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Coroner’s office identifies fatal accident victim

The Bartholomew County Coroner’s Office identified the victim in a fatal car accident early Thursday morning as Gerald Henry, 72, of Columbus. The accident was in the area of U.S. 31 and County Road 100S at 4:55 a.m. Thursday morning. Submitted photo

Staff Reports

The Bartholomew County Coroner’s Office has identified the victim in a fatal car accident early Thursday morning as Gerald Henry, 72, of Columbus.

Deputies with the Bartholomew County Sheriff’s Department responded to a two-vehicle accident in the area of U.S. 31 and County Road 100S at 4:55 a.m. Thursday. Upon arrival, deputies found Henry deceased at the scene, deputies said.

The cause of death was blunt force trauma the head and chest, according to Bartholomew County Coroner Clayton Nolting.

The other driver, Alexander Gaskins, 28, of Crothersville, was transported by ambulance to Columbus Regional Hospital with what appeared to be non-life threatening injuries, deputies said.

The cause of the accident remains under investigation, deputies said.

Chief recommends unpaid leave for Abbott, Lamb

Seymour’s chief of police asked the city board of public safety and works Thursday morning to place former Chief Bill Abbott and Capt. Carl Lamb on unpaid administrative leave.

Abbott and Lamb were arrested Wednesday by state police on charges of ghost employment, official misconduct and theft after a four-month investigation by the Indiana State Police. The officers have been on paid administrative leave since the start of that investigation in October 2019.

During Thursday’s board meeting at city hall, Police Chief Bryant Lucas recommended the board place Abbott and Lamb on unpaid administrative leave.

The board can only act on that recommendation during a public meeting, not during an executive session. A public meeting to discuss that recommendation has been set for 2 p.m. Wednesday at city hall.

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It also was announced during Thursday’s meeting that Lamb had submitted the paperwork for his retirement and was making it official at 11 a.m. Friday. That decision also requires board of works approval.

It was further announced Friday the department planned to conduct an administrative investigation in the wake of the arrests.

The charges, all Level 6 felonies, stem from a review of an Indiana State Police investigation by Special Prosecutor C. Michael Steiner of Bedford, according to a news release from Sgt. Stephen Wheeles with the state police post at Versailles.

The original investigation was sparked by an anonymous letter sent to Jackson County Prosecutor Jeff Chalfant from a Seymour police officer.

The letter alleged Lamb had been receiving money to conduct scheduling to provide security for the Interstate 65 construction project while he was on duty with the police department, according to the probable cause affidavit signed by Detective Andrew Mitchell. The work was for K-4 Security, a Jeffersonville firm that had the contract to provide security for the construction project.

The letter stated Lamb also used the department’s emergency notification program to send officers text messages about the construction detail while on duty with the department, and he asked officers to communicate with him through his department-issued cellphone about the work detail.

Abbott became a target of the investigation because he allegedly knew about Lamb’s activities and failed to report them or take any action against Lamb.

During the investigation, detectives also were able to determine Abbott was employed by Schneck Medical Center to schedule off-duty officers to provide security at the Seymour hospital, according to court documents.

That investigation indicated Abbott allegedly performed his duties for Schneck while also working in his official capacity with the police department.

Abbott received $7,920 from Schneck for scheduling off duty while he also was on duty in his official capacity with the Seymour Police Department.

Lamb also was a part-owner and employee of a Seymour company, B-Safe Tactical Training, which provides training to area schools, churches and businesses. Investigators were able to determine Lamb received payment from that company while he also was on duty in his capacity with the police department.

Officer Jeremy Helmsing, a public information officer with the Seymour Police Department, said the department is looking for a fresh start under Lucas, who took over Jan. 1.

He said Lucas is big in transparency and is working to get information about the department’s activities in a variety of ways.

Helmsing said officers are willing to listen to the concerns from anyone, either anonymously or by just talking to an officer.

“We have several outreach meetings planned,” he said.

Those meetings will be with various groups in the community and are just another way to give the public greater access to the department.

