JUSTICE ISN’T SERVED

Waiting for his trial to begin, J.D. Campbell smiled the confident smile of a prominent citizen, a pillar of the community of Peoria. Sitting in a small justice courtroom in Peoria on August 9, the local real estate mogul and businessman seemed certain that justice would smile back. Clad in…

YOUNG GUNS

As this matter unfolds, you will find that what happened to Mr. Jordan was the kind of random violence that all the public is concerned and afraid of. It could have been any of us. It could have been anybody who happened to get tired at that time. –Jim Coleman,…

OF THEE I STING

On a moonless, June night, a purple light bobs and hovers along the barbed-wire fence marking the northern boundary of the Gila River Indian Reservation on the far side of South Mountain Park. Joe Bigelow is hunting for scorpions, scanning his ultraviolet lamp across the desert gravel until a scorpion…

MISCUE 911

One of Sarah Dugan’s last thoughts before her life changed forever was particularly sweet. It was the morning of November 2, 1990, and Sarah was at work as a quality-control supervisor at the American Express administrative complex in north Phoenix. She walked over to a colleague’s desk inside the building…

EVEN HIS WIFE CAN’T STAND HIM ANYMORE

We have to distrust each other. It’s our only defense against betrayal. –Tennessee Williams If I had never trusted Dennis DeConcini, things would never have gotten so bad. That’s why it’s so hard to be around him these days. You sense the aura of approaching doom. His eyes are set…

DON’T TREAD ON JESSE

The 1969 Chevy pickup truck that Yuma farmer David Davidson sold to Jesse Van Myers was rusted and in dire need of repair. But that heap of a truck was what Martin Mowbray, an administrator with the Farmers Home Administration, needed to nail Myers. Myers had been the federal lending…

WAY OFF ABBEY’S ROAD

Chuck Bowden, the lizard king of Arizona authors, is shedding some skin this summer. A Tucson-based essayist, bird watcher and former newspaperman, Bowden has made his literary nut writing books full of his own deep, dark rumblings about life in the Sonoran Desert. His latest book, Trust Me: Charles Keating…

DIARY OF A SCARED HOUSEWIFE

Too many of Joe Calo’s friends in the Italian-restaurant business and the drug trade here in Phoenix were being systematically murdered. Seven died in less than a year–June 1988 to February 1989. The cops figured this could not be written off to mere coincidence. Especially since in so many of…

WIN CHILL FACTOR

The Lady Kings won a game a couple of Saturdays ago, and for the first time in team history, Phoenix’s all-female hockey club was not in last place. Karmel Scott scored on a breakaway with less than a minute to play, giving her team a 2-1 victory over the mostly…

A LESSON IN HOW POWER CORRUPTS

I sat there watching Congressman Dan Rostenkowski proclaim his innocence of all wrongdoing. Everybody in Chicago calls him “Rosty.” Very few people now alive remember when Rosty wasn’t the congressman from the 8th Congressional District who lived in the family home in the 32nd Ward–the Polish ward. In Chicago, that’s…

“THE JACKASSES OF ARIZONA”

You could tell right off that Grant Woods was upset. “This was so bad and so outrageous,” said the attorney general in a phone call to New Times managing editor Jeremy Voas. “It’s absolutely fucking ridiculous.” Mr. Voas did not disagree. We had asked Woods to be photographed, telling him…

A FATAL CAE OF GOLD FEVER

On December 16, the day he would be killed, Fred Schrader got up before dawn, made a pot of coffee, turned on the TV, and sat down to watch the morning news. His wife, Elaine, was still asleep when she first heard the creaking of the approaching bulldozer. In her…

IN PURSUIT OF PUBLICITY ATTORNEY GENERAL POSES WITH ESCAPED CONVICTFELON FLEES CUSTODY, THEN SELLS HOT DOGS IN FRONT OF JAIL ONVICT

Indignation, and some amount of beer, compelled Robert Carter’s first telephone call. Carter had just seen Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio on television, he said. The sheriff was bragging about the county’s work-furlough program for jail inmates, and defending his department’s recent inability to keep prisoners from escaping. Carter had…

THE STATE ROUTINELY DUMPS THE AIDS VIRUS DOWN THE SINK

Ellen Avilla was a good soldier in the war on disease. For almost five years, while working as a technician in the Arizona Department of Health’s state laboratory, Avilla performed tests on thousands of blood samples–checking them for HIV (the virus that causes AIDS), hepatitis, measles and other infectious and…

BACK TO WORK

The first letter I read upon coming back from vacation had this to say: “How come you wrote about the Suns the way you did? How dare you sell out to Colangelo like that?” Wonderful. Things are back to normal. Let’s get a few other things out of the way…