Whitsett changes name; Milhaus launches division
The Whitsett Group LLC has changed its name to TWG Development LLC, and Milhaus has created a division to manage properties it develops.
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The Whitsett Group LLC has changed its name to TWG Development LLC, and Milhaus has created a division to manage properties it develops.
The Indiana Securities Division has summarily revoked the investment adviser registrations of William R. Muench and his Greenwood-based Aperio Wealth Management. The division alleges that Muench did not answer the door when division personnel arrived at his office last July for a routine compliance investigation. It also alleges Muench filed inaccurate information concerning his address. […]
Menard has countersued Tomisue Hilbert for “abuse of process,” saying she filed her lawsuit only after companies controlled by Menard removed the Hilberts as managers of a private equity firm and sued to recover millions of dollars in fees paid to the Hilberts.
Indiana has many fine communities with good schools and great local amenities. High-earning households are eager to live in these communities, and businesses flock there to obtain access to those workers and consumers. Indiana also has many poor communities with weak schools and few amenities. Households and businesses flee such places.
Indianapolis officials hope to include plans for a new downtown luxury hotel in their bid for the 2018 Super Bowl, but they’re not sure all the pieces for a deal—potentially on Pan Am Plaza—can be put together before a bid presentation for 32 NFL owners in May.
As public safety director for a day I got a feel for the complexity of the job of keeping us safe.
Indianapolis needs to stage a Super Bowl encore performance.
Tesla Motors Inc. is eyeing space in the Fashion Mall at Keystone and is seeking a zoning variance to sell cars there and to install charging stations within the parking garage.
The company may violate loan covenants in the next three to six months, and its ability to refinance a $280 million loan that matures in July 2014 is “highly questionable,” Moody’s says.
It’s hard to imagine topping Indy’s hosting of the 2012 Super Bowl, but it can be done.
Residents in Morristown are rallying against a proposed $500 million power plant they fear will harm the quiet agricultural community.
A new study found that Indianapolis-area hospitals are charging patients insured by their employers 264 percent more for outpatient services than the federal Medicare program pays for the exact same services at the same hospitals.
Animal control workers in an Indianapolis suburb have been trying to find an 8-foot-long red tail boa constrictor. The Noblesville owner of the pet snake, named Rainbow, said it got away Monday from a home on Wagon Trail Drive. Officials do not believe it poses a threat to humans but could eat a very small pet.
The U.S. Drought Monitor's weekly report released Thursday lists much of Indiana's midsection and parts of its northern counties as abnormally dry, which is the least-severe drought condition. The report places 34 percent of the state in that category. The National Weather Service has measured a smidge more than an inch of rain since the start of August in Indianapolis, with only a slight chance of rain forecast for the coming days.
Indianapolis police are seeking three suspects after a 15-year-old boy was shot in the chest about 10:30 p.m. Wednesday on the city’s west side. The victim was hospitalized in critical condition after the shooting in the 700 block of Concord Street, near 10th Street and Tibbs Avenue. Police are seeking two men and a 17-year-old girl. Police say the victim and his father were helping a neighbor in a domestic disturbance before the incident.
Contract law dominated an Indiana Supreme Court hearing over an agreement requiring the state to buy synthetic natural gas from a private plant and resell it on the open market.
Honda and Subaru led U.S. sales gains in August as auto demand beat projections and Asia-based carmakers, buoyed by Toyota Motor Corp., combined for their best month ever.
United Way of Central Indiana is boosting its annual fundraising goal well past last year’s record-setting tally.
Fewer Americans are seeking unemployment benefits, but about 80 percent of the jobs created this year have been lower-paying, part-time positions.