The family of Ella Whistler issued a statement today saying the Noblesville West Middle School student was shot 7 times. According to the statement, the 13-year-old girl suffered gunshot wounds to the face, neck, hand and upper chest. She suffered a number of injuries, including collapsed lungs, a broken jaw, clavicle, multiple neck vertebrae, nerve damage and numerous related injuries.
Ella’s parents expressed their pride in her bravery and strength in facing these terrible injuries. Her condition is listed as stable, but the family statement says a long road to recovery is ahead. She is expected to remain a patient at Riley Hospital for “the foreseeable future.”
There are several campaigns to raise money for the teacher that intervened, Jason Seaman, and Ella Whistler. The Whistler family is asking that people donate to a specific GoFundMe page to help Ella’s family, which you can find at this link.
Authorities continue to investigate what the Fishers Fire Department describes as a “suspicious” blaze that started Sunday evening in an unoccupied area near 106th Street and Hague Road. The house was in a wooded area, on land that is not within the City of Fishers boundaries. This is one of many areas within Fishers never annexed into the city.
Firefighters had many challenges to fight this blaze. The lane to the structure could not be accessed by trucks, due to the bridge over the ditch being gone and the lane being overgrown. Firefighters had to drag over a thousand feet of hand lines down a path in the woods to get access to the fire.
Firefighters also had to deal with fire that spread to the surrounding wooded area.
Because this area is not within the City of Fishers, the Hamilton County Sheriff’s Department is assisting in the investigation.
Unincorporated areas receive fire protection through a contract between townships and the City of Fishers. The City of Fishers and the outlying areas straddle Fall Creek and Delaware Townships. This house is located in Delaware Township.
Saturday was graduation day for both high schools in the Hamilton Southeastern School District. Each ceremony was held at the Indiana State Fairgrounds Coliseum.
Fishers High School had a total of 822 graduating seniors. The Valedictorian was Gautam Fotedar. Fishers tallied 93 grads Magna Cum Laude. There were 8 National Merit Scholars.
On the HSE High School side, 790 seniors were handed diplomas. The Valedictorian was David Sun. 84 students graduated Magna Cum Laude.
Congratulations to all graduating seniors and their families!
32 professional artists are displaying their work for the fifth Fishers Art in City Hall exhibit. The various works were viewed by a number of visitors during a reception Saturday afternoon.
Those with artwork at City Hall are members of Indiana Artists (IN/A).
All works of art at City Hall as part of this exhibit are available to buy. If you see one that is of interest to you, contact Rachael O’Dell of Nickel Plate Arts at her e-mail address, rodell@nickelplatearts.org or give her a phone call at 317-452-3690.
The Fishers Arts Council is partnering with the City of Fishers and Nickel Plate Arts to put on this art exhibit. For more information on the Fishers Arts council, use this link
Indiana Landmarks Foundation has presented Hamilton County with their award for ‘Historic Preservation for Continued Use,’ naming the Courthouse as a best example of preserving a public building. The Courthouse is 140 years old this year. In the architectural style of French Second Empire, the structure was restored in 1994 with many original features retained. County Commissioner Mark Heirbrandt accepted the award Thursday.
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Duane Brenton will be the Libertarian Party candidate for county sheriff in this fall’s general election. The Fishers resident will oppose Dennis Quakenbush, the Republican nominee. No Democrat has filed. Brenton will apparently be the only Libertarian on the county ballot.
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Property owners have until June 15 to appeal their recently updated real estate assessments. Notices of annual trending of assessments were sent last month. For property owners who got no notice, there will be no change in their assessment. Property taxes for next year are based on assessed value of land and structures. Folks wishing to appeal may get further information from the County Assessor’s office.
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Officials report no decision has yet be made on countywide financing of 911 communication costs. The issue arose early this year when county officials asked towns and townships in northern Hamilton County to help pay for the increasingly expensive costs of operating the vital communications center. At present the county along with Carmel, Noblesville, Fishers and Westfield pay the entire cost. Seven other units get calls answered and dispatched from the center at the county sheriff’s office. A meeting with the northern units was held last month, but no resolution was reached and no further meeting has been set. County officials want a decision for 2019 operations, budgeting for which is made this summer.
Between 9 a.m. on Friday, May 25 – just before the first call came in about the active shooter at Noblesville West Middle School – until 5 p.m. that afternoon, Hamilton County 911 dispatchers handled 364 calls, of which the incident that has become a national news story was only one.
