GreeneStreets. Feature photo of a back country road in Greene County, Indiana.


Benefit SxS and Jeep Ride for GCSD Deputy Harvey Holt

GCSD Deputy Harvey Holt

GCSD Deputy Harvey Holt

Time and place to be announced.

The Center-Jackson Fire Territory, Linton Cycle Sales and Southern Indiana SxS have teamed up to sponsor their 1st Annual SxS and Jeep Ride on Sunday, August 26, with door prizes, drawings and a 50-50 raffle.

The cost of the ride will be a donation to support Greene County Sheriff’s K-9 Deputy Harvey Holt who is currently battling cancer.

The starting location and time will be announced on the ride’s Event Page on Facebook “Benefit SXS and Jeep Ride for Deputy Harvey Holt.”

Donations of items for door prizes and drawings are being accepted – contact Center-Jackson Fire Chief Jeremy Inman at 812-360-1499 for more information about the ride or to make a donation.

Donated items include a Hi-Lift Jack, box tickets to the Indianapolis Indians, two two-way radios and more.    

Report on last week's Opioid Summit and info on new laws to curtail the crisis

Report on last week's Opioid Summit and info on new laws to curtail the crisis

Indiana’s Opioid Epidemic is affecting Hoosiers across the state, including Greene County. Below is a link to a report by the Times of Northwest Indiana on last week’s Opioid Summit that includes information on 11 new Indiana laws that may help to curtail the opioid crisis. Indiana’s Opioid Epidemic: Opioid Summit seeks solutions to one of Indiana’s most pressing problems

Read More

On GreeneStreets: Making a change to improve the site

Working on the GreeneStreets site has been great. It's still early for a start-up, but so far, so good. For the most part, everything has gone smoothly, rolling right along. It continues to grow and it's been very encouraging to see how many people are interested in this coverage - more than I expected. I thank every subscriber and every visitor. 

However, I do have a concern that my news from my own hometown of Worthington is a distraction and is getting in the way. So I’m backtracking. Combining the Times and GreeneStreets onto one site seemed like a good idea, but hindsight being 20-20, it’s time to recognize a mistake and backtrack to separate the two. Good thing I have experience - I’ve gotten pretty good at fixing mistakes over the years.

Here’s what’s going to happen over the next few days:

GreeneStreets stays at greenestreets.com covering the Greene County crime and courts beat, jail logs and court news. If you’re mainly here to read the crime news and not interested in news from Worthington, Wotown items are going to be getting out of your way.

The Worthington Times is moving back onto its own site at worthingtontimes.com. Worthington items will be moving off and away from GreeneStreets and all will reappear on the Times site – a process that will likely take a few days.

I think Greene County people interested in the crime scene coverage will be happier with this change. And I think Worthington Times people will also be happier with this change once completed.

The cost for subscribers remains the same. There’s no change in this. If you have a subscription, there's nothing you need to do - subscribers will have access to both sites.

This move is going to cause some long hours of jumping through hoops on the back end and coordinating with the subscriber service provider to write some additional code just for the Times, but in the end, when the move is completed, this will be better for our readers, both from Greene County and from Worthington.

Follow GreeneStreets on Facebook at GreeneStreets.
Follow the Times on Facebook at The Worthington Times.

Thanks for your patience during this change to make this a better site.

Anna

 

Ramirez Arrest: Accused of driving drunk, causing crash that took the life of Jeremiah Murphy

Raul Ramirez

Raul Ramirez

On Friday, May 18, Jeremiah Murphy lost his life in a horrific crash involving two vehicles in eastern Greene County. Murphy’s two passengers, including his young child, were very seriously injured. On Monday afternoon, a warrant was issued for the other driver, also injured, who is accused of driving drunk without a valid driver’s license in a stolen vehicle, crossing the center line and causing the crash. He was taken into custody and booked in to jail early Monday evening.

Raul Ramirez, 51 at the time of the crash, now 52, with a home address on East Blue Sky North, Springville, is facing five felonies and one misdemeanor.

The crash has been under an ongoing investigation by Detective James O’Malley of the Greene County Sheriff’s Department.

The crash occurred around 9:30 p.m. near the address of 58 North State Road 45 at Carmichael Road, in rural Bloomfield.

Jeremiah Murphy, 37, was the driver of a 2000 Mercury Mystique. Kayla Faubion, 31, and Samantha Murphy, age four, were passengers in Murphy’s vehicle.

Ramirez was the driver of a 2001 Oldsmobile Aurora which was registered to his ex-wife, who had left her vehicle at his house for him to install a thermostat. She contacted the sheriff’s department to report the vehicle as stolen and said Ramirez did not have permission to drive it. O’Malley reported that Ramirez confirmed her story and admitted he took it without permission.

