INDIANAPOLIS — An Indianapolis family is remembering a loved one who is a victim of gun violence.
“Brittany was my sister, my friend. She was a confident person,” Valerie Young, Brittany Allen's sister, said.

IMPD says 33-year-old Brittany Allen was shot and killed on Friday. The shooting happened around 4 p.m. in the 9500 block of Village Way, near the Meijer on 96th Street.
“She left a beautiful daughter that I have to raise. I just don’t understand,” Terry Jordan-Keets, Allen's mom, said.
While talking to WRTV Monday, Allen's family said they still can’t believe what happened. She leaves behind a 9-year-old daughter, Elsie.
“She had just came back home from having mother daughter day with Elsie and that was something that was not uncommon,” Ebonie Walls-Paterson, Brittany’s cousin. said.
The family says they are going to stay strong during this time.
“Indianapolis, this is not what it’s supposed to be. Young kids with the guns — put them down. This is crazy,” Samuel Jordan, Brittany’s brother, said.
Detectives are currently speaking with witnesses and asking anyone who may have video doorbells or other information about the case to contact them.
“This could have been anybody’s family. This could have been a knock at anybody’s door,” Young said.
No information about a suspect or suspect vehicle has been provided.
Allen’s family has this message for the City of Indianapolis as they try to put together the pieces of a loved taken far too soon.
“I feel like it’s up to the people of Indianapolis to say enough is enough – enough. It’s time for families to stop going through this,” Young said.
Anyone with information about this incident should call Detective Daniel Hiatt at the IMPD Homicide Office at 317.327.3475.
-
'Indiana: Faces of the Fallen' honors Hoosier veterans no longer with us
A special exhibit at the Fishers Event Center honored fallen Hoosier veterans at Thursday's Indy Ignite Volleyball game.Shooting on near eastside of Indy, man in critical condition
A person is in critical condition after a shooting on the near eastside of Indianapolis Thursday evening, IMPD said.From threatening to trendy: How Fountain Square turned around in 30 years
Fountain Square is now one of the most popular places for people in Indianapolis to spend a night on the town. The neighborhood had a much more dangerous reputation 30 years ago.Hoosiers can pick free produce at Fishers AgriPark, now open for the season
The growing season is underway, and after months of preparation AgriPark, an urban farm run by the city of Fishers, opened its gates to the public for the first time this year.