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…

TO YOUR HEALTH!

Richardson Browne runs a little saloon that is midway between homey and swank style-wise and serves food that is healthy without being preachy about the fact. Located in a strip mall at Bethany Home Road and 16th Street, Richardson’s Hen House qualifies as a neighborhood hangout for citizens from central…

BOUND AND GAGGED

The recent U.S. Supreme Court decision, Rust v. Sullivan, prohibits family planning clinics that receive federal Title X funds from offering any information or counseling about abortion. When the new policy goes into effect, health professionals at the affected clinics will be forbidden to give information about the advisability and…

TAKEN FOR ANOTHER RIDE

If the old wives are right and bad news really does come in threes, then Tom Connelly is due for some good news very soon. In the past year, the former federal prosecutor has had a run of terrible luck. First, he resigned from the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Phoenix…

THE LONG GREEN

You are playing in your company’s annual golf outing, ostensibly a social occasion, but everyone knows the tournament’s results will be the topic of endless conference-table quacking back at headquarters. Interoffice alliances are forged on these occasions, mentors are acquired, careers are ruined. Fate has dropped you, a junior executive…

SCARRED FOR LIFE

Sue Holmes eyed the newspaper ad like a hungry fish eyes a worm. “I remember exactly what it said,” she recalls. “`Free consultation with one of Arizona’s leading cosmetic surgeons! No visible scars!’ I’d been thinking about doing something like that for a long time. It sounded great.” Since the…

SPELLING OUT RETARDATION

“Weirdo. Retard. Stupid. Slowpoke.” With gentle prodding, the third graders at Liberty Elementary School had no problem coming up with the words used to describe people with mental retardation. A few minutes later, the kids got a taste of what it’s like. Split up into small groups, they were told…

CURVE TO THE RIGHT

The race to replace retiring Maricopa County Supervisor Ed Pastor has taken an unexpected right turn with the emergence of three Republicans among five finalists recommended for appointment by a citizens panel. The advance of so many Republican candidates fires speculation–already smoldering–that the Board of Supervisors’ Republican majority will jump…

Keating’s Camelback Connection

So much happened here. And now the grass bordering the headquarters of Charlie Keating’s American Continental Corporation at 2735 East Camelback is burned out. The trees should be trimmed. The yellow awnings are faded. Some are torn to shreds. They haven’t been replaced. The place is run-down and seedy. I…

SPIES AND SAVAGES

The arrest of the militant environmentalists of Earth First! on May 30, 1989, included charges of terrorism directed at nuclear power plants in the West. The foundation for the alarming headlines that announced the bust is contained in government files. Those files detail an undercover FBI probe that began in…

WHERE’S THE NATION’S VIDEO CAPITAL?YOU WON’T BELIEVE IT

Never mind a car in every garage and a chicken in every microwave. Where in these United States is the couch-potato Utopia that has a videocassette recorder in virtually each and every home? Incredibly, the answer is Flagstaff. That’s what Arbitron, the national rating service that is one of the…

HAND IN HAND

“YOU BOND TO THE TORTOISES YOU FIND.” On the edge of Little Shipp Wash in west-central Arizona, the Sonoran Desert is settling in for the night. But the people inside a small trailer ignore the rattling call of a frog in a nearby acacia tree, the scent of moss and…

BITTER MEDICINE

It was bad enough that a jury found a partnership of nine East Valley doctors guilty of defrauding a California couple in a catastrophic real-estate deal in Mesa. The doctors practically went into cardiac arrest when, based on the jury’s verdict, they were found guilty of racketeering. Maricopa County Superior…

SABOTAGING THE SABOTEURS

That rarest commodity, a saboteur with a sense of humor, wrote the Arizona media in the second week of November 1987. A letter claiming credit for vandalizing ski lifts at Flagstaff’s Snow Bowl arrived on editors’ desks from a group calling itself the Evan Mecham Eco Terrorist International Conspiracy, EMETIC…

SOMEWHERE, BILL LEE IS LIGHTING A VICTORY CIGAR

These are truly dark days for sportswriters covering the Chicago Cubs. The sacking of Don Zimmer, a popular manager, is a comparatively minor source of the discontent. More and more, the total environment for the writers keeps evolving for the worse. There was a time when covering the Cubs was…