A records check showed Ramirez did not have a valid driver’s license – it was suspended and he knew it. And, Ramirez had a prior conviction for operating a vehicle while intoxicated endangering a person.

Two probable cause documents prepared by Det. O’Malley point to substantial evidence and witness testimony to support the criminal charges filed against Ramirez.

Ramirez was employed by a construction company and O’Malley called to verify the hours Ramirez worked on the day of the crash. A supervisor said Ramirez was scheduled to work a 12-hour shift that ended at 7 p.m. but Ramirez only worked 10 hours and left at 5 p.m.

The owner of a tavern in Ellettsville said his employees were familiar with Ramirez and a bartender recalled Ramirez was there around 7:30 p.m. and drank a couple of beers.

A search warrant was granted for the vehicle Ramirez was driving and when executed, O’Malley reported deputies found a cooler with unopened Coke, Budweiser, Wild Turkey whiskey and Gatorade. They also found an empty bottle of Budweiser and assorted prescription medication bottles, all prescribed to Ramirez, one containing a cyclobenzaprine medication with a warning that it causes drowsiness. O’Malley wrote that in an interview, Ramirez, who said he takes prescribed Xanax and hydrocodone, said he didn’t take any medication on the day of the crash because he was out of his medication.

According to O’Malley, Ramirez admitted drinking alcohol before the crash and said he had consumed a couple of beers and a shot of whiskey that day, around 7:30 p.m., at a friend’s house, then was driving southbound on SR 45 toward his home in East Blue Sky.

When Murphy’s passenger, Kayla Faubion, was interviewed, she explained she and Murphy were northbound on SR 45 with their daughter Samantha to go to the Dollar General Store. She said they saw the vehicle coming toward them at what she thought was a high rate of speed and Murphy commented that the vehicle was swerving in its lane. She told him to pull over then turned to check on Samantha in the back seat when the crash occurred. She remembers the noise.

Jeremiah Murphy was pronounced dead on the scene.

Kayla Faubion was transported to IU Health Bloomington Hospital with injuries that included broken ribs, broken medial scapular, broken left arm, broken T-1 and T-7 of the spine and a broken neck.

Samantha Murphy was first transported to IU Health Bloomington then airlifted to Riley Hospital in Indianapolis due to her age and the severity of her injuries which included a brain bleed and a fractured skull.

Ramirez was also injured and transported to IU Health Bloomington Hospital where he consented to a blood draw, taken at 1:22 a.m., that was sent to the Indiana Department of Toxicology for analysis. When the results came back in mid-June, they showed Ramirez had a blood-alcohol concentration equivalent to .146. The legal limit is .08.

Indiana State Police Trooper Eric Russell, a crash scene reconstructionist, was also assigned to this investigation. He concluded the crash occurred in the northbound lane, which was the lane Murphy’s vehicle was in, that Ramirez had traveled left of center, evidenced by the gouges in the pavement in the area of impact, and that the damage on both vehicles was centered on the driver’s side front.

In addition, in the execution of the search warrant on the vehicle driven by Ramirez, Trooper Russell retrieved information from the vehicle’s Event Data Recorder and reported the speed of the vehicle was 66 mph one second before the impact. He also reported the brake switch circuit was not activated - the brakes were not applied at any time during the eight seconds before and up to the moment of impact.

Greene County Prosecutor Jarrod Holtsclaw filed a criminal case against Ramirez in Greene Circuit Court on Monday. Also on Monday, Judge Erik Allen ordered a warrant be issued for the arrest of Ramirez.

Ramirez was arrested by Greene County Sheriff’s Deputy Heather Wood and booked into the Greene County Jail before 8:30 p.m. Monday with a bond set at $43,000 surety with ten percent cash allowed.

Now that he’s in custody, he will be scheduled into court for an initial hearing when he will be formally charged with:

  • Operating a vehicle causing a death while intoxicated with an alcohol concentration equivalent to .15 or more, a Level 4 felony,
  • Operating a vehicle causing a death while intoxicated with an alcohol concentration equivalent to at least .08 or more with a previous conviction of operating a vehicle while intoxicated within the 10 previous years, a Level 4 felony,
  • Two counts of operating a vehicle causing serious bodily injury while intoxicated with an alcohol concentration equivalent to at least .08 or more, both Level 6 felonies,
  • Auto theft involving theft of the entire vehicle, a Level 6 felony, and
  • Operating a vehicle while driver’s license is suspended or revoked – a knowing or intentional violation, with a prior conviction, a Class A misdemeanor.