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Possible recounts of tight state Senate races could extend into July

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Possible recounts of tight state Senate races could extend into July


(AP) — It could take several weeks to complete a recount — if one is sought — of the razor-thin margin in the Republican primary race between state Sen. Spencer Deery and his President Donald Trump-endorsed challenger.

The Indiana Recount Commission on Friday approved procedures for checking ballots in a possible recount just hours before the Tippecanoe County Election Board completed the final preliminary tallies in the Senate District 23 race.

As Tippecanoe County counted no additional ballots in the race, the totals from all six counties in the district showed Deery with a three-vote margin — 6,337 to 6,334 — over Fountain County Republican Chair Paula Copenhaver.

Recount filing period opened

Friday was the first day recount petitions could be filed with the state. A candidate has until noon Tuesday to do so, while any Republican county chair in the district faces a noon May 22 deadline to ask for a recount.

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Copenhaver did not immediately seek a recount Friday, and neither she nor a campaign spokesman responded to messages from the Indiana Capital Chronicle seeking comment.

Deery, a first-term senator from West Lafayette, was among the Republican legislators targeted by Trump after voting against the congressional redistricting plan pushed last year by the president.

When asked about the prospect of a recount, Deery replied, “I don’t have anything to say about a request that hasn’t happened yet.”

Final tallies were also posted Friday in the Senate District 15 primary between Republican Sen. Liz Brown of Fort Wayne and challenger Darren Vogt.

Those results for the district, which is entirely in Allen County, showed Vogt picking up one vote from the preliminary figures. But Vogt still trailed Brown by 14 votes — 5,241 to 5,227.

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Vogt did not respond to messages seeking comment about whether he would seek a recount.

Recount work could last into July

The state Recount Commission, meanwhile, approved Friday the selection of a recount director and guidelines for State Board of Accounts auditors in conducting any election reviews.

Recounts conducted in 2024 of two contested Indiana House primary races confirmed the initial results, finding only two miscounted ballots out of thousands.

But those reviews were not finalized until August — three months after the primary was held.

State Examiner Paul Joyce, who heads up the Board of Accounts, said after Friday’s commission meeting that the logistics are complicated for a recount spread over multiple counties.

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The tight Deery-Copenhaver race involves all or parts of six counties spanning much of the area between Lafayette and Terre Haute.

Joyce said field auditors could need two days in each county to complete their work.

“If it’s in the six-county area, you’re talking a minimum of 12 on-site days,” Joyce told the Capital Chronicle. “It’s not going to surprise me if it’s into July. I would hope it’s done before the end of July and we don’t get into August.”

Morales responds to criticism

Republican Secretary of State Diego Morales is chair of the Recount Commission, along with Republican member Paul Mullin and Democratic member Michael Claytor.

Morales, who also chaired the commission during the 2024 recount, said “we are ready” to take up any requests.

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“We’ve been preparing for this, just in case,” Morales told the Capital Chronicle. “If they will file a recount between today until noon next Friday, then we will be ready.”

Claytor asked at the end of the commission’s 15-minute meeting for Morales to respond to criticism of his role as the board’s chair because of his involvement with Turning Point USA, which endorsed Copenhaver, and public support of congressional redistricting.

“This is my duties, my responsibilities, and I will be chairing the Recount Commission,” Morales said. “If should there be any recount filed, we will be holding those meetings transparently for the public to see.”

The commission approved the appointment of attorney Jessica Dickinson as the recount director. Dickinson has been Indiana House parliamentarian, making her a key aide to Republican Speaker Todd Huston during legislative sessions. She has also worked for a Fishers law firm founded by Hamilton County Republican Chair Mario Massillamany and GOP state Rep. Chris Jeter.

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Indiana Fever, Caitlin Clark photos vs New York Liberty

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Indiana Fever, Caitlin Clark photos vs New York Liberty


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Indiana Fever, Caitlin Clark photos vs New York Liberty

Jun 6, 2026; Brooklyn, New York, USA; Indiana Fever guard Kelsey Mitchell (0) drives past New York Liberty forward Satou Sabally (0) in the fourth quarter at Barclays Center. Mandatory Credit: Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images

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(Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images)



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14-year-old charged in fatal shooting of Indiana University graduate

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14-year-old charged in fatal shooting of Indiana University graduate


INDIANAPOLIS − Indianapolis prosecutors announced that a 14-year-old boy has been charged in the fatal shooting of an Indiana University graduate in a politicized homicide case consuming the state’s capital.

