Indiana
NW Indiana man charged with stalking, intimidating and harassing Taylor Swift

LONG BEACH, Ind. (WLS) — A northwest Indiana man has been accused of stalking, intimidating and harassing singer Taylor Swift.
Mitchell Taebel of Long Beach was booked at the LaPorte County Jail on Friday. That was the first night of Swift’s three concerts at Soldier Field.
SEE ALSO | Some Taylor Swift fans say they’re wearing adult diapers to her shows so they don’t miss any songs
Taebel allegedly traveled to Nashville, trying to see the singer. Prosecutors said he also posted a threatening photo on line and left a message for Swift’s father, claiming to be the singer’s soulmate.
Taebel has been charged with stalking, intimidation, invasion of privacy and harassment.
READ MORE | Hanover Park murder: Mother of 7 gunned down by alleged stalker, sister says

Indiana
Indiana Pacers enter NBA playoffs

by: Christopher Claffey and Gregg Montgomery
Posted: / Updated:
INDIANAPOLIS (WISH) — The Indiana Pacers celebrated entering the NBA playoffs, although the team didn’t play Tuesday night.
The Portland Trailblazers beat the Atlanta Hawks 127-113, and that loss by the Hawks put the Pacers in the playoffs.
Now, the Pacers will wait to find out what team they’ll oppose. At the current standings, the Pacers say they could possibly play the Detroit Pistons with a home-court advantage.
The team’s “magic number,” to secure a top-four seed and the home-court advantage in the first round, was 5 on Tuesday night.
The Pacers put a poster on social media to celebrate and shared a link for tickets.
The Pacers went to the playoffs last season, but the Boston Celtics swept the best-of-seven conference championship series with four wins.
On Wednesday night, the Pacers play the Charlotte Hornets with a 7 p.m. tip-off.
Indiana
Nurses in Indiana County protest outside of IRMC

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Indiana
Bill to expedite squatter removals passes Indiana House, heads back to Senate

INDIANPOLIS (WISH) — The author of a bill to expedite squatter removals said Monday existing trespassing laws could tie up property owners in unrelated landlord-tenant regulations.
The bill defines a squatter as anyone who occupies someone else’s property and does not have and never had a rental agreement or the owner’s permission. A property owner could provide a sworn statement that someone was a squatter, whereupon law enforcement would have to remove the person within 48 hours. Bill author Sen. Mike Gaskill, R-Pendleton, said police in his district are encountering an increasing number of squatters. He said under current laws, a squatter could claim to be a tenant. At that point, any effort to remove them would have to be diverted into landlord-tenant procedures.
“What has happened around the country is people have had trespassers, squatters, and then had to go through a court proceeding and wait for a hearing to get them removed,” he said.
A person accused of squatting could defend themselves by providing documentation showing they had permission to be on the property, at which point the property owner could face perjury charges.
The bill passed the Senate 48-1 earlier this session and cleared the House by a vote of 72-18 on Monday. Rep. Matt Pierce, D-Bloomington, said the bill turns law enforcement into finders of fact in the absence of a judge. He said the state already has laws to expedite the removal of unauthorized persons from private property.
“We don’t need to create an entire new body of law that has no judicial officer, no finder of fact, no determiner of law in the whole process,” he said. “Once the person is removed from the property, now the burden is on them to go into court and fight it out.”
The measure has to go back to the Senate because the House made some changes in committee. Gaskill said he worked with the House on those changes and will ask the Senate to accept them.
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