Indianapolis officer dies after alley gun battle
By The Associated Press / July 7, 2014A veteran Indianapolis police officer died after he and another patrolman exchanged gunfire with a suspect in an alley Saturday night.
A veteran Indianapolis police officer died after he and another patrolman exchanged gunfire with a suspect in an alley Saturday night.
Find out the top news for July 7.
A shooting in a bar-hopping Indianapolis neighborhood that injured seven people may have been set off by two people bumping into each other in the street, police said Saturday.
The United States turning 238 isn’t the only American milestone in July.
This month, hundreds of bills and acts signed into law by Gov. Mike Pence during the 2014 legislative session come into effect. New laws include stopping police officers from downloading or looking at accused criminals’ cellphones without a search warrant, protecting minors who are reporting a sex crime from alcohol-related offenses and allowing the production of industrial hemp in the state.
Jordan Huffer is a junior photojournalism major and writes ‘Born in a Ball Jar’ for The Daily News.
The Pittsburgh Pirates claimed former Ball State baseball player Dean Anna off waivers Saturday.
A former Ball State pitcher and current Miami Marlins’ minor leaguer is attempting to show what he can bring to a pitching staff.
Even without Neymar, Brazil’s show must go on.
Novak Djokovic won his second Wimbledon title and denied Roger Federer his record eighth by outlasting the Swiss player in five sets Sunday.
Final out the results of the quarterfinals July 5.
Find out the results of the quarterfinals July 4.
British regulators are investigating revelations that Facebook treated hordes of its users like laboratory rats in an experiment probing into their emotions.
The university signed a five-year contract with Papa John’s to bring a franchise to the Atrium with an anticipated opening of Aug. 18.
Bypassing the popularity of Silicon Valley, an alumni-owned Hungarian software company looks to open a location in the Midwest.
The majority of Americans base their decisions of what food to buy based on natural food labels, a new survey from Consumer Reports shows.
Business owners who don’t want to pay for their employees’ birth control are ending that coverage after the Supreme Court said they could choose on grounds of religious belief not to comply with part of the health care law.
Learn about 5 things to know July 3.
While the Fourth of July is a celebration, state officials and a Muncie lawyer are warning Hoosiers about the safety of fireworks.
Check out what's new in music and movies this week