INDIANAPOLIS — A woman was able to escape a vehicle after a carjacking in downtown Indianapolis early Wednesday morning.
Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department officers were called to the area of 15 W. Maryland Avenue just before 12:30 a.m. for a report of a stolen vehicle with a person inside of it.
Arriving officers identified the stolen vehicle as a Chevy Equinox, which witnesses said fled eastbound on Maryland Avenue.
Preliminary investigation shows that the victim was able to get out of the vehicle several blocks from the scene. It is unclear police say the female inside the vehicle was able to get out. Police say she was not harmed in the incident.
Later Wednesday, police in Illinois located the stolen vehicle and arrested the driver on unrelated charges. Police have not been able to identify if the driver arrested in Illinois is the same person who was involved in the carjacking in Indianapolis.
The incident remains under investigation. The driver does not face any charges in Indiana at this time. The Marion County Prosecutor will work with police to make the final charging decision in Indiana.
-
Amy Grant, Michael W. Smith and Cece Winans bring Christmas Tour to Fishers
The Fishers Event Center announced on Friday that Amy Grant, Michael W. Smith and Cece Winans are making a stop in Fishers for their Christmas Together Tour.Chinese manufacturers are enticing Americans to buy from them amid the trade war
Chinese manufacturers urge shoppers to "cut out the middleman"— meaning e-commerce sites like Temu and Amazon — and "buy direct" from their warehouses. But experts warn it's not that simple.More than 1,000 international students have had visas or legal status revoked
More than 1,000 international students at 128 colleges and universities have had their visas revoked or their legal status terminated since mid-March.Indiana Lawmakers face challenge as revenue forecast predicts budget shortfall
Indiana lawmakers have about a week left to pass a balanced budget, a task made more difficult by a revenue report projecting a shortfall of over $2 billion over the next two years.