Indiana
Reporters Committee Local Legal Initiative expands to Indiana
The Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press announced today the launch of the Indiana Local Legal Initiative to provide vital pro bono legal support for Indiana newsrooms and journalists investigating and reporting the stories that matter most to their communities.
Indiana is the latest addition to the Reporters Committee’s Local Legal Initiative, which is active in Colorado, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, and Tennessee.
“We are thrilled to expand the Local Legal Initiative into Indiana and build upon the Reporters Committee’s longtime work with journalists and news organizations in the state,” said Katie Townsend, deputy executive director and legal director for the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press. “Access to legal resources is a vital part of the infrastructure that underpins thriving local journalism, and we are excited to grow our ability to help Indiana journalists defend their newsgathering rights, access public records and court proceedings, and hold public officials accountable.”
The Reporters Committee will hire an attorney to work in Indiana and provide direct pro bono legal support to local journalists and news organizations pursuing enterprise and investigative reporting in their communities.
“The Hoosier State Press Association is thrilled to be welcoming the Local Legal Initiative to Indiana at such a critical time for newspapers across the state,” said HSPA Executive Director Amelia D. McClure. “The addition of their legal team will allow Indiana’s newspapers to navigate a changing media and legal landscape with nimble and responsive expertise, something that is extremely crucial as local newspapers fight to continue their role as a pillar in our democracy.”
HSPA played a pivotal role in bringing the Local Legal Initiative to Indiana, submitting an initial proposal for an attorney in 2019 during the pilot phase of the program, and continuing to build support for the program in the state.
With the addition of a Local Legal Initiative attorney in Indiana, the Reporters Committee will build upon the impactful work its attorneys have previously done on behalf of journalists and news outlets in the state.
In 2018, for example, Reporters Committee attorneys helped WTHR-TV sue a local school district to access public records concerning the suspension of a high school football coach. That lawsuit ultimately resulted in a landmark Indiana Supreme Court decision holding that agencies must provide specific facts explaining why a public employee is suspended, fired, or otherwise disciplined — a ruling that increases transparency across the state. More recently, the Reporters Committee and a coalition of six journalism and news organizations filed a federal lawsuit to block the enforcement of an Indiana law that makes it a crime to approach within 25 feet of a police officer after being told to withdraw.
The Reporters Committee launched the Local Legal Initiative in 2019 with a generous investment from the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation. Anchor support for the Local Legal Initiative in Indiana has been provided by Lumina Foundation.
“The Hoosier State Press Association’s leadership in working with the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press made this legal support possible,” said Kevin Corcoran, strategy director for Lumina. “Our participation comes as part of the national Press Forward initiative to rebuild local news and information, especially for Black, Hispanic and Latino, immigrant and refugee, and low-income audiences who have not been served. We hope this will ensure the availability of public meetings and records for the benefit of every Hoosier.”
In just a few years, the Local Legal Initiative has transformed the local news landscape in Colorado, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, and Tennessee, empowering local journalists to fight for greater government transparency as they pursue local investigative and enterprise journalism in the public interest. The reporting made possible by the work of Local Legal Initiative attorneys in those states has provided the public access to a secret board meeting about school safety, prompted renewed scrutiny into the deaths of two Native American men at the hands of law enforcement, and exposed a transit agency’s failure to track incidents of sexual assault and harrassment against its employees, and much more.
“Since launching the Local Legal Initiative four years ago, we have seen the meaningful difference that free, on-the-ground legal support can make for local journalists as they tell the stories that matter to their communities,” said Bruce D. Brown, executive director of the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press. “We are grateful to Lumina Foundation and our news media partners in Indiana for their collaboration in bringing the Local Legal Initiative to the state to help power the kinds of local reporting that an informed and engaged democracy depends on.”
For more information on the Local Legal Initiative, go to rcfp.org/local.
About the Reporters Committee
The Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press provides pro bono legal representation, amicus curiae support, and other legal resources to protect First Amendment freedoms and the newsgathering rights of journalists. The Reporters Committee serves news organizations, reporters, editors, documentary filmmakers, media lawyers, and many more who use our free resources.
About the Hoosier State Press Association
The Hoosier State Press Association, founded in 1933, is a trade association representing 142 daily and weekly paid-circulation newspapers in Indiana. HSPA provides legal information, training, and other services to its members.
About Lumina Foundation
Lumina Foundation is an independent, private foundation in Indianapolis committed to making opportunities for learning beyond high school available to all. We envision higher learning that is easy to navigate, addresses racial injustice, and meets the nation’s talent needs through a broad range of credentials. We are working toward a system that prepares people for informed citizenship and success in a global economy.
