Governor Eric J. Holcomb announced Thursday, September 12 that Matthew T. Aldridge is his judicial appointment to the Marshall County Superior Court No. 2. Aldridge will replace Judge Dean Colvin whose retirement is effective September 29, 2024.
Continue readingMarshall County Commissioners Approve Contract for Court Recording Technology Upgrades
The Marshall County Commissioners reviewed information in a contract with BIS Digital, Inc. Monday morning that deals with the upgrades in recording technology in Superior Court No. 1, Superior Court No. 2, newly-established Superior Court No. 3, and Circuit Court.
Continue readingPlymouth Man Arrested in Alleged Domestic Battery Incident
A Plymouth man is in the Marshall County Jail for his alleged involvement in a domestic battery incident on Sunday afternoon.
Marshall County Commissioners Discuss Copier Agreement
The Marshall County Commissioners were presented with a master agreement for the lease or purchase of copy machines for all county departments.
County Councilman Bill Githens worked with Ricoh representative Patrick Nau to formulate an agreement to be presented to County Attorney Jim Clevenger for review. There are five departments who have copier replacement requests in their budgets this year and it is the hope that this contract would save the county thousands of dollars in copier leases or purchases and maintenance and service fees.
Former Marshall County Resident Sentenced to 32 Years
A former Culver resident was sentenced to 32 years in prison on charges of serious violent felon in possession of a firearm with an enhancement of habitual offender.
Russell Prosser, 44, was found guilty of those charges in a trial in February.
The case began in December of 2013 when officers found Prosser sleeping in a truck in the McDonald’s parking lot in LaPaz. He was a suspect in a case where several thefts occurred from vehicles in Culver. Guns were spotted by police inside the vehicle. A warrant to search the vehicle was obtained, and the weapons were confiscated. He was known by police to have been convicted of an armed robbery, and it was illegal for Prosser to possess any firearm.