EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT
FOOTNOTE: Â EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT information was provided by the EPD and posted by the City-County-County Observer without opinion, bias, or editing.
Todd Rokita thanks Thomas M. Fisher, Indiana’s first-ever solicitor general, for more than two decades of service
Attorney General Todd Rokita thanks Thomas M. Fisher, Indiana’s first-ever solicitor general, for more than two decades of service
Fisher set to take on private sector role at EdChoice
Attorney General Todd Rokita announced this week that Solicitor General Thomas M. Fisher will depart next month to take a leadership role with a nonprofit advocacy group.
“The people of Indiana received an incalculable level of value from Tom’s service,†Attorney General Rokita said. “He is a highly skilled and talented lawyer who could have made millions of dollars with his God-given talents over the last 20 years. Instead, he put those talents to good use for the people of Indiana, and as Hoosiers, we couldn’t be more thankful.â€
The solicitor general oversees litigation involving constitutional challenges and other issues of vital interest to the state government.
Fisher will join EdChoice, a nonpartisan organization dedicated to empowering every family to choose the educational environment that best fits their children’s needs.
“I am a lawyer who believes in a calling,†Fisher said. “And after two decades in the Office of Attorney General, I have been called to advance the cause of liberty on a new front.â€
Nonetheless, leaving his current position was not an easy decision, said Fisher, who joined the Office of the Attorney General in 2001 and became solicitor general in 2005.
“It has been the professional honor of a lifetime to serve the people of Indiana as solicitor general, representing Hoosier values, common sense and the rule of law in courts here and across the nation,†Fisher said. “I am grateful to Attorney General Rokita and his predecessors — Attorneys General Hill, Zoeller, and Carter — for affording me this challenging and gratifying opportunity. The people of Indiana are fortunate to have had such distinguished and visionary leaders as these to handle the important legal affairs of our state.â€
Fisher also expressed gratitude to all the colleagues with whom he has worked over the years in the Office of the Attorney General.
“This is the finest, most consequential law firm in the state,†Fisher said, “and we should all be proud of the exceptional service our deputy attorneys general, paralegals and staff provide daily to Indiana citizens. I wish every citizen could see firsthand the hard work and dedication these talented professionals put forth daily to safeguard liberty and the rule of law.â€
As solicitor general, Fisher has argued five times before the U.S. Supreme Court and dozens of times before the Seventh Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals and the Indiana Supreme Court. Fisher’s practice has also included authorship of dozens of amicus curiae briefs in the U.S. Supreme Court and lower courts on a wide range of issues, including climate change, telephone privacy, law-enforcement defense, legislative prayer, Ten Commandments displays, the definition of marriage, abortion regulation, blocked railroad crossings, and the right to trial by jury, among many others.
Asked to name the three most memorable cases he has argued, Fisher cited Crawford v. Marion County Election Board (defending Indiana’s robust voter ID law in the U.S. Supreme Court), Meredith v. Daniels (defending Indiana’s school choice scholarship law in the Indiana Supreme Court) and Planned Parenthood v. Members of the Medical Licensing Board of Indiana (defending Indiana’s new law protecting the unborn in the Indiana Supreme Court).
Fisher has received numerous awards for his efforts. Among others, he is a two-time recipient of the National Association of Attorneys General Best Brief Award for excellence in U.S. Supreme Court brief writing, was named a Fellow of the exclusive American Academy of Appellate Lawyers, and was recently awarded the prestigious Senior Peck Medal by his alma mater, Wabash College.
“Without question, Tom Fisher is one of the finest public servants you’ll ever meet,†Attorney General Rokita said. “On top of that, he has one of the sharpest legal minds of his generation. While we’re certainly sorry to see him go, we also look forward to cheering his success in his next chapter.â€
Robert C. Enlow, president and CEO of EdChoice, said his organization is elated to hire a leader of Fisher’s caliber.
“With the rapid growth of universal choice in education over the last three years, Tom Fisher will be joining EdChoice as it expands its legal affairs work,” Enlow said. “With so many new programs and efforts around the country, there is more need than ever to provide legal services to the school choice movement.”
Attorney General Rokita is now conducting a nationwide search for Fisher’s successor.
Otters fall in extras to Y’alls
Evansville, Ind. – The Florence Y’alls scored three runs in the tenth inning to defeat the Evansville Otters 5-2 Wednesday night at Bosse Field.
Evansville was a strike away from moving to the bottom of the tenth inning before the Y’alls mounted a two-out rally.
A hit-batter kept the inning alive before a single scored the game winning-run. A double followed to score two more runs.
Josh Broughton hit a leadoff base hit in the ninth inning and eventually advanced to third but the Otters could not score the walk-off run.
Three Evansville pitchers combined to pitch 4.1 scoreless innings. Tyler Vail allowed just two hits over 2.1 innings of work with two strikeouts.
Hunter Kloke pitched 1.2 innings allowing just one hit and Kevin Davis worked a scoreless ninth inning.
The Otters took the lead in the first inning. Noah Myers hit a triple to the right field warning track and an Ethan Skender single drove him in for a 1-0 Evansville lead.
Florence used a sacrifice fly in the top of the third to even the game at one apiece.
Evansville answered in the bottom half of the inning. Bryan Rosario led off with a walk and stole second base. Myers hit a single to score Rosario.
The Y’alls quickly tied the game in the fourth. Two batters walked and a two-out hit drove in the tying run.
The Otters used five pitchers in Wednesday’s ballgame. They stranded a total 17 Y’alls runners.
Myers led the offense with three hits to move his on-base streak to 21 games.
Evansville and Florence play for the series on Thursday evening with a 6:35 PM CT first pitch. A Budweiser Thirsty Thursday with discounted drafts and domestic cans is part of a Blue Beach Bash with the Otters alongside Habitat for Humanity and Eyewitness News.
All home and road Otters games this season are televised on FloSports with audio-only coverage available for free on the Evansville Otters YouTube page.
Dates and Locations for 2023-24 OVC Championships Set
Dates and Locations for 2023-24 OVC Championships Set
• 2023-24 OVC Championships Website
The dates and locations of the 2023-24 Ohio Valley Conference Championships have been announced.
The first Championship is set for October 28 in Morehead, Kentucky when the Men’s & Women’s Cross Country Championship will be contested. The championship season will conclude Memorial Day weekend with the OVC Baseball Championship in Marion, Illinois.
• Cross Country – October 28 (Morehead, Ky.)
• Women’s Soccer – October 27 & 29 (campus sites), Nov. 2 & 5 (No. 1 seed)
• Men’s Soccer – November 5, 8 & 11 (Edwardsville, Ill.)
• Volleyball – November 19-25 (No. 1 seed) (actual dates to be determined by host)
• Rifle – February 3-4 (Morehead, Ky.)
• Indoor Track & Field – February 21-22 (Birmingham, Ala.)
• Basketball – March 6-9 (Evansville, Ind.)
• Women’s Golf – April 14-16 (Tunica, Miss.)
• Women’s Tennis – April 19-21 (St. Louis, Mo.)
• Men’s Golf – April 21-24 (Muscle Shoals, Ala.)
• Beach Volleyball – April 25-27 (Morehead, Ky.)
• Softball – May 8-11 (Peoria, Ill.)
• Outdoor Track & Field – May 9-11 (Charleston, Ill.)
• Baseball – May 22-25 (Marion, Ill.)