Indiana
Officer safety of high concern after recent accidents across Indiana and Michigan

SOUTH BEND, Ind. (WNDU) – The job of a police officer is unfailingly dangerous. In recent weeks, that danger appears to have increased, as multiple officers across Indiana and Michigan have been struck by cars.
Since January, we’ve heard of four officers from around Indiana and Michigan that have been struck by vehicles during traffic stops. An Indiana State Trooper was left in serious condition after helping a stranded motorist change a flat tire and a Michigan State Trooper was killed.
“Over the past couple weeks, and especially since the beginning of the year, the story has been whether it be state troopers that have been hit or seriously injured and killed or just police officers from other departments across the country,” said Sgt. Ted Bohner, with the Indiana State Police.
Unfortunately, it’s a scary sight that comes with the territory for the boys and girls in blue.
“It’s one of those things that we know one of the most dangerous places we can be is outside our cars on a traffic stop,” Bohner said. “That’s because we’re literally within feet of traffic that’s going highway and a lot of times interstate speeds.”
And even with most states having move over and slow down laws, it’s still a danger that these officers have to continuously think about before stepping out to help that vehicle on the road.
“You do think about it more,” Bohner said. “You check your mirrors when you’re getting out of your car, when you’re sitting and typing a crash report or that ticket or warning. looking in the rearview mirror, maybe put your seatbelt on in case you are hit while on that traffic stop before you get out of your car.”
But there are some things the public can do while driving to better protect our officers.
“We trust you every moment when you see us to do the right thing and slow down,” Bohner said. “I don’t want to be cliché and say our lives depend on it. But not only do ours, but your life does and the person we have stopped, or the crash were working, or the people whose flat tire that were changing. Everybody’s life depends on everyone doing the right thing all the time.”
Copyright 2024 WNDU. All rights reserved.

Indiana
‘Nah, was to pack y’all up’: Tyrese Haliburton trolls Knicks after series win

The Indiana Pacers are embracing everything about advancing to the NBA Finals for the first time since 2000.
Indiana defeated the New York Knicks in six games in the Eastern Conference finals, capping it off with a 125-108 win in Game 6 on Saturday night. Indiana will take on NBA MVP Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and the Oklahoma City Thunder in the NBA Finals, which begin Thursday (8:30 p.m. ET, ABC).
The Pacers’ win was one for the books, with seven players scoring in double figures, led by Pascal Siakam, who scored 31 points and was named Eastern Conference Finals MVP. Tyrese Haliburton had a dominant second half and finished with 21 points and 13 rebounds.
Haliburton is the third player to record over 60 assists and 10 or fewer turnovers in a series, joining Chris Paul and Tim Hardaway, according to ESPN Research. He is the first player to achieve the feat in the conference finals.
Indiana’s road to the Finals wasn’t easy — on and off the court.
So once the Pacers had the Eastern Conference title in the bag, their social media team — and Haliburton — didn’t hold back on the Knicks and their shared history, landing a handful of worthy social media jabs.
Pacers packed up New York
The Pacers have a storied history of defeating the Knicks in the playoffs in the 21st century. They accomplished the feat in 2000, 2013, 2024, and now 2025.
To showcase their dominance over New York in the playoffs, the Pacers dropped a graphic highlighting their series wins over the Knicks with the Empire State Building and the 73-story One Vanderbilt tower behind Indiana’s starting five.
so long, New York.
we’ll be taking our duffel bags to the NBA Finals 😏 pic.twitter.com/v76x8kdpJC
— Indiana Pacers (@Pacers) June 1, 2025
The ‘Big Apple’
The Pacers also sent a post featuring the sports pages of various newspapers from each game in which they defeated the Knicks, while also taking a shot at New York’s nickname, “the Big Apple.”
start spreading the news 📰 pic.twitter.com/yMcsuun39T
— Indiana Pacers (@Pacers) June 1, 2025
Haliburton is the new Miller
In Game 5 of the 1994 Eastern Conference finals, Pacers guard Reggie Miller made the infamous choking gesture toward director and Knicks fan Spike Lee at Madison Square Garden. Twenty-five years later, Haliburton recreated the gesture in Game 1 after completing a comeback in which the Pacers trailed by more than 14 points with 2:51 remaining in regulation. The Pacers’ social media team was quick to take note.
Haliburton goes at Ben Stiller
Actor Ben Stiller is known for his courtside Knicks appearances and for supporting the Knicks on social media. In Haliburton’s arrival to Game 6, he wore an all-black outfit with a black duffle bag. Stiller responded to the post pregame, saying: “Good thing he brought his duffle for the flight to NY.”
