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On July 17, 2022, a mass shooting occurred at the Greenwood Park Mall in Greenwood, Indiana, United States. The shooting began at 5:56 p.m. EDT ( UTC−04:00 ) and lasted less than one minute. Three people were killed and two others were injured in the shooting [ 1 ] before the perpetrator, 20-year-old Jonathan Sapirman, was fatally shot by 22 ...
An Indiana police department has released body camera video of a traffic stop in which an officer fatally shot a 22-year-old Black man, a death that prompted local protests.
Police suspected striking hotel workers, but no arrests were made. [210] November 3, 1979 Greensboro, NC textile organizing 5 Five labor organizers were killed at the Greensboro Massacre, as workers were attempting to organize across racial lines at various textile mills in the area. A rally to protest recruitment at the mills by the Ku Klux ...
Officers Adam Ahmad and Steven Sanchez, members of the Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department, sat at the defense table in the Marion County Courthouse dressed in their uniforms and ...
Brandon Kaiser, one of three men charged in a fight and shooting involving judges from Southern Indiana, was found guilty on eight charges Wednesday.
Sarah Pender's trial was held at Marion Superior Court in July 2002, with James Nave as the defending attorney, Larry Sells as the prosecuting attorney, and presiding judge Jane Magnus-Stinson. Sells was known for his recently failed campaign to become prosecutor of Hamilton County , in which he had highlighted his success with convicting ...
The prosecution then showed a video of the shooting, prompting the defendant to break down in tears. More: Meet Jennifer Crumbley's jurors: Several gun owners, mostly women Prosecution's opening ...
Hess v. Indiana, 414 U.S. 105 (1973), was a United States Supreme Court case [1] involving the First Amendment that reaffirmed and clarified the imminent lawless action test first articulated in Brandenburg v. Ohio (1969). Hess is still cited by courts to protect speech threatening future lawless action. [2]