“While that incident was occurring, life in the rest of Hamilton County was still occurring as well,” Hamilton County Public Safety Communications Executive Director Michael Snowden told The Reporter. “We had two completed suicides, one attempted suicide, 27 traffic accidents, 18 suspicious circumstances, 11 traffic hazards, eight thefts – we were busy literally all day long. It is hard to say we were no longer busy because of the school incident at ‘X’ time, but we were really busy that entire day.”
Three Hamilton County teams finished in the top 10 and won two individual events
at the IHSAA boys state track and field meet, which took place Saturday at Indiana
University.
Hamilton Southeastern finished third with 44 points, behind only Avon’s 66 points
and North Central’s 47. Madison Norris led the way for the Royals, winning the state
championship in the 110 hurdles in a time of 14.02 seconds.
Norris later joined Jack Boyd, Noah Malone and Chase Maxey to place second
in the 4×100 relay. Malone won two more medals by taking fourth in both the 100 and
200 dashes. Gabe Fendel placed fourth in the 1600 run, Nathan Smith was fourth in
the 300 hurdles and HSE’s 4×400 relay team of Chaz Birchfield, Nick Bostock, Nick
Bowman and Jackson Sweeney took eighth
in that event.
Carmel finished in eighth place, scoring 26 points. Spencer Gudgel placed third in
the 400 dash, then finished the meet by teaming with Alex Brown-Baez, Eli Konow
and Trey Harris for a sixth-place finish in the 4×400.
Ben Miller took third in the 3200 run.
The Greyhounds also got a fifth-place result from Harris, Konow, Gudgel and Jimmy
Snyder in the 4×800 relay. Isiah Baxter finished seventh in the 200 dash.
Fishers tied for 10th with 16 points, but finished the meet with an event victory. The
4×400 relay team of Nicholas Carrithers, Henry Lewis II, DiSean Graham and Benjamin
Norton clocked in at 3:15.80 to place first. Earlier, Lewis, Carrithers and Norton
joined Jason Lassic to take fifth in the 4×100 relay. The Tigers’ 4×800 relay team of Dylan
Arive, Samuel Kuhn, Ethan Meyer and Drew Smith placed ninth.
Westfield’s Peyton Haack placed eighth in the pole vault.
After getting past one tough game on Saturday morning, the Fishers baseball
team found itself in another tough game Saturday night.
The evening game was the regional championship at Lafayette’s Loeb Stadium.
The Tigers were knotted at 5-5 with a pumped-up Fort Wayne Carroll team
through eight innings. After having the bases loaded with one out in the top of the
seventh and eighth but not scoring, Fishers was in that same situation in the top of the
ninth.
That time, the Tigers came through, to the tune of seven runs. That powered
Fishers to a 12-5 Class 4A Lafayette Jefferson regional championship victory, the first
ever regional crown for the program. The Tigers will now play Chesterton next Saturday
in the 4A north semi-state at Kokomo.
“It’s awesome,” said Fishers coach Matt
Cherry. “We’re not done yet, but excited for
them to keep fighting, keep battling and
finally coming through with the seven runs
in the ninth.”
While it was frustrating to leave the bases loaded so late, both times the Tigers
quickly regrouped on defense. Fishers set down the Chargers 1-2-3 in the bottom of
the seventh, forcing extra innings. The Tigers again took care of Carroll three-up,
three-down in the bottom of the eighth.
Fishers’ offense tried again in the ninth. With one out, Jack Roudebush drew a walk,
then Ben Burton was hit by a pitch. JJ Woolwine got on with a base hit, loading
the bases again. Could the Tigers finally get one in?
They did and then some. Craig Yoho came up after Woolwine, and he sent a
single into left field to score Jack Roudebush and Ben Burton. Next up was Grant
Richardson, who smashed a single into center field to get Woolwine and Yoho in
to score.
“That’s what this team’s done for the last two years,” said Cherry. “As long as we
don’t run out of time, they have fight in them and they’re going to find a way to get
it done. And we didn’t run out of time this time, we kept holding them defensively and
on the mound and finally broke through there in the ninth.”
After absorbing a strikeout, Fishers got another runner on when Matt Wolff got hit
by a pitch, sending Richardson to second. That brought up Alex Jamieson, and he
cracked a home run into left field. The 5-5 tie was now a 12-5 lead.