Haliburton’s response after the game?
“Nah, was to pack y’all up,” referring to the Knicks.
Nah, was to pack y’all up https://t.co/hhgo9fp8ib
— Tyrese Haliburton (@TyHaliburton22) June 1, 2025
Haliburton vs. New York
Knicks fans were relentless with their antics during the playoffs — even throwing garbage bags at a Pacers fan and heckling him for wearing a Haliburton jersey on the streets of New York in the hours after the Knicks knocked off the Celtics in Game 6 of the East semifinals.
Haliburton actually invited the accosted fan to attend Game 4 in Indianapolis. He also kept the receipts and topped off a reel with his highlights from the series.
‘cers in 6 pic.twitter.com/cCjASm1qNF
— Tyrese Haliburton (@TyHaliburton22) June 1, 2025
Indiana
Knicks-Pacers: 5 takeaways as Indiana eliminates New York, advances to 2025 Finals

Indiana forces 18 turnovers in Game 6, converting those miscues into 34 points to advance past New York.
INDIANAPOLIS – Indiana coach Rick Carlisle had started counting off his team’s Eastern Conference championship series from the get-go, not by victories, but by duration.
“This is just Day 1 of 13 days,” Carlisle said after the Pacers pulled off an improbable, exhilarating, overtime victory over the Knicks in the opener in New York. When the Pacers won again 48 hours later, sure enough, it was simply “Day 3” in Carlisle’s world.
It seemed as if he was trying to provide a framework for his players, maybe even for the media and the Indiana fans, not to get ahead of themselves. Beware the irrational exuberance that can bite hard when things go awry, in other words, in a difficult NBA playoff series.
And it did appear to lay a calming blanket over the Pacers when they stunned even themselves in Game 1, dropped Game 3 at home, then fumbled a close-out shot in Game 5 Thursday in their worst performance of the series.
In the end, though, Carlisle was wrong.
The thing didn’t last 13 days.
The Pacers needed only 11 from the opening tipoff to the celebration late Saturday night on the court at Gainbridge Fieldhouse. They sealed the Eastern Conference title and the franchise’s second trip ever to the NBA Finals – the first was in 2000 – with an impressive 125-108 elimination of the Knicks.
The series lasted long enough for Indiana to show itself in full in Game 6, but not so long that it had to face the stresses of heading back to Madison Square Garden for a winner-take-all finish.
There should be plenty of that waiting for the Pacers, anyway, at Oklahoma City’s Paycom Center when the 2025 Finals begin Thursday (8:30 p.m. ET, ABC). First, here are five takeaways from the victory that earned them the trip:
1. Every Pacers ingredient on display
It would be hard to conjure an Indiana outcome more “on brand” than what it served up Saturday. Seven guys put up double-figures. The same seven each hit at least a pair of 3-pointers. The Pacers’ shooting, despite New York’s dialed-up and rugged defensive pressure, was exemplary: 54.1% overall (46-for-85), 51.5% on threes (17-for-33) and 84.2% (16-for-19) from the line. They played fast, running to a 23-6 edge in fast-break points through three quarters, by which time they led 92-77.
And that pace, along with their pesky-enough defense, sprung loose 18 Knicks turnovers, good for 34 of the home team’s points.
Center Myles Turner had a modest stats line, foul trouble limiting him to 21 minutes and 11 points. But he has perspective on this team that no one else matches, his seniority stretching back to his arrival in 2015 at 19 years old, the No. 11 pick from Texas.
Turner rode the Pacers elevator from a playoff contender to three straight lottery finishes and now back up again. He was the subject of endless trade rumors for his first six or seven seasons, until Indiana brought in Tyrese Haliburton in exchange for Turner’s former frontcourt mate, Domantas Sabonis.
“When the buzzer was sounding, it was nothing but joy,” Turner said Saturday. “All the years, all the hate, all the love, all the in-between just made sense in that moment.”
Turner and his teammates are proud of Indiana’s egalitarian roster, the praise, the credit and the blame spread around just like the responsibility. He called the Pacers’ foundation “the power of friendship” in his postgame remarks.
“It’s not the flashiest, sexiest team,” he said, “but it gets results.”
2. Siakam snags the Bird trophy
The vote was close, 5-4 from the media panel that determined the Most Valuable Player of the Eastern Conference championship series. Pacers forward Pascal Siakam edged out teammate Haliburton to take home the Larry Bird Trophy after scoring 31 points with five rebounds, three assists, a steal and three blocked shots in the finale.
