Indiana Pacers vs New York Knicks 1st Look
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Caitlin Clarks Strong Statement to Indiana Fever Star
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Opening weekend in the WNBA has come and gone with eight matchups taking place in the first three days of the regular season. History was made with the first WNBA regular season game ever being played at the Chase Center for Valkyries vs.
Indiana will execute Benjamin Ritchie early May 20, 2025 more than two decades after his murder conviction in the killing of Beech Grove officer William Toney.
Benjamin Ritchie, 45, has been on death row for more than 20 years after being convicted in the fatal shooting of Beech Grove Police Officer Bill Toney during a foot chase.
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Beech Grove police officer William “Bill” Toney wasn’t supposed to be on the clock that Friday night in September 2000.
MICHIGAN CITY, Ind. (WNDU) - An Indiana man convicted of killing a police officer in 2000 will be executed by lethal injection early Tuesday morning. 45-year-old Benjamin Ritchie was convicted of shooting and killing a Beach Grove officer in Marion County during a foot chase and has been on death row for more than 20 years.
On Monday, Indiana took to social media to announce a new major WNBA record that it has reached. The Fever shared that they are the first team in the league to reach one million social media followers on any platform. "1M on Facebook," they posted. "First WNBA team to reach 1 million followers on any platform."
In two months, Boone Grove seniors Xavier and Davian Carrera could have decisions to make. The twin brothers are Indiana baseball commits, giving them the chance to play together beyond this season. But they also could get selected in the MLB draft in July.
Isolated thunderstorms could contain patches of strong winds and heavy rain through the afternoon, but most of the activity will fade away just before the night time hours. A few small thunderstorms will develop later into our Monday afternoon, with most of the trend staying towards our east.
Before noticing the article came from parody news site The Onion, some Hoosiers thought this headline was real.