Indiana
Pacers Injury Report: Crucial Indiana Forward Remains Out vs Cavaliers
The Indiana Pacers have slowly but surely started to get healthy this season. After losing both backup centers, a starting guard, a starting forward, and a reserve guard to injuries, they have mostly gotten back to being healthy.
These injuries were the primary reason why the Pacers started out just 6-10 on the season. They weren’t able to win games with regularity because they didn’t have any continuity in the lineup.
Now that they do have continuity, the Pacers are playing much better basketball. They have won five straight games as well as 11 of their last 14.
More Pacers: Pacers’ Andrew Nembhard Explains Why Young Players Need to Follow Pascal Siakam
As healthy as they are right now, there is still one player who continues to be out. That is starting small forward Aaron Nesmith.
Nesmith has played in just six games this season due to a severe ankle sprain that he suffered. He has been slowly working his way back to the court.
As the Pacers get ready to face the best team in the NBA, Nesmith remains out. He is the only player who is in the rotation listed on the injury report for the Pacers.
There is still no firm timetable for his return. All Rick Carlisle will say when he is asked about Nesmith is that he is making progress.
Read more: Pacers’ Johnny Furphy Makes Case for More NBA Time With Dominant G League Performance
Nesmith has been a crucial player for the Indiana Pacers, especially last season. He emerged as their best perimeter defender and one of their best 3-point shooters.
Indiana has back-to-back games against the Cavs coming up. This will be a great litmus test for them to determine if they need to make a big move at the trade deadline or if they can stand pat.
Because he has been hurt for most of the season, there’s a chance that Nesmith could be in a trade package for the right player. Any move the Pacers would make would likely be closer to the deadline.
Aaron Nesmith is averaging 9.2 points, four rebounds, and one assist this season. He’s also shooting 52.8 percent from the field and 54.5 percent from beyond the 3-point line.
More Indiana Pacers news: Pacers Must Go All In Ahead of Trade Deadline Following Strong 14-Game Run
Pacers ‘Recently Held Trade Discussions’ for Rival Star Forward: Report
Indiana
The Minute After: Iowa
Thoughts on an 85-60 loss to Iowa:
Iowa City is a long way from the Bahamas.
But tonight’s game from Indiana could have fit right into its Battle 4 Atlantis performance.
As Iowa began to pull away early in the second half, the Hoosiers completely folded. They failed to compete. The body language was poor. They couldn’t defend. They couldn’t score. They looked like a team that had given up.
Iowa got up by as much as 30 before settling on a 25-point victory. That 25-point defeat for the Hoosiers? It’s the largest loss during regular season Big Ten play in the Mike Woodson era.
Iowa entered this game 121st on KenPom in adjusted defensive efficiency but held Indiana to just .83 points per possession tonight. That’s Indiana’s lowest output of the season. The previous low? The .85 points per possession it scored against Louisville in the Bahamas.
The Hoosiers have played well against zone defense this season, but that wasn’t the case tonight. Iowa’s 2-3 zone turned them into jump shooters. The Hoosiers just couldn’t find a consistent rhythm against it. On paper, Indiana entered this one as the far superior rebounding team. It’s an area that’s helped the Hoosiers succeed during their three-game conference winning streak. But the Hawkeyes snagged 29 percent of their offensive rebounds tonight, while the Hoosiers rebounded just 24 percent.
Iowa also absolutely feasted off Indiana’s 16 turnovers. The Hawkeyes scored 24 points off turnovers on a night the Hoosiers turned the ball over on 22 percent of their possessions. Indiana was particularly poor with the ball in the first half and entered the locker room turning it over on 32 percent of its possessions.
Oumar Ballo had a rough start. Iowa doubled him from the get-go and Owen Freeman poked at him, too. The Arizona transfer had four turnovers by the 14:38 mark in the first half when he was yanked from the game by Woodson. Ballo has been a dominant force for Indiana of late. And while he still posted a double-double — 10 points, 13 rebounds — Freeman bested him tonight. The sophomore can play out on the perimeter and his quickness and array of moves made him a tough matchup for the bigger Ballo. Freeman finished with 16 points (8-of-13) and 12 boards. He also defended the paint well, racking up a game-high four blocks while also adding three steals. Ballo didn’t block a shot this evening.
Mackenzie Mgbako played only 16 minutes and scored six points. He’s 2-of-14 from the floor over his last two games.
Iowa hit 11-of-24 (46 percent) from 3-point range. Indiana made just 4-of-16 (25 percent). After heating up in the second half, Payton Sandfort led all scorers with 23 points.
“When you go out on the road in the Big Ten, you can’t turn it over, you gotta rebound with your opponent and you gotta make shots,” Woodson said after the game. “We failed in all three areas tonight.”
