Losing Patients

The Arizona Board of Medical Examiners (BOMEX) plans to ask legislators for more power and more secrecy, despite harsh criticism at a joint legislative hearing last week. BOMEX’s proposed legislation would enable the director, at the board’s discretion, to dismiss complaints, resolve cases in mediation and deny licenses. BOMEX also…

How the West Was Spun

Glenn G. Boyer–scholar, novelist, rancher, entrepreneur, horseman, humorist and icon–hefts Wyatt Earp’s rifle to pose with it for a photograph. This morning, he says, he’s accepted an offer of $200,000 for the rifle from a collector. “You better not put that in the paper or the guys who I owe…

Tell the Teacher We’re Cruisin’

Teacher, teacher, I declare–I see Monica Lewinsky’s underwear! Actually, the panties in question don’t belong to Lewinsky; they’re owned by drag queen Celia Putty, a performer at Wink’s, a Valley gay bar. But that doesn’t stop 30 Glendale Community College students and their instructor from roaring as the “semen”-caked intern…

The Inmate Who Cried Wolf?

What follows are excerpts from a May phone conversation between wolf advocate Pat Wolff and a man she says is Jody Lee “Chance” Cooper, who at the time was serving a sentence for firearms violations at a federal prison in Tucson. Cooper denies talking to Wolff, but comments the man…

Wildlife Disservice

Paul Morey had been waiting, hoping, to see something like this. “As we’re driving down a dirt road, we saw this elk calf bedded down,” the U.S. Fish and Wildlife technician says. “It suddenly jumped up when it saw two wolves coming.” The calf got up and ran across a…

Tweaking the Truth

For more than two years, the Maricopa County Sheriff’s Office has kept secret a toxicologist’s report concluding inmate Scott Norberg–who died when detention officers stuffed him into a restraint chair on June 1, 1996–was not high on methamphetamines at the time of his death, and that the drug had no…

Flashes

Pennant Fever You say you’re a baseball fan anticipating an intriguing 1999? Forget about it! There’s no need to play the games. The Arizona Diamondbanks have won the National League West. Might as well go ahead and hoist the banner. And fret not, diamond junkies can always speculate about who…

Red Hot Chile Paperwork

Former Chilean president Augusto Pinochet stands charged of murder, torture and kidnapping, but even he has access to the British court system as he fights his extradition to Spain. That’s better treatment than another Chilean, Oscar Fuchslocher, is getting in the United States. Fuchslocher, who has been ordered deported by…

Jailer’s Jihad

Ex-corrections officer Bill Haro thinks he knows exactly why his former employer, the Arizona Department of Corrections, suffers from a severe shortage of prison guards these days. It’s a lousy place to work, says the 16-year veteran of the Florence gulag, and it’s not because of the low pay or…

Letters

Clouds Over Sunnyslope This is the second time I ever had the dubious pleasure of reading anything you publish, and it happened this time only because a friend drew our attention to that portion of Brian Smith’s article (“Night in the City,” December 3) relating to Sunnyslope. I generally have…

How Dare They?

Arizonans have been joking about their cultural desert for years now. But recently Dr. Robert Knight, director of the soon-to-open Scottsdale Museum of Contemporary Art (SMOCA), has been putting a slightly different spin on the phrase. Ticking off the list of new or enlarged museums, theaters, sports halls and public-art…

Poring a Foundation

The Baptist Foundation of Arizona recently proclaimed a banner financial year despite the fact that investigators from three different state agencies are scrutinizing the foundation’s multimillion-dollar real estate and stock transactions with insiders, New Times has learned. The Organized Crime and Fraud Section of the Arizona Attorney General’s Office, with…

Flashes

Sheriff Raff The remarkable affidavit of former sheriff’s lieutenant Robert Wetherell continues to have repercussions after shaking up Sheriff Joke Arpaio and his favorite heavy, Dave Hendershott, director of the sheriff’s office. Wetherell blew the whistle on the dynamic duo, claiming that Hendershott in particular had rigged an internal investigation…

Balancing Act

Rob Smith, head of the Sierra Club in these parts, is a mild-mannered, middle-aged man. He doesn’t look like a bomb thrower. So he was taken aback when the Phoenix police detective approached him in a courtyard at the Pointe Hilton Resort at Tapatio Cliffs, where he was awaiting the…

Letters

Out of Bounds I have been heavily involved in the issues regarding the Washington Elementary School District’s proposed new school at Seventh Avenue and Peoria, which also proposes to use city park land by joint agreement between the school district and the City of Phoenix Parks and Recreation Department. My…

Trunk Murder?

Ruby, the Phoenix Zoo’s Asian elephant, died last month when her pregnancy went awry, and the city got the blues. Ruby had lived here almost 25 years–longer than most of us–and she’d become famous as one of the world’s most unlikely painters. Her works raised hundreds of thousands of dollars…

Fed Up

The U.S. Department of Justice is conducting criminal investigations into the deaths of county jail inmates Scott Norberg and Robert Butler. Christine DiBartolo, spokeswoman for the Justice Department’s civil rights division, confirms that both cases are being handled with help from the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Criminal civil rights investigations…

Night In The City

About suffering they were never wrong, The Old Masters; how well they understood. –W.H. Auden, Musee des Beaux Arts The Taxi Driver “Hey man, you wanna buy this gun?” says the yellowy-eyed Latino man in the back seat who has introduced himself as Hank. “For $80 it’s yours, mister. A…

Unpleasantville

Mary Corona and Nora Arbizo sit on the porch and play a morbid board game. With a cardboard box lid between them, they tally up the sick and the dead. Drawn on the lid is a crude map of their street in Hayden, Arizona, a tiny mining town 90 miles…

Flashes

Hookers for the Holidays The holiday spirit has infected the Flash. Consequently, this Burst of Light is pleased to pass along the following little advice column by Sam Greene, a former cop who patrolled East Van Buren. The Flash isn’t certain, but, judging from this essay, surmises that Greene was…

America’s Toughest Suspects

Last week, the U.S. Attorney’s Office said it will look into allegations that some of Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio’s deputies faced gestapolike tactics in Arpaio’s desire to root out dime-droppers. Those allegations surfaced in an affidavit by former lieutenant Robert Wetherell, who left the sheriff’s office in October and…

Letters

Peak Performance Michael Kiefer’s comprehensive article about the Phoenix Mountain Preserves (“Deconstructing the Phoenix Mountain Preserves,” November 26) is one of the best examples of investigative reporting I’ve seen in years! He really dug in and got an accurate and complete story about the alarming threat to our Valley’s crown…