Haliburton finished with 21 points, six rebounds, 13 assists, three steals and one block. The lanky, frenetic point guard remains the head of Indiana’s proverbial snake and a reliable win-lose barometer for how their team does, following his lead up or down.
But this was a case of Siakam providing offense when the Pacers needed it most. In a slow Pacers start, it was Siakam’s 3-pointer that slowed New York’s early roll and a breakout layup that put them up 12-11. He hit another 3 to start the second quarter, and by halftime Siakam had a game-high 16 points that were essential to his team’s 58-54 lead.
When Indiana outscored the Knicks 34-23 in the game-cracking third quarter, Siakam had 10 more points. Haliburton was just 1-for-3 in that period, though it wasn’t as if the pair were competing with each other.
Siakam led the Pacers in the series with 24.8 ppg and his shooting – 52.4% overall, 50% from the arc – was a reflection of their offensive strength. He was able to pester Knicks big man Karl-Anthony Towns more than Turner with better mobility and a mighty wingspan.
“The versatility,” Knicks coach Tom Thibodeau said of Siakam. “His ability to run the floor, his ability to play in the paint, his ability to get to the basket … makes him a tough cover.”
Siakam, 31, was the NBA’s Most Improved Player in 2018-19 when his team at the time, the Toronto Raptors, won the NBA championship in his third season. It has taken him six years to return to the Finals, a trip he has said he took for granted.
All the Pacers know is that, since they acquired him 16 months ago for three players and three first-round draft picks, they have gone to the conference finals twice and now are four victories away from taking home the Larry O’Brien Trophy.
Said Haliburton: “When we brought him here, we envisioned something like this.”
3. This ending ‘sucks,’ but the Knicks’ run did not
New York point guard Jalen Brunson has been in that city long enough to know how the tabloid newspapers work. So he gave them easy back-page fodder with his first postgame comments Saturday.
“It sucks,” Brunson said, providing the stuff of big, rude headlines. “Simple as that. It sucks.”
Of course it did. New York ground out 18 games of postseason drama only to spit out the bit in the second half Saturday, when they got outscored 67-54. The Knicks never led after halftime, never really got close after Indiana reeled off the first nine points of the third quarter.
Frankly, it was a near-miracle that they got up one more shot than the Pacers, considering their 18 turnovers. If you’re going to get outscored by 24 points on 3-pointers, you had better not give up 34 easy points by throwing the ball away or snuffing possessions with offensive fouls.
“Some of it was our own doing, some of it was their ball pressure,” Thibodeau said.
Said Brunson, who had five turnovers to go with seven assists: “I try to control the things that I can control, and that’s one of them. That’s terrible on my part.”
Zooming out a few thousand feet, however, the Knicks’ season looked better than their final 24 minutes. They pushed through an injury-riddled season to win 51 games, their most in a dozen years. They had a major piece dropped in their laps, Towns, on the eve of training camp and patched around the departures of Isaiah Hartenstein, Julius Randle and Donte DiVincenzo.
New York handled a scrappy Detroit team in the first round, then bumped off the defending champions from Boston in six games with a pair of 20-point comebacks. They got a round further than when they lost in the East semis to Indiana a year ago.
“There were a lot of people saying we couldn’t do a lot of things,” Brunson said. “A lot of negativity around what we were trying to accomplish Just kind of put blinders on and went to work.”
Any speculation about Thibodeau’s job status, an inevitability for a New York fan base, will be premature at best. Folks fretted about the heavy minutes he loaded on Knicks starters, then never explored why they were as healthy as any team eight months in. Thibodeau has steered the Knicks to the postseason four times in five seasons, compared to three times in 16 seasons by the nine guys who preceded him in the job.
4. Carlisle’s golden touch once more
Backup center Thomas Bryant had played in just three of the series’ first five games for a total of 22 minutes. So he goes out in Game 6 and gives the Pacers 11 points in 13 minutes, hitting three of his four 3-pointers, grabbing three rebounds and blocking a shot.
It went that way with Bryant in the previous round too. In the first four games against Cleveland, he totaled nine points in 42 minutes. In the decisive Game 5, Bryant responded to Carlisle’s tap on the shoulder with nine points in 11 minutes to help defeat the Cavaliers on their own floor.
It’s chicken-or-egg stuff at this point: does Bryant play well in clinchers or do games become clinchers because Bryant plays well? Let’s not forget, the much-traveled 27-year-old (five teams) was on the 2023 Nuggets championship squad.
Said Siakam: “I told him, the basketball gods reward you.”
🗣️ “4 more, that’s all we are worrying about right now.”
