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Mother Faces Charges; Clark Appointed Attorney

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Casey Crain, 24, Salem appeared in court today to be formally charged with a Class A Felony, Neglect of a Minor.

Her 8 month old son died in Sunday September 8 as a result of alleged  injuries from her boyfriend,  Jamie Lykins.

Washington County Circuit Judge Larry Medlock told Crane she placed her son in danger, allowed him to be abused and delayed medical treatment,  resulting in the baby’s death.

Because Crane said she had no assets, Medlock appointed Mark Clark as her defense attorney.

A pre-trial conference is set for Thursday October 31 at 9 a.m. with the trial tentatively set for May 7, 2014.

Crane was arrested at noon last Friday after Medlock issued a warrant based on information gathered by the Indiana State Police,  Salem Police Department and the Washington County Prosecutors office.

She is being held on a $40, 000 full cash bond at the Washington County Detention Center in an isolated cell.

Lykins was arrested a week ago and was charged with two Class A Felonies— Battery Resulting in Death and Neglect of a minor.

He remains incarcerated in the Washington County Detention Center.

Excise Officers Arrest 61 at B100 Concert in South Bend

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SOUTH BEND, Ind. (Sept. 16) – Indiana State Excise Police officers arrested or cited 61 people on alcohol, tobacco and drug charges at the B100 concert at the St. Joseph County Fairgrounds in South Bend yesterday.

Officers arrested 22 people for illegal possession or consumption of alcohol. Six adults were arrested for furnishing or providing alcohol to a minor.

drugs

Twenty-eight people were cited for underage possession of tobacco. Two adults were also cited for furnishing tobacco to a juvenile.

Excise officers also made arrests for possession of a controlled substance, possession of marijuana, possession of synthetic marijuana and false informing.

Yesterday was B100’s 19th annual birthday party, when the station hosts country music performers for a free concert. This year’s event included Travis Tritt, Joe Nichols and several other music artists.

As the enforcement division of the Indiana Alcohol and Tobacco Commission, the primary mission of the Indiana State Excise Police is to promote public safety by enforcing Indiana’s Alcoholic Beverage Code. While excise officers have the authority to enforce any state law, they focus primarily on alcohol, tobacco and related laws.

All criminal defendants are to be presumed innocent until, and unless, proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt in a court of law.

REED MAY OF BROWNSTOWN CENTRAL HIGH SCHOOL NAMED COLTS 4th Coach of the Week

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Reed May of Brownstown Central High School has been named the Colts/NFL Coach of the Week, a program presented by Anthem Blue Cross and Blue Shield.

Reed MAY

May was selected after recording his 200th victory as the head football coach at Brownstown Central. The Brownstown Central Braves delivered an excellent performance beating the visiting Salem Lions 55-7 to secure their coach’s 200th victory and improve to 4-0 on the season.

Coach May enters his twenty-first season as the leader of the Brownstown Central football program. With an overall record of 200-41 during that time, May has built a tradition of hard work and dedication. Coach May attributes his success at Brownstown Central to the commitment and loyal support of the school, local community and his coaching staff.

The 2013 season marks the fourteenth year the Indianapolis Colts will be recognizing outstanding Indiana High School football coaches through the Colts/NFL Coach of the Week program, presented by Anthem Blue Cross and Blue Shield.

All high school head coaches in the state of Indiana are eligible regardless of their school size, league or division.  Coaches are evaluated on various factors including the coach’s impact on his team, school and community, as well as performance of the team.  The honorees are selected by a panel of high school football media, former athletic directors and other football representatives from all regions of the state. Each Monday, following a high school football weekend, one head coach will be announced.

At the conclusion of the high school football season, each winning coach will receive a framed certificate signed by NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell, Colts Head Coach Chuck Pagano, Colts General Manager Ryan Grigson and Colts Youth Football Commissioner Mike Prior, as well as a $1,000 donation from the NFL Youth Football Fund.  In addition, Anthem Blue Cross and Blue Shield will contribute $1,000 for the school’s athletic fund.

The following coaches were recognized as honorable mentions for Week 4:

Region 1-  Brett St. Germain – Lake Central Region 6-  Kent Wright –   Lebanon
Region 2- Cory Yeoman – Penn Region 7-  Bruce Scifres –   Roncalli
Region 3 –  Jim Rowland –   New Haven Region 8- Kevin Wright – Carmel
Region   4 – Chris Meeks – Rensselaer Central Region 9-  Andre Thomas –   Evansville Bosse
Region 5 –  Dave Snyder –   Southwood Region 10-  Winner

Hospital Foundation Hosts Golf Scramble this Friday

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Salem, Indiana – August 28, 2012 – The Hospital Foundation of Washington County, Inc. will host a golf scramble on Friday, September 14 at Hidden Creek Golf Club in Sellersburg, IN. Registration will begin at 10:30 a.m. This year the event will also include a silent auction.  While silent auction items are still being collected, to date, a Peyton Manning autographed football, and a signed UofL football and basketball and tickets to various sporting events are just a few of the most sought after items to be offered.