The teen suspect is accused of killing Brett Scrogham, a 23-year-old recent graduate of Indiana University Kelley School of Business, in late May in a downtown Indianapolis parking garage. The boy faces charges of felony murder, attempted robbery resulting in serious bodily injury and dangerous possession of a firearm, Marion County Prosecutor Ryan Mears announced June 5.

Officials have not released the 14-year-old boy’s identity, though they said he had no criminal history. Mears said his office has filed a petition to move the teen’s case, currently in juvenile court, to adult court.

Marion County Prosecutor Ryan Mears speaks during a press conference on Friday, June 5, 2026, in downtown Indianapolis, where he announced charges against a 14-year-old boy who was arrested and accused of killing Indiana University graduate Brett Scrogham. Scrogham was shot May 28 in a downtown parking garage and died two days later. The 14-year-old is charged with several crimes, including felony murder.

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The case has drawn scrutiny from Indiana to Washington, DC, as elected officials and local law enforcement grapple with the teen’s age, youth access to firearms, and how local prosecutors are addressing crime.

Mears, a Democrat, has drawn scrutiny from Republicans in the GOP-leaning state over his handling of prosecutions in the state’s predominantly Democratic capital city.

On the Senate floor of the U.S. Capitol, Sen. Jim Banks, R-Indiana, on June 1 said Scrogham’s shooting was indicative of a “crisis” with what he called “soft-on-crime policies.”

On June 5, Mears said “a lot of people” are “very willing to assign blame” before knowing all the facts.

U.S. Sen. Jim Banks spoke on the Senate floor June 1, 2026, days after the shooting death of Brett Scrogham, 23, of Greenwood (pictured right), who died May 30 of a gunshot wound he suffered in downtown Indianapolis on May 28, 2026. Screenshot/Senator Jim Banks X profile

U.S. Sen. Jim Banks spoke on the Senate floor June 1, 2026, days after the shooting death of Brett Scrogham, 23, of Greenwood (pictured right), who died May 30 of a gunshot wound he suffered in downtown Indianapolis on May 28, 2026. Screenshot/Senator Jim Banks X profile

On May 28, Scrogham was shot while in a vehicle inside a downtown Indianapolis parking garage near the Indiana Convention Center, police said. Scrogham died two days later of a gunshot wound to the head. 

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On June 3, Indianapolis Metropolitan Police homicide detectives arrested the teen suspect on the city’s west side.

“While today’s arrest is significant, my heart breaks for everyone impacted by this tragedy,” Police Chief Tanya Terry said in a June 3 statement. “A young man lost his life, and another now faces allegations that will change his life forever.”

On June 5, Terry told reporters that the case wasn’t indicative of typical activity in downtown Indianapolis, with crimes in the area accounting for less than 7% of total crimes citywide. 

With homicides, the figures appear even less pronounced in downtown. The most recent official data, from 2024, shows that five of the city’s 173 homicides that year happened downtown, or less than 3% of all homicides. In 2023, the number of homicides downtown was just over 1%, or two out of 169 citywide homicides.

A large pothole in the bus lane for the Red and Purple Lines on Capitol Avenue near the Indiana Statehouse on April 21, 2025. Jordan Smith/IndyStar

A large pothole in the bus lane for the Red and Purple Lines on Capitol Avenue near the Indiana Statehouse on April 21, 2025. Jordan Smith/IndyStar

Since the start of 2026, there have been 57 homicides across the city, with three of them downtown, or about 5% of all homicides, according to a homicide tracker by IndyStar, part of the USA TODAY Network, drawing from Indianapolis police data.

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Still, GOP lawmakers have focused on Indianapolis, saying that the city, particularly its downtown, needs state intervention to address rising violence. One bill in the Republican-controlled state General Assembly’s last session would have created a special district within downtown where a special prosecutor, appointed by the governor, could prosecute crimes. The bill failed.

In 2025, Gov. Mike Braun, a Republican, said he was open to the state intervening in the capital after gun violence during the July 4 weekend left five dead, including two youths.

Terry said parents need to be more involved in their children’s lives to prevent them from getting involved in violence.

