Carmel law firm settles consumer claims in Vermont
Mossler Law Firm of Carmel agreed to cease all business in Vermont, refund about $79,500 in fees paid by Vermont residents
and pay $60,000 in civil penalties.
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Mossler Law Firm of Carmel agreed to cease all business in Vermont, refund about $79,500 in fees paid by Vermont residents
and pay $60,000 in civil penalties.
A City-County Council subcommittee will meet Monday at 5:30 p.m. to vote on the plan to transfer Indianapolis' water
and sewer responsibilities to Citizens Energy Group. The Indianapolis Board of Waterworks approved the sale proposal last
month. If approved by the committee, the proposal will be referred to the full council for approval July 26. Fox59 will have
more at 4 p.m.
Bulldozers await an office complex that previously served as headquarters to August Mack Environmental. It’ll be the first
building demolished along Interstate 69 to make way for highway expansion.
There's one man controlling the contracts of Colts' quarterback Peyton Manning and overall No. 1 draft choice Sam
Bradford. And he'll use that leverage to squeeze as much cash as he can from the Colts and St. Louis Rams.
Symphony on the Prairie? Brooks and Dunn? What did you see, hear or do this weekend?
Economists say the U.S. recovery continued during the second quarter of this year with more businesses hiring workers and
fewer cutting jobs, but the pace of growth has slowed, a new survey shows.
The Indiana Connections Academy Virtual Pilot School, financed with state education money and allowing students to work from
home, will serve about 280 children from around the state.
The victims from three shootings Saturday night in a downtown crowded with visitors for Indiana Black Expo were reported to
be in good condition on Sunday. Eight were shot in the initial round of gunfire near Circle Centre mall.
An Indiana agency is telling about 36,000 people who collected a $25 stimulus payment as part of their unemployment check
that they must repay the money because they were later ruled ineligible.
The three-year agreement is designed to help the franchise shoulder the costs of operating Conseco Fieldhouse. One dissenting
voice called the team and city back to the negotiating table for a longer-term deal.
The National Collegiate Athletic Association must face a lawsuit by consumers claiming the organization unlawfully profits
from a ticket lottery.
Dan Clark will direct efforts to coordinate and align Indiana’s K-12 and postsecondary educational systems, as well
as work force agencies like the Department of Workforce Development.
Authorities are trying to determine a motive for why a Noblesville man was shot Thursday while delivering medical supplies
to a home in the community of Center in eastern Howard County. Joshua David Glyn, 22, who worked for a medical company, was
hit multiple times in the torso, and taken to Howard Regional Hospital in Kokomo and then transferred to Methodist Hospital
in Indianapolis in critical condition. Taken into custody was 61-year-old Charles E. Miller, who lived at the address. Officers
saw several long guns, handguns and ammunition in the home. Authorities believe at least four nearby homes were struck by
gunfire. It appears that shots were fired from multiple locations inside Miller's residence.
The house on the east side of Indianapolis where seven family members were murdered four years ago is no more. A crew
contracted by the city tore down the house at 560 N. Hamilton Ave. Friday morning. Neighbors now wonder what will happen next
with the property. On June 1, 2006, three children and four adults in the Covarrubias and Albarran families were gunned down
in what turned out to be a botched robbery. The were found in different parts of the house, with the children in bed. Fox59
will have more at 4 p.m.
The Indianapolis-Marion County Public Library board of trustees agreed Thursday to keep open two library branches targeted
for closure next year. Board members also outlined $2.5 million in proposed budget cuts for 2011 to help stem the growing
gap between revenue and expenses.
Indiana brought in $957 million less in revenue than it budgeted for fiscal year 2010, forcing it to use almost half its reserves,
Indiana State Auditor Tim Berry announced Friday morning.