Chandler Hit-and-Run Highlights Tech Companies’ Cozy Relationship With Police
Autonomous, camera-equipped vehicles like Waymo can provide law enforcement with what is essentially a traveling fleet of surveillance cameras.
Autonomous, camera-equipped vehicles like Waymo can provide law enforcement with what is essentially a traveling fleet of surveillance cameras.
Dispensaries aren’t legally allowed to sell seeds now. That would change under the Smart and Safe Arizona Act.
The bill would eliminate what remains of the infamous Senate Bill 1070.
The proposal aims in part at bolstering Arizona’s general stream adjudications, which have dragged on for four decades.
The state attorney general weighed in on the confusion during a press conference Tuesday.
There were concessions for Airbnb and similar companies.
Valentina Gloria will remain in mental health facilities while awaiting trial.
Video of the incident doesn’t match officers’ descriptions of the shooting, and the 120-page police report is rife with inconsistencies.
A 9th U.S Circuit Court of Appeals ruling means Phoenix’s homeless should be allowed to sleep outside without fear of repercussions. City policy doesn’t yet reflect that.
Finally, someone to call when the vacationers next door get too damned rowdy.
Arizona is one of at least six states to sue JUUL for deceptive marketing tactics targeting teens.
Three months after his indictments.
AZPOST took no action against a Tempe officer who tased a man in his own apartment who was holding his 1-year-old baby.
ADOT has rejected nearly 36,000 vanity plate applications that it says “carries connotations that are offensive to good taste and decency.”
This is just the latest in Tempe pastor Steven Anderson’s hateful rhetoric, which has targeted the gay community and Jewish people, among others.
“The hero we deserve, but not the one we need right now.”
The bill appears to be a gift to a far-right group that has raised more than $25 million to build border walls on private land.
The tweet was apparently meant to assure Phoenix residents that they were safe, but the message had the opposite effect.
He’ll continue to hold his badge, allowing him to apply at another department if he wishes.
Anti-tobacco advocates are “disheartened,” while Arizona vape industry representatives are “supportive” of the partial ban.
The third-biggest donor to the initiative to legalize pot in Arizona just announced it’s leaving the state.