Latest news with #PortageFireDepartment


CBS News
07-07-2025
- CBS News
Man, 24, identified in fatal house fire in Portage, Indiana
The Lake County Coroner's Office identified the victim of a deadly fire in Portage, Indiana, over the weekend. Around 6:30 p.m. on Saturday, The Portage Fire Department responded to a single-story home in the 300 block of Camelot Estates for a fire with possible entrapment. Flames and heavy smoke were seen coming from the north end of the residence. Firefighters immediately performed suppression and search-and-rescue operations. Crews found a man unresponsive inside a bedroom on the south end of the home. He was removed, and lifesaving measures were performed at the scene. The victim was taken to St. Mary Medical Center, where he later died. The office identified him as 24-year-old Inikko Irizarry. The cause of the fire remains under investigation. No further information was immediately available.


Chicago Tribune
27-06-2025
- Chicago Tribune
Former Portage firefighter accused of $93,000 in pay fraud
A former Portage firefighter faces felony charges that accuse him of using a cellphone payroll app to falsely claim $93,001.11 in pay he didn't earn over four years. William Thomas Lundy III, 25, of Michigan City, was charged Thursday with two Level 5 felonies of fraud and theft. He was booked into Porter County Jail late Thursday night and has since bonded out, according to jail records. Lundy left the Portage Fire Department in April, city records show. He is the son of Bill Lundy, a retired Portage Fire Department employee who served as chief from 2006 to 2009. A probable cause statement filed in Porter Superior Court outlines how Lundy's former supervisors at the Portage Fire Department and the Portage Police Department discovered the fraudulent scheme. One of Lundy's former colleagues in January happened to be perusing the Indiana Gateway website to see the pay of various city employees. The website is an online portal for municipal finances, including salaries. When he happened to see that Lundy's pay was comparable to other firefighters, suspicions were raised because he knew as a fellow paramedic, that Lundy hadn't worked a significant amount of overtime. A check of the master work schedule confirmed that Lundy had worked 72 overtime hours in 2024. The man expressed his concern to Lundy, who allowed him to look at the Automatic Data Payroll (ADP) app on his phone, according to court records. The colleague then compared the department's timecard to three or four ADP pay documents and noticed the overtime hours claimed didn't match the Portage Fire Department schedule. It was estimated that Lundy had earned between $25,000 and $30,000 more than what he was entitled. When confronted about the overpayment, Lundy replied that the pay seemed normal to him. Lundy then approached Deputy Fire Chief Jeremy Himan and asked if he was in trouble. Himan stated that the matter was being investigated, and there would be no issue unless he did something intentionally wrong regarding his overpayment. The investigation found that Lundy had used the unique personal employee number from his ADP payroll app, and some of his work hours submitted didn't match those authorized by Portage Fire Department personnel, charging documents state. Portage Police Detective Robert Shrader and Chief City Clerk Carrie Belt then compared records of the hours Lundy submitted on his ADP app with hours on the master schedule. As a result, it was found that starting in 2022, Lundy allegedly claimed 554 hours he didn't work for additional pay of $16,599.40. That amount grew to 1,182 hours fraudulently claimed in 2023, when he collected $36.404.45. Last year, Lundy was accused of claiming 1,072 additional hours that resulted in $39,018.87 collected. This year, Lundy had collected $978.39 in unauthorized pay. As an extra step, the work schedules were examined to see if Lundy had happened to trade shifts with a fellow firefighter. A check of the department logs found that he wasn't listed on calls of service for the days that he falsely claimed to be working on his payroll app.

Yahoo
13-02-2025
- Yahoo
Portage ambulance, SUV involved in wreck; two medics, other driver injured
Two Portage medics complained of pain after the ambulance they were riding in was struck by a sport utility vehicle Wednesday afternoon that was driving too fast for snow-covered roads, according to police. The two medics, and another two medics who also were in the ambulance, were transported to the hospital for evaluation. The ambulance was returning to the fire station at the time and no patients were inside, according to a release from Portage Police. The SUV driver, a 36-year-old man from Hobart, was not wearing a seatbelt, police said, and he suffered a serious head injury, though he is expected to survive. Officers responded around 2:43 p.m. Feb. 12 to the area of the Willowcreek Bypass south of Chrisman Road for a report of a collision involving a Portage Fire Department ambulance, police said. Initial reports indicate that a white 2013 Chevrolet Equinox was southbound over the Willowcreek Bypass at an unsafe speed for the roads, police said. 'The combination of excessive speed and snow-covered roads caused the driver of the SUV to lose control and cross the center line into the northbound lanes,' police said. The SUV sideswiped a northbound delivery truck before striking the ambulance, which was northbound in the outside lane, head-on. The driver of the SUV was thrown from the driver's seat into the passenger side of his vehicle during the collision, police said, and suffered a serious head injury that rendered him unconscious. Several medical helicopters were requested but could not fly because of the weather conditions. The driver of the SUV was transported by ambulance to a nearby hospital. The Chevrolet Equinox and the ambulance were both towed from the scene due to disabling damage. The Willowcreek Bypass was closed to all traffic for approximately an hour and a half before being reopened. The Portage Street Department assisted in setting up barricades to keep traffic out of the area during the investigation.


Chicago Tribune
13-02-2025
- Chicago Tribune
Portage ambulance, SUV involved in wreck; two medics, other driver injured
Two Portage medics complained of pain after the ambulance they were riding in was struck by a sport utility vehicle Wednesday afternoon that was driving too fast for snow-covered roads, according to police. The two medics, and another two medics who also were in the ambulance, were transported to the hospital for evaluation. The ambulance was returning to the fire station at the time and no patients were inside, according to a release from Portage Police. The SUV driver, a 36-year-old man from Hobart, was not wearing a seatbelt, police said, and he suffered a serious head injury, though he is expected to survive. Officers responded around 2:43 p.m. Feb. 12 to the area of the Willowcreek Bypass south of Chrisman Road for a report of a collision involving a Portage Fire Department ambulance, police said. Initial reports indicate that a white 2013 Chevrolet Equinox was southbound over the Willowcreek Bypass at an unsafe speed for the roads, police said. 'The combination of excessive speed and snow-covered roads caused the driver of the SUV to lose control and cross the center line into the northbound lanes,' police said. The SUV sideswiped a northbound delivery truck before striking the ambulance, which was northbound in the outside lane, head-on. The driver of the SUV was thrown from the driver's seat into the passenger side of his vehicle during the collision, police said, and suffered a serious head injury that rendered him unconscious. Several medical helicopters were requested but could not fly because of the weather conditions. The driver of the SUV was transported by ambulance to a nearby hospital. The Chevrolet Equinox and the ambulance were both towed from the scene due to disabling damage. The Willowcreek Bypass was closed to all traffic for approximately an hour and a half before being reopened. The Portage Street Department assisted in setting up barricades to keep traffic out of the area during the investigation.