Indianapolis, IN
Man killed in random downtown attack beloved member of Indianapolis Convention Center staff
3 things to know if you share information with Crime Stoppers
Crime Stoppers of Central Indiana allows Indianapolis residents to share anonymous tips with law enforcement.
Alan Gosnell’s last day on Earth started like most others during the past seven years.
He was working his noon to 8 p.m. shift as a foreman of the sound and light division at the Indianapolis Convention Center. On Sept 11, 2024, he was scheduled to complete additional maintenance and cleaning jobs as the convention center’s team was putting on the final touches for the Indiana Wellness Summit expected to start the following day.
Nearing the end of the day, he had completed much of his work and decided to take a break inside the sound and light division office with a coworker.
This is where Gosnell first encountered Brian Fulton.
Gosnell didn’t know Fulton, according to court documents, and when Fulton approached the office, Gosnell did not interact or speak with him, witnesses told police.
The man walked away before Gosnell left the office to check on equipment in the area. That’s when the attack happened. Inside a hallway on the second floor of the convention center, Gosnell would draw his last breath.
Fulton was primarily charged with murder, but as of Monday, he had not formally been charged.
This unwarranted attack left many in the city questioning downtown’s safety, but more importantly, it has left Gosnell’s family with heartbreaking questions that may never receive answers.
Who was Alan Gosnell?
To many, Gosnell was known as “Big Al,” a kind man who would help anyone.
“I don’t know why this guy would do something (to him),” said John Gosnell. “My brother would never do anything to hurt anybody… He was just a big Teddy Bear.”
There were only a few things in this world that Alan Gosnell loved more than his passion for audio and lighting visuals and that was his family.
He would take any opportunity allotted to him to share stories about his grandchild and how excited he was to meet his next grandchild due later this year.
That opportunity was stolen.
Indiana Convention Center attack
Many in the community are still trying to understand what motivated Fulton to allegedly kill Gosnell inside the Indianapolis Convention Center on Sept. 11, 2024.
An employee of the convention center told police that Fulton approached her acting “weird” and kept referencing the roof. Unsure of what Fulton was asking, she led him to the light and sound office.
Fulton continued asking nonsensical questions about the roof before leaving the doorway, according to court documents. Then Gosnell left the office to check the equipment.
Soon after multiple people heard Gosnell screaming for Fulton to stop attacking him, according to court documents.
Witnesses saw Gosnell being beaten before he was strangled with “some kind of phone charge cable,” according to court documents.
“He got what he deserved,” a witness heard Fulton say before leaving the Indiana Convention Center, perplexing those who know him.
“Such a tragedy, I worked with (Gosnell) at the Indiana Convention Center, he was a very nice guy, such a senseless killing,” Bernadette Billerman-Mooney said on social media.
Police detained Fulton about two blocks from the convention center.
After being arrested, Fulton told detectives he was military and CIA and “had just neutralized an international terrorist nuclear threat.” When asked to elaborate on his statement, Fulton told detectives he would not say more and wanted a lawyer.
‘He was a one-of-a-kind person’
After reading about how his brother was killed, John Gosnell could not understand why Fulton would do this to his brother.
Unlike other family members who served in the military, Alan Gosnell followed his passion for audio and visual arts early in life and decided to go to college.
Gosnell moved to Arizona and attended Phoenix Institute of Technology as a young adult, where he learned the ins and outs of being an audio and visual stagehand.
He followed his passion for nearly three decades and traveled the country as a stagehand operating the lighting and audio for countless monster truck shows and worked with Markey’s an Indianapolis audiovisual equipment rental service before joining the convention center staff.
“He was a one-of-a-kind person,” John Gosnell said.
Everyone knew Gosnell as ‘Big Al’, many believed it was due to his size, but his brother revealed that the nickname stemmed from a childhood joke.
“When we were growing up he was about 5 foot 4 and weighed about 110 pounds,” his brother said. “We called him ‘Big Al’ because it was kind of an opposite thing. And then in his senior year, he grew to 5 foot 11.”
Growing up Alan Gosnell loved Indiana University basketball and followed Notre Dame football religiously. But after his son started attending Purdue University, he grew to love the Boilermakers.
Beyond his immediate family, many of his fellow union workers and members of his stagehand family shared the devastation of Gosnell’s death.
“Al Gosnell, a beloved employee of the Capital Improvement Board, lost his life … in a senseless act of violence. Al worked with us for more than 10 years and was a great friend to his colleagues. Our CIB family mourns his loss, and we hold his family in our hearts,” said Monica Brase, spokesperson for the Indiana Convention Center.
The killing raised questions among residents about the safety of downtown Indianapolis and security at the Convention Center, which draws people to the city year-round.
Andy Mallon, executive director of the Indianapolis’s Capital Improvement Board, addressed security concerns at last Thursday’s City-County Council committee meeting.
At the time Gosnell was killed the convention center had 24-hour security in place and a uniformed Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department officer was on the same floor, Mallon said.
Still, Mallon said he appreciated being “held accountable” and would review what more could be done to increase safety at the Convention Center.
Contact IndyStar reporter Noe Padilla at npadilla@indystar.com.
Indianapolis, IN
Kate Douglass sets 50 free world record in Indy: ‘Did not expect (that) like ever’
Watch as Lucas Oil Stadium builds a pool for the USA Olympic swim team trials
Indianapolis is hosting the 2024 U.S. Olympic Team Trials at Lucas Oil Stadium this year from June 15-23. According to USA Swimming’s website, this is the first time the event will be staged on a football field.
