COSMIC EVENTS

Atop Mount Graham inside the Columbine Visitor Center on a brisk Saturday morning, a half-dozen Department of Public Safety officers stood in a circle. They were discussing the merits of shining their shoes. “The colonel says we can wear Reeboks if we can get a shine on them,” one officer…

FOR DECONCINI, POLITICS WAS AN ENRICHING EXPERIENCE

It seemed a flawless setting. Dennis DeConcini visualized this as his final great moment in Arizona politics. Such presumption was not surprising. Over the years, the senior senator’s opinion of himself has been inflated in direct correlation to the swelling of his bank account. He was fresh from a single…

ALONE IN THE DARK

At the time, it seemed of no consequence. It happened on a night in Chicago while the Suns were playing in the championship series against the Bulls. The Suns had their backs to the wall after losing the first two games of the series here in America West Arena. And…

MAY DIVORCE BE WITH YOU

There wasn’t much left of Janet when Bob Hirschfeld got done with her. A tall, soft-spoken woman, she takes great pride in her rail-straight posture and unshakable composure. But after three hours of questioning, she seemed shrunken and lost–slumping against the courtroom table and weeping into her hands. Janet knew…

WHAT MAKES TAMMY RUN?GAMBLING-CAPITAL SKEPTICS HAVE RESERVATIONS ABOUT DEBBIE REYNOLDS, LAS VEGAS’ UNLIKELIEST INNKEEPER

LAS VEGAS–Gazing out a second-story window of the intimate “boutique” hotel that bears her name, Debbie Reynolds, best known for her role in 1957’s Tammy and the Bachelor, surveys the once-familiar landscape that’s rapidly being transformed into some sort of whacked-out theme park for gamblers. “This town has really changed,”…

DYING TO BE FREE

When Deborah Stuart left the home of her elderly aunt last July–skipping out on her probation officer, stealing $300 and leaving behind an $875 phone bill–there was little doubt where she was headed. The 31-year-old mother of two, a repeat felon, was making a beeline for Oklahoma–specifically for 1-918-596-5601, the…

NOTES FROM THE TELLURIDE FILM FESTIVAL

TELLURIDE, Colorado–It’s the fourth and final day. The 20th annual Telluride Film Festival is almost history. Everyone’s getting ready to blow town. Each Labor Day weekend, this film festival draws film buffs from all over the country. They watch four or five films per day, and grow punchy from being…

THE SINS OF THE BISHOP

Bishop Thomas J. O’Brien ought to be on his knees, praying for forgiveness. On Friday, August 27, Father Wilputte Alanson “Lan” Sherwood was sentenced to ten years in prison. In diaries and home movies seized by the police, the priest had chronicled his own sexual liaisons with 22 underage boys…

THE FORGOTTEN COURT

Abuses by attorneys and private fiduciaries such as Wayne Legg, Webber Mackey and others have led to proposed changes in how the Maricopa County Probate Court operates. “This hasn’t been a matter of a little tweaking here and there to get things up to speed,” says the court’s presiding judge,…

AS HELPLESS AS CHILDREN

The Kings of Probate Dorothy Richards hadn’t spoken to her Aunt Delores for years when she decided to look her relative up in early 1988. A few inquiries led the Newport Beach, California, resident to Delores Reichwein’s home in Mesa. But Richards’ visit to Arizona was short and sad. Her…

THE AX MAN COMETH

Kamala Stillwell opened her Sunday paper early in July to disquieting news. The Maricopa County Library District, she learned for the first time, was advertising for a new director. The job offering came as more than a slight shock to Stillwell. She has, after all, held the director’s post for…

THAT’S SPELLED P-L-A-G-I-A-R-I-S-M

Leo Damore was in a state of high dudgeon. At this moment, his fury knew no bounds. Damore’s blood had been stirred by reading an excerpt from Joe McGinniss’ latest book, The Last Brother, in the September issue of Vanity Fair magazine. Damore did not bother to pull punches, as…

ERIC MAGEARY ISN’T GOING ANYWHERE

I drove to the Arizona State Prison at Florence last week to watch the Board of Pardons and Paroles in action. Anyone who spends much time as a reporter will visit quite a few prisons and hear many inmates’ tales. I have talked to killers, gang leaders, bank robbers, drug…

DEAD & HARRIED

About noon on June 18, 1985, Josh Burner pulled his truck into a parking space in front of the Tempe Police Department. He had come to report a murder. He knew exactly what he wanted to say. As it turned out, Sergeant Mike Palmer, a detective, did the listening. “My…