“One of the biggest things is our policies are being reviewed from top to bottom,” Helmsing said.

The idea is to make the department better in every way possible.

A lot of those policies have not been updated in a while, Helmsing said.

Columbus man faces two felonies for sexual misconduct with minor

Jeffrey Batton Submitted

BROWN COUNTY — A 40-year-old Columbus man faces two Level 4 felonies in Brown County after a girl reported he had inappropriate contact with her twice.

Jeffrey Batton was formally charged on Feb. 5 with two counts of sexual misconduct with a minor.

On Jan. 26, Detective Brian Shrader with the Brown County Sheriff’s Department responded to Johnson Memorial Hospital after the minor had reported being raped. She told Shrader that Batton had inappropriately touched her twice.

According to the probable cause affidavit, the victim immediately told her grandfather that she had been assaulted after the second occurrence.

The victim’s mother told police that Batton also had allegedly touched other juveniles in the past.

Shrader went to the place where the incident happened and spoke with people who were there at the time. He noted that Batton’s mother’s story of what happened was different than anyone else’s, including Batton’s.

The victim’s grandfather told police that she had come running to him, shaking and crying. Both grandparents told police that the victim is a straight-A student and would not make something like this up.

The victim’s siblings were in the room sleeping when the incidents happened. One of the siblings called their mother because she knew something wasn’t right after seeing the victim run to her grandfather.

Shrader spoke with Batton at his home in Columbus. He told Shrader he loved the victim and that she loved him. He denied doing anything inappropriate. He told police that the victim and her siblings were jealous of his family.

Shrader received a copy of a report from 2016 from when Batton was last accused of a previous molestation. He reported seeing similarities in that report and this investigation.

One of the victim’s siblings reported that that evening, the victim had scooted over to let Batton sit near her while they were watching a movie. She said that he tried to rub the victim’s feet and she told him to stop, the affidavit states.

The sibling said she fell asleep and woke up to the victim crying. She said Batton’s face became red when the victim began telling the grandfather what happened. The sibling said that Batton would often hug her and the victim, but that he would hug the victim for a longer period of time, which she felt was weird, according to the affidavit.

Shrader collected mouth swabs for DNA testing from Batton. In a second interview with police, Batton continued to deny touching the victim or molesting her.

Batton is being held in the Brown County jail on $60,000 bond. It was reduced from $250,000 after a hearing on Feb. 14. If released on bail, Batton is to have no contact with the victim or her family.

A trial by jury has been preliminarily set for Wednesday, April 1 at 8 a.m.

Driver arrested in school pickup lane for OWI

Patrick A. Swan Submitted photo

Columbus police officers arrested a local man Thursday afternoon on suspicion of operating a vehicle while intoxicated after determining that he crashed into another vehicle in a school student pick up lane and later provided a breath test sample more than 4 1/2 times over the legal limit.

At 2:50 p.m., Columbus police were sent to Richards Elementary School, 3311 Fairlawn Drive, in regards to a minor accident involving two vehicles in the student pick up lane, said Lt. Matt Harris, Columbus Police Department spokesman. A school resource officer, who was inside Richards Elementary School when the call was dispatched, also responded to the crash.

A short time later, the officers noted that one of the drivers involved in the crash, Patrick A. Swan, 37, of 3774 Greenbriar Drive, had a strong odor of an alcoholic beverage on his breath and observed that his balance was unsteady, Harris said. The officers administered several field sobriety tests to Swan which he did not pass, Harris said.

Swan was later transported to the Columbus Police Department where he provided a breath sample of .361%, Harris said.

Swan was placed under arrest and transported to Columbus Regional Hospital for medical clearance and later taken to the Bartholomew County Jail on the preliminary charge of operating a vehicle with a blood alcohol reading of .15% or greater, a Class A misdemeanor. He has since been released from jail under the county’s pre-trial program which allows qualifying defendants to be released form jail without posting bond.

