INDIANAPOLIS — An Indianapolis man has formally been charged with five felonies in connection to stealing a truck with a one-year-old child inside on the city's east side on Sept. 20.
Gonzalo Mondragon Jr, 35, faces two charges of criminal confinement, one count of operating a vehicle as a habitual traffic violator, one count of auto theft and one count of resisting law enforcement.
According to court documents, Mondragon was seen on surveillance video exiting a Chevy Equinox and getting into a running Nissan Frontier in the parking lot of the Shell gas station near the intersection of 34th Street and Emerson Avenue. The Nissan was running in the gas station parking lot with a one-year-old child inside as their mother was inside the gas station.
An Amber Alert and wide search area were put into place in the aftermath. The child was eventually located by a construction worker in Speedway and was unharmed, according to court documents.
After the conclusion of the Amber Alert, IMPD patrolmen and officers continued their search for the stolen vehicle.
According to court documents, an IMPD working on a crash investigation in the 1600 block of Rural Street witnessed the vehicle with matching plates drive by. After following the vehicle, the driver later identified to be Mondragon sped away leading to a pursuit.
After the pursuit was terminated, officers located the vehicle unoccupied in the 2500 block of 25th Street. Approximately .7 miles away from the vehicle, Mondragon was located and taken into custody, according to court documents.
Mondragon is scheduled for a jury trial beginning at 9 a.m. on Nov. 28.
-
Indianapolis 500 reserved seating sells out a week earlier than in 2025
Reserved seating for the Indianapolis 500 on May 24 will be sold out for the second consecutive year, and the local television broadcast delay will be lifted again.
Windy and cooler Wednesday, summer like weekend on tap
Windy and cooler Wednesday, summer like weekend on tap
Windy and cooler for your Wednesday. A big pattern shift for the weekend brings much warmer temperatures across the state.
Corteva Agrisciences to split headquarters between Indianapolis and Iowa
Corteva Agrisciences has selected Indianapolis as the headquarters for New Corteva, its crop protection and technologies business, and Johnston, Iowa, for Vylor, its seed and genetics company.