Attorney general sues AT&T for suspending injured workers
AT&T’s Indiana operating company faces a discrimination lawsuit from the Indiana Department of Labor for suspending three workers, allegedly because they reported work-related injuries.
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AT&T’s Indiana operating company faces a discrimination lawsuit from the Indiana Department of Labor for suspending three workers, allegedly because they reported work-related injuries.
An attorney who played an integral role in consolidating the governments of the city of Indianapolis and Marion County, which made the Hoosier state capital the 11th largest city in the United States, has died.
An Indiana State Police trooper who pulled over a Jeep because a hole in its tail lamp emitted white light lacked probable cause to initiate the traffic stop that resulted in drunken-driving charges.
A judge last week approved an order clearing the way for Indiana University to transfer $450,000 to a federal court restitution fund for victims of former personal-injury and wrongful-death attorney William Conour.
The Chinese immigrant who tried to kill herself by consuming rat poison and was charged with murder and attempted feticide days later when her newborn daughter died pleaded guilty to a lesser charge of criminal recklessness, a Class B misdemeanor.
A Chinese immigrant who tried to kill herself by consuming rat poison and was charged with murder and attempted feticide days later when her newborn daughter died has pleaded guilty to a lesser charge of criminal recklessness, a Class B misdemeanor.
A Chinese immigrant who tried to kill herself by consuming rat poison and was charged with murder and attempted feticide days later when her newborn daughter died will plead guilty. Bei Bei Shuai’s plea agreement was announced this afternoon at a news conference in Marion Superior Court. She was to face trial beginning Sept. 3. […]
Indiana and Texas are the lead authors of an amicus brief filed Friday that asks the U.S. Supreme Court to reverse a 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals ruling banning legislative prayer at the beginning of a government meeting.
Indiana Court of Appeals
Jeremy Benner v. State of Indiana (NFP)
79A02-1211-CR-913
Criminal. Affirms conviction of child molesting as a Class C felony.
Randy Reeder v. State of Indiana (NFP)
71A05-1210-PC-540
Post conviction. Affirms conviction of four counts of murder and sentence to an aggravated term of 65 years for each conviction, to be served consecutively for a total term of 260 years.
Dwayne Kelly v. State of Indiana (NFP)
27A01-1212-PC-568
Post conviction. Affirms denial of post-conviction relief.
In the Matter of the Termination of the Parent-Child Rel. of M.R.; C.B. v. Indiana Department of Child Services (NFP)
49A05-1212-JT-643
Juvenile. Affirms the termination of parental rights of C.B., the mother of M.R.
Carolyn (Hansen) Miller v. Robin Mendelsohn, M.D. (NFP)
67A01-1301-PL-13
Civil plenary. Affirms the jury verdict entered in favor of Mendelsohn.
Indiana Supreme Court and Indiana Tax Court released no opinions by IL deadline.
7th Circuit Court of Appeals
Anthony Weddington v. Dushan Zatecky, Superintendent
11-3303
Vacates denial of Weddington’s habeas petition and remands for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. Finds the District Court erred in failing to consider Weddington’s claims that he could not meet the limitations period because prison officials confiscated his legal paper work, law books and legal mail. Also points out that the question of whether Judge Tanya Walton Pratt should have recused herself can be remedied by assigning the case to a different district judge on remand.
Although a prisoner filed his habeas petition late, the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled the District Court should not have dismissed it on procedural grounds.
Criminal defendants ordered to perform community service work will have to get to their destinations without a ride from the Marion County Probation Department as the result of a program change adopted Friday.
Finding that the status of the grant holder had changed, the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that Citizens Health Corp. is no longer eligible for Section 330 federal monies.
Using California law, the Indiana Court of Appeals ruled that an insurance company does not have to pay for an environmental cleanup, but the court noted it did not agree with the position of the Golden State and it would have ruled differently if Indiana law had been applicable.
Indianapolis-based Celadon Group Inc. has agreed to pay $18.5 million to the families of two men who died in a multiple-vehicle accident involving a Celadon truck driver in northwest Indiana in February 2011. The settlement was disclosed late last week. The Indianapolis Business Journal has the story.
Anticipating a high-profile, weeks-long trial beginning after Labor Day, a Marion County judge Friday laid down rules for public and media decorum in the criminal case against Bei Bei Shuai.
A chain of 19 liquor stores in Indianapolis wants the drug, grocery and convenience stores that sell alcohol to be subject to the same strict regulations that govern package liquor stores.
Indiana Court of Appeals
Keith Ellis v. State of Indiana (NFP)
49A02-1212-CR-983
http://media.ibj.com/Lawyer/websites/opinions/index.php?pdf=2013/august/08011302cjb.pdf
Criminal. Affirms conviction for Class C felony robbery. Finds the prosecutor’s comments about Ellis’ decision to represent him at trial and not to testify did not rise to the level of fundamental error.
Donald R. Green v. State of Indiana (NFP)
18A02-1212-CR-1032
Criminal. Affirms conviction for domestic battery as a Class A misdemeanor.
Luxury Townhomes, LLC/LP XXIV, LLC, et al. v. McKinley Properties, Inc. and Kenneth Polsinelli
49A05-1210-MF-514
Mortgage foreclosure. Affirms denial of Luxury’s motion to correct error. Rules that since the trial court already held a hearing, accepted the receiver’s final report and discharged the receiver, the doctrine of res judicata precluded Luxury from filing a separate motion against the receiver.
U.S. District Judge Tanya Walton Pratt has made permanent an injunction barring Indiana from denying Medicaid funds to Planned Parenthood clinics. Indiana Lawyer’s sister publication Indianapolis Business Journal has the story.