Indiana Senate Republican reports business bomb threat
The senator is supportive of a controversial proposal to redistrict Indiana’s congressional boundaries — and make Indiana’s two blue districts red — ahead of the 2026 midterm elections.
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The senator is supportive of a controversial proposal to redistrict Indiana’s congressional boundaries — and make Indiana’s two blue districts red — ahead of the 2026 midterm elections.
The primary challenge threat from President Donald Trump and Gov. Mike Braun could be muted by the election cycle of senators who serve four-year terms.
U.S. District Judge Jia Cobb concluded that President Donald Trump’s military takeover in Washington, D.C., illegally intrudes on local officials’ authority to direct law enforcement in the district.
The latest statements from Lindsey Halligan, the hastily named interim U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia, represent an attempt to backtrack on earlier comments the prosecution team made under persistent questioning from a judge
The justices could say as soon as Monday whether they will hear Trump’s appeal of lower court rulings that have uniformly struck down the citizenship restrictions. They have not taken effect anywhere in the United States.
The Indiana Court of Appeals earlier ruled that the man did not choose to enter the jail while possessing prohibited items, but the state is appealing that ruling.
“Swatting” involves hoax calls or reports to emergency services intended to trigger armed responses to someone’s home or business.
In the Hoosier state, Goodwill of Central & Southern Indiana has been one of the nonprofits with the most M&A activity in recent years, including two major deals announced in 2025.
Indiana Court of Appeals
Tejinder Aulakh and Mohinder Aulakh, Harbhajan Aulakh, Northlake Investment LLC, and Greenhill Investment LLC v. Navneet Aulakh
24A-DC-3027
Domestic relations with children. Affirms the Hendricks Superior Court’s division of property and child support award in the dissolution of Tejinder Aulakh’s marriage to Navneet Aulakh. Finds the trial court properly denied the motion for summary judgment filed by Northlake Investment LLC and Greenhill Investment LLC. Also finds the husband has failed to demonstrate that the trial court’s conclusions regarding the contents of the marital estate, valuation of marital assets, division of the marital estate, or child support are clearly erroneous. Attorneys for appellants: Bryan Ciyou, Anne Lowe. William Riley, Russell Cate, Sundeep Singh. Attorneys for appellee: Brian Zoeller, Gabriel Hawkins, Michael McBride, Julie Andrews.
Who controls the session’s length, agenda and existence once called has been debated since Indiana’s first constitutional convention in 1816, again in 1850 and in a 2022 Indiana Supreme Court case.
Brad Schwer, partner in charge at the Indianapolis office of Taft Stettinius & Hollister LLP, said he knew he wanted to work in mergers and acquisitions right out of the gate.
The development risked further imperiling a politically charged prosecution already subject to multiple challenges and demands for its dismissal.
The bill requires the Justice Department to release all files and communications related to Epstein, as well as any information about the investigation into his death in a federal prison in 2019, within 30 days.
The draft AI order would direct the Justice Department to challenge state laws regulating the technology on the grounds that they interfere with interstate commerce.
Once the bill is signed by the president, it sets a 30-day countdown for the Justice Department to produce what’s commonly known as the Epstein files.
About 300 Hoosier National Guard members will deploy next month to support the D.C. National Guard in a federal public safety campaign.
A Michigan-based industrial equipment supplier has sued an Elkhart machine manufacturer for over $250,000, alleging the Indiana company has failed to pay commissions for several years.
U.S. District Court Judge Cristal Brisco sentenced Denardo McCormack, 34, to 211 months in prison after he pleaded guilty to possession with intent to distribute 500 grams or more of a mixture and substance containing methamphetamine and possession of a firearm in furtherance of a drug trafficking crime.
Indiana Court of Appeals
Janette Sue Jackson, Jody Ann Stanley, and Jeffrey Lynn Jackson v. Jay Thomas Jackson
25A-CT-1575
Civil tort. Reverses the Clark Superior Court’s order entering summary judgment in favor of Jay Thomas Jackson. Finds Janetta Jackson, Judy Stanley and Jeffrey Jackson presented clear and convincing evidence of unilateral mistake in the first deed and that both corrections made by the second deed—correcting the intended donees of her gift and correcting the legal description of Woodburn Farm—reflected their mother’s actual intent in making the gift to the siblings. Also finds Jay Jackson does not point to designated evidence establishing the existence of a question of fact as to the intent of the mother as the donor. Remands with instructions to grant the siblings’ motion for summary judgment, deny Jay’s motion for summary judgment, dismiss Jay’s complaint, issue an order that the first deed did not convey any interest in Woodburn Farm to Jay, and enter any further necessary orders consistent with this opinion. Attorneys for appellants: Jared Baker, Matthew Senko. Attorney for appellee: Robert DeWees III.
The U.S. Education Department is handing off some of its biggest grant programs to other federal agencies as the Trump administration accelerates its plan to shut down the department.