Koch education bill passes Senate

Koch

Staff Reports

A bill authored by Sen. Eric Koch, R-Bedford, that would provide Hoosier students with better educational opportunities to align their skills with the needs of Indiana’s utility industries recently passed the Indiana Senate.

Senate Bill 195 focuses on creating vocational education pathways for students to the electric, natural gas, telecommunications, water and wastewater industries by directing the Indiana State Board of Education (SBOE) and the Governor’s Workforce Cabinet to create a Utility Career and Technical Education Cluster. SB 195 would also ensure that career clusters and courses created by the SBOE will consider whether the course or sequence of courses is tied to high-wage, high-demand career opportunities.

“Our state’s utility industry is experiencing a shortage of skilled workers,” Koch said. “These jobs are high-paying with good benefits. This bill will ensure that our vocation-educational system is aligned with industry needs.”

This legislation now moves to the House of Representatives for further consideration.

Koch, Chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, serves Senate District 44, which includes all or parts of Bartholomew, Brown, Jackson, Lawrence and Monroe counties.

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For more information on Senate Bill 195, visit https://iga.in.gov/legislative/2020/bills/Senate/195.

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Takin’ it to the alleys: Architecture students pitch ideas for downtown upgrades

J. Irwin Miller Architecture Program student Melanie Brock presents her and her partner's Urban Switch alleyway design Relationships of Columbus at Indiana University's J. Irwin Miller Architecture Program in Columbus, Ind., Wednesday, Feb. 12, 2020. Students were grouped together and tasked with coming up with a design reimagining an alleyway on Washington Street. The winning design will receive $10,000 to implement their design. Mike Wolanin | The Republic

Staff Reports

Student teams from the J. Irwin Miller Architecture Program took their ideas to the streets — or perhaps more accurately the alleys — of Columbus in a design competition.

The project, dubbed “Urban Switch,” required students to propose a public art installation for an alleyway or alleyways along the main commercial downtown corridor in Columbus — Washington Street — working in teams of two or three.

The project is a collaboration between the architecture program and the Columbus Area Arts Council, according to organizers.

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Each group was tasked with coming up with a unique idea for the project, according to Jei Jeeyea Kim, assistant professor of the J. Irwin Miller Architecture program, which is housed in The Republic building downtown.

The unique ideas were then judged by a panel of community representatives, including Kathryn Armstrong, executive director of the Columbus Area Arts Council, Erin Hawkins, director of marketing for the Columbus Area Visitors Center, Mary Ferdon, executive director of administration and community development for Columbus, Polly Kramer of Kramer Furniture and Travis Perry, Tovey-Perry Co.

The chosen proposal will be granted a total budget of $10,000 — split between the arts council and the architecture program — and will be built in the summer, Kim said.

The proposals each had a view of how to transform a downtown alley into a visual showcase based on a unique theme, which varied widely among the four possibilities.

One team chose an “Arcade Alley” theme, with the designers saying that while alleys are traditionally thought of as a service space, they could be a place for visitors to explore. The designers were Ariel Walden, Jacquelyn Brice and Casey Adams.

The team said they would transform Alley C, described as a “long, tall and dark passageway” between Third and Fourth streets located to the east across Washington Street from The Commons, into a more inviting and safer space by adding illumination through a specialized design.

The alley has the potential to connect Washington Street to the Fourth Street Bar, Escape 812 and the Columbus Philharmonic, the team said.

Using nearby Brown County and its lush tree canopy as inspiration, the designers proposed an urban canopy for the alley that resembles an arcade, providing different visual experiences in the day and night. During the day, colorful tree trunks would be placed at regular intervals injecting natural beauty through abstract art, the designers said. At night, the blacklights on the trees would glow in neon colors, adding light but also an otherworldly feel to the space, which could attract visitors downtown to experience the nightlife, the designers said.

A second nominee was Alley Bazaare, whose designers complimented Columbus as “well-planned,” but noted the city is perhaps too “well-planned.”

Members of the team were Jacob Bower-Bir, Tony Meyer and Danny Weddle.

