INDIANAPOLIS — Two people were injured — one very seriously — in a crash involving four vehicles early Wednesday on Interstate 70 on the city's northeast side, police say.
Witnesses told police that one of the people hurt may have been running across the interstate when they were struck by a driver, according to Indiana State Police. It is not clear if they were involved in the initial crash.
The crash happened in the eastbound lanes of I-70 near North Sherman Drive and caused lane blockages between Massachusetts and Emerson avenues. Initially, all lanes were blocked but a single lane was later reopened. However, as of 6:46 a.m., all lanes were blocked again.
ISP says one of the people injured is in critical condition, but stable. There have not been any confirmed fatalities at this time.
#TrafficAlert
— Sgt. John Perrine (@ISPIndianapolis) November 9, 2022
I-70 EB near Keystone, ISP is still on the scene of a serious crash that happened earlier this morning.
A miscommunication led to this being confirmed as a fatality, which is not the case
4 vehicles involved, 2 people injured one of those is very critical
The condition of the other injured person was not immediately available. That person may have been driving at the time of the crash, police say.
This is a developing story.
-
Pacers beat Hornets 114-112 to end 13-game skid, give Carlisle 1,000th win
A 114-112 win over the Charlotte Hornets on Thursday night that snapped the Pacers' 13-game skid and finally gave coach Rick Carlisle his 1,000th career win.
GM Ballard plans to spend offseason finding solutions to Colts late-season woes
Instead, Ballard said he intends to spend this offseason finding solutions for Indy's continual late-season failures.
Greenfield growth drives push for a third fire station as emergency calls surge
Now there's a push to get a third fire station amid more concerns about response times and available resources within the Greenfield Fire Territory.
"It’s always a gamble": Indiana farmers watch weather as drought deepens
The latest Drought Monitor, released January 8, shows that 68% of Indiana is in some form of drought.