Indiana forms coalition to fight public corruption
Indiana Attorney General Greg Zoeller said the Public Integrity Coalition will educate and train officials from counties, cities, towns, townships and other local government units.
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Indiana Attorney General Greg Zoeller said the Public Integrity Coalition will educate and train officials from counties, cities, towns, townships and other local government units.
Tuesday's decision means former Indiana Utility Regulatory Commission chairman David Lott Hardy is immune to criminal prosecution.
The new report says that while many farmers took advantage of warmer, drier conditions in the past week to kick off their planting work, others held off because cool, wet weather is in the forecast for the next several days.
Fox59 now faces the challenge of filling airtime for two new newscasts, and the question of whether viewers even notice or care about repetition across shows.
Thoughts on the just-announced Tony nominations. Also, worst poster and worst head shot of the year.
The value of corporate takeovers announced in 2014 hit the $1 trillion mark Monday, reaching that level at the fastest pace in seven years.
Sam Zell’s Equity Group Investments would step in at Chase Tower and PNC Center, replacing a firm accused of conflicts of interest and underperformance.
A City-County Council task force recommended Monday an increase in the income taxes dedicated to public safety. It also backed eliminating a homeowner tax break.
Indianapolis-based Lilly Endowment sold 150,000 shares of Eli Lilly and Co. stock on Monday, resuming a short-lived asset diversification plan suspended when stock prices swooned in 2008.
Westfield-Washington Schools is asking the city to help pay for a new football stadium to accelerate construction and make way for what’s being described as a $40 million-plus commercial development at U.S. 31 and State Road 32.
Fort Wayne Community Schools announced it has dropped the online version of the ISTEP following issues with a practice run last week, and Wayne Township schools in Indianapolis is also trading computer testing for traditional paper tests.
Mayor Greg Ballard is scheduled to join U.S. Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx on Tuesday for a press conference on the Green Lane Project.
Who makes more? The average National Football League player, Major League Baseball player or a professional cricket player in India? The answer might surprise you.
Nicole Pence, who abruptly left WTHR-TV Channel 13 late last year, has been hired by WXIN-TV Channel 59 as the station continues to expand its local programming with two additional weekday newscasts.
Former Colts quarterback Peyton Manning has been passed as the top National Football League player when it comes to merchandise sales. Two Colts rank among the top 50.
Until doctors and hospitals make a whole lot more headway—or, perhaps, more accurately, are allowed to make more headway—in offering package deals, it’s hard to see major progress on containing out-of-control health care costs.
The court noted that after the government filed a second indictment March 12, the trade-secret theft claims against Guoqing Cao and Shuyu Li were changed to wire fraud, and aiding and abetting and conspiracy to commit wire fraud.
One of the first states to adopt Common Core standards became the first state to formally abandon the national benchmarks.
When John Lechleiter was named CEO of Eli Lilly and Co. in late 2007, the Indianapolis-based drugmaker derived just 5 percent of its annual revenue from its Elanco Animal Health subsidiary. But next year, after Lilly completes its $5.4 billion acquisition of Novartis Animal Health, Elanco will contribute 17 percent of revenue—or one out of every six dollars flowing into Lilly’s coffers. It’s been a swift transformation for Greenfield-based Elanco. In the mid-2000s, Lilly employees often tried to avoid or leave posts at Elanco because its future was in doubt. “Five years ago, people said, ‘Don’t go to Elanco because they’re going to get sold,’” Elanco President Jeff Simmons said in a 2010 interview. But the 2007 decision by Lechleiter and the Lilly board to invest in Elanco turned things around. Elanco now employs 3,500 worldwide, up from 2,500 a few years ago. Elanco’s revenue has shot up from $996 million in 2007 to $2.2 billion last year—growth of 120 percent, which is three times faster than the rest of the animal health industry. Of that growth, 60 percent has come organically, as Elanco aggressively pushed its products into foreign markets to complement its strong presence in the United States. The other 40 percent has come via acquisitions. The Novartis deal, expected to close in early 2015, will be Elanco’s eighth purchase in as many years.
Two Warsaw-based orthopedic implant companies agreed to merge last week in a $13.4 billion deal. Zimmer Holdings Inc. will acquire Biomet Inc., whose private equity owners had planned to stage a public stock offering this year. Biomet posted $3.1 billion in revenue in 2013, up from $2.8 billion in 2012, according to IBJ research. It employs 9,000 people worldwide. Zimmer reported $4.6 billion in revenue in 2013. It has about 9,500 employees. “This will give Zimmer some leverage when they go to hospitals, and help them compete,” said Jason McGorman, an analyst at Bloomberg Industries in Princeton, N.J., according to a report by Bloomberg News. Also, “they get a little more in terms of products in other areas, like sports medicine, extremities and trauma, where Zimmer has less exposure.” Zimmer will pay $10.4 billion in cash and issue shares of its common stock valued at $3 billion to Biomet Inc.'s equity holders.
Eli Lilly and Co.’s drug ramucirumab won approval from U.S. regulators to be sold under the brand name Cyramza as a treatment for gastric cancer. According to Bloomberg News, analysts expect the drug could bring in annual sales of more than $1 billion. Lilly is trying to launch new cancer and diabetes drugs to offset the loss of revenue from the anti-depressant Cymbalta, which saw its U.S. patent expire in December. Lilly obtained the drug Cyramza in its acquisition of ImClone Systems Inc. in 2008. Lilly is also studying the drug in lung, liver and colorectal cancers.
Dow AgroSciences LLC reported record sales of $2.1 billion in the first quarter, an increase of 1 percent over last year's first period, the Indianapolis-based company reported April 23. The subsidiary of Midland, Mich.-based Dow Chemical Co. also reported record earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization, or EBITDA, of $529 million, up 9 percent from a year ago. Dow Agro said higher sales and lower expenses boosted profit. Sales of crop-protection products grew 4 percent overall in the quarter, mainly due to gains in foreign markets. Sales of new crop-protection products rose 28 percent. Sales of seeds and seed traits fell 7 percent in the quarter, partly due to the late planting season in the United States.