explained his mission to make Indiana’s the nation’s leader in nuclear energy and home to the nuclear supply chain in a recent op-ed . Indiana will be host to the National Governors’ Association’s nuclear energy retreat this summer and the Global Nuclear Energy & Economic Summit this November at Purdue University.
House Bill 1007 ensures that 80% of the cost of new energy infrastructure to support new large-load electricity customers coming to the state are paid by that business, not the ratepayer.
Senate Enrolled Act 425 establishes energy production zones to speed up the process for developing new power generation sites.
Governor Braun ceremonially signed the following bills to unleash Hoosier energy production:
• Senate Enrolled Act 4 – Water matters
• Senate Enrolled Act 422 – Advanced transmission technologies
• Senate Enrolled Act 423 – Small modular nuclear reactor pilot program
• Senate Enrolled Act 424 – Small modular nuclear reactor developmental costs
• Senate Enrolled Act 425 – Energy production zones
• House Enrolled Act 1007 – Energy generation resources
GAVEL GAMUT
By Jim Redwine
www.jamesmredwine.com
(Week of 14 July 2025)
LUDDITES LOST
Just recently, a 13-year-old boy captured a photograph of a young girl and used Artificial Intelligence to remove her clothing and make her normal image pornographic. Then he put his modified, false depiction on the internet and caused the girl great emotional distress.
In June 2025, some person or persons used AI to impersonate United States Secretary of State Marco Rubio and sent false messages to several foreign officials.
During the Sean Diddy Combs trial one of the jurors may have accessed internet information about the trial.
Can Americans rely upon their government through its legal system to afford them fair trials when false or inadmissible, unvetted information is readily available on a smart phone? The answer is, Yes! However, trial judges must apply the tools the various State Supreme Courts, Constitutions and statutes provide.
There are probably several ways for judges to approach the rapidly developing dilemmas of how jury trials are affected by Social Media. Three major theories are:
(1) The ostrich method: pretend it does not exist. Well, it does, so ignoring it will not solve it;
(2) The Luddite solution where the legal system strikes back with Draconian controls in hopes jurors will be frightened back to pre-internet behavior. Workers of the early 19th century tried to halt mechanization in an effort to save their jobs. The Luddites who refused to adapt to the Industrial Revolution were swept into the dustbin of history; or,
(3) Adapt to the inevitable change in both technology and sociology.
State trial judges already have the education, training and legal tools to use the only rational approach to the irreversible momentum of the internet. We should call upon the lessons of thousands of years of history and our faith in our democratic system. Jurors, judges, the media and both real and artificial intelligence can operate a fair and efficient legal system using time-tested rules of due process applied with diligence and goodwill.
Technology may change but human nature has been formed over a few million years of hominoid fits and starts and two or three hundred thousand years of Homo sapiens experience and progress. And over about the past 250 years we have gone from gazing at the heavens to visiting them. Plus, over the past 100 years we have gone from curing polio and small pox to creating artificial limbs. Science has been good to us even if we take pause at the levels of death and destruction it has enabled. We just need to keep progressing before we exterminate ourselves and AI might be a huge boost in that regard.
So, how does the legal system deal with Social Media and Jurors? By remaining true to our time-tested principles and having confidence our citizens who are called for jury duty will also. As we know, people usually respond positively to positive treatment and ethically to expectations of ethical behavior. Are there plenty of bad exceptions, absolutely. However, judges have the tools to weed those potential jurors out and to guide and encourage sitting jurors to eschew extraneous influence from outside forces.
In the end, judges must adhere to their honored principles and have faith so will jurors. Most jurors want to be fair and most likely will be if judges give them proper guidance, such as the following instructions:
The parties are entitled to jurors who approach this case with open minds and agree to keep their minds open until a verdict is reached. Jurors must be as free as humanly possible from bias, prejudice or, sympathy. Jurors must not be influenced by preconceived ideas as to facts or as to law.
… Until the conclusion of this trial, do not discuss this case with any other person, including family and friends. You should not read or listen to any media discussing this case nor research this case in any way, including through the internet or any other tools of technology. Nor should you use any of these means to communicate to others about the case. It is important that this case be decided solely on the evidence you receive in this courtroom.
Progress can be a huge benefit to us. We may not now be able to see the benefits, but we should approach the future relying on our lessons from the past.
For more Gavel Gamut articles go to www.jamesmredwine.com
INDIANAPOLIS – State Rep. Alex Burton (D-Evansville) has been appointed to the Interim Study Committees on Courts and the Judiciary and Energy, Utilities, and Telecommunications.
Burton released the following statement on committee assignments:
“I’m honored to represent Southwest Indiana on these important committees. This is a chance to dig into the data and push for solutions that make life more affordable and fairer for Hoosiers.
“I plan to revisit my proposal from the 2025 session that focused on utility affordability and review Indiana Utility Regulatory Commission (IURC) reports to advocate for cost transparency and alignment with Indiana’s five pillars of energy policy.
“I am ready to serve and focus on protecting Hoosiers from losing their homes due to medical debt, emergencies or unfair processes.
“We need systems that support people through hardship, not punish them for it.”
Notice of Executive Session
The Board of Commissioners of Vanderburgh County will hold an executive session on
Friday, July 18, 2025, at 8:00 a.m. in Room 305 of the Civic Center at 1 NW Martin Luther King
Jr. Boulevard, Evansville, Indiana 47708. The Board will meet pursuant to I.C. § 5-14-1.5-
6.1(b)(5) to receive information about and interview prospective employees.
Event Details:
Date: Wednesday July 16
Time: 2 PM
Location: Browning Gallery
Upside Down Fairy Town Puppet Show! – Summer Reading Program
Get ready to turn fairy tales on their heads! Join us Tuesday, July 16 at 2 PM at Willard Public Library for the Upside Down Fairy Town Puppet Show, a laugh-out-loud performance by Dylan Shelton with River City Puppets.
This imaginative and silly puppet show is perfect for families and full of unexpected twists, funny characters, and magical mayhem. Part of our Color Our World Summer Reading series, it’s a storytelling adventure you won’t want to miss!
To sign up for the Summer Reading Program and view the full schedule, visit: https://www.willardlib.org/children-s-summer-reading-program