2013 Forty Under 40: Chasity Q. Thompson
As a lawyer working in higher education to help other lawyers, Chasity Thompson believes she has the best of both worlds.
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As a lawyer working in higher education to help other lawyers, Chasity Thompson believes she has the best of both worlds.
-QuinnCo LLC bought an 11,655-square-foot office building at 374 Meridian Parke Lane, Greenwood. The buyer was represented by Andrew Follman of NAI Meridian Real Estate Services. The seller, Republic Financial Corp., was represented by Andrew Martin and Bennett Williams of Cassidy Turley.
-The Gene B. Glick Family Housing Foundation bought the 200-unit Hunt Club Apartments at East 56th Street and Interstate 465. The property was listed for $7.95 million. The sale price wasn't disclosed. The buyer and seller, Eli Stefansky dba Hunt Club Apartments LLC, were represented by Tikijian Associates.
-An affiliate of Bickford Senior Living bought 8.88 acres of retail land in Northern Beach Park, 5829 E. 116th St., Carmel. The seller, Mansion Real Estate, was represented by Stan Elser of Lee & Associates. The buyer represented itself.
-Denny’s Excavating bought a 90,123-square-foot building at 1329-1340 W. 29th St. The seller, D-A Lubricant Co. Inc., was represented by Steven Schaub of Summit Realty Group. The buyer represented itself.
-Butler Automotive Group bought 19.1 acres at 4200 East 96th Street. The property was listed for $4.9 million. The sale price wasn't disclosed. The buyer and seller, John P. Tyner Revocable Stewardship Trust, were represented by Michael P. Sloan of The Broadbent Group.
-Drew Investments LLC bought a 6,250-square-foot office building at 7160 Graham Road. The buyer was represented by Tom Frank of Summit Realty. The seller, 7160 Graham Road LLC, was represented by Paul Dick and Kevin Dick of Colliers International.
Interior designer Nikki Sutton has her fingers in many artsy pies around town. She has designed spaces for noteworthy projects such as Indy Reads Books on Mass Ave., The Speak Easy in Broad Ripple and companies such as ExactTarget.
In just four years, Michelle Study-Campbell has put Reach for Youth on firm financial footing while expanding its staff and services. The not-for-profit offers counseling to Indiana youth and their families and works with the juvenile justice system by operating a nationally recognized teen court for non-violent first offenders.
An affiliate of Butler Automotive Group bought more than 19 acres at the northwest corner of East 96th Street and Randall Drive in late December and is seeking permission from Carmel to build a structure that would house Butler Hyundai.
The Indiana House has approved a bill that would shorten the time that school districts must hold onto vacant buildings in case a charter school operator wanted to move into the building.
Sherron Rogers is up at 3 a.m. to hit the gym. “It works well for me,” laughs Rogers, a self-described high-energy person who was recently promoted to vice president of patient support services at Indiana University Health. “I try to exercise a bit, and get my day started with work.”
In September 2001, Chad Pittman had a nice career going as a lawyer with Bose McKinney & Evans LLP, and his wife was about to deliver the first of their now-four children. Then 9/11 happened.
Deborah Ecksten, a former shareholder of Indianapolis-based Createc Corp., is suing her brother and mother, claiming they earned multimillion-dollar profits at her expense by selling the company without her knowledge.
Una Osili has one foot in the global community and the other in Indianapolis. A renowned researcher on philanthropic trends, she also is a wife and mother who serves on St. Richard’s Episcopal School board and helped her husband, Vop Osili, campaign for public office.
Doran Moreland discovered political science at Indiana University. After graduating in 2000, his real education in politics began, working for Indianapolis Mayor Bart Peterson, then U.S. Sen. Evan Bayh.
For the past few years, the Statehouse has been almost a second home for Lawren Mills.
Some people start on the ground floor. Josh Miles started in the basement, launching Miles Design LLC in his home.
As the corporate fundraiser for the Salvation Army Indiana Division, Mel McMahon is responsible for seeing that their red kettles stay full to “do the most good.”
Jayson Manship’s job title is Lead Nerd.
Co-founder of Indianapolis-based inSourceCode, Manship and his 12 coworkers write code for websites serving clients ranging from major political entities to professional sports teams. He has also done the Web work for the two “Extreme Makeover: Home Edition” projects in Indiana.
Becca Manolov left Indiana 10 years ago to try something new. Now she’s back to promote something new—CityWay, the apartment/hotel/retail/YMCA complex downtown.
In 2009, Matt MacGregor was working as a consultant in Vietnam when Chuck Dietzen, the founder of Timmy Global Health, asked him to apply for the executive director’s job at Timmy.
Anyone who knew David Leazenby at Westfield High School must have figured he’d end up in some area of design and development.
Rob Laycock says that when he’s at work, there’s no better feeling than seeing Bankers Life Fieldhouse packed with fans. As vice president of marketing for Pacers Sports & Entertainment, he has a hand in making that happen.
“It’s a collaboration of everyone who works here,” he said. “This is a great organization, and I’ve been given a lot of opportunities.”