Tag Archives: Indiana

Winter Storm Warning Issued for Parts of NE Illinois, NW Indiana With Heavy Snow Expected – NBC Chicago

The National Weather Service has issued a winter storm warning for portions of Illinois and Indiana as heavy snow and frigid wind chills are expected through Tuesday morning.

The warning will go into effect at 6 p.m. Sunday in Kankakee and eastern Will Counties in Illinois, along with Lake, Porter, Newton and Jasper counties in northwest Indiana. The warning will remain in effect through 9 a.m. Tuesday.

All of Cook County will also be under a winter storm warning beginning at 3 a.m. Monday and running through noon on Tuesday.

According to the warning, frigid temperatures and occasional snow are in the forecast for Sunday night, with the main threat of snow coming during the evening commute on Monday. Approximately 4-to-8 inches of snow are possible in the affected areas, and areas closer to Lake Michigan could see even more snow due to lake-effect enhancement.

Wind chills of up to 20 degrees below zero are also possible in the impacted counties, with frigid overnight temperatures potentially impacting the effectiveness of salt and other road treatments, according to the warning.

A winter weather advisory has been issued for Lake County in Illinois, along with Kane, DuPage, LaSalle, Kendall, Grundy and northern and southern Will counties. The advisory will go into effect at noon Monday and run through 9 a.m. Tuesday.

Bursts of snowfall are expected in the impacted areas, with frigid wind chills also posing a threat in those communities.



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Indiana man pleads guilty to hate crime for targeting neighbor with burning cross, swastika

An Indianapolis-area man who burned a cross and set up a swastika to intimidate his Black neighbor in June pleaded guilty to a hate crime and weapons charge Friday, prosecutors said.

Shepherd Hoehn, 51, who is white, was angry because a neighbor was removing a tree on June 18, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Indiana said. The tree was on the neighbor’s property.

Hoehn then set up and burned a cross facing the neighbor’s house; used silver duct tape to create a swastika on his fence; blasted the song “Dixie” on repeat; and displayed a sign with racial slurs, according to a plea agreement.

“Hoehn’s hateful and threatening conduct, motivated by racial intolerance, is an egregious crime that will not be tolerated by the Justice Department,” Pam Karlan, principal deputy assistant attorney general of the department’s civil rights division, said in a statement.

A request for comment from Hoehn’s public defender was not immediately returned Friday evening.

Hoehn has not yet been sentenced, but he was taken into custody Friday by federal marshals and will be detained, according to court records.

He pleaded guilty to criminal interference with housing rights and a weapons charge because he had guns while a habitual user of marijuana, which is illegal in Indiana and federally.

“I wanted to make him miserable,” Hoehn told the FBI about his neighbor, according to an affidavit.

Hoehn repeatedly denied being racist, but told investigators: “He’s a Black man. Perfect opportunity, alright. So yes. I wrote a bunch of racial slurs on a piece of board an put ‘em out there,” according to the document.

The FBI affidavit also says that Hoehn told the agency that he was upset about Black Lives Matter protests around the country and efforts to remove statues — an apparent reference to the push to take down Confederate statues.

Hoehn walked around with a gun on his hip on June 18, and some construction workers said they were scared — one avoided turning his back on him, prosecutors said in a detention motion. The neighbor was so afraid he told family members to stay away and slept with a firearm.

A plea deal does not lay out a specific sentence that prosecutors will recommend. Each count that Hoehn pleaded guilty to carry a maximum sentence of 10 years in prison, the U.S. attorney’s office said.



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Trump agreements seek to tie Biden’s hands on immigration

SAN DIEGO (AP) — During the Trump administration’s final weeks, the Department of Homeland Security quietly signed agreements with at least four states that threaten to temporarily derail President Joe Biden’s efforts to undo his predecessor’s immigration policies.

The agreements say Arizona, Indiana, Louisiana and Texas are entitled to a 180-day consultation period before executive branch policy changes take effect. The Biden administration rejects that argument on grounds that immigration is solely the federal government’s responsibility under the Constitution.