Teams are $400 for four players which include green fees, cart rental, lunch, snacks and drink tickets. Individual registrations are $100 per person. The winning teams will be awarded cash prizes.

All money raised from the tournament will go toward renovations within the hospital.  “The Hospital Foundation has already provided funds to purchase new flooring in the main entrance of the hospital and new paint and lighting in the Emergency Room,” said Lee Jaeger, CEO of St.Vincent Salem Hospital and Vice-President of the Hospital Foundation. “The funds raised at this golf outing will allow the Foundation to continue investing in the improvement of our facility.”

Each golfer will also have the chance to win a $10,000 cash prize by carding a hole-in-one on the seventeenth hole.

Sponsorship opportunities with various pricing options are also available for the tournament. Corporate Sponsors include: First Harrison Bank, Washington County Medical Association and Premier Care.

For more information on the golf scramble, to register a team or to become a sponsor, please call Tournament Director, Melissa Richardson, at 883.5881 ext. 1366 or e-mail at MLRicha1@stvincent.org.

St.Vincent Salem Emergency Physician Awarded Doc Hollywood Award by Indiana Rural Health Association

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Salem, Indiana – September 13, 2013 – On August 8, St.Vincent Salem Hospital Emergency Medicine physician, Joel Nunley, MD, was awarded the Doc Hollywood award during the IRHA Annual Conference.

The Doc Hollywood Award was created to recognize the many individuals who care professionally for folks in rural and underserved communities across the country.  It is also a way to honor those medical professionals who have shown dedication toward improving healthcare in his/her own underserved rural community.

Dr. Nunley Doc Hollywood Award 004

Dr. Nunley was nominated by St.Vincent Salem Hospital for many different reasons. Not only is he a full-time Emergency physician in rural Washington County in southern Indiana, but he is also pastor at City on the Hill Church in Scottsburg and a tireless volunteer in both communities.

Dr. Nunley consistently offers to pray with patients and/or families in the ER after he has treated them, but once he leaves the hospital, Dr. Nunley doesn’t stop! He also runs “Gospel-Driven” free community medical clinics and food giveaway events for families in need. The medical clinics include non-urgent medical exams, diabetes and blood pressure screenings and vision screenings. They also give away food to families in need, free haircuts, consultations for stress, anxiety and depression and they offer free dog and cat food and kitty litter to those in need.  These clinics are offered throughout Indiana approximately four times a year and are completely staffed by volunteers. Many times they are attended by 200-300 individuals in need of medical care and other types of assistance.

Every month, Dr. Nunley travels to the Scott County Jail to minister to the inmates and to pray with them. He hands out bibles and gives them his cell phone number to call if they need someone to talk to or pray with.

This year he also offered free sports physicals to students in Scott County, Indiana so that underprivileged children can also participate in school sports.

He is also part of an organization called “Breaking Borders” which focuses on taking medical care to third world countries and sharing the gospel in those countries. He has traveled several times to various countries with this group.

“I was pleasantly shocked to win this award! I just thought I had been nominated and that would be it,” said Dr. Nunley. “This award is just a way for me to give glory to God for all that he has done in my life. I wouldn’t be able to put on the clinics and devote my time to all these endeavors without my family, the volunteers and churches that so graciously support it. It is a way to share the gospel with those who attend by providing testimonials, compassionate care and showing them the love of Jesus.”

“Dr. Nunley is very deserving of the Doc Hollywood Award,” said Dana Muntz, CEO/CNO at
St.Vincent Salem Hospital. “He is constantly looking to help others. He is not only a supporter with money, but with actions. He uses his medical training to further the well-being of others whenever and wherever he can, but graciously gives the glory to God when patients thank him for helping them feel better.”

Dr. Nunley’s next free medical clinic will be held on September 21 from 10 a.m. – 2 p.m. at Kid’s Place in Austin, Indiana. For more information, visit www.cityonahillscottsburg.com/ministries/free-medical-clinic/.

Dr. Nunley resides in Scottsburg with his wife, Peggy and their three children.

Austin Man Pleads Guilty To Causing Death While Under Influence

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A Scott County man pleaded guilty Friday to one count of causing death while driving under the influence of a controlled substance.

Garan A. Terrell, 19, of Austin, faces up to four years in prison under a plea agreement with the Jackson County prosecutor’s office.

Terrell was arrested last fall in connection with the death of 17-year-old Danika Collins, of Seymour, following a wreck on Seymour’s far west side.

Terrell pleaded guilty to the one charge, causing death when operating a motor vehicle with a Schedule I or II controlled substance in the blood. Two other charges, including reckless homicide, were dismissed as part of the plea agreement.

The crash  involving a car and a parked trailer owned by Seymour Police Department left a teen dead and two others injured.

Seymour Assistant Police Chief Craig Hayes says that  Collins, died from blunt force trauma to the chest.

