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Monday, Nov. 25
The Indiana Daily Student

Crime & Courts


The Indiana Daily Student

Woman reports sexual assault

The Bloomington Police Department responded to IU Health Bloomington Hospital on Sunday to a report of a sexual assault, BPD Sgt. Joe Crider said.


The Indiana Daily Student

Behrman's killer to remain in jail

A post-conviction relief filed by John Myers II, convicted of killing Jill Behrman in 2000, has been denied by Morgan Superior Court Judge G. Thomas Gray.


The Indiana Daily Student

Robbery reported at city food mart

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The Bloomington Police Department responded at 4 a.m. to the Circle S Food Mart  at 2110 N. Walnut St.  after a clerk reported that a black man pointed a silver revolver and demanded money.


The Indiana Daily Student

Girl reports sexual assault in apartment

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A 17-year-old girl reported to police she was sexually assaulted after she and her 16-year-old female friend stayed the night at a 20-year-old male acquaintance’s apartment.


The Indiana Daily Student

Woman found dead along Hillside Drive

An unidentified woman was found dead along Hillside Drive Tuesday afternoon. Police do not believe foul play was involved.






The Indiana Daily Student

Pizza X shooter sentenced to 73 years

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James Finney, 24, was sentenced Wednesday to 65 years for the murder of Pizza X employee Adam Sarnecki, 22, and two concurrent eight-year sentences for illegal handgun possession.




The Indiana Daily Student

Man shoots bullet through neighbor’s apartment

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A Bloomington man is charged with criminal recklessness after his firearm discharged in his apartment, with the bullet traveling into an adjoining apartment, Bloomington Police Department Sgt. Joe Crider said.


The Indiana Daily Student

Man kicks window out of police car

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A 24-year-old man was arrested after reportedly attempting to stab a 34-year-old man and kicking the window out of a police car Saturday.




CAROUSELCamm

Former trooper found not guilty of murder

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The verdict, the stunning ending to one of the most notorious murder cases in Indiana history, was immediately hailed by some as vindication for a wrongly accused man — and condemned by others as a shocking failure to bring a monster to justice.