Former President Donald Trump relied heavily on executive powers for his immigration agenda because he was unable to build enough support for his policies in Congress. Now some of his supporters say Biden is going too far in doing the same to reverse them.

The first legal test is in Texas, where the Republican governor and attorney general are challenging the Democratic president’s 100-day moratorium on deportations, which took effect Friday.

The Homeland Security Department told lawmakers shortly before Biden’s inauguration last week that it reached nine agreements, mostly with states, according to a congressional official speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss information that is not yet publicly available.

The department declined to comment, citing the lawsuit. The Trump administration, usually eager to trumpet immigration enforcement, stayed publicly quiet on the agreements, which were first reported by BuzzFeed News.

The nine-page agreements known as Sanctuary for Americans First Enactment, or SAFE, are expansive. They require that state and local governments get 180 days’ notice of changes in the number of immigration agents, the number of people released from from immigration custody, enforcement priorities, asylum criteria and who qualifies for legal status.

Without offering evidence, the agreements say looser enforcement can hurt education, health care, housing and jobs.

Sheriff Sam Page of Rockingham County, North Carolina, on the Virginia border, signed an agreement on Dec. 22.

“Any incoming administration is likely to make changes in policy,” the sheriff said. “Policy changes at the federal level affect us on the local level. It is our hope that the SAFE agreement will foster timely communications about any significant forthcoming policy changes. We are simply asking for notice of these changes.”

Louisiana Attorney General Jeff Landry, a Republican, signed an agreement on Dec. 15 to “stem the tide of illegal immigration,” spokesman Cory Dennis said.

“While some may attempt to blur the lines, there is a difference between legal and illegal immigration, and it is important to recognize that,” he said. “Our office will continue to be a watchdog for any changes to immigration policies that may be detrimental to the people of Louisiana.”

In Indiana, former state Attorney General Curtis Hill, a Republican, signed the agreement on Dec. 22. Rachel Hoffmeyer, spokeswoman for Gov. Eric Holcomb, said it will remain in place after an initial review.

Katie Conner, a spokeswoman for Arizona Attorney General Mark Brnovich, confirmed that the state signed, saying it “has numerous cooperative agreements with federal, state and local enforcement agencies, including DHS.”

In addition to the deportation moratorium, the Biden administration suspended a policy to make asylum-seekers wait in Mexico for hearings in U.S. immigration court. Six of Biden’s 17 first-day executive orders dealt with immigration, such as halting work on a border wall with Mexico and lifting a travel ban on people from several predominantly Muslim countries.

Hiroshi Motomura, a professor of immigration law and policy at the University of California at Los Angeles School of Law, called the agreements “a very unusual, last-minute sort of thing” and said they raise questions about how an administration can tie the hands of its successor. He believes a deportation moratorium was within a president’s power.

Steve Legomsky, professor emeritus of the Washington University School of Law and former chief counsel for U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, said the agreements are “a terrible idea” that could create “a race to the bottom,” with states opposing immigration competing against each other to drive immigrants elsewhere.

“For our entire history, immigration policy has been understood to be the exclusive responsibility of the federal government,” Legomsky said.

Keeping immigration enforcement with the federal government allows the nation to speak with a single voice as a matter of foreign policy and consistency across states, Legomsky said. We “can’t have 50 conflicting sets of immigration laws operating at the same time,” he said.

The Biden administration made similar arguments in a court filing Sunday after Texas asked a federal judge to block the deportation moratorium.

Texas, which has led a challenge to the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program to shield hundreds of thousands of young people from deportation, argued that the moratorium violated its agreement with Homeland Security. The state also argued that the moratorium violates federal rule-making procedures.

U.S. District Judge Drew Tipton in Victoria, Texas, who was appointed last year by Trump, held hearings on Friday and Monday to consider Texas’ request.

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Associated Press writers Ben Fox in Washington, Gary Robertson in Raleigh, North Carolina, Casey Smith in Indianapolis, Melinda Deslatte in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, and Anita Snow in Phoenix contributed to this report.