This team said the city needs “liminal spaces” — spaces that can accommodate anything as easily and as often as they accommodate nothing.

Noting the alleyway between Third and Fourth streets empties directly into The Commons, the team imagined a bazaar-like passageway that could be repurposed in different ways with tables and other structures designed to be functional for a variety of uses. The space would be made over each day depending on how visitors decided to use it, with space that can be partitioned off for different activities. The tables would fold up to the wall out of the space, or fold out for use.

Team members Morgan Anderson and Patrick Dimond presented “Movement” based on the energy that a wind tunnel can produce between two tall buildings.

The team chose the alleyway between Fifth and Sixth streets due to the buildings’ height. “Guided by the practice of drying laundry between buildings in other cultures, the team proposed installing mylar across the top of the alley “to swim in the alley’s gentle breeze and reflect daylight.”

The fourth presentation, “Relationships of Columbus,” was by Victoria Bell and Melanie Brock, who chose an alley between Fourth and Fifth Street.

The designers said the art installation would build upon the contextual and personal relationships observed in downtown Columbus, extending the city’s already colorful geometric vernacular to create murals inspired by the city’s significant art pieces and locations.

Those who visit may interact with the modular murals by physically moving the pieces to a different spot, to create a new image, the designers said.

“This inspires the people of Columbus to utilize their creativity to constantly be creating new, different murals and connect to an otherwise unused space in the downtown area,” the designers said.

Among the mural compositions suggested were designs based on the front of kidscommons, the Chaos sculpture in The Commons, the streetscape of Fourth Street, Friendship Way and Flamenco, the red sculpture on Washington Street.

In addition to the murals, the designers took the idea of lighted shapes for night wayfinding from the shapes along Friendship Way, another alley downtown.

Community judging panelist Armstrong is a veteran of her own public art projects in Indianapolis and nationally. She met with the IU students a couple weeks ago for a preliminary critique — and for some practical feedback “and ideas on how they can frame out their projects in real time,” as she put it.

“So much of public artwork is getting the design concept down, but also the feasibility of a project and answering the question of how you can actualize it in real time,” Armstrong said. “You look at ‘Do the materials work? Can it withstand the weather? And what about the budget? And how do you build in the artist and design fees?’”

Columbus native and judging panelist Hawkins, a former president of the Columbus Area Arts Council, said she was impressed by all of the presentations.

“Participating made me remember the early days, several years ago, when Kelly Wilson arrived in Columbus and began IUCAD with the goal of one day making Columbus home to a masters of architecture program,” Hawkins said. “It was great to see that work come full circle and to see students interacting with community members to solve real design problems in Columbus. Having these students in our community is a wonderful asset.”

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To learn more about the J. Irwin Miller Architecture Program through Indiana University, visit https://architecture.indiana.edu/

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What: Indiana University’s J. Irwin Miller Architecture Program, a three-year master’s degree program, offered through the Eskenazi School of Art, Architecture + Design.

Location: 333 Second St., Columbus. Program’s building is the former home of The Republic, which the newspaper occupied from 1971 through December 2016. The all-glass building was designed by renowned American architect Myron Goldsmith, of the Chicago-based firm Skidmore, Owings & Merrill. The building was designated a National Historic Landmark in 2012.

Highlights:

  • Open to students coming from different disciplines
  • Utilizes Columbus’ more than 65 examples of Modern architecture, its size, its fabrication technology at local manufacturing companies and its coalition-building process
  • Has study abroad component for students
  • Involves hands-on learning that would include building projects that aid and support the Columbus community’s interests
  • Students will learn how to become entrepreneurs and community contributors

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Gerald W. Henry

Gerald W. Henry
Gerald W. Henry

COLUMBUS

Gerald W. Henry, 72, of Columbus, was a born again Christian and was taken home to be with God on February 13, 2020.

He was born in Brown County on January 26, 1948. He was preceded in death by his parents, Garlan Wayne and Velma Seitz Henry. Gerald married Jerry Thurman in Las Vegas, NV on September 10, 1974, and she survives. In those 45 years they were blessed to have wonderful children and grandchildren.

