Northern Indiana RV maker to add up to 250 jobs
The company plans to invest $3.9 million to buy land and construct a 93,000-square-foot facility adjacent to its existing 45-acre campus in the town of Topeka.
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The company plans to invest $3.9 million to buy land and construct a 93,000-square-foot facility adjacent to its existing 45-acre campus in the town of Topeka.
A central Indiana city's mayor has resigned with less than a week left to go in his term. Anderson Mayor Kris Ockomon submitted his resignation at a safety board meeting Monday.
Two Indianapolis women were charged Tuesday with making false claims to try to collect money from funds intended for victims of the Indiana State Fair stage collapse.
FedEx Corp. has won an appeal that overturns a $66 million verdict in favor of defunct Indianapolis airline ATA Airlines Inc.
Defendants include companies affiliated with Indianapolis restaurateur Henri Najem, the rapper Ludracis and former Indianapolis Colts quarterback Blair Kiel.
Several Indianapolis firefighters also had to battle a wayward driver while battling a blaze on the city's west side Tuesday. Crews were fighting a house fire at West 29th Street and Barnes Avenue just before 2 a.m. when a man drove around the fire trucks, onto the sidewalk, over hoses and into the middle of the fire scene. The driver narrowly missed members of the fire department, who had to pick up the car and remove it from the water-supply line. The driver was arrested when he became confrontational. The two-story house, which was vacant, was called a total loss.
A neighbor who was watching a 9-year-old Fort Wayne girl when she went missing last week will be formally charged with murder Tuesday. Authorities said Monday night that Aliahna Lemmon had been found dead. Family friend Mike Plumadore, 39, who was watching Aliahna and her two sisters when she went missing Friday, was being held on a murder charge. Police said Plumadore told investigators on Monday he bludgeoned the girl to death with a brick, then dismembered her with a hacksaw. He stuffed her remains into freezer bags and hid some at his trailer and some at a nearby business.
Police say a robbery suspect was shot to death by an employee Monday evening at the Kroger grocery store near 71st Street and Georgetown Road on the northwest side of Indianapolis. According to police, Jeremy Atkinson, 26, entered the store about 6 p.m., placed an object in the back of a female employee and forced her into the office area of the store. Another employee already in the area shot Atkinson in the face. Atkinson died Monday night at the hospital. Police said no arrests are expected. Kroger said it is investigating the incident.
Quarterly sales rose at Warsaw-based Biomet Inc., lifting investors’ sentiment that the recession-induced slowdown in orthopedic surgeries may be ending. Biomet, one of the largest makers of orthopedic implants, reported sales of $725.1 million in the three months ended Nov. 30, a 4-percent increase over the same quarter a year ago. Excluding foreign currency fluctuations, Biomet’s sales would have risen 3 percent. Still, investors took it as a positive sign for the industry, trading up the shares of other orthopedics companies, including Warsaw-based Zimmer Holdings Inc. and Michigan-based Stryker Corp. “We would view the Biomet large joint reconstruction results with cautious optimism for the broader hip and knee markets,” Derrick Sung, an analyst with Sanford C. Bernstein & Co., told investors Dec. 20, according to Bloomberg News. “Investors are generally pricing in no expectation for an orthopedic market recovery in 2012, so we would view any signs of such as incrementally positive for Stryker and Zimmer, the pure-play orthopedic companies.” Biomet reported that sales of its knee implants rose 2 percent worldwide, while sales of hip implants rose 7 percent, and sales of its sports, extremity and trauma implants rose 13 percent. Biomet’s figures are preliminary, and the company has not yet reported its quarterly profits.
Zimmer Holdings Inc. will start giving its shareholders a dividend in the first quarter of 2012. The Warsaw-based maker of orthopedic implants will dole out 18 cents for each share of its common stock held on March 30. Zimmer also announced that it will buy back $1.5 billion of its own stock between now and the end of 2014. Zimmer is trying to make its stock more attractive after the economy forced many patients to put off elective orthopedic surgeries. Zimmer’s share price has been stuck between $50 and $60 for most of the past two years, even though it neared $70 earlier this year. Zimmer had $553 million in cash and cash equivalents as of Sept. 30.
Eli Lilly and Co. was one of the drug firms stung by an illegal importation ring, based in Houston, which sold copies of erectile dysfunction drugs as the real thing. According to the Houston Chronicle, the ring was led by an illegal immigrant from Pakistan named Irfan Qadir, who was recently sentenced to 13 months in prison and ordered to pay about $140,000 in restitution to pharmaceutical Indianapolis-based Lilly and to New York-based Pfizer. Lilly makes the impotence pill Cialis and Pfizer makes Viagra. In the six months leading up to his May arrest, Qadir received about 8,000 pills of those two drugs, according to the U.S. Department of Justice.
Between 100 and 120 Sears and Kmart stores will be closed, the retailer said Tuesday, after terrible holiday sales during what is the most crucial time of the year for retailers.
The economy may be stuck in the doldrums, but government and the private sector are continuing to make huge investments aimed at strengthening the region's future. Check out IBJ‘s complete year-in-review coverage, including a photo gallery, reader poll and A&E recap.
Before he changed his mind, Dan Parker’s decision to step down as party chairman was seen by many as an opportunity to find fresh blood to lead Democrats through fights to win back the governor's office and a U.S. Senate seat next year.
Tea Party supporters that helped the Republicans win a U.S. House majority last year also prevented the party from taking control of the Senate and could do it again in 2012, Senator Richard Lugar said.
The Monroe County Board of Aviation Commissioners will charge charge $75 a day for parking planes at the airport between Feb. 2 and Feb.6.
Cummins has invested about $10 million in 70 projects in its Indiana facilities since 2007, leading to annual savings of $4 million.
Construction is expected to start in 2014, with the city paying about half the estimated $22 million cost out of its revenue from a special taxing district for infrastructure projects.
Indiana State University officials concerned about low freshman retention rates, especially among African-American students, are looking at ways to keep more students in college to get their degrees.
General Motors Co., preparing to introduce new pickups in 2013, has scheduled 21 weeks without production at three U.S. full-size truck plants next year to update the factories for building the new models.
Ice Miller LLP hired Taryn Stone as an associate in its health care transactions group. Most recently, she was senior corporate counsel for Louisiana-based home health and hospice company Amedisys Inc. Stone graduated from Washington University in St. Louis in 2002 and received her law degree from the Indiana University School of Law-Indianapolis in 2005. Stone worked in Ice Miller's health care transactions group from 2005 to 2008.
The Indianapolis-based Behavior Analysis Center for Autism added Dr. Peter Gerhardt as a clinical consultant. He will make regular visits to the center to train the center’s staff and parents of children with autism. Gerhardt will remain a director of education for the McCarton School for autism in New York. Previously, Gerhardt was a research professor at Rutgers University in New Jersey.
Anesthesia Consultants of Indianapolis LLC has 80 physicians. The size of the Indianapolis-based practice was reported incorrectly in the Dec. 19 edition of IBJ Health Care & Reform Weekly.