Evansville attorney put on indefinite suspension
| IL Staff
An Evansville attorney’s noncooperation suspension has become indefinite due to his continued failure to cooperate with the Indiana Supreme Court Disciplinary Commission.
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An Evansville attorney’s noncooperation suspension has become indefinite due to his continued failure to cooperate with the Indiana Supreme Court Disciplinary Commission.
Four students who are interested in studying the law and religion have been selected to participate in a new Notre Dame Law School fellowship addressing both areas of study.
To commemorate the 50th anniversary of Title IX, the Historical Society of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Indiana will be hosting a panel discussion to take a look at the history of the law, its current application and how the law may be applied in the future.
No one is disputing the fact that AES Indiana’s newest power plant, Eagle Valley in Martinsville, conked out twice last year and stayed out of service for 11 months while dozens of experts tried to fix it. But now plenty of people are arguing over who was at fault—and who should pay.
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An Indiana man has been sentenced to 65 years in prison for abusing his 12-year-old son and starving the boy to death.
A man suspected of killing two people early Sunday in northern Indiana was fatally shot during a shootout with police, authorities said.
The mayor of Indiana’s second-largest city apologized Sunday after an overnight arrest for drunken driving.
Uvalde’s school district on Friday pulled its embattled campus police force off the job following a wave of new outrage over the hiring of a former state trooper who was part of the hesitant law enforcement response during the May shooting at Robb Elementary School that left 21 dead.
Northwest Indiana attorney Robert McMahon has been suspended from the practice of law after pleading guilty to possession of child pornography and being sentenced to two years in federal prison.
The Indiana Supreme Court has made alternations to the requirements for filing appeals of final determinations in certain tax disputes, among other changes.
A patent attorney with a history of deceitful misconduct has been suspended without automatic reinstatement after violating multiple Indiana Professional Conduct Rules related to a business he opened in Florida under an alias.
A man who was a part of a duo that conducted a string of Indianapolis-area Kroger pharmacy robberies in 2016 did not convince the Court of Appeals of Indiana that he was wrongly denied a petition for post-conviction relief.
Court of Appeals of Indiana
Robert Deshon Coleman v. State of Indiana
21A-PC-1260
Post-conviction. Affirms the denial of Robert Coleman’s petition for post-conviction relief, in which he alleged that he had received ineffective assistance of trial and appellate counsel. Finds Coleman has failed to meet his burden of showing that the Clay Superior Court erred by denying relief. Remands to the post-conviction court to correct its typographical error.
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A northeastern Indiana university placed its women’s cross-country head coach and an assistant on leave Thursday after two former runners claimed in a federal lawsuit they were doped and sexually assaulted.
President Joe Biden is pardoning thousands of Americans convicted of “simple possession” of marijuana under federal law.
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