Pol Pot Luck

Carr Crash The Arizona Democratic party’s downward spiral continues. While party chairman Mark Fleisher was making national headlines with the news that Arizona will be the first state to use Internet voting in March’s presidential primary — a terrible idea, in my opinion, given that the party can hardly get…

Invisible Scourge

In the past three years, the rate of gang homicides in Phoenix has skyrocketed by nearly 90 percent. In 1996, street gang members killed nine people. In 1997, 11 people were murdered by gangs. In 1998, the last year for which statistics are available, 17 people died at the hands…

City of Coke

He is a gangbanger, a drug dealer and a devoted father, and when he goes to buy coke from the Sinaloans, he always leaves his gun in the car. He says one .45 would do little good against the men on the other side of the duplex door. This door…

Tales Out of School

Lambert Ormsby is graduating with the Mesa High School class of 2000. He’ll be only one of about 800 students donning the cap and gown next spring, and, at 21, he’ll be at least three years older than most of the other graduates. But if it’s taken him longer than…

Faces of Milpas

Editor’s note: In October, New Times published the first in a series of stories about gang problems in the neighborhood known as Las Cuatro Milpas (The Four Fields), which is situated southeast of downtown Phoenix. Many residents believed the stories — which focused on a ruthless faction of the Eastside…

Lost World

More than 20 years ago, in an unparalleled community effort, Mesa residents built the Little Adobe Schoolhouse, an authentic reproduction of Mesa’s original one-room school. It was a labor of love that served as a grassroots bicentennial project. Some 28,000 schoolchildren donated pennies and other change to fund the project…

A Friend in Need

Eighty-year-old William Armstrong sat still as a rock at the Baptist Foundation of Arizona creditors hearing in the grand ballroom of the downtown Hyatt on December 21. Armstrong and about 1,200 other mostly elderly BFA investors attended the routine bankruptcy court proceeding to learn when, and if, they’d ever recover…

Jane’s Adaptation

Adapting Jane Austen’s Mansfield Park for the screen was never a life’s ambition for filmmaker Patricia Rozema. “It would never have crossed my mind,” she says. The project came her way as a commission, in the midst of the Austen fever that still held Hollywood in its grip a couple…

A Question of Hope

The young man at the end of the pew is a professional car thief. Law enforcement also recognizes him as a cocaine user and a drug peddler. Yet here he sits in church, a child of God as much as you or your neighbor. He accepted Jesus while locked up…

Suspended Animation

On September 30, 1998, Perry Mitchell’s supervisors at Maricopa County Superior Court evaluated him: “Perry is well positioned to lead the further expansion of Pretrial Services, planned for the next few years, and his future with the court is very bright!” One year later, however, things changed drastically for Mitchell,…

Double Crossed

Here’s why you should be skeptical about what Graham Berry and Robert Cipriano say about the Church of Scientology: Berry’s been after the church for years, and he makes no secret of his desire to litigate the 45-year-old organization to its knees. An eloquent, New Zealand-born attorney who lives in…

Mystery Science 2000

Steven took his first punch on the playground at Mitchell Elementary School in west Phoenix. He was five. He didn’t defend himself, because his assailant was a sixth-grade girl, and Steven was taught never to hit girls. So he lay bleeding while his older sister walloped the girl. Growing up,…

Disco Technicalities

It was a bad idea, poorly executed, and north Phoenix was the perfect setting. Land of franchised illusions, where on Saturday, December 4, Phoenix Studio 54 celebrated its grand opening in a strip mall on Bell Road. It’s an epoch away from the west side of Manhattan — 254 West…

Targets Beyond The Turf

Russell Hamblin’s black 1998 Honda Civic was still dripping with suds and water when the other car rolled up to the near-deserted Chandler car wash late on the evening of September 7. The clean and shiny late-model sedan may have seemed the perfect score for members of a roaming street…

Wrong Place, Wrong Time

Dozens of Valley residents have been killed or injured in the past decade as gang violence has spread beyond fights between gang members. A New Times review of reports of such incidents shows at least 62 innocent bystanders have been hurt or killed as the result of gang crimes. There…

Flashes 12.16.99

Marriage on the Boulders When police were called in to squelch that boozy domestic battle between C.C. Goldwater-Hedley (that’s Barry’s granddaughter to you) and husband Anthony Hedley late last month, local gossip-mongers couldn’t get enough of the juicy details. According to newspaper accounts of the torrid tiff, trouble started when…

The Farm Side

Ma and Pa Kettle, they ain’t. And forget any resemblance to those “American Gothic” sourpussed sod-busters, too. In fact, better check all those citified notions about farm life when you enter Kathleen and Arnott Duncan’s pick-it-yourself veggie patch and petting zoo in Goodyear. Part of an actual organic farm providing…

Honey, He Blew Up the Kid

Size does matter. Or at least it does to painter John Cerney, creator of the Rushmorean rug rat seen daily by thousands of westward-bound I-10 travelers. “As long as I’ve been painting, I’ve always been interested in making things bigger and bigger,” says Cerney, who operates a commercial mural studio…

Phone Hex

Telephone Tom migrated to Bisbee in April 1979. Of course, back then he wasn’t known as Telephone Tom, he was simply Tom Wheeler, a phone company worker who’d arranged a transfer from Phoenix to Cochise County because he was fed up with traffic and crowds and crime and sprawl. He…

Strike Two

A Teamster’s strike that began two months ago in Tolleson is poised to go nationwide after a long-awaited federal labor report substantiated union claims that Fry’s grocery store owners violated labor laws. The report by the general counsel’s office of the National Labor Relations Board was released last week. In…

Flashes 12-09-99

Can’t Buy Love L’Affaire Steve just won’t go away. The Dallas Morning News reported Tuesday that Texas A&M University had rejected $10,000 the Arizona Republic had sent to the university in an attempt to purchase penance for an editorial cartoon that offended Texans in general and Aggies in particular. The…

London Calling

To: Voas From: Holthouse Re: Severe setbacks with Governor Hull in London story. Cheers from England, chief, and bad news: I’m afraid rioting in the streets, too many shots of absinthe, a lobster-electrocuting device known as the Crustastun, and other factors too numerous and bizarre to detail here have prevented…