Carroll got a groundout for the third out, so all the Tigers had to do now was get three
outs on defense, which they did easily. Matt Wolff, who relieved Richardson in the
eighth inning, sandwiched two strikeouts in between a groundout to third baseman Kiel
Brenczewski.
Wolff is officially credited with the win, but Richardson deserves recognition as
well. He threw seven and a third innings, striking out 12 and allowing seven hits.
Richardson also went 4-for-6 at the plate; he, Yoho and Jamieson all batted in three
runs.
Fishers scored one run each in the first three innings. Richardson hit a homer into
center field in the first inning, Burton singled in Nick Lukac in the second, and
Brenczewski hit a sacrifice fly to score Yoho in the third.
Carroll took a 5-3 lead through the fifth inning, but the Tigers tied it up in the top
of the sixth on back-to-back sacrifice flies. Woolwine’s right field fly ball sent Tristan
Baker home and moved Burton to third base. Burton then scored after Yoho sent
another fly ball into right field.
In the semi-final, Fishers came back to beat Zionsville 6-5. The Eagles had the
Tigers down 4-1 midway through the third inning, but the Tigers rallied with four runs
in the bottom of the third.
Brenczewski got things started with a left field double that sent Woolwine and
Yoho home. Richardson scored on a wild pitch to tie the game at 4-4. Jamieson then
hit a sacrifice fly to score Collin Shelton and put Fishers in the lead.
Richardson hit a fourth-inning double that scored Yoho and put the Tigers up 6-4.
Woolwine got Fishers on the board in the first inning with a solo home run; both he
and Yoho had two hits.
Luke Albright went five innings for the
win, striking out four. Wolff pitched the last
two innings and got the save.
On this week’s edition of Hamilton County Goes To The Movies, Adam & I review The Rider, a very special film about a bronco rider in rural South Dakota. Our guests this week are John Krull and Shelby Mullis…both were heavily involved in producing a new documentary film about Indiana Senator Richard Lugar.
Based on the performance list, Hamilton Southeastern was favored to win Friday’s IHSAA girls state track and field meet.
All the Royals had to do was take care of business. And they did.
Southeastern won its first ever girls track and field state championship, waiting out a
one-hour weather delay and some very tough competition to triumph at Indiana University. The Royals used their superior depth to score 62 points, pulling away from runner-up Brebeuf Jesuit as the meet went into its later stages. The Braves scored 44
points.
“We were favored to win, but there’s so many things that can happen,” said HSE
coach Julie Alano. The Royals coaches impressed upon their athletes that everybody
needed to do their part – “You go take care of what you’re supposed to do,” said Alano
– and if that happened, Southeastern would win.
“And that’s what we talked about, and making sure that you did whatever you need
to do to make sure you score your points and do your part,” said Alano.
Brebeuf held an early advantage due to its strength in the 4×800 relay (which finished
third), the 100 hurdles (which placed second) and wins in the 100 dash and 4×100
relay. Alano admitted that the Royals were a little worried after those events.
But Southeastern wasn’t too far behind. Junior Tierra Sydnor helped out with a
fifth-place finish in the long jump, then senior Mia Mackenzie added another five
points by taking fifth in the 100 hurdles. “It’s amazing, because last year we
weren’t even expecting to get second, because there’s only seven of us who made
it,” said Sydnor. “And this year, we were really working hard towards it in practice,
saying that we can do it.”
Senior Camille Christopher finished third in the 100 dash, and was part of the
Royals’ runner-up 4×100 relay, along with sophomore Olivia Burgess, Sydnor and
freshman Alyssa Barker.
The tied began to turn in HSE’s favor once the pole vault results came in. Royals
junior Kennedy Drish defended her state championship in that event, with a winning
vault of 12 feet, 6 inches. Drish went for 13 feet, but 12-6 isn’t bad either – “I just came
in, did what I did, what I’ve been practicing, and got 12-6, so I’m happy with that.”
Drish’s teammate, senior Jessica Bray, helped out with a sixth-place finish in the
pole vault, clearing 11-6.
“It’s been a really exciting past two years,” said Bray, who has committed to
Grand Valley State University. “I never really expected to be here when I first
started, so I’m just happy to be here. I’m happy to be here again this year.”