Fail Indiana did tonight. The start of its toughest stretch of the season was a disaster. With better teams just over the horizon, the Hoosiers need to forget about this one and not let it affect them.
We’ll soon see how they respond with the Illini coming to Bloomington for a Tuesday night bout.
(Photo credit: Big Ten Basketball on X)
Filed to: Iowa Hawkeyes
Indiana
How to watch Indiana vs No. 23 Iowa women's college basketball: Schedule, streaming info, game preview
Conference play in women’s college basketball gets started in earnest this month and on Sunday afternoon, the 11-4 Indiana Hoosiers visit the No. 23 Iowa Hawkeyes (12-4) for a Big Ten matchup at 3pm ET on Peacock.
Indiana has just one conference loss this season — they fell to No. 1 UCLA 73-62 on Saturday, January 4th. But they bounced back with a 68-64 win over Northwestern their last time out to improve to 3-1 in the Big Ten. It was the program’s 900th win all-time, but it was also a hard-fought win against a Wildcats team that isn’t a barnburner in the conference (Northwestern is 7-9 overall, 0-5 Big Ten).
“Winning is hard,” Indiana head coach Teri Moren said after the Northwestern victory. “It’s hard at home, it’s hard on the road, and our margin of error is really small, and so, we’ve got to be much better, but we’re happy that we’re going to get out of here with the win tonight.”
For Iowa, there’s been plenty of questions and plenty of scrutiny in the post-Caitlin Clark, post-Lisa Bluder era. The Hawkeyes have kept the momentum going with their devoted fanbase: Iowa has sold out women’s basketball season tickets for the second straight season, and the team has played in front of 28 consecutive sellout crowds, the longest streak nationwide.
The Hawkeyes started off the season 8-0, but have struggled more recently, going 4-4 in their last eight games. Longtime Iowa assistant Jan Jensen took over the head coaching role from Bluder, and senior guard Lucy Olsen, a transfer from Villanova, has helped to fill the void left by Clark on the court. Olsen leads the team in scoring with 17.0 points per game, and junior forward Hannah Stuelke leads the team with 8.0 rebounds per game.
For full information on how to watch Sunday’s game, including start time and streaming information, see below.
READ MORE: Big Ten, SEC each have 4 top 10 teams in AP women’s poll
How to Watch Indiana vs Iowa Women’s College Basketball
- Date: Sunday, January 12th
- Time: 3:00pm ET
- Location: Carver-Hawkeye Arena (Iowa City, Iowa)
- Streaming: Peacock
Big Ten women’s basketball 2024-25 schedule on NBC & Peacock
Date | Time (ET) | Matchup |
---|---|---|
Sun., Jan. 12 | 3 p.m. | Indiana vs. Iowa |
Wed., Jan. 15 | 9:30 p.m. | Penn State vs. UCLA |
Wed., Jan. 15 | 10 p.m. | Northwestern vs. USC |
Thurs., Jan. 16 | 7 p.m. | Illinois vs. Indiana |
Thurs., Jan. 16 | 9 p.m. | Ohio State vs. Wisconsin |
Sun., Jan. 19 | 12 p.m. | USC vs. Indiana** |
Wed., Jan. 22 | 7 p.m. | USC vs. Purdue |
Wed., Jan. 22 | 9 p.m. | Iowa vs. Washington |
Sun., Jan. 26 | 2 p.m. | UCLA vs. Maryland** |
Thurs., Jan. 30 | 10 p.m. | Minnesota vs. USC |
Wed., Feb. 5 | 7:30 p.m. | USC vs. Wisconsin |
Wed., Feb. 5 | 9:30 p.m. | Ohio State vs. UCLA |
Thurs., Feb. 6 | 8 p.m. | Michigan vs. Nebraska |
Thurs., Feb. 13 | 7:30 p.m. | Minnesota vs. Ohio State |
Thurs., Feb. 13 | 10 p.m. | UCLA vs. USC |
Wed., Feb. 19 | 9:30 p.m. | Michigan State vs. USC |
Thurs., Feb. 20 | 7 p.m. | Ohio State vs. Indiana |
Sun., Feb. 23 | 2 p.m. | UCLA vs. Iowa |
Wed., Feb. 26 | 8 p.m. | UCLA vs. Wisconsin |
Thurs., Feb. 27 | 7 p.m. | Maryland vs. Indiana |
Sun., March 2 | 2 p.m. | Indiana vs. Purdue |
Sun., March 2 | 4 p.m. | Wisconsin vs. Iowa |
Tues., March 4 | 3:30 p.m. | Big Ten Tournament |
Tues., March 4 | 6 p.m. | Big Ten Tournament |
Tues., March 4 | 8:30 p.m. | Big Ten Tournament |
**on NBC and Peacock |
How to Watch Big Ten Sports on Peacock
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