His children are Grant (Dawn) Henry of Greenwood; Billie Henry of Columbus; Terrie Henry of Columbus; and Geoff (Angela) Henry of Columbus. His grandchildren are Devon Henry, Shaela Henry, Erralynn Henry, Andie Clark, Charlie Clark, Jentzen Bechtel, Joel Bechtel, Chance Henry, Trevor Conrad, and Kaleb Conrad. He is also survived by five sisters and four brothers.

Gerald enjoyed going to all his grandchildren’s sporting events, including basketball, baseball, HAVOC Volleyball Club and school volleyball. He loved and adored them all.

He was one of the founders of the Biddy Basketball program in Hope.

Gerald graduated in 1966 from Columbus High School. After graduation, he worked at Hartup Tool and Die. He then worked at several tool and mold making shops. He currently was employed at R & M Tool in North Vernon.

A funeral service will be held on Tuesday at 1 p.m. at Norman Funeral Home. Visitation will be Monday from 4 to 7 p.m. and one hour prior to the service on Tuesday y at the funeral home. Burial will follow at Flat Rock Baptist Cemetery.

Memorial contributions may be given to Hauser Athletic Department.

Online condolences may be sent to the Henry Family at www.normanfuneralhome.net.

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Mary Graham

NORTH VERNON

Mary Graham, 77, of North Vernon, died on February 12, 2020.

A celebration of life held from 12 – 2:00 p.m. on February 22, 2020, at the Crossroads Community Church in Elizabethtown, IN. Sawyer-Pickett Funeral Home handled the arrangements.

Dorothy Jean Patrick

Dorothy Jean Patrick
Dorothy Jean Patrick

COLUMBUS

Dorothy Jean Patrick, 92, of Columbus, died at 1:30 p.m. February 12, 2020, at the home of her daughter.

Jean was born March 15, 1927, in Jeffersonville, the daughter of James Franklin McKinney Sr. and Bertha Hazel Lind McKinney.

She loved NASCAR, cats, collecting salt and pepper shakers, reading, playing euchre, and traveling. Jean enjoyed sending and receiving cards; no special holiday or reason required she just enjoyed sending cards to her friends. She was always one to remember a birthday by putting a “Happy Birthday” announcement in the newspaper.

The funeral will be conducted at 11 a.m. Monday, February 17, 2020, at First United Methodist Church with the Rev. Sarah Campbell officiating. Calling will be 10 a.m. until the time of service Monday at the church. Burial will be at Garland Brook Cemetery.

Memorials may be made to the Autism Society in memory of Jean.

Survivors include her daughters, Kathy L. Rea of Columbus, Karen J. Patrick of Bedford and Kimberley S. (Mark) Schoettmer of Columbus; brother, George L. McKinney of Columbus; nieces, Vicki (Mark) Huckaby of Columbus, Deb Risinger of Columbus and Susan (Eric) Wilcox of Jeffersonville; grandchildren, Daniel (Cindy) Rea, Andrew Rea, Melissa (Bryan) Cross, Rebecca (David) Bevis, Gabriel (Leslie) Schoettmer, Jessica (Nick) Curd, Jacob (Heather) Schoettmer, and Elizabeth (Isaac) Shafer; and 17 great-grandchildren.

She was preceded in death by her parents; brothers, Lawrence and James McKinney; and a granddaughter, Mary Teresa Schoettmer.

Arrangements provided by the Jewell-Rittman Family Funeral Home.

You are invited to view her video tribute, light a virtual candle and send a message to the family via the funeral home website: www.jewellrittman.com

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Roger D. Sullivan

FREETOWN

Roger Sullivan, 75, died Wednesday, February 12, 2020. The funeral will be conducted Wednesday at 12:00 p.m. at Becks Grove Christian Church-Freetown. Visitation will be one hour prior to the service. Arrangements entrusted to Barkes, Weaver & Glick Funeral Home.