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Indianapolis Police Investigate Mass Murder

Indianapolis police are investigating a mass shooting that left five people and a pregnant woman’s unborn baby dead and a community reeling from what the mayor called “an act of evil.”

Authorities provided little information about the victims or the motive but said the FBI and federal prosecutors had been alerted.

“I want those responsible to know that the full might of local, state, and federal law enforcement are coming for them as I speak,” Mayor Joe Hogsett said.

“Coming for them today, coming for them tonight, coming for them tomorrow, and the day after that.”

Police said the mass murder unfolded before 4 a.m. on Sunday. Cops were called for a report of a boy with gunshot wounds on the street. As that victim was rushed to the hospital in critical condition, investigators went to a nearby home where they found the others shot to death.

Among those slain was a pregnant woman who was taken to the hospital, but she and her unborn child did not survive, police said at an afternoon briefing.

No motive was given for the worst shooting in the city in more than a decade, but authorities said it was not a random act.

What happened this morning was a mass murder.

Mayor Joe Hogsett

Indianapolis set a record for homicides in 2020, recording 244 of them, a big jump after several years of increases—and shootings have also spiked, as they have in many other major cities.

The new year only brought more bloodshed, with three homicides in the first four days of 2021, and another rash of shootings sent seven people to the hospital earlier this weekend.

But officials said there was a fundamental difference between the typical shooting in the city and the scene they found in a home on Adams Street before dawn on Sunday.

“I want to be very clear about something: What happened this morning was not an act of simple gun violence,” the mayor said. “What happened this morning was a mass murder, a choice of an individual or individuals to bring—and I do not use these words lightly—terror to our community.”

As officials pleaded for tips that would lead them to the culprit, Hogsett said police would track down whether any guns involved in the incident were illegally and hold the sellers accountable and would also arrest anyone harboring the shooter or shooters.

“We will not stop until anyone complicit with this act of violence is held fully responsible,” he said.

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At the buzzer: Indiana 81, Iowa 69 – Inside the Hall

Quick thoughts on an 81-69 win at Iowa:

How it happened: The question leading into Thursday’s matchup against No. 4 Iowa was simple: Could the Hoosiers keep up with the nation’s most potent offense? The Hawkeyes got out of the gate strong with 27 points in the game’s first 10:26. And as Joe Wieskamp and Luka Garza filled the stat sheet, it looked like the Hawkeyes were well on their way to a 50-point half. But Iowa’s offense sputtered in the final nine-plus minutes of the first half, which allowed Indiana to keep within striking distance. Despite a below-average shooting performance (46 eFG%), the Hoosiers trailed just 37-31. A big reason for that was Iowa’s poor 3-point shooting (4-of-13), Indiana only committing five turnovers and a reasonable pace that kept the game mostly in the halfcourt (32 possessions).

Iowa’s offense never found its footing in the second half. And as the Hawkeyes couldn’t score in the halfcourt and the 3s clanked off the rim, Indiana gained confidence on both ends of the floor. The Hoosiers took the lead at 57-55 on an Al Durham Jr. jumper with 6:58 to play. By the under four media timeout, IU was on a 14-1 run and led 67-56. Iowa’s field goal drought in the second half lasted more than 11 minutes as the Hoosiers nabbed their second road win in Big Ten play. Most importantly, it was a win over a top-five team away from home that will provide a significant boost to the NCAA tournament resume.

Standout performer: Despite battling foul trouble for most of the game, Trayce Jackson-Davis finished with a team-high 23 points on 9-of-14 shooting. Rob Phinisee (18 points), Armaan Franklin (11 points) and Al Durham Jr. (14 points) all finished in double figures as well.

Statistics that stands out: Iowa shot a dismal 9-of-34 from the field in the second half, including just 1-of-10 from behind the 3-point line. Indiana committed just eight turnovers in the win.

Final IU individual statistics:

Final tempo-free statistics:

(Photo credit: IU Athletics)

Filed to: Iowa Hawkeyes

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