Neighborhood eyesore headed for demolition
The city is soliciting bids from companies to tear down four buildings on the 16-acre Avanti Development Corp. property, which is tucked in a residential area a few miles west of downtown Indianapolis.
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The city is soliciting bids from companies to tear down four buildings on the 16-acre Avanti Development Corp. property, which is tucked in a residential area a few miles west of downtown Indianapolis.
The investors are concerned Emmis will gain voting rights to two-thirds of the preferred shares and that it would use that clout to get out of paying millions of dollars in dividends.
Indiana State Excise Police officers served search warrants at two Indianapolis homes Sunday morning, looking for evidence of illegal alcohol sales. Investigators said they found 543 bottles and cans of alcohol, an undisclosed amount of cash and more than 11 pounds of marijuana with a street value of $30,000 to $50,000. Authorities also seized a handgun, two vehicles and three refrigerators. The raids were the result of an investigation into illegal alcohol sales at 2445 N. Arsenal Ave. and 2449 N. Arsenal Ave. Undercover officers made several liquor purchases during their probe, and police are pursuing charges against three individuals.
Two people were charged with murder Sunday in the Dec. 12 shooting deaths of 7-year-old Kyleigh Crane and her 21-year-old uncle, Jeremy Crane. Cumberland police arrested 22-year-old Michael Bell, a friend of the older victim, after he turned himself in. Detectives also charged 25-year-old Jeremy Priel, but did not release details about the crime or a motive. Jeremy Crane and Bell played football together at Warren Central High School, and Bell lived with the Crane family in their Woodlark Drive home until about a month ago. Family members said they do not know Priel.
North Koreans poured into the streets Monday to mourn the death of Kim Jong-il as state media hailed his untested son as the "Great Successor" of the reclusive state whose atomic weapons ambitions are a major threat to the region. Earlier, a tearful North Korean television announcer said the 69-year old ruler died on Saturday of "physical and mental over-work." Kim assumed the leadership of the totalitarian state in 1994, taking over from his father Kim Il-sung. He will be laid to rest next to his father Dec. 28. News agency KCNA lauded Kim's youngest son, Kim Jong-un, as "the outstanding leader of our party, army and people," but there was uncertainty about how much support he has among the ruling elite, especially in the military.
An Indianapolis judge says he'll decide within 30 days whether Indiana's sweeping new school voucher law violates the state's constitution.
In its first five months on the books, Indiana's texting-while-driving ban has led to only a few dozen citations by state troopers—a trend police blame on restrictions in the law that make it difficult for them to enforce.
Executive Director Scott Fulford said he is retiring and handing over leadership to Troy Whittington, who currently is director of business development. He officially becomes interim director on Jan. 1.
Catch ‘Willy Wonka’ at Civic? Spend an afternoon with ‘Frog and Toad’?
Those trying to fast-track legislation cite estimates that the 2010 Super Bowl brought 10,000 prostitutes to Miami and resulted in 133 arrests in Dallas at the 2011 Super Bowl.
Organizers of the auction thought advertising agencies or individual advertisers would bid on the right to wrap their message around downtown buildings.
A state tax processing error resulting in $320 million more in the bank for the state and improved tax collections could put a nominal amount back in Hoosiers' purses and wallets next year. But a bi-partisan thirst to restore education funding and pay down state debts could just as easily take that refund away.
Vectren has locked out 270 union workers at several Indiana worksites after the union rejected a proposed three-year-contract.
Dan Parker, the chairman of the state Democratic Party who abruptly resigned this week, reversed himself Saturday and narrowly survived a vote to keep his post, a party official told The Associated Press.
Illinois Gov. Pat Quinn on Friday signed tax-break legislation designed to keep the Chicago Mercantile Exchange and Sears Holding Co. from fleeing the state. CME had talked to Indianapolis officials about moving to central Indiana.
By gutting its central office, Indianapolis Public Schools could free up $188 million to provide universal preschool, to pay key teachers more than $100,000 a year and to transform itself into a network of autonomous “opportunity” schools.
An Indiana judge on Friday ordered Gov. Mitch Daniels to be deposed in two lawsuits over the state's cancellation of a $1.37 billion contract IBM received to modernize the state's welfare system, but the state attorney general said he would challenge the order.
If you're a Citizens Water customer, you'll notice a bigger bill come January. A rate increase takes effect in January to pay for federally mandated improvements to the sewer system. The 10.75-percent increase amounts to an additional $2.84 on next month's bill for the average customer. The same rate increase will occur in January 2013. The improvements will help prevent raw sewage from leaking into local rivers and streams.
Robert Alford Brown, an 89-year-old Noblesville man, died Thursday night in a fiery accident on the northeast side of Indianapolis. Brown was driving the wrong way with his headlights off on southbound Interstate 465 near 56th Street when he crashed head-on into a sport-utility vehicle. A truck driver pulled Brown from his burning Buick, but couldn’t save the man. The driver of the SUV was not injured.