INDIANAPOLIS — A weekend shooting at a shopping mall in Broad Ripple has businesses in the area reacting to the ongoing violence.
"Any act of senseless gun violence in our community is one too many and we will and we will continue to say whatever led up to this incident gun violence is never the answer." IMPD Officer Samone Burris said.
Officers were called just after 2 a.m to the 1000 block of Broad Ripple Avenue, which is located at the shopping mall between Winthrop Avenue and Compton Street.
Police said officers were in the area for a special detail called BREZ — which stands for Broad Ripple Entertainment Zone. The special detail has been in place for more than a year now and adds more officers to the area.
“A lot of officers work the Broad Ripple and will continue to do so as long as the grant continues to do so,” Burris said.
Aryk Whittwer works at the Great Clips in the strip mall where the shooting took place. He said that violence is all over Broad Ripple and all over Indianapolis right now.
“They have to send out two cleanup crews, one on Saturday and one on Sunday and because you walk into this at 7 or 8 in the morning and it looks like chaos,” Whittwer said.
He feels like the ongoing violence over time is going to give Broad Ripple a bad reputation.
“In Broad Ripple, it just seems to culminate here so this strip mall is used as a parking garage now. Late at night, people have to pay for parking, people culminate here. There are hundreds and hundreds of cars and people partying,” Whittwer added.
The map below details some of the violent crimes that occurred this year in Broad Ripple.
Editor's note: The map below is still in progress and may not contain all of the incidents of violence.
-
Leaders launch study to reshape Washington Square Mall
On Wednesday, city and development leaders unveiled a pre-development site study for the aging retail anchor that has served as a hub for the east side community for years.
American Cancer Society pushes for medical debt relief on World Cancer Day
Senate Bill 85, currently awaiting a committee hearing in the House, aims to reform how medical debt is collected from patients who cannot afford to pay.
Feeling cooped up? Hoosiers share how they handle winter cabin fever
Wednesday is the fourteenth straight day of high temperatures below normal in Indianapolis. Some Hoosiers are feeling a bit feverish, that is, cabin fever.
Indiana State Police spend $1.17M on new guns amid national safety concerns
Indiana State Police purchased 1,350 Sig Sauer P320 pistols at a total cost of $1.17 million, including holsters.