Taken to the Cleaners

Eleven years ago, after her father suffered a stroke, a middle-aged housewife and mother named Charlotte Walton suddenly found herself at the helm of Maroney’s, the family dry-cleaning and laundry business. Walton put in long hours at Maroney’s, which has two locations in Phoenix. As company president, she rarely took…

Flashes

Longest Flash on Record The Flash couldn’t help enjoying the view as Sheriff Joke Arpaio went into complete spin-and-fluster mode last week after questions were raised about his investigation into the June death of inmate Scott Norberg. Equally amusing, however, was the source of the sheriff’s consternation: stories by Arizona…

Greenhouse Defect

Geochemist Wallace Broecker once voiced this astute observation about Biosphere 2: “To run three acres of land without God is really complicated.” There’s no debating a statement like that, but getting into the minibar in Room 16 at the Biosphere Hotel is not without its own level of complexity. And…

Letters

Priority Mail New Times’ cover for March 6 is disgusting! A child with a cigar in his mouth! It is illegal for children to smoke, even those in rock bands! This boy is a role model, and New Times is blatantly supporting a sick message (“Straight Outta Scottsdale,” David Holthouse)…

A Hap-less Case

Part 1 of this series established that animosity between Jeanne Tovrea and her stepchildren led to estrangement and litigation. It showed how James “Butch” Harrod, the man accused of killing her, continues to proclaim his innocence despite the damning presence of his fingerprints at the crime scene. Part 2 examined…

Desperately Seeking Susan B.

Peering over the podium at a Washington, D.C., fund raiser last July, the tiny dark-eyed child in the white satin dress flashes her audience a disarming smile–then proceeds to annihilate them with comic timing worthy of Johnny Carson. “Right now I know exactly how Susan B. Anthony felt,” announces the…

“. . . I’m on a Conveyor Belt to Death Row”

James “Butch” Harrod contacted New Times through his sister, June Barney, a few months after his September 1995 arrest. Barney said her brother was unhappy at the time with his attorney, a Maricopa County deputy public defender. She said Harrod wanted to tell his story publicly, no holds barred. New…

Requiem for a Rogue

Descriptions that weren’t heard at a memorial service for Phoenix attorney Mike Scott last Saturday morning: Elegant. Subtle. Wimpy. Pompous. Mellow. Slick. Those who paid their respects at Phoenix’s St. Francis Xavier Catholic Church ran the gamut. Cowpokes wearing blue jeans and garish belt buckles mingled with barristers in Brooks…

Feds Sue Arizona

Janet Reno, U.S. attorney general, made good on a threat by filing a civil rights lawsuit against the State of Arizona on Monday. The lawsuit could result in yet another instance in which a judge will oversee certain aspects of the prison system–an arrangement loathed by Governor J. Fife Symington…

Alien Victory

Oscar Fuchslocher is still behind bars at a U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service detention center in Florence, but a federal court decision means he should be reunited with his wife in Phoenix as early as this week, according to Fuchslocher’s lawyer, Patsy Kraeger. Fuchslocher is a Chilean citizen who has…

Letters

Have Money Will Sing I must say I wasn’t at all surprised by the article about Chronic Future (“Straight Outta Scottsdale,” David Holthouse, March 6). Before I continue, let me just say that I have listened to the band’s CD and, after reading the piece about the group, I realize…

The Secret Worlds of Big Jake

Visions are real, they do exist. Visions arise in intelligent brains. Every intelligent brain has the prerequisites for creating visions. The impulse for producing visions is of extraterrestrial origin. –Erich von Daniken What you are about to read may shock and disturb you. You may find it difficult to believe…

Straight Outta Scottsdale

Willobee Carlan marches around the main floor of the Dragonflye, clutching a guest list that reads like a headhunter’s guide to music-industry lawyers, agents, A&R reps and midlevel record-company managers. His hair is slicked back. He is wearing sunglasses. He looks tense. Willobee manages a rock band. The band calls…

The Suspect’s Sidekick

The lead news story in Arizona on April 1, 1988, was a grabber. “Socialite found slain,” the headline in a Phoenix daily blared. The crime could have been taken from a Columbo script–a millionaire heiress to a cattle fortune is executed as she sleeps in her home. Phoenix police had…

Joint Attack

Let’s say you’re a pot smoker. Or a pot dealer. To you, a joint is probably no more odious than a six-pack of beer. If you weren’t too busy staring into your Lava-Lite this past Election Day, you even may have turned out to vote for Proposition 200, which, among…

Feds Slam Sexual Misconduct

Federal investigators say they have found an “unconstitutional pattern or practice of sexual misconduct” in Arizona women’s prisons, and the U.S. Department of Justice may sue the state over it. Assistant U.S. attorney general Deval Patrick directed a study of women’s prisons that lasted for 18 months, from February 1995…

Flashes

It’s Only $2 Billion Before Governor J. Fife Symington III seized power, state retirees knew their $13 billion nest egg at the Arizona State Retirement System was safely invested by reputable Wall Street money-management firms. But Symington, whose real estate development company once borrowed–but did not pay back–a six-figure loan…

Young, Gifted, Gay and Animated

Japanese animation icon Speed Racer does many extraordinary things. He has fantastic driving skills. His car can perform amazing feats. He is adept at throwing a punch, and getting himself into and out of incredible jams where evil lurks just around the next hairpin turn. But one thing the hot…

Letters

Buffaloed Bills Not only did John Dougherty’s article “DOC Paid Some of Fife’s Bills” (February 20) scream with detail, but Senator George Cunningham’s contention rings true that a department that generates unilateral decisions on spending undermines the Legislature in the very act, putting yet another yellow brick in the road…

Death of an Heiress

The cop and his prey faced each other in a quiet room at the Phoenix Police Department. It was the early evening of September 14, 1995. Veteran detective Ed Reynolds had craved this moment since 1992, when he’d taken on the task of revisiting one of Arizona’s most infamous unsolved…

Mr. Lopez Goes to Scottsdale

The Lopezes are like a lot of South Phoenix families. They work hard, obey the law and pay taxes like their neighbors. But for years they’ve been frustrated that the public school where they send their daughter Lupe is falling apart. State lawmakers say they’ve been trying to improve funding…

Flashes

Warner’s Warning When Department of Public Safety lieutenant colonel Charlie Warner summoned the troops in the Criminal Investigations Bureau to an emergency meeting on February 14, many officers believed a St. Valentine’s Day Massacre was at hand. “We thought the Hells Angels had declared war,” says one DPS officer. But…