Podcast: Fridays With Larry – April 24, 2026

Issues involving press freedom, the changing job market and the growing use of technology in everyday life are all part of this week’s Fridays with Larry podcast.

In the April 24 episode, I open with commentary on reports that a New York Times journalist was investigated by the FBI for alleged “stalking” while working on a story involving the FBI director’s girlfriend. The situation raises broader questions about the role of journalists and the potential chilling effect such investigations could have on reporting, particularly when covering sensitive subjects.

My guest this week is my brother, Tony Lannan, who is widely recognized for his expertise in hiring and job seeking. He shares practical advice on how job seekers can navigate a labor market that continues to evolve, including what applicants should be doing now to improve their chances in a competitive environment.

The podcast also includes a story out of Anderson, Indiana, where a woman was flagged for fraud by facial recognition software after being misidentified as someone else in the Bureau of Motor Vehicles database. The case highlights concerns about the accuracy and real-world consequences of biometric identification systems.

Fridays With Larry is sponsored by Citizens State Bank.

You can listen to the April 24 edition of Fridays with Larry at the links below.

Vote411 aims to help Hamilton County voters prepare for May 5 primary

The League of Women Voters of Hamilton County is urging local residents to use Vote411.org as they prepare for Indiana’s May 5 primary election, promoting the website as a nonpartisan tool for checking candidate information, polling places and other voting details. The local league says the site is designed to help voters build a plan before heading to the polls. Vote411 is operated by the League of Women Voters Education Fund and includes ballot, registration, polling place and early-voting information.

In a local news release, League of Women Voters of Hamilton County President Lisa Dick said the group considers Vote411 “the best online election resource” for getting ready to vote. The league said it launched its local push in time for early voting, added a Vote411 banner on the courthouse lawn in Noblesville and placed yard signs with QR codes at early-voting sites so voters can review ballots and candidate information on their phones while waiting in line.

The local league said Hamilton County voters who go to Vote411.org can enter their home address and receive a ballot guide tailored to their area. According to the release, voters can then see offices on their ballot along with candidate biographies and responses submitted directly by campaigns. The league said it contacted all candidates running in this year’s primary and does not edit the responses before they are posted.

The timing is important for Hamilton County voters. The county’s 2026 primary election is Tuesday, May 5, and Hamilton County officials say polls on Election Day will be open from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m. The county also notes that ballots vary by precinct, so voters should confirm their exact polling place or review a sample ballot before Election Day.

For Fishers-area voters who want to cast ballots before May 5, Hamilton County offers early voting at Roy G. Holland Memorial Park Building and the Billericay Park Building in Fishers. Those sites are open April 22-23 and April 29-30 from 2 p.m. to 7 p.m., and April 24-25 and May 1-2 from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Hamilton County voters may also vote early at county sites in Noblesville, Carmel and Westfield. County officials say no application is required for in-person early voting, but voters must bring an acceptable photo ID.

Hamilton County’s Elections Office says the May primary ballot includes a long list of federal, state and county contests, including U.S. House District 5, several Indiana House and Senate districts, sheriff, prosecutor, clerk, assessor, coroner, county commissioner and county council races, along with township offices in some parts of the county. School board races, including Hamilton Southeastern board seats, are listed for the November general election rather than the May primary.

The voter registration deadline for the primary was April 6, according to Hamilton County, so unregistered residents can no longer sign up in time for the May 5 election. Voters who qualify to cast an absentee ballot by mail had until April 23 to submit an application online by midnight, or by 4:30 p.m. if submitting it in person or by mail to the Elections Office.

Indiana’s primary is effectively a party-ballot election, meaning voters choose either a Democratic or Republican ballot for the primary. In the general election in November, voters are not limited to one party’s nominees on the ballot. Vote411 and the county election website both offer tools that can help voters review what will appear on their ballot before they cast it.

HSE bus driver charged after alleged alcohol use while transporting students

A Hamilton Southeastern Schools bus driver is facing misdemeanor charges after allegedly consuming alcohol while operating a school bus with students on board.

According to reporting by Current Publishing journalist Leila Kheiry, Terri Shore, 61, of Noblesville, was charged April 22 in Hamilton County Court with criminal recklessness and driving a bus after or while consuming alcohol. She has not been charged with operating while intoxicated.