A 2023 NBA Champion with Denver… Thomas Bryant is going back to the Finals 💯🏆 pic.twitter.com/PvSB3v8tn0
— NBA (@NBA) June 1, 2025
5. Low-wattage Finals? More like high concept
Siakam and Turner both took knees to the groin from attacking Knicks players in Game 6 – and both got called for the fouls on the two plays. But in the grand scheme, that might serve as solid prep work for the force the Pacers can expect when they face the Thunder in the 2025 NBA Finals.
Oklahoma City plays the league’s most physical and smothering defense, the sort of the-refs-can’t-call-every-foul style that can stymie opponents competitively and mentally. Indiana just demonstrated how potent it can be when it plays fast, attacks both inside and out, and pushes its point total north of 110 points (11-0 in the playoffs so far when doing that, 52-23 in the regular season).
So it’s offense vs. defense in a Finals that will lack a major TV market for the people focused on ratings. But it shouldn’t lack much for basketball fans who can watch without worrying if the folks across the hall or down the street are doing the same. If the neighbors miss out, they miss out.
* * *
Steve Aschburner has written about the NBA since 1980. You can e-mail him here, find his archive here and follow him on X.
The views on this page do not necessarily reflect the views of the NBA, its clubs or Warner Bros. Discovery.
Indiana
How Indiana Fever guard Caitlin Clark’s injury is affecting fans and ticket prices

INDIANAPOLIS — With hopes to meet Caitlin Clark, Kestas Jociuf and his 8-year-old daughter, Elizabeth, left their seats in section 119 and went to the tunnel next to the Indiana Fever bench. Before her family started their nine-hour drive from Minnesota to Indiana, Elizabeth painted a picture draped with Fever logos and a “Caitlin, we love you” message.
The Jociuf’s attempt to meet Clark was successful. Elizabeth’s painting now has a new owner.
“Caitlin actually took the picture,” Jociuf said. “Elizabeth probably wrote Caitlin Clark at least 14 times on that drawing.”
Elizabeth and her father also told Clark to feel better soon, to which she thanked them. The Fever announced Monday that Clark would miss at least two weeks with a left quad strain. Since Clark’s injury, the Fever played the Washington Mystics and Connecticut Sun, losing both matchups. Indiana will be without their star guard for at least the next two games, when they host the Mystics on Tuesday and travel to the Chicago Sky on June 7.
Jociuf and his wife, Sulema, had taken their daughter and 10-year-old son to see Clark when she visited the Minnesota Lynx last season. Elizabeth and her brother fell in love with Clark, so Sulema and Jociuf bought seats closer to the court for the family’s first visit to Gainbridge Fieldhouse.
While Sulema admitted she was worried for Clark after hearing of her injury, she said her kids were “upset” when they learned Clark wasn’t playing.
“The visit was worth it even though she’s not playing because we wanted to experience Gainbridge and it’s been great. They have a lot of cool things for the kids. Also, there are other good people on the team,” Sulema said. “I told them we can get more tickets later in the season (to watch Caitlin).”
The family of four spent $900 on their tickets. On game day, the price for the same tickets in section 117 was $174.70. The price difference reflects the impact of Clark’s injury on tickets.
IndyStar collected data from Ticketmaster and found that selected ticket prices for Clark’s future matchups against the Sun, Mystics and Sky, in which she is expected to play, increased by as much as 366%.
Note: These are resale prices and may change daily. These numbers were logged up to two hours before the Fever and Sun tipped off Friday.
The most expensive ticket in section 120 for Friday’s contest against the Sun cost $86.25. When Indiana hosts the Sun on June 17, a ticket in the same section will cost $140.30, a 62.7% increase.
The price difference for a seat nearer to the court when the Mystics return to town Aug. 15 is more consumer-friendly. A seat in section 116 on Tuesday will cost $391.95. The price will increase 11% when Washington makes its final regular-season visit to Indiana.
Sky and Fever games are always a hot ticket, with Clark and Sky forward Angel Reese headlining the matchup. If a fan desires to sit in section 225 at the United Center and watch Indiana and Chicago square off in their WNBA Commissioner’s Cup matchup, the cheapest ticket will cost $57.50.
When the two teams reconvene in Chicago on July 27, the cheapest seat in section 225 will cost $267.95.
Although Clark’s availability may alter ticket prices, the impact of her presence remains the same.
”My 8- and 5-year-old daughters were sad not to see her play, but they were still glad to see her in the building,” said Chris Gerrity, a Fever fan who bought tickets for his family before Clark’s injury was announced. “We are still excited to support the city, the rest of the players and the WNBA.”
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