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Deadly Sanctuary

Sylvia Nobel dreamt of a movie version of her Kendall O'Dell mysteries — until the money disappeared.

When Nobel and her lawyer demanded that he get out of the production company, Briggs didn't go quietly. Instead, he returned the money to the 92-year-old widow who'd given it to Nobel and her husband for the film. Nobel believes it was a bit of tit-for-tat: If Briggs couldn't have the money, neither could the people who'd driven him off the film.

Through his lawyer, Sturr, Briggs says that he informed the widow of Nobel's lawsuit in April 2008. At that point, he says, she asked for her investment back — and that's why he returned the $1 million.

Geoffrey Grahn
Sylvia Nobel
Courtesy of Sylvia Nobel
Sylvia Nobel

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Either way, the widow would no longer return calls from Nobel and her husband. (Her lawyer, Steve Dichter, did not return New Times' call seeking comment.)

Without the money, the project was unquestionably dead.

And, as it turns out, Sugar Daddy's may be in equally big trouble.

Last month, Briggs and his partners at Sugar Daddy's were sued by the bar's former owner. The $550,000 loan he'd given them to buy the place had come due on October 1.

Mark Briggs and his partners, the lawsuit claims, are now in default.


Sylvia Nobel was horrified that a lawyer — supposedly, the lawyer hired to make a movie happen — could just "loan" himself the bulk of the movie's capital. Never mind that he eventually returned it. It wasn't his money!

She filed a bar complaint against Briggs, alleging he'd embezzled from her production company. She got her lawyers to file a lawsuit, claiming malpractice, fraud., and breach of fiduciary duty. (Both are still pending.) And, she put up a screed on her Web site, detailing the ordeal for her fans.

She was forced to take it down when Briggs' lawyer, Colin Campbell, threatened to sue her for defamation.

No one seemed to care about what had happened to Nobel. No one, that is, with the power to do anything about it.

In fact, Briggs and LaMont were able to force Nobel's own lawyers off the case. As they pointed out, the small firm had once done work for LaMont.

This summer, the judge agreed the conflict was too great for the lawyers to stay on the case — leaving Nobel on the hook for legal bills, without even a lawyer to show for it.

Nobel approached more than 30 different lawyers seeking representation. Either they weren't interested, or they cited a conflict. She managed to find a small firm willing to take the case, but after they accepted, the lawyer called with regrets. His firm has a branch in Seattle, he explained, and Briggs had just announced that he'd talked to a lawyer there about the case. That meant the Phoenix lawyer had to step aside.

Over lunch in September, Nobel burns with the unfairness of it. "They make it impossible for the average person to find justice!" she says.

In October, Nobel managed to find a lawyer without a conflict. (That lawyer, Chris LaVoy, declined comment, citing Briggs' threats of a defamation lawsuit.)

The case is still eating at her.

"I have the worst case of writer's block," she says. She tried to write, but when she went back and read what she'd put down, she was horrified. "My anger really came out in my writing," she says. "I reread my stuff and it was just depressing."

It's not hard to see why. What happened to the Deadly Sanctuary production upsets every ideal that provides the framework for a Kendall O'Dell novel. Sure, bad things happen, and bad people try to take advantage of the system, but once the flame-haired reporter cracks the case, the law steps in. The bad guys get caught. Order is restored.

That hasn't happened to Sylvia Nobel.

Mark Briggs is still at Quarles & Brady. Chris LaMont is still head of the Phoenix Film Festival. If Sylvia Nobel were writing it, and Kendall O'Dell were doing the investigating, those two would be long gone.

The fallout from a situation like this in real life can be horribly messy — enough to make Sylvia Nobel wish she were living in one of her novels instead.

"This has been the most frustrating thing to me," she admits. "I can't write the ending."

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