First Internet Bancorp quarterly earnings up again
First Internet Bancorp earned just over $1 million in the third quarter ended Sept. 30, compared to a loss of $208,806 for the same quarter of 2009.
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First Internet Bancorp earned just over $1 million in the third quarter ended Sept. 30, compared to a loss of $208,806 for the same quarter of 2009.
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A recent poll found that more than 60 percent of likely voters support the proposed constitutional amendment, and some of the measure’s biggest opponents have given up the fight.
The lawsuit filed Friday in Marion County accuses Indianapolis-based WellPoint of violating a state law that requires businesses to provide notification of data breaches in a timely manner.
Indiana’s life sciences industry has weathered the recession relatively well, but Eli Lilly’s struggles and tight capital markets could threaten the future.
State regulators are investigating whether the University of Notre Dame violated safety rules when it allowed a student to videotape football practice from a tall hydraulic lift that toppled in high winds, killing the young man.
Congressman Dan Burton is expected to win his 15th term Tuesday despite what some say is an anti-incumbent sentiment sweeping the nation.
Student-loan giant Sallie Mae will consolidate operations in Indiana as part of a company-wide restructuring, creating about 350 jobs at its existing facilities in Fishers and Muncie.
The city of Anderson is nearing a milestone in its effort to find new uses for numerous former General Motors sites that have been in its possession since 2006.
Robert Vane, Ballard’s deputy chief of staff and communications director, plans to start his own firm specializing in crisis and strategic communications. His last day with the city is Nov. 5.
Alabama-based Progress Rail Services, a subsidiary of Caterpillar Inc., said it plans to invest about $50 million to open the first locomotive manufacturing and assembly plant in the United States in many years.
Butler University President Bobby Fong will leave at the end of the current academic year to take the helm of private Ursinus College outside Philadelphia, the Indianapolis school confirmed Friday afternoon.
St. Louis-based Ascension Health announced Friday morning that it would open a professional service center in Indianapolis, creating up to 500 jobs by 2013.
A Greenfield woman was taken by helicopter to Methodist Hospital in Indianapolis Thursday night after she was struck by a car while walking on a sidewalk along State Road 9. The woman, 46, suffered head injuries and a broken leg. Police have not released her name.
A woman has filed a civil lawsuit against Broad Ripple’s Casba, claiming a bartender served too much alcohol to a man who crashed into her shortly after leaving the tavern. Sherry Richardson suffered serious injuries in the May 2009 crash and spent 44 days in the hospital. She was hit by Andrew Bailor, who was fleeing from police. Bailor is now in prison for driving while intoxicated, resulting in serious bodily injury. The lawsuit says he had been drinking at the Casba from 9:45 p.m. to midnight and was served eight to 11 shots even though the bartender knew he was drunk.
Bebe Paluzza Productions, which started as a local trade show for parents and grew into a series of consumer events staged in five cities, has been sold to two industry veterans who want to continue that expansion.