“Do something with your kid,” she told reporters. “Don’t let them run off and do stuff like this.”

Contributing: Kayla Dwyer, IndyStar

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This article originally appeared on Indianapolis Star: Teen charged in fatal shooting of Indiana graduate in politicized case



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Girls Indiana All-Stars on wrong end of buzzer beater against Kentucky All-Stars

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Girls Indiana All-Stars on wrong end of buzzer beater against Kentucky All-Stars


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  • Brianna Wilkins made a game-winning shot at the buzzer to give the Kentucky All-Stars a 59-57 victory.
  • The Indiana All-Stars rallied from an 11-point deficit in the second half to briefly take the lead.
  • Ashlinn James led Kentucky with 22 points, while Brooke Zartman led Indiana with 13 points.

LEXINGTON, Ky. – The play was not necessarily designed for Brianna Wilkins to take the final shot.

With 3.2 seconds left in the girls’ Indiana All-Star game against the Kentucky All-Stars on Friday night, Indiana’s Brooklynn Renn drilled two free throws to tie the score. Kentucky called timeout to advance the ball to halfcourt (a rule that is used in women’s college basketball in the final minute of the fourth quarter and overtime).

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Kentucky Miss Basketball Ashlinn James, an Indiana recruit, took the ball out of bounds and fired it to teammate Brianna Wilkins in the right corner.

“The original plan was I was going to catch the ball, and Ash was going to cut and get it back,” Wilkins said. “But there was only three seconds left and I was counting down in my head.”

Indiana had James well covered. But not Wilkins. The Marshall University recruit made a move, went baseline, and drained the game-winning shot at the buzzer to give the Kentucky All-Stars a 59-57 win over the Indiana All-Stars at Lexington Catholic High School.

“It was drawn up for me to go back door,” James said. “But I think they knew that was coming. They were like, ‘Back door, back door.’ I was hoping Bri had a plan and she did her thing.”

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It was as frustrating night for the Indiana All-Stars, who were blanked for more than five minutes to start the second half and trailed 52-41 with just under 6 minutes remaining. Indiana rallied with an 11-0 run and took the lead 55-54 on a 3-pointer by Warsaw’s Brooke Zartman with 1:52 left.

But a steal and layup by James gave Kentucky the lead and she added a free throw to make it 57-55. After an Indiana miss, Renn corralled a loose ball under the basket and was fouled with 3.2 seconds left, calmly hitting both free throws to tie the score.

Then, Wilkins’ drive. Ballgame.

“I was concerned,” Indiana All-Stars coach Joe Huppenthal said. “I don’t know if it was the drive or what, but we just didn’t have that giddy-up. That was concerning. Then we found out about KK (Holman) and that put us in a bad spot. I’m not making excuses but that hurt.”

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Holman, the Hamilton Southeastern guard and Oregon commit, was out due to illness. The point guard’s absence was notable considering how poorly Indiana shot, going just 8-for-30 (26.7%) from the field in the second half and 32.8% for the game.

“I don’t know how many times we got the ball in the paint and didn’t finish,” Huppenthal said. “You can’t win if you do that.”

The Indiana All-Stars were led by Zartman (Miami, of Ohio) with 13 points. She was 3-for-8 from the 3-point line, accounting for half of Indiana’s 3-pointers (6-for-23). Lawrence Central’s Lola Lampley (LSU) added nine points and five rebounds. Pike’s Komari Booker added eight points and Renn added seven points, nine rebounds and three blocked shots.

“I thought for the most part we were solid (defensively), we just didn’t score,” Huppenthal said. “You have to be able to score the basketball. We had some decent looks. We had a stretch there where we got to bombing a bunch of threes.”

James finished with 22 points and nine rebounds to lead Kentucky and Wilkins, a Marshall recruit, added 21. James and Wilkins are normally rivals, playing at Louisville Assumption and Louisville Sacred Heart, respectively.

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Together, they led Kentucky to a win. Indiana will attempt to even the rivalry and gain a spilt on Saturday night at Gainbridge Fieldhouse.

“You can’t just give up and unguarded layup there with 3.2 seconds left,” Huppenthal said. “We have to come back (Saturday) and fight. That’s the biggest thing. We have to fight.”

Call Star reporter Kyle Neddenriep at (317) 444-6649.



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