INDIANAPOLIS — Marion County Prosecutor Ryan Mears thanked the community for their support in providing information to investigators to help build homicide cases.
On Wednesday, Mears announced that his office filed charges against 7 people for their role in Indianapolis homicides. The cases stem from March 1 through April 30.
The following individuals were charged on Sunday, May 1:
The following individuals were charged on Monday, May 2:
David Villanueva has been charged for the April 25 shooting death of Tyvon Moore.
Eric Futrell has been charged for his alleged role in the April 30 stabbing death of Bobbie Hill.
Jason Rhea has been charged for the March 1 shooting death of Dai-Ghia Hogan.
The following individuals were charged on Tuesday, May 3:
“In one case we relied very heavily on social media records, a lot of Instagram records," Mears said. "In another case it was DNA records."
Mears said typically homicide cases last more than a year and today’s filing is the first step towards resolution in these cases.
“We have a lot of the information we need to turn it over to the defense and they need to digest it and do their own discovery,” Mears said.
In 2019, 49 Murder cases were tried to verdict with a 73% conviction rate.
In 2020, nine murder cases were tried to verdict with a 100% conviction rate.
In 2021, 31 murder cases were tried to verdict with a 84% conviction rate.
Since January 2022, the MCPO has resolved 22 murder cases with a 90% conviction rate
“We are hoping those types of community investments help establish a relationship with people in the community who are willing to trust the prosecutor’s office and who are going to talk about the worst moment in their life,” Mears said.
-
Indianapolis organizations give food to families ahead of the holidays
The Bridge Indy gave out turkeys, hams, sides, and seasonings to around 300 families on Tuesday night. They will have four more food giveaways leading up to Thanksgiving.Senate Minority Lead Greg Taylor addresses colleagues at Organization Day
Inside the chamber, it was business as usual during Organization Day. Outside, one organization advocated for lawmakers to change a criminal law.Road Safety Audit highlights crashes at northeast Indy intersection
More than 90 crashes at the intersection of Binford Blvd and Kessler Blvd have city leaders searching for potential changes.Racist flyers found scattered around Hamilton County
Numerous neighbors are taking action after dozens of racist flyers threatening deportation were found scattered across roads in Hamilton County.