INDIANAPOLIS — An arrest has been made in the deadly shooting of a Lucas Oil Stadium workerin Downtown Indianapolis that occurred on Monday, March 6.
“I was a bit worried because I was here all day yesterday setting things up.” Richard Vermette said.
Vermette is one of thousands of people who traveled to the Hoosier State for one of the hundreds of conventions the city is host for each year.
Vermette is staying in a hotel near the Indiana Convention Center. That same hotel was placed on lockdown Monday night.
“I always pick and choose my places to be in the safer area. You have to be smart about it today, but this was really too close to home,” Vermette said.
According to IMPD, downtown remains one of the safest places in the city. The department says 6% of crime in 2022 happened downtown.
The city has a new grant program that can help businesses cover the costs to enroll in the B-Link camera system.
The B-link program allows personal and business security cameras to join a network of live-stream video access for IMPD to utilize in the event of a crime or incident in the vicinity.
This all comes after 35-year-old Donnie Lee Sanders was shot and killed Monday night after a shooting near Lucas Oil Stadium, according to IMPD.
The shooting happened around 9:45 p.m. near South Street and Missouri Street. Sanders was found dead on the sidewalk.
IMPD emphasized the shooting did not happen inside Lucas Oil Stadium or the Indiana Convention Center.
The Indiana Convention Center was locked down and employees were asked to shelter-in-place during the investigation. The shooter was believed to have entered the convention center.
IMPD's release says a 25-year-old man was arrested in connection to the shooting. WRTV will not release their name until formal charges are filed.
-
“We are getting overlooked”: Neighbors say some Indy parks look forgotten
WRTV Investigates visited about 10% of the city’s 216 parks across the city including north, south, east, west and central. We found weeds, trash and broken equipment at some Indy Parks.Colts begin season trying to snap the NFL's longest opening-game winless streak
The Indianapolis Colts are trying to halt the NFL's longest winless streak in season openers at 10 straight.Caitlin Clark and the Fever are a playoff team and hungry for more
Caitlin Clark and the Indiana Fever clinched a playoff berth without playing on Tuesday night with losses by the Chicago Sky and Atlanta Dream.Clarksville curveball: Louisville Slugger bats weren’t always made in Kentucky
The Louisville Slugger was crafted in Clarksville, Indiana, from 1970 until 1995. The Indiana plant was located on the other side of the Ohio River, and it cranked out 3 million bats a year.