What was he thinking?!

Bishop Thomas J. O’Brien is the highest ranking Catholic cleric ever charged criminally in the United States. As we go to press, a jury is mulling whether the bishop will celebrate his next Mass behind bars. Bishop O’Brien is accused of “leaving the scene of a serious injury or fatal…

Gun Shy

In 2002, the department had only 140 Tasers in use. Now it has 1,556. You may remember the startling headlines from early last year: In 2002, Phoenix police officers shot 28 people, killing 13. It was a record year for police shootings, but not much worse than the previous five…

Letters

Hostage Crisis Wrong arm of the law: I am writing to share my horror and disgust about the way the hostage situation at the Arizona State Prison Complex was handled (“Covering Tracks,” Robert Nelson, February 5). It didn’t take a genius to figure out that the female hostage was being…

Loungin’ With Lucifer

Ten o’clock in P-town, my second Ketel One on the rocks, and still no sign of Jett. Wonder what’s keeping that bee-ahtch? Not that I wouldn’t be more than satisfied to sit on this barstool for a while and bathe my liver in a river of vodka, but damn, girl,…

Molecular Damage

Shawn Dirks says he couldn’t wait to report for duty. After months of training, February 17, 2001, would mark the first time that Dirks would be patrolling alone as a rookie officer with the Phoenix Police Department. That night, a Saturday, 42-year-old Lori Levinson was out on a date that…

Covering Tracks

As Governor Janet Napolitano and Department of Corrections officials portrayed it, the end of the 15-day standoff at the Arizona State Prison Complex-Lewis was a triumphant love fest. The remaining hostage was released unharmed into the arms of the governor, the result of state officials’ brilliant strategy of subtle negotiation…

Letters

Investigative Lead The rest of the story: Kudos to John Dougherty for “Blasphemous Backlash” (January 29)! The article was very informative and well-balanced. Mr. Dougherty, while presenting Ross Chatwin as a brave soul willing to stand up to Warren Jeffs, also gave the readers the “rest of the story” when…

Blasphemous Backlash

COLORADO CITY — With his wife and six children clustered behind him on the front porch of his modest home, Ross Chatwin did what no resident of this isolated, fundamentalist Mormon town has ever done. Chatwin, 35, publicly denounced the religious leader of the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of…

The Man Behind the Curtain

Fundamentalist Mormon cult leader Warren Jeffs has convinced thousands of polygamist followers that he receives direct revelations from God, visions that reveal the most intimate details of their personal lives. But Jeffs’ insights may be based far more on modern technology than any supranatural spiritual powers. Warren Jeffs, the Prophet…

Juvenile Offenses

For years, state officials from the governor down have virtually ignored allegations that children are being mistreated at Arizona’s juvenile corrections facilities. Finally, the federal government is forcing Arizona to pay attention. In a letter to Governor Janet Napolitano dated January 23 detailing a 28-month investigation, Assistant Attorney General R…

Blow My Mine

President Bush was just in town, which meant a city of three million got its bowels put in a security vise so the incumbent could look interested in education. On Wednesday, he was at Mesa Community College to congratulate college officials on their job-training efforts. It was basically just another…

Letters

Developing Story Guilt by association: Thank you to Robert Nelson for his January 22 story “Big Bad Developer.” George Johnson should go to jail for what appears to be a long history of criminal activities associated with his big bad developments. Pinal County officials should be ashamed of themselves. If…

Big Bad Developer

MARANA — George Johnson watches stonefaced as two Black Hawk helicopters rise from the tarmac and tilt toward Ragged Top Mountain, the heart of Ironwood Forest National Monument southeast of Phoenix and home to one of Arizona’s last remaining native herds of desert bighorn sheep. The Army helicopters are loaded…

Luck Out

Convicted murderer Jasper McMurtrey III says he feels “like Rip van Winkle winning the PowerBall.” McMurtrey was released from Arizona’s death row just before Christmas, the result of an unusual legal snafu that has the state and a federal judge pointing fingers at each other. Now, state prosecutors contend U.S…

Letters

Brain Dread Adult education: I suppose sensationalism sells. I won’t even argue that behind most fallacies lie some truths. However, it is simply unfathomable that the January 15 article “Brainiacs” (Jimmy Magahern) could ever achieve any credibility. In what appears as a David and Goliath account of the obnoxiously elitist…

Brainiacs

It’s just after school on a Tuesday, and Jacob, Chris, Sam and Mike are doing what they’ve done for the past 12 years: lying around in Jacob Verburg’s living room playing video games and drinking Coke. “It’s been this way every day pretty much since kindergarten,” says Verburg, a 17-year-old…

Double Hit

Jennifer Morse puts the ingredients for pizza dough into the KitchenAid and turns it on, then she gets out the “Getting Better Book.” “We call it the Getting Better Book’ because we’re getting better,” she says, standing at the kitchen counter and flipping the cover of the scrapbook to the…

First Her Face, Then Her Hair

. . . Alexis’ hair was a mat of dark, dried blood with beads of glass slowly spilling from it when the nurses moved her. Little pieces of blonde hair stuck out of the mat, reminding us of what had been. In the hospital, there was a lot of talk…

Letters

Bawdy Language How dry I am: Susy Buchanan wrote an excellent story on the present and future condition of Van Buren Street, I must say, since I find myself extensively quoted in her article (“Tough Row to Ho,” January 8). Her description of the sex trade on the street carried…

Tough Row To Ho

Art Casillas trolls East Van Buren Street for hookers four nights a week. Dressed in an untucked tee shirt and jeans, Casillas looks like he might be a Little League coach. Maybe that’s why there’s something initially unnerving about the ease with which he can rattle off a menu of…

No Choice

During the first hours of what turned out to be a grueling 44-day trial, Brian Finkel said to no one in particular, “I’ll be glad when this clown show is over.” That was vintage Finkel — always the wise guy, cocksure, always in control. Until last week, when the former…

Scenes From an Abortion

In 2000, Brian Finkel on average performed four to 15 abortions daily, six days a week, roughly 20 percent of the abortions performed annually in Arizona. New Times profiled Finkel in 1999 (“The Terminator,” June 17) but was not privy at that time to the performance of an abortion. The…