EPISODE · Feb 14, 2026 · 2 MIN
Indianapolis Local Pulse: Decades-Old Cold Cases Cracked, Community Honors Haley Busby
from Indianapolis Local Pulse · host Inception Point AI
Good morning, this is Indianapolis Local Pulse for Saturday, February 14th. We're starting this morning with significant developments in two cold cases that have haunted our community for decades. A former Hamilton County town official named Andy Emmert was arrested and charged with murder in connection with the 1992 disappearance of Tony Bledsoe, a 24-year-old father of three from Arcadia. Emmert, who served as utilities and streets superintendent and building commissioner for the town of Atlanta, was just 21 years old when investigators say he committed the crime. He made his first court appearance yesterday afternoon in Noblesville. This arrest marks a major breakthrough after more than three decades, and the case was cracked thanks to a tip that eventually led Lieutenant Josh Watson to connect evidence from a separate remains recovery in Putnam County. In another development, Thomas Anderson has agreed to plead guilty to the 1993 murder of Carmen Van Huss, a 19-year-old killed in her North Side Indianapolis apartment. Anderson faces 30 years in prison plus 10 years probation, and he'll be sentenced on March 11th. Van Huss's family finally has answers after waiting nearly 33 years, and they credit Detective William Carter, who worked tirelessly on the case for years. We're also reflecting on the community's response to the tragedy surrounding 17-year-old Haley Busby. Hamilton Southeastern High School continues to honor her memory by selling custom clothing, with orders now open online and shipping available across the country. Her celebration of life took place yesterday at IT Town Church, and the community is channeling grief into action. Her family is pushing for real change at the state house to improve how authorities handle missing children cases and when alerts go out. On the city front, Indianapolis leaders shared a snow response review this week. The Department of Public Works deployed crews for more than 90 thousand hours, plus another 52 thousand hours of overtime, during the recent major snowstorm. They're implementing improvements, including upgrading the snow force viewer so residents can track plow locations in real time. DPW crews are already on pothole patrol as snow melts across the city. Looking at today's weather, we're expecting rain to move in this afternoon with high temperatures reaching around 52 degrees. Tomorrow should clear up nicely with mostly clear skies and a high near 55 degrees. On the sports calendar, we're just 100 days away from the Indianapolis 500, and the speedway celebrated this milestone yesterday with a big community event near the pagoda and Gallagher Plaza. This has been Indianapolis Local Pulse. Thank you for tuning in, and please subscribe for more local updates. This has been a Quiet Please production. For more, check out quietplease dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
What this episode covers
Good morning, this is Indianapolis Local Pulse for Saturday, February 14th. We're starting this morning with significant developments in two cold cases that have haunted our community for decades. A former Hamilton County town official named Andy Emmert was arrested and charged with murder in connection with the 1992 disappearance of Tony Bledsoe, a 24-year-old father of three from Arcadia. Emmert, who served as utilities and streets superintendent and building commissioner for the town of Atlanta, was just 21 years old when investigators say he committed the crime. He made his first court appearance yesterday afternoon in Noblesville. This arrest marks a major breakthrough after more than three decades, and the case was cracked thanks to a tip that eventually led Lieutenant Josh Watson to connect evidence from a separate remains recovery in Putnam County. In another development, Thomas Anderson has agreed to plead guilty to the 1993 murder of Carmen Van Huss, a 19-year-old killed in her North Side Indianapolis apartment. Anderson faces 30 years in prison plus 10 years probation, and he'll be sentenced on March 11th. Van Huss's family finally has answers after waiting nearly 33 years, and they credit Detective William Carter, who worked tirelessly on the case for years. We're also reflecting on the community's response to the tragedy surrounding 17-year-old Haley Busby. Hamilton Southeastern High School continues to honor her memory by selling custom clothing, with orders now open online and shipping available across the country. Her celebration of life took place yesterday at IT Town Church, and the community is channeling grief into action. Her family is pushing for real change at the state house to improve how authorities handle missing children cases and when alerts go out. On the city front, Indianapolis leaders shared a snow response review this week. The Department of Public Works deployed crews for more than 90 thousand hours, plus another 52 thousand hours of overtime, during the recent major snowstorm. They're implementing improvements, including upgrading the snow force viewer so residents can track plow locations in real time. DPW crews are already on pothole patrol as snow melts across the city. Looking at today's weather, we're expecting rain to move in this afternoon with high temperatures reaching around 52 degrees. Tomorrow should clear up nicely with mostly clear skies and a high near 55 degrees. On the sports calendar, we're just 100 days away from the Indianapolis 500, and the speedway celebrated this milestone yesterday with a big community event near the pagoda and Gallagher Plaza. This has been Indianapolis Local Pulse. Thank you for tuning in, and please subscribe for more local updates. This has been a Quiet Please production. For more, check out quietplease dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
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Indianapolis Local Pulse: Decades-Old Cold Cases Cracked, Community Honors Haley Busby
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