A city-county councilmember in Indianapolis, Ron Gibson, said he woke to 13 bullet holes in his home and a note reading “No Data Centers.” The incident appears tied to local political conflict over a proposed data center project, approved by the Indianapolis Metropolitan Development Commission in a 6-2 vote. The attack underscores how community opposition to AI infrastructure is escalating beyond public hearings, with residents citing energy use, water consumption, noise, and land-use concerns. The report links the tension to a broader hyperscaler push to expand data-center capacity. For universities and regional economic development offices watching AI infrastructure siting, the event signals increased security and stakeholder-management risks tied to large-scale computing projects.