A probable cause affidavit filed by School Resource Officer Matthew Madden states the incident began April 1, when a student on Shore’s bus reportedly saw a vodka bottle inside a grocery bag hanging from the driver’s armrest. The student photographed the bottle and sent the image to a Hamilton Southeastern High School dean, who forwarded it to district transportation officials.

Transportation Director Zach McKinney and another employee contacted Shore and instructed her to stop the bus. She pulled over at Brooks School Elementary, where students were transferred to another bus.

During questioning, Shore allegedly admitted to consuming alcohol earlier in the day, according to the affidavit.

Madden wrote that he later reviewed bus camera footage, which reportedly showed Shore drinking from a vodka bottle shortly before 2 p.m. and pouring liquid into an orange juice container. The affidavit alleges she continued drinking from that container while driving and transporting students.

The report also states Shore appeared to brush her teeth around that time, which investigators believe may have been an attempt to mask the odor of alcohol.

Authorities said testing confirmed the bottle contained vodka.

In a statement, Hamilton Southeastern Schools said Shore was removed from duty April 2 and is no longer employed by the district.

“We do not tolerate any behavior that compromises the safety of our students,” the district said. “Student safety remains the district’s highest priority.”

Online court records do not yet list an attorney for Shore. She has not publicly responded to the allegations.

Read Leila Kheiry’s story at this link.

Fuel draw familiar, formidable foe in first-round playoff matchup with Fort Wayne

The Indy Fuel slipped into the Kelly Cup Playoffs on the final day of the ECHL regular season. Their reward is a first-round series against the team that won the Western Conference Central Division.

Indy, the No. 4 seed at 34-27-11, opens a best-of-seven division semifinal against the Fort Wayne Komets, who finished 45-17-10 and claimed their first regular-season division title in 10 years. The Komets also reached the 100-point mark for the first time since 2015.

Games 1 and 2 are set for Friday, April 24 and Saturday, April 25 at Fort Wayne, both with 7:35 p.m. puck drops. The series then shifts to Fishers Event Center for Games 3 and 4 on Tuesday, April 28 and Wednesday, April 29, both at 7:05 p.m. If necessary, Game 5 would be May 3 in Fort Wayne, Game 6 on May 5 in Fishers and Game 7 on May 6 in Fort Wayne.

On paper, Fort Wayne carries the edge. The Komets dominated the 12-game regular-season series, going 9-2-1 against Indy. Kirill Tyutyayev hurt the Fuel repeatedly, posting 13 points in those meetings, while goaltender Nathaniel Day went 5-0-0 against Indy in the season series.

Fort Wayne also brings more proven firepower into the postseason. Austin Magera scored 32 goals, tied for third-most in the league, and Tyutyayev led the club with 68 points. William Dufour heads into the playoffs after earning ECHL Player of the Week honors earlier this month, when he piled up six goals and two assists in a three-game stretch. In net, Samuel Jonsson posted a 21-8-2 record and led the ECHL with five shutouts, while Day gave the Komets another reliable option with 22 wins.

The Fuel counter with a group that has been battle-tested just to get here. Indy has reached the postseason for the fourth straight year and the fifth time in six seasons. Defenseman Matt Petgrave led the Fuel in scoring with 48 points, and goaltender Mitchell Weeks carried a heavy workload, finishing 20-15-7 with a 2.46 goals-against average and the third-most minutes played in the league. Jesse Tucker was Indy’s top scorer in the regular-season matchup with Fort Wayne, collecting eight points.

One number that favors Indy: the Fuel were second in the ECHL in shots allowed per game at 26.17, evidence that when they are structured and disciplined, they can make life difficult even for high-powered opponents. But discipline may be the key word in this series. Fort Wayne’s power play finished fourth in the league at 23.1 percent, and the Komets showed again in the final regular-season meeting with Indy that they can punish mistakes with the man advantage.

There is also a strong local angle once the series reaches Fishers. The Fuel’s playoff roster includes forwards Jesse Tucker, Tyler Paquette, Cody Laskosky and Lee Lapid – defensemen Matt Petgrave and Chris Cameron – goaltenders Weeks and Owen Flores. Games 3 and 4 will give Fishers Event Center its first home playoff dates for this year’s Fuel club, with Tuesday’s game also promoted by the team as a “317 Night.”

This is the first playoff meeting between the Komets and Fuel, and Fort Wayne says it is the franchise’s first postseason matchup with an Indianapolis team since 1991. That adds another chapter to one of Indiana minor-league hockey’s most familiar rivalries.

