Tuesday, November 14, 2006

First Fresh Start!


Tuesday, November 14, 2006
Compiled by Tom Spalding & Jill Phillips from staff & wire reports.

Top of the news
Gregg Appliances swings to profit in 2nd quarter
Indianapolis-based Gregg Appliances Inc. swung to a profit of $3.5 million in its second quarter, up from a loss of $4.2 million for the same period a year ago. Total sales at its H.H. Gregg and Fine Lines stores increased 11.7 percent to $237.7 million from $212.9 million. The company attributed the increase to the addition of 10 stores during the past 12 months and an increase in comparable store sales of 1.2 percent from the same period a year ago. The comparable store sales performance was driven by gains in major appliances, bedding and video, with flat panel television sales growth outpacing the sales decline in projection and tube televisions, the company said in a statement.


Read it!

Monday, October 16, 2006

Special assignment: The trial of Jill Behrman's killer



Indiana University student Jill Behrman, 19, disappeared May 31, 2000, while riding her bicycle in her hometown of Bloomington. Nearly three years later, investigators found remains they confirmed to be those of the missing student. On Oct. 30, 2006, after only 50 minutes of deliberation, a jury found John R. Myers II guilty of her murder.



On the day she vanished, Behrman left home about 9 a.m.but failed to show up at work that afternoon. She was last seen riding her bicycle at 9:30 in the area of Harrell Road and Moffett Lane on Bloomington's southeastside.

Her bicycle was found undamaged June 2, 2000, in an area just a few miles north of Bloomington's Stout Creek.

Police, friends and family staged an area wide search for Behrman for any clues to her disappearance. The following day, lacking further clues, police suspended the search for Behrman and focused on their theory that she had been abducted.

Behrman's parents, Eric and Marilyn Behrman, Indiana University and others offered a $25,000 reward for information leading to the arrest and conviction of those responsible. More than 10 FBI agents and profilers joined in the investigation.

On the one-year anniversary of her disappearance, with no solid leads, the reward was increased to $100,000. The additional money was raised among senior university officials, who provided $10,000 each to the reward fund.

On March 9, 2003, skeletal remains were found by a turkey hunter and his son in a Morgan County field. Four days later, after comparing Behrman's dental records with the teeth found at the scene, investigators confirmed that Behrman's remains had been found.

But the discovery also meant that investigators had been way off base in their previous focus on Salt Creek, which was 25 miles away from the new crime scene.

In March 2006, a grand jury was convened to investigate Behrman's death and on April 9, John Robert Myers II was arrested after being indicted for murder.

Myers trial began Oct. 16, in Martinsville and, for the first time, it was revealed that Jill died after a close-range blast to the back of the head by a shotgun.


Prosecutors, as I reported from inside the trial, said Myers' guilty conscience did him in.

After two weeks of emotional testimony, Myers was found guilty of Behrman's murder (here's the PDF version of the Web story that I authored during the course of the day.) Jurors credited a visit to the place where Behrman's body was found and the testimony of Myers' family for their quick decision to convict.



Friday, July 28, 2006

Through the roof! Hailstorm claims soar


Indiana weather is notorious for the volatile swings it can produce from one day to the next. Just this month, high temperatures in Indianapolis fluctuated about 40 degrees within 48 hours.

The disparity in major storm damage that befell the state the past two years is quite unusual, though, even by Hoosier standards.

Statewide property losses totaled $1.5 billion in 2006, the most in the nation, due in large part to what's become known as the Good Friday hailstorm.

May 11, 2006: Fixing to wait. Thousands of houses and cars still bear scars a month after a hailstorm battered Central Indiana. The lines for repair work could stretch for months.

July 22, 2006: Through the roof! Hailstorm claims soar. April storm one of state's costliest: $560M in damage

This was a REALLY fun story that affected a lot of people but didn't attract a lot of attention. The Good Friday hailstorm will go down as one of the costliest weather events in state history: 177,000 Central Indiana residents have filed claims totaling $560 million for auto and home repairs.

Here's how the hailstorm looked through the eyes of a witness.

Friday, March 10, 2006

Brownsburg Home: It fosters independence


One of the Brownsburg homes I wrote: In Dolores Moon's Brownsburg home, everything is within arm's reach -- and a tap from her elbow on a black button automatically opens an interior door in case her hands are full with groceries.

Despite being in a wheelchair, the 72-year-old has complete independence. Every room in her condominium south of Main Street -- from the kitchen to the baths to the bedroom -- was either modified or custom-built to suit her needs.

A reaction from my editor:Wonderful piece on the disabled woman and her (awesome) home in Brownsburg AM. I read every word, including her tips from her tipsheet on designing a home for the wheelchair-bound. -- Thanks Tom! Neill