TERRE HAUTE, Ind. (AP) — Federal prosecutors will not seek the death penalty against an Indiana man charged in the fatal shooting of a Terre Haute police detective who was also an FBI task force officer.
Notice that the government would not seek capital punishment against Shane Meehan was filed Monday in U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Indiana.
Instead, Meehan would face up to life imprisonment if convicted. Meehan’s attorneys have said they did not believe he qualified for the death penalty and told the court last month they had submitted 1,500 pages of medical records showing he was mentally ill.
Officer Greg Ferency was 53 and the father of 18-year-old twins when he was killed on July 7, 2021, in Terre Haute, a city about 70 miles (113 kilometers) west of Indianapolis.
Authorities allege Meehan threw a Molotov cocktail at an FBI office and then shot the officer as he emerged from the building. Ferency and an FBI agent both fired on Meehan, wounding him in the ambush, authorities said.
Ferency was a 30-year Terre Haute police department veteran and he was also a federal task force agent.
PREVIOUS: FBI Memorial Star given to family of fallen officer Greg Ferency | Funeral for Terre Haute FBI Det. Greg Ferency | What we know about Shane Meehan, the man accused of killing Terre Haute Detective Greg Ferency | Terre Haute detective ambushed, fatally shot outside FBI building
-
Direct flights to Cabo coming to Indianapolis for Spring Break 2026
For the first time, travelers from Indianapolis will have a nonstop flight to Cabo, Mexico, just in time for Spring Break 2026.Indiana Fever sign guard Kyra Lambert to seven-day contract
The Indiana Fever have announced they have signed guard Kyra Lambert to a seven-day contract. This decision comes as the team deals with injuries to Sydney Colson and Aari McDonald.Arrest made in connection with a domestic disturbance that led to police pursuit
IMPD officers were shot at during a vehicle pursuit after responding to a domestic disturbance late on Wednesday and the suspects remain at large. No injuries were reported during the incident.OPHS no longer enforcing closure of Fountain Square encampment
"We are not enforcing the closure so that we can work to find alternative solutions for everyone at the camp,” Andrew Merkley, OPHS Director, said.