3/31/06
DETENTION ACADEMY OFFICERS GRADUATE TODAY
Future Jail Detention officers are graduating today from a Detention Officer
academy.
The Academy has been going on for the past few months with
future Detention officers from Graham, Greenlee, and Gila Counties attending.
11-cadets will graduate today (Friday, March 31, 2006), at a ceremony to
be held at the Graham County General Services Building at 8:00am. The Cadets
have completed 250-hours of training.
There were 5 from Graham County, 4 from Greenlee County and
2 from Gila County. It's the second joint academy graduation.

KONOPONIKI SAYS EAC BILL LEAVES
ED COMMITTEE
Arizona House Bill #2058, the piece of legislation that could possibly allow
Eastern Arizona College to become a four-year college, has been accepted
by the Senate Higher Education Committee. The bill will now go to the Rules
Committee and if it make it out of there, will go to the Senate Floor for
debate.
If the bill survives the Senate Floor, it will go back to
the Arizona House for reconsideration and then according to Representative
Bill Konoponiki, will "hopefully be signed by the Governor." Konoponiki
says, "this is a major win for the people of Graham, Greenlee, and
Gila Counties."
Konoponiki is hoping that if all goes well, Bill 2058 will
be signed into law by the first week in April.

BATCHELDER MISSING SINCE TUESDAY
EVENING
Safford Police and most of the Graham and Greenlee County law enforcement
community have been searching for Eve Marie Batchelder, 27, of Safford,
who has been missing since Tuesday evening, at around 8:00pm.
According to missing person information released by the Safford
Police Department, Batchhelder's family contacted Safford Police to
report that know one had seen Eve Marie and she didn't show up for
work on Tuesday. The police and Eve Marie's family are concerned for
her welfare.
Eve Marie Batchelder is 27-years-old; she is 5'1" in
height, weighs approximately 135 pounds and has blond hair and blue eyes.
Anyone in the community who might have seen Eve Marie Batchelder since Tuesday
evening is encouraged to contact the Safford Police Department.

Forest Service to seek more comments
on land sale
The public has another month to let the US Forest Service know what they
think of its plan to sell more than 300,000 acres of national forest. The
sale would funnel 800 million dollars to rural schools in 41 states.
Some of the land that could potentially be sold is located
in Arizona. Included are parcels in the Apache-Sitgraves National Forest
in Navajo and Greenlee counties and parcels in the Kaibab National Forest
in Coconino County.
Thursday was originally the deadline for public comment. Forest
Service officials extended it until May first after several members of Congress
asked them to give people more time to examine the tracts proposed for sale.


Feds indict nine in trafficking
of protected reptiles
Eight men and one woman from six states have been charged in federal indictments
with illegally trafficking in protected reptiles including Gila Monsters.
The indictments handed down by a federal grand jury in Arizona
charge the nine with violating the Lacey Act. It prohibits the unlawful
interstate sale and transport of reptiles - as well as wildlife or fish
taken in violation of state wildlife statutes.
The Fish and Wildlife Service says the Gila Monsters were
collected illegally in Arizona, then sold and transported to Oregon and
elsewhere. Those indicted include two people each from Arizona, California
and Texas, along with one person each from Oregon, Nevada and New York.
Conviction could bring penalties of up to 250,000 dollars
and five years in prison.

Researchers: Epilepsy cause identified
Researchers studying Old Order Amish children in Pennsylvania say they have
identified a genetic cause for epilepsy.
The Translational Genomics Research Institute in Phoenix says
this discovery could lead to the development of medicines to treat epilepsy
and autism. The institute made the finding along with the Clinic for Special
Children in Strasburg, Pennsylvania.
The new finding is published in the New England Journal of
Medicine. It describes a mutated gene that causes an epileptic disorder
in Old Order Amish children in Pennsylvania. All of the affected children
had relatively normal development until the onset of frequent seizures in
early childhood.

3/30/06
AZ COUNTY ATTORNEY AND SHERIFF'S ASSOCIATION MAILERS IS NO SCAM
If you received, in the mail, a letter from the Arizona County Attorney
and Sheriff's Association, asking for donations, this mailer is not a scam.
According to Graham County Sheriff, Frank Hughes, the Arizona County Attorney
and Sheriff's Association is a legitimate and legal association that actually
does help counties in Arizona.
Hughes said that he had applied for a $9,000 grant last year.
He was asking for the money for a senior citizen program in Graham County
called "Are You O.K.", from the association - and got it. Hughes
says usually Graham County will receive at least $1,000-per-year from the
Association to help pay for different county programs.
The Arizona County Attorney and Sheriff's Association
is a legitimate organization that really does help those in Arizona, and
if you decide to help them financially, you can be assured that your donation
will not be wasted.


