MARLEY’S GHOSTSJUDY MOWATT SPREADS HER WINGS BEYOND REGGAE

Ten years after his untimely death, Bob Marley’s legacy continues to grow. Unreleased material, everything from airchecks to concert bootlegs, continues to trickle into the CD long-box bins. There isn’t a reggae band alive that won’t launch into a Marley hit like “Get Up, Stand Up” when the dance floor…

AS SEEN ON TV,A FAMOUS PHOENIX MURDER

I have finally figured out the Redmond murder case. Since I am not extremely quick on the draw, this has only taken me ten years and a few months. I sat in front of the television set Sunday night watching a show based on the Redmond killings called False Arrest,…

THE SCANDAL AT THE MESA POLICE DEPARTMENT

LATE ONE NIGHT, after everyone else had gone to bed, Dick told Stacie to take off her clothes. “Let me massage your whole body,” he whispered. “Take off your shirt and bra and I’ll just give your whole body a little somethin’.” Dick squirted some baby lotion into his hands…

A HIGHER POWER AT WORKCOPS SPY ON GAY BAR FROM HIGH-RISE

The owner of a downtown Phoenix gay bar accuses police of using binoculars to spy on him and his customers from an adjacent high-rise. And he’s right. But exactly why this is happening is under hot dispute. According to the bar owner, Steve Johnson of Cruisin’ Central, the problem started…

THE REAL HERO

Stacie Elliget hid from all but a few girlfriends that her father, Mesa Police Department patrol cop Dick Elliget, had been sexually molesting her for years. When she finally tried to get her mother to help her, she got an icy response. “I gave my mom a chance before I…

DISTURBING THE PEACE

It’s so peaceful and dark in Barbara Hughes’ neighborhood just south of Carefree Highway that three owls live there, and other wild critters regularly scamper through. But it’s peaceful only on the surface. A battle–so far a polite one–is being waged over whether bulldozers will move in. Hughes lives across…

MUSIC REVIEWS

Passionflies, Squid and Cherry wine New Times feasts on a banquet of local recordings It’s Arizona Music Conference and Showcase ’91 week in the Valley, so let’s celebrate local acts. In the spirit of the event–one designed to focus national attention on Arizona’s homegrown talent–we decided to feature the latest…

THIS SPORTING LIFE

There has been so much speculation surrounding the Arizona State University and Phoenix Cardinals football teams that I decided to see for myself. I drove over to Tempe to see the ASU-UCLA game hours before it was scheduled to start. It was a sunny day with temperatures in the 80s…

THE PRICE OF ARROGANCE

Money slips through his fingers like so much mercury. When the money belongs to a savings and loan, the loss is limited to its depositors–unless the loss is so enormous that the financial institution goes belly up and the taxpayers are left holding the bag. When the money belongs to…

MURDER AT ROCKY POINT

IT POURED ON THE day of Patricia Willoughby’s funeral. Even if headlights weren’t traditional for the members of a processional, the extraordinary number of creeping cars that snaked behind the hearse on the way to the Mesa graveyard would have needed their headlights because of the curtains of rain. Heaven…

IN THE NEWSROOM, POTS AND KETTLES

Bad things often happen to good journalists. Nina Totenberg of National Public Radio and Juan Williams of the Washington Post played key roles during the Senate confirmation hearings for Judge Clarence Thomas. Both, however, have come away from the event with their reputations under fire. This doesn’t really surprise me…

LOW TIDE IN AMERICA

LATE SUNDAY NIGHT–Finally, it is over. In Washington, D.C., it is past 2 a.m. This is the hour for stealth; a perilous period when muggers rule the streets. It’s a time for the criminal class to prevail and congressional pay raises to be voted. The faces of the senators are…

DIARY OF AN URBAN POET

Linda Lee Curtis grew up in Great Bend, Kansas, the daughter of an oil-field worker. She moved to Phoenix 11 years ago and settled in a simple clapboard house near the State Capitol. Since that time, she and her husband, Ron, have lived frugally–a 1967 Volkswagen is their transportation–and have…

BUILT ON A LIETHE GOVERNOR’S BEST DEFENSE JUST CRUMBLED

On October 4, Governor Fife Symington’s official press secretary lied to New Times and the governor’s law firm released a misleading document to the newspaper in an apparent 11th-hour attempt to discredit federal reports that Symington in 1983 had violated banking law. Did Doug Cole, the Governor’s press secretary, deliberately…

HISTORIC PRESERVATION TAKES TO THE SHADOWSWHEN IT COMES TO SAVING PHOENIX’S RAREST BUILDINGS, CITY HALL SENDS THE WORK OUT OF TOWN AND LEAVES THE LOCALS IN THE DARK

OF THE 14 multimillion-dollar bond issues approved enthusiastically by Phoenix voters in 1988, the city’s $15 million proposal to preserve its architectural heritage was uniquely ambitious. Never before had the city even considered devoting such resources to historic preservation. No one familiar with Phoenix’s screwy sprawl would have believed the…