She was a front-seat passenger in a car driven by 18-year-old Garan Terrell, of Brownstown.

Terrell was taken to Schneck Medical Center in Seymour, where he was treated for minor injuries and released.

A back-seat passenger, 18-year-old Tanner Payton, of Seymour, who suffered facial injured was flown by helicopter to University Hospital in Louisville. According to a hospital spokeswoman Payton is listed in serious condition.

Spring Mill Candlelight Tour Sept. 21

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The Pioneer Village at Spring Mill State Park will come to life with historical re-enactors, crafts, demonstrations and musical entertainment during the annual Tri Kappa Candlelight Tour on Saturday, Sept. 21.

The tour is from 4-9 p.m. and is sponsored by service sorority Kappa Kappa Kappa’s Gamma Epsilon Chapter of Mitchell.
Dressed in traditional pioneer clothes, Tri Kappa members and their families and Spring Mill employees will re-create life in the mid-1800s in the houses and buildings of the restored Pioneer Village.

Visitors should bring a flashlight. Tri Kappa members will sell concession and food items in the carriage house.
The event is free, although the standard park admission fee of $5 per in-state vehicle and $7 per out-of-state vehicle applies. Buses will shuttle visitors from the campground and inn parking lots to the village.

Tri Kappa is a statewide sorority that supports community and state charities as well as educational and cultural projects. The Mitchell chapter has sponsored the Spring Mill Candlelight Tour since 1967. It has become a popular kick-off event for the week-long Persimmon Festival in Mitchell. Spring Mill State Park (stateparks.IN.gov/2968.htm) is located on State Road 60 east of Mitchell.


Brown Co. Commissioners’ Bid For Courthouse Renovations Has Failed

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The Brown County Commissioners’ attempt to seek financing for renovation and expansion of the historic Brown County Courthouse has failed.

By Friday afternoon, four days after the petition/remonstrance process ended, signatures for and against the estimated $6.5 million loan had not been certified.

But Brown County Clerk Beth Mulry and Auditor Glenda Stogsdill announced in a news release that “the outcome of the petition and remonstrance process is clear.”

Less than 200 signatures were gathered in support of the proposed project, while more than 800 signatures against it had been verified as of 1 p.m. Friday.

“Both offices will continue to work through the certification as quickly as possible,” a news release reported. “Final signature counts will be released when the certification is complete.”

Police arrest man at Patoka with stolen gun

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Indiana Conservation Officers arrested an Indianapolis man Friday afternoon at Patoka Lake in Crawford County on felony charges of receiving stolen auto parts, possession of methamphetamine, and misdemeanor charges of possession of marijuana, possession of drug paraphernalia, and failure to stop after accident resulting in damage.

25-year-old Justin Petrowski was arrested after an investigation into his alleged theft of a vehicle at the Champaign, Illinois Wal-mart Tuesday.

Early Thursday morning, the stolen vehicle was located near the Patoka Lake archery range. After locating the vehicle, Indiana Conservation Officers and Patoka Lake personnel conducted an exhaustive search, but were unable to locate Petrowski.

On Friday, just before 1 p.m., conservation officers discovered additional clues and hiked nearly a mile over rugged terrain into the woods on Patoka Lake property. They eventually located and arrested Petrowski, who was armed with a stolen shotgun and tending to his makeshift camp.

Conservation Officer Dennis Talley stated “It was a tense situation, and fortunately, there was a safe ending for all involved.” Petrowski is being held on $20,000 cash bond, and also faces additional charges in Indianapolis and Champaign, Illinois stemming from this investigation.

Assisting agencies at the scene included the Orange and Crawford County Sheriff’s Departments, and Indiana State Police.

Deaths Attributed To New Molly Drug

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A handful of deaths have been tied to what some are calling a new drug that‘s popular at dance clubs.  But one doctor says it isn‘t a new drug at all.

“Molly” is short for molecule and is touted as a “pure” form of MDMA.  MDMA is the same thing as the drug Ecstasy according to Dr. Kris Hunt, emergency room physician at St. Vincent Hospital.

“It‘s a slang term people are using to try to revamp the drug,” Hunt said. Those who use Molly claim it is safe, that it gives a powerful high with no lingering effects the next day.

“It increases dopamine and increases seratonin, especially.  Those are the two chemicals in the brain that make you happy,” Hunt says.  But the doctor also says claims of the drug‘s safety are specious.

“There is no guarantee of purity if anything is bought on the black market or through a drug dealer,” a claim Hunt says is true of any drug.

Molly‘s advocates are plenty – Miley Cyrus, Kanye West and Madonna (her last album was titled MDNA) are among those who have spoken of its benefits in songs.

The drug appeared to be popular at music festivals over the summer.   The Electric Zoo festival in New York is where two young women died over Labor Day weekend, and the medical examiner says both had overdosed on Molly.

At least two other deaths in other parts of the country have been linked to the drug, though Hunt says he isn‘t sure how prevalent it is in Indiana.