HIKER DEVELOPS APPENDICITIS -
CALLS SEARCH AND RESCUE
A hiker who apparently developed an appendicitis, Tuesday night, while hiking
with the National Outdoor Leadership School, in the Guluiro Mountains, was
rescued and taken to the Northern Cochise County Medical Center in Willcox
for treatment.
The National Outdoor Leadership School is an accredited school
out of Wyoming that teaches people the skills to lead and operated safely
in the outdoors. They teach rock climbing, mountaineering, backpacking,
horsepacking and many other outdoor skills.
The Outdoor Leadership School was holding a hiking school
near Bonita and when victim Ben Peck, 19, developed the appendicitis. At
around 10:00pm, Tuesday night, the group contacted the Graham County Sheriff's
Office, requesting Search and Rescue because they might need help transporting
Peck to the "trail head" where he could be transported to a
hospital by ambulance.
Graham County Sheriff's Deputy, Sergeant Mike Wear,
was asked to lead the ambulance into the Ashcreek Trail-Head. Wear and the
Southwest Ambulance Crew were able to locate the hiking group treat the
victim and transport him to Northern Cochise County Medical Center.
There was no further information on the condition of Ben Peck.

House signals support for trespassing
law to fight illegal immigration
The Arizona House has given preliminary approval to a proposal that would
expand Arizona's trespassing law to enable local authorities to arrest illegal
immigrants.
Supporters say the approach would help communities catch illegal
border-crossers who manage to get past federal authorities. Opponents say
the idea won't lead to significant changes and that a similar strategy flopped
last year in New Hampshire because states don't have the authority to enforce
federal immigration law. The bill now moves to a formal vote by the House.
It would let local police officers ask criminal suspects about
their immigration status. That provision is aimed getting rid of "sanctuary
policies," which some officials say discourage or prohibit officers
from inquiring about a person's immigration status. Opponents say the approach
could lead to racial profiling of Latinos.

Wildfire burning in Chiricahua's
burns 470 acres
Fire officials are crediting higher humidity and cloud cover in helping
contain a wildfire burning in the Chiricahua Mountains. The Burro Fire has
consumed 470 acres and was 50 percent contained, Tuesday. Full containment
is expected by Friday.
The fire is burning in grass and brush on steep slopes about
seven miles southwest of Portal in the Chiricahua Wilderness. The fire is
difficult for crews to access by foot. Crews are working on containment
lines.
Three Hotshot crews, two Arizona Department of Corrections
crews from Douglas and Fort Grant and a Coronado National Forest crew are
working the fire. The cause is under investigation.


03/29/06
GLOBE WOMAN CAUGHT WITH KIDS IN N. CAROLINA
A 30-year-old Globe woman, who had taken her two kids and became a fugitive
was arrested in North Carolina, Friday, on kidnapping charges and accused
of posing as the kids father.
The saga culminated Friday when investigators on stakeout
in Roanoke Rapids, North Carolina, spotted a woman dressed as a man enter
a residence. Shellie White, who was divorced from her her husband, Ernest
Karnes, of Globe, and was living with a female partner, apparently carried
out the gender charade so convincingly that even her two children believed
she was their father.
After Ms. White was arrested, her children, now ages 6 and
8, asked the Deputy U.S. Marshals, "why they were arresting their daddy?"
White told officials that she never knew she was on the run.
Detective Johnny Holmes of the Gila County Sheriff's
Office in Globe, confirmed that White and Karnes shared custody of the children
when she left Arizona in 2003. However, he said, a parent who takes the
children and disappears under those circumstances is committing custodial
interference, a felony.
The kids, Erica and Dusty were reunited with their father
in Globe, on Monday.

TASK FORCE FOILS PRISON DRUG DELIVERY
The Southeastern Arizona Narcotics Task Force were able to foil a Safford
Prison drug delivery scheme involving a Tucson woman.
According to a Task Force report, The Narcotics Task Force
in cooperation with Department of Corrections Officers at the Safford Prison,
learned that a girlfriend of one of the inmates was coming from Tucson to
deliver 5-grams of heroin and 5.5-grams of cocaine, to an inmate.
The officers knew from phone taps at the prison and letters
that had been screened that Christine Veronica Valenzuela, 32, of Tucson,
was coming, Saturday morning, to visit her boyfriend, James "Jaime"
Gallegos, 32, who is incarcerated at the Safford Prison.
When Valenzuela arrived at the prison, Task Force officers
were waiting for her and asked that she come to the prison office. When
confronted about the drug scheme, Valenzuela confessed that she had been
told in a letter from an inmate named "D", to go to Casa Grande
ˆ pick up the cocaine and heroin ˆ and come to Graham County,
on Saturday, to visit her boyfriend. When she got here, she was to take
the drugs to the EAC campus and hide them in an orange juice container near
the baseball field. The drugs would then be picked up, on Monday, by a work-release
prison inmate. Valenzuela took the officers to the EAC ball field and showed
them where the drugs were stashed.
Task Force officers confiscated the drugs and arrested Valenzuela
and took her to the Graham County Jail. She was charged with Possesssion
of narcotic drugs, Possession for sale, Transportation of narcotic drugs,
possession of drug paraphernalia, and she was arrested on a warrant out
of Tucson.