With the pole vault points in, Southeastern moved into the lead. The Royals got
more points from Mackenzie, who took seventh in the 300 hurdles, then Christopher
earned a runner-up finish in the 200 dash. Junior Lulu Black added two more points
after taking eighth in the 3200 run; Black’s time was 10:47.67, a new school record.
By now, Southeastern had the meet in hand, but why not finish with a bang? That’s
what the Royals did in the 4×400 relay. The team of Burgess, junior Mya Hammons,
freshman Annice McFarland and Sydnor finished the meet with a win in that event.
HSE’s 4×400 time was 3:51.10. The Royals edged out Perry Meridian by .04
seconds. Sydnor ran the anchor leg, and she got that extra inch in the end.
“Last week was a lot of pushing, it was a lot of roughhousing going around, so no
one really ran their best best times,” said Sydnor. “Like today, we were a whole two
seconds faster.”
“Exclamation point. Oh, my gosh,” said Alano. “They’ve done it in practice. I knew
they could run faster. That was a school record for us.”
“There were a lot of good teams in that race,” said Alano. “We had practiced all
kinds of crazy situations, but not really out front by ourselves, because we weren’t sure
that would happen. We were so excited. We had a pack there, we were so excited, it was
so crazy. That was awesome. All the girls ran well there. It was every person doing
their part on that relay, too.”
Southeastern’s win was the first state championship for the Royals since the boys
track and field team won in 2013. It also puts HSE in an exclusive club: Friday’s state title
was the school’s 10th IHSAA state title.
After Brebeuf’s 44 points, two-time defending state champion Warren Central
placed third with 40 points. Carmel finished in fourth place with 38 points.
Sophomore Phoebe Bates led the way, claiming the state championship in the 1600
run. Bates made a strong kick in the last 100 meters to finish the race in 4:51.79. Bates
also took fifth in the 3200 run.
“I thought the mile went really well, and then the 32, I just gave it everything I had,”
said Bates. “It was a good day.”
Senior Kara Deady finished up her high school career with another medal in the pole
vault. Deady, who will vault for IU next year, placed fourth by clearing 11-9.
“It was very tough this year,” said Deady. “We had a lot of good vaulters. But
you just got to try your best. It wasn’t what we had hoped, but I’m happy to be back here.
It was fun.”
Junior Reagan Hune earned three medals at the meet. She placed fifth in the 400 dash,
then was part of Carmel’s ninth-place 4×100 relay, joining sophomore Kiara Gill and
seniors Carly Markley and Josie Upton. Hune ran the anchor on the Greyhounds’
eighth-place 4×400 relay, teaming up with freshman Abbey Grogan and seniors Beverley
Thompson and Alexis Waples.
Carmel opened the meet with its 4×800 relay team of freshmen Annie Christie and
Mahalet Zeruesenay, senior Anna Morozov and sophomore Sydney Haines finishing in
fifth place. Senior Maddie Dalton took sixth in the 1600 run.
“Our girls showed up and competed their hearts out,” said Greyhounds coach Aaron
McRill. “The coaches are so very proud of this group. The meet itself was incredibly
exciting from start to finish. Lots of great teams and lots of great competition. We fell
just six points shy of the podium, but we feel we had a pretty great meet. Congratulations
to HSE and Brebeuf, well deserved.”
Noblesville tied for 13th place with 15 points. Junior Shelby Tyler soared to
another state championship in the high jump, in yet another battle between her and
Zionsville senior Katie Isenbarger.
Both athletes cleared 5-11, but Tyler got the win on fewer misses. Thus Tyler
defended her state title, becoming the first Millers athlete to win back-to-back track
championships.
“It felt good,” said Tyler. “I had really good competition. And it was fun, and I
think that’s the most important part.”
Noblesville’s 4×800 relay team of senior Abi Little, junior Aubrie Deal, freshman
Bella Sharples-Gordon and sophomore Anna Hazelrigg placed sixth in that event.
Little also finished ninth in the 1600 run; she has committed to run at IU.
Fishers scored nine points to place 28th as a team. Junior Tamia Perryman won three
medals for the Tigers, first placing eighth in the 100 dash. Later, she finished ninth in the
200 dash. In between, Perryman joined seniors Toni Grace and Danielle Harrison
and junior Grace May to take fourth in the 4×100 relay.