For Indy, the path to an upset is fairly clear: steal one of the first two games in Fort Wayne, keep the Komets’ power play off the ice, and let Weeks give the Fuel a chance to bring a tied or favorable series back to Fishers. If that happens, what looked like a tough draw could suddenly become a very live series.

I expect some Fuel fans to make the trip up I-69 and attend one or both of the first two matchups in Fort Wayne.  Tickets for games 3 and 4 at the Fishers Event Center are available at this link.

Fishers Freight rise to #2 in this week’s IFL Coach’s Poll

Fishers improved to 4-1 on the season with last Saturday’s road win in Tulsa, and the result has vaulted the Freight to No. 2 in the latest IFL Coaches Poll. Their only setback came against the Green Bay Blizzard, who now hold the top spot in the rankings.

The strong start has been fueled by a combination of timely offense, improving defensive play, and a growing sense of cohesion within a roster that continues to come together week by week.

That progress will be tested again this weekend.

The Freight return to the road for a matchup with the Iowa Barnstormers in Des Moines. While Iowa has struggled out of the gate this season, Freight players and coaches understand that road games in the IFL rarely come easy. The league has already shown that momentum can shift quickly, particularly in hostile environments.

After a one-week break, the team’s “Coach’s Corner” feature also returns, with Andrew Smith sitting down once again with head coach Dixie Wooten. The conversation recaps the hard-fought win in Tulsa and previews Saturday night’s contest.

One theme stands out: Wooten points to the work his players are putting in away from the field. From extra film study to additional preparation outside scheduled team activities, the Freight are building chemistry and discipline that is beginning to show on game nights.

Kickoff is set for 8 p.m. Eastern time Saturday, with the game available via the Yahoo Sports Network.

Use this link or the link below to watch this week’s edition of “Coach’s Corner” with Andrew Smith and Coach Wooten.

Podcast: National Volunteer Month with Scott Fadness & Amy Crell

April is National Volunteer Month, and in Fishers, city leaders are placing a renewed emphasis on the role volunteers play in building community.

In this episode of the LarryInFishers.com podcast, I sit down with Mayor Scott Fadness and the city’s Volunteer Coordinator, Amy Crell, for an in-depth conversation about how volunteerism supports city services, strengthens neighborhoods, and connects residents to one another.

A key focus of the discussion is a new City of Fishers initiative aimed at expanding volunteer opportunities for young people. The program is designed to introduce youth to civic engagement early, while helping local organizations tap into a new generation of volunteers.

We also explore how the city recruits and manages volunteers, the impact those volunteers have across a wide range of programs and events, and why both guests believe volunteerism remains a cornerstone of a thriving community.

You can listen to the full podcast at this link for the link below.

Fishers High School robotics team advances to world championship, earns top engineering honor

The Fishers High School robotics team, known as Tiger Dynasty, is heading to the global stage after a strong showing at the FIRST Indiana State Championship.

Team sponsor and coach Amelia Stone said the group has qualified for the FIRST World Championship in Houston, placing the team among roughly 600 teams worldwide advancing from a field of more than 3,000.

Along the way, Tiger Dynasty earned the prestigious Innovation in Controls Award, sponsored by nVent. The award recognizes teams whose control systems demonstrate unique and effective use of sensors, software and robot controls — a technical honor judged by engineering professionals.

“This is an engineering recognition, and our students earned it on the merits of what they built,” Stone said.

Within Indiana, the Fishers team finished the season ranked ninth out of 69 teams.

At the state championship competition, Tiger Dynasty placed 15th in qualification rounds before being selected as the first pick of Alliance 4 in the playoff draft. The team’s alliance battled through the lower bracket of the double-elimination playoffs, advancing to Match 12 — the lower bracket final — before being eliminated one match short of the championship series.

That performance placed the alliance among the top four of the eight playoff alliances.

Stone acknowledged the team had higher expectations entering the event but said the outcome reflects the quality of the students’ work.

“Candidly, our 15th-place qualifying rank was below where we believed this robot could land,” she said. “But the combination of reaching Match 12, winning the Innovation in Controls Award, and qualifying for Worlds tells a story: the students’ engineering is at a championship level.”

The team is already preparing adjustments for the world competition, with travel to Houston set to begin within the next week.

