Throughout my campaign for judge, I have questioned the efficiency of the current Juvenile-Probate division of the Vanderburgh Superior Court. I will continue to do so. Under its current leadership, the court has become so inefficient, that it has become ineffective. For over three decades, the Superior Court maintained a well defined structure with “Paternity†cases being filed and resolved in the Juvenile division. These cases generally involve a single parent attempting to obtain child support or hoping to receive parenting time with their child. Emergency paternity hearings were being set up to 8 months in the future after being filed. For example, under Judge Niemeier’s system, if a parent were to file a paternity action to get parenting time with a 5 month old child, the parent would not likely set foot in the Juvenile Court until after the child’s 1st birthday. That’s unacceptable and yes, inefficient.
Paternity filings began to noticeably increase in 2008 and they quickly became backlogged due to the fact that Judge Niemeier refuses to hear paternity cases. This is not a new problem. Prior to the “Reorganization†of the Superior Court on September 1, 2012, paternity cases represented approximately 1/3 of this Superior Court division’s total case load. Not until I challenged my opponent for re-election to a third term, did Judge Niemeier feel compelled to act. Does making the first comprehensive change to Superior Court in 30 years just 8 weeks before the election seem coincidental? I’ll leave that up to the voters to decide. Regardless, I commend the other Superior judges for stepping in and picking up the slack.
I am running for judge because I want the opportunity to make a difference in our community. I’ve witnessed the current Juvenile Court system firsthand, and it’s in trouble. As an Evansville native and father to 2 young children, I have a vested interest in not only their safety and security, but of your children and grandchildren as well. I am not part of the establishment. I am not running as the attorney’s judge. I am not running for endorsements and awards. I am running as a new kind of people’s judge.
FOOT NOTE: POSTED WITHOUT OPINION, BIAS OR EDITING.





Guy Banta, a 1973 University of Evansville graduate and expert on aerospace medicine and human performance, will return to his alma mater to deliver the fifth annual Homecoming alumni speech during Homecoming 2012 Reunion Weekend.
The USI Center for Communal Studies will host a lecture by Dr. Dawn E. Bakken, associate editor of Indiana Magazine of History. Bakken will present “Monroe County’s Own New Harmony? An Owenite Experiment in 1826 Bloomington, Indiana,” from 2 to 3 p.m. Wednesday, October 24, in Kleymeyer Hall in the Liberal Arts Center.