Despite rain, climatologists still
concerned about warming trend
The Gila Valley and most of Arizona is getting some snow and rain. But it
isn't nearly enough to pull us out of the drought.
The head of the University of Arizona's Climate Assessment
for the Southwest program, recently wrapped up a study that shows wintertime
lows have been increasing in the state for 70 years. According to the study,
average wintertime lows rose more than one-degree a decade in Mesa, where
the biggest warm-up was reported.
While the effects are clear with longer growing seasons and
drier soils, climatologists say the long-term impact on the climate is harder
to figure out.


03/28/06
SPD CATCHES TWO IN BOWLING ALLEY BURGLARY
Safford Police officers were dispatched to the Safford Bowling Alley, at
around 2:00am, Saturday morning, in reference to a burglar alarm going off.
Safford Officers, who were responding to the burglar alarm,
approached the scene. They turned off their headlights as they slowly approached
the Safford Bowling Alley and witnessed two male subjects running across
the street and toward the Quality Inn. Several officers surrounded the area
and began searching the South side of the Quality Inn property.
A suspect was located, hiding in some bushes near the Southwest
corner of the motel. Chris Whitlock, age unknown, was ordered at gunpoint
to get on the ground. He was handcuffed and placed in a police vehicle.
Thatcher Police came to assist Safford PD, and they found
another suspect, Joshua Mata, breathing and sweating heavily, hiding inside
a car in the back seat. Mata was handcuffed and detained for his possible
involvement. Officers then went back to the Bowling Alley to assess the
damage. No one was found in the building. Extensive damage was done to the
East-Side door of the Bowling Alley.
A victims rights report was given to the Bowling Alley owner
to take inventory and see what was missing. Both Whitlock and Mata were
taken to the Graham County Jail.

2-TUCSON MEN KILLED IN ROLL OVER
ON TANQUE ROAD
Graham County Sheriff's Deputies were called to a single-vehicle roll
over accident that killed two Tucson men, and injured three other passengers,
Saturday evening.
The roll over accident happened about 4.4-miles south-west
of the Hot Wells on Tanque Road, around 5:30pm, Saturday evening. The driver,
34-year-old Daniel Gasper Ochoa, of Tucson, and a front seat passenger,
Julio Lomas Jr., 40, were both killed in the crash.
According to a Sheriff's Department report of the accident,
Ochoa, Lomas, and a female, middle-front seat passenger, Elizabeth Calanchi,
44, also of Tucson, had met 30-year-old Israel Christopher Mendoza of Benson,
and Cheryl Brathupt, 43, address unknown, in a bar in Willcox. The three
from Tucson asked Brathupt and Mendoza to show them where the Hot Wells
and Tanque Dunes were.
Brathupt and Mendoza got in the back of the 1999 Ford F-150
EX-Cab and were on their way to the Dunes when the roll-over occurred. Ochoa
and Lomas were both pronounced dead at the scene. Calanchi, who was complaining
of chest pain and difficulty breathing, was air-lifted to University Medical
Center in Tucson. Brathupt and Mendoza were both transported by ambulance
to Northern Cochise County Medical Center in Willcox, suffering from cuts
and bruses.
The accident is still under investigation.


Soldier arrested for allegedly
abusing his baby stepdaughter
A Fort Huachuca soldier has been arrested in connection with the abuse of
his three-year-old stepdaughter.
Sierra Vista police 23-year-old Curtis R. Dailey was taken
into custody Friday, on Post, and booked into the Cochise County jail on
one count of child abuse. His bond is a half million dollars.
Dailey's arrest came more than two months after Sierra Vista
police were notified by the Sierra Vista Regional Health Center ER that
the girl had been brought in for breathing problems. After she was examined,
the girl was immediately flown to UMC in Tucson where she would undergo
three surgeries for abdominal injuries.
Police determined the girl was injured while in Dailey's care
either in a car or at their apartment while her mother was at work.

3/27/06
State jobless rate falls in February
Arizona's jobless rate has dipped slightly.
The state says unemployment in February was four-point-four
percent, down four-tenths of a percent from January. Economists attribute
the decrease to a healthy rise in hiring normal for the month and strong
construction and hospitality industry activity.
The state Department of Economic Security says the state's
economy added nearly 37,000 non-farm jobs in February and is on track to
have the highest-ever employment level in the next few months.

Judge dismisses charges against
two men in player slaying
A judge has dismissed homicide charge against two Tucson men accused of
gunning down a college football player last year.
Twenty-year-old Nicholas Lee Arnold and two fellow students
from Western New Mexico University, in Silver City, New Mexico, were shot
at while in a car at a fast-food restaurant in Tucson on February 6th, 2005.
Authorities say more than 15 bullets hit the car and Arnold died at the
scene. His friends survived.
In April, police accused 20-year-old Juan Jose Olivares and
Mark A. Romero of the drive-by shooting. Earlier this month, a Pima County
Superior Court Judge threw out Olivares's confession.
The judge says gang detectives wrongfully coerced Olivares
into giving them statements after he invoked his right to remain silent.
The judge dismissed the case without prejudice March 14th but prosecutors
say they're working to refile charges.


3/24/06
BODY AND PIPE BOMB FOUND IN SILVER CITY, N. MEXICO
The body of a