Tiger Dynasty is seeking community support to help cover travel expenses for the trip. Donations can be made through the team’s website at this link.

The Fishers students will now represent their school — and the broader community — as they compete against top robotics teams from around the world.

Hamilton County Leadership Academy Announces Speakers for 2026 Leadership Summit

The Hamilton County Leadership Academy has announced the speaker lineup for its 13th annual Leadership Summit, scheduled for June 18 at the Embassy Suites Conference Center.

The event, set for 11 a.m. to 1 p.m., will focus on workplace culture—an issue organizers say is increasingly important as employers compete to attract and retain talent.

This year’s panel will feature three Hamilton County business leaders:

  • Bethany Gremel, Director of Culture and Brand Experience at Beck’s Hybrids
  • Mandy Haskett, Leadership Consultant with ADVISA
  • Mike Pote, Vice President of Strategic Initiatives at Gaylor Electric

The discussion will be moderated by Heather Haas, CEO and owner of ADVISA.

According to HCLA Executive Director Maria Kanger, the panel will explore how organizations define and build strong workplace cultures, along with how emerging factors such as artificial intelligence are shaping those environments.

“We are incredibly fortunate to have this phenomenal panel of leaders from well-respected Hamilton County employers,” Kanger said in a statement. “Those who attend the Leadership Summit are bound to benefit from their wisdom and willingness to dig into key questions.”

In addition to the panel discussion, the summit will include the presentation of HCLA’s Distinguished Alumni and Honorary Alumni awards. Recipients have not yet been announced.

The event is open to the public, with individual tickets and sponsorships currently available. Registration is scheduled to close June 1.

Founded in 1991, the Hamilton County Leadership Academy provides leadership development opportunities for residents and professionals across the county. Its flagship Signature Program is a 10-month course that examines key community issues and prepares participants for leadership roles in civic organizations, nonprofits and government.

Hamilton County to Host Drug Take Back Day Event April 25

Hamilton County residents will have an opportunity this weekend to safely dispose of unused or expired medications as part of a nationwide effort to combat prescription drug misuse.

The Hamilton County Council on Alcohol and Other Drugs will host a drive-thru medication drop-off event Saturday, April 25, from 9 a.m. to noon in the east parking lot of Riverview Health, across from Federal Hill Commons in Noblesville.

The event is part of the 30th annual National Drug Take Back Day coordinated by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration. The initiative, held each spring and fall, aims to reduce access to potentially dangerous medications that often remain in home medicine cabinets.

Locally, Hamilton County has participated in the program for years, collecting hundreds of pounds of medications annually.

“A critical aspect of the prescription drug epidemic is the supply chain,” said Monica Greer, executive director of the Hamilton County Council on Alcohol and Other Drugs. “For most people who misuse these drugs, the source isn’t an anonymous street dealer but a trusted friend or family member, and the point of access is the home medicine cabinet.”

Greer said removing unused or expired medications from homes can play a key role in preventing misuse and abuse.

The April 25 event will accept expired and unused prescription medications, as well as vape devices. However, organizers say liquids, sharps and needles will not be accepted. Those items should instead be taken to the Hamilton County Household Hazardous Waste Center for proper disposal.

For residents unable to attend Saturday’s event, year-round disposal options are available at several local law enforcement agencies, including the Hamilton County Sheriff’s Office, as well as police departments in Fishers and Westfield. Some retail locations, including Walmart, Walgreens and Meijer, also offer medication drop-off services.

Officials encourage residents to take advantage of the event as a simple step toward improving public health and safety.

Additional information on local medication disposal can be found at www.hamiltoncounty.in.gov

IndyStar investigative piece focuses on Fishers man behind protests and allegations of other activities

Reporter Cate Charron of the IndyStar has a story posted to the newspaper’s Web site Tuesday morning centered on a man in Fishers that has been behind anti-Trump protests in the area.  The story contains much more, including involvement by the Fishers Police Department, which, according to this reporting, referred some information to the FBI.

There is so much involved in this story I hesitate to summarize it for you.

It is unclear whether this story is behind the IndyStar paywall.  If you are a subscriber you will have access.  If not, you may or may not.  Here is the link.

Once again, the only reason a news organization like the IndyStar can do reporting like this is through subscribers.  Initial online subscription rates are very inexpensive.  Once again, I communicate this message – subscribe to your local media!  Otherwise, someday, it could go away.