INDIANAPOLIS — Five-time Olympic gold medalist Kate Douglass made history Friday night at the TYR Pro Swim Series, becoming the fastest woman ever in the 50-meter freestyle.
Douglass touched the wall in 23.59 seconds at the Indiana University Natatorium, shaving two hundredths of a second off the previous world record of 23.61 set by Sweden’s Sarah Sjöström at the 2023 World Aquatics Championships.
“I think I’m still in shock,” Douglass said during a post-race interview. “I don’t know what to say.”
The crowd erupted as Douglass looked up at the scoreboard, taking in the significance of her swim. She edged teammate Gretchen Walsh, who finished second in 23.78. Walsh’s time also bettered the previous American record of 23.91, which she and Douglass had shared, but it wasn’t enough to catch Douglass’ world-record performance.
“(I) did not expect a world record in 50 free like ever in my life,” she said.
Known more for her success in the 200-meter breaststroke, where she owns the American record and won Olympic gold, Douglass has built a reputation as one of the sport’s most versatile swimmers. Her latest accomplishment came in one of swimming’s purest sprint events, further showcasing her range.
“I think I just nailed the breakout and I just really accelerated toward the finish,” Douglass said. “I think it’s cool to be able to swim a bunch of different things.”
The swim may also alter her plans for the remainder of the season.
“I don’t think I was planning on doing the 50 free much this summer in August,” Douglass said. “Now maybe we’re rethinking that.”
Jessica Garcete is an IndyStar sports reporter.
Indianapolis, IN
Retro Indy: For years Marott was Indianapolis’ most luxurious hotel
(A version of this story first appeared in 2020.)
When the Marott Hotel opened at Meridian Street and North Fall Creek Boulevard in 1926, it was a culmination of 30 years planning for George J. Marott.
Born in Daventry, Northamptonshire, England, Marott emigrated to the United States in 1875 at the age of 16 with his parents. He opened a shoe store in 1884 in Indianapolis, using money he earned from his $10 a week salary as a shoe clerk in a store his father operated, according to an obituary in the Indianapolis Star on February 16, 1946.
Eventually one shoe store became several. A consummate businessman, Marott also purchased electric and heating utilities in Kokomo and interurban lines between Kokomo and Marion and Kokomo and Frankfort, though he eventually sold those.
Marott continued to diversify, building the hotel that bears his name. He worked 12 to 15 hours a day all his life, juggling management of the hotel and his shoe business, his obituary said.
The hotel was his pride and joy; it wasn’t just a hotel, it was also a place where Indianapolis’ high society resided just as New York society did at the Waldorf-Astoria and the Plaza Hotel. Booth Tarkington, Meredith Nicholson and widows of Indianapolis’ long-dead tycoons all took up residence.
“I saw in this property,” Marott said, “the opportunity some to erect some kind of a monumental edifice to the city which I have loved so well and as the time draws near for the realization of a dream, I am convinced anew that my dreams to hold this property for the purpose to which it now is dedicated have been fulfilled.”
Limousines lined the property’s semi-circular drive as visitors in tails and minks arrived to be entertained in the Marott’s Marble Ballroom, Reef Room and Crystal Dining Room.
The hotel guest list over the years was as impressive as the structure itself: Clark Gable, Paul Newman, Marilyn Monroe, John F. Kennedy, Bob Hope, Babe Ruth, Herbert Hoover, Helen Hayes and Lauren Bacall.
In 1932, Winston Churchill, then a member of British Parliament, arrived in Indianapolis by train with his daughter, Diana. They were given a hearty welcome by Indianapolis dignitaries, including Mayor Reginald Sullivan, then spirited away to the Marott Hotel where they stayed.
That evening Churchill spoke before a crowd of 1,200 at the Murat Theater on the “destiny of English-speaking peoples.” Churchill was still nursing wounds suffered in a car accident on New York’s Fifth Avenue just months before and did little Indianapolis sightseeing or socializing, but he was entertained by his fellow countryman, George Marott.
Churchill was so impressed with the hotel that he carried back to England a complete plan of the hotel. Marott and Churchill developed a friendship that lasted until Marott’s death in 1946.
A 1940 Indianapolis Star article noted Marott’s career attracted the attention of numerous authors who wanted to write a book about his life, which he found distasteful. Churchill was the most eminent author he refused. When Churchill returned to England, he sent Marott one of his books — an autobiography as proof of his writing ability. Marott cherished the autographed book, even though the text misspelled his name as “Marrot.”
Marott was also known for his generosity. Over the course of his life, he gave away more than $500,000, according to his obituary. Shortly before his death, he donated his shoe store empire to Butler University and his veteran employees, an Indianapolis Star story on January 27 of that year reported. About 20 years later, the employees bought out Butler.
At the age of 87, Marott died in his apartment in the hotel that bore his name. After flourishing for several decades, the Marott Shoe Company closed its downtown store at 18 East Washington Street in June 1978. A few years later, its remaining suburban stores closed as well.
By the 1970s, the Marott had gone through several owners and become low-income apartments. The Marott got a shot in the arm with extensive renovations, and today the Marott apartments are owned by Van Rooy Companies. The hotel was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1982.
Indianapolis, IN
1 critical after shooting on near east side of Indianapolis
INDIANAPOLIS — One person is in critical condition following a shooting on Indy’s near east side.
According to the Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department, around 8:10 p.m., officers were called to the 2000 block of East Washington Street on reports of a person shot.
Upon arrival, police located a 50-year-old man with injuries consistent with a gunshot wound.
He is currently reported to be in extremely critical condition.
No additional information has been made available at the time of this article’s publication.
This is a developing story; check back for updates.
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