New Cannabis Group Opposes Recreational Pot Initiative, Plots an Alternative
If a new group gets its way, there could be a competing initiative to legalize marijuana on Arizona’s 2020 ballot.
If a new group gets its way, there could be a competing initiative to legalize marijuana on Arizona’s 2020 ballot.
“That was true haha working in the kitchen I read it,” wrote one officer.
Michael Trailor is leaving. No one knows exactly why, or what he’s doing instead.
“How crazy do I need to act to get out of here?” one Maricopa County Attorney’s Office slide says.
“In many ways, this case is an example of the system responding to a girl of color who has experienced trauma by punishing her.”
“So there’s no marijuana or anything like that in the car I need to know about, no cocaine … no heroin?”
“She should have never been working on the auger with it moving. She was told not to,” Jim Manos said of Mary Stinson.
Who knew a few words could make such a big difference?
The city says safety is the concern. Cyclists say that’s unbelievable.
“Right now, things are really shitty, and you have to be able to go to a place that replenishes your heart and your soul, wherever that may be.”
By the time slices of deli meat arrived in prison, “it was already turning green,” Sierra Bruce said.
Juan Martinez will no longer be handling death penalty cases, according to a statement released by acting Maricopa County Attorney Rachel Mitchell.
First, Melvin was appaerntly forced out as Salt River Police Chief, then from Port Arthur, Texas. Now, the Maricopa County Sheriff’s Office has hired Melvin.
Arizona’s cannabis industry won’t be a Wild West for much longer.
The anti-vaxxers are at it again.
Dozens of Arizona elected officials say the business of Arizona is … refugees.
Its decision came after Mary Stinson, an inmate who made $4.25 an hour working at Hickman’s, lost a finger while doing maintenance there.
One day after a New Times report.
Bluntly speaking, any Arizonan who consumes cannabis frequently should obtain one of these get-out-of-jail free cards.
Seniors are a growing but overlooked group within a burgeoning homeless population.
Almost all of recommendations the committee is reviewing were made in response to high-profile incidents of bad publicity for Phoenix police.