LOCAL LAWYERS INTRODUCED TO ETHICS

“This is going to be fun,” assistant Maricopa County attorney Jessica Funkhouser promises the bleary-eyed barristers. The occasion is a three-hour seminar titled “Ethics for Public Lawyers–The Higher Standard,” part of the State Bar of Arizona’s annual convention. “The `Higher Standard’?” one local lawyer says as the 9 a.m. session…

THE TOXICS SHUFFLE

ENSCO was the stuff of nightmares, a fuming, snorting, glowering demon that would have gorged on toxic waste, expelling its lethal scat into the air we all breathe. When it inhaled, wastes from all over the West would be sucked into Arizona. It would exhale dioxins, heavy metals and countless,…

BRUSH WITH GREATNESS DICK GEORGE’S JOB IS TO PUBLICIZE RUBY, THE

The hottest local public relations man is not slick or manipulative. At work he wears boots and a cowboy hat instead of the usual overworked grin and slimy handshake. His client is a total beast who nonetheless has sparked an incredible buzz in the international media. The hot publicist is…

WHAT THE EVIDENCE WILL SHOW

In Washington, D.C., a gentleman boards a jet and flies across the country to Arizona. This man is a lawyer from a city of lawyers. He is Mr. Daniel Fromstein, a prosecutor with the Department of Justice of the United States. Once in Phoenix, Fromstein must drive from the floor…

NEGATIVE BIOFEEDBACK

FINAL VERSION For his article on Biosphere 2, Marc Cooper did not investigate science or an ecological research project–a task he has no scientific qualifications to do in any event. Instead he set out, by his own admission, “predisposed to find an eccentric group of goofballs.” What we are asked…

THE RISE AND GALL OF RUBEN ORTEGA

He loved power. Without it, Ruben Ortega was just an ordinary man. He was possessed of neither dazzling wit nor overwhelming intelligence. His clothes were nondescript. His lack of sophistication and general knowledge was surprising even for a police officer. But as chief of one of the ten largest police…

OF FIREBRANDS AND FILES

This is where you want your children to grow up. Prescott. It is clean. It is beautiful. It is peaceful. On a Sunday afternoon in Prescott, the appearance of tranquillity is everywhere. Just off the town square, the local sports tavern, Penelope Parkenfarker’s, hosts a friendly full house as the…

THE SEXUAL REVULSIONGAYS AND THE LONG ARM OF THE LAW

Roger Rea is a gay attorney who was badly beaten up last year. The night before he was badly beaten up, he made his first visit to a gay bar since he and his longterm lover had parted ways months before. He chose Apollo’s, a well-known joint on Seventh Street,…

THE SECRET WARS OF CHIEF ORTEGA

If Phil Alvidrez had known that Ruben Ortega was in the audience, he might have said it differently. Alvidrez, news director of the ABC affiliate in Phoenix, was describing the futility of his station’s freedom-of-information lawsuit against the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA). He was one of several panelists invited by…

A NEW POLLUTION CZAR?

The leading candidate for Arizona’s environmental-quality czar is a career federal regulator who is credited with helping clean up the state’s two dirtiest copper smelters. Sources close to Governor Fife Symington’s office confirm that the official, John Wise, a 48-year-old Tucson native, leads the short list and could be named…

THE JUDGE’S LONG GOODBYE

This would be different. For nearly twenty years, Philip Marquardt had been a Superior Court judge. Whenever he took the bench to speak, people listened with respect. Others had reason to await his words with baited breath because Marquardt was regarded as a judge who handed down harsh sentences. In…

IMAGINING A

Last week Owen Shackelton Jr., an investigator with the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC), refused to be interviewed. Referring all questions to an NRC publicist, Shackelton said it was a matter of policy. The NRC inspector was not nearly so reticent when it came to talking to the Federal Bureau of…

THE OLD SOLDIER

The organ played softly. The casket containing Joseph Hessinger’s body was rolled slowly down the sloping aisle to the front of the church. Two of his sons, Joseph and Mark, both lawyers, one a prosecutor and one who specializes in defense, were among the pall bearers. His wife Julia, and…

THE KING

Attorney General Grant Woods is in the wrong profession. He’d be the first to tell you how much he envies your job. Whatever it is, if it’s something other than being a lawyer, he says he envies it. He envies people in advertising. That’s what he told nearly 200 advertising…

ONE LAST CALL

I’m not surprised the jury didn’t convict Richard Horwitz on two counts of second-degree murder. I wouldn’t have voted for his conviction, either. There never was a real case against him for murder. And without being able to pinpoint the exact time Horwitz injected cocaine into his arm, there was…

A DEATH IN THE DESERT

Three weeks ago, Kathy Gravell stood beneath the Washington Monument and prepared to place a flower in a large wreath. The occasion was the tenth annual National Peace Officers’ Memorial Day service. Kathy’s late husband, Bill–a 49-year-old detective from a small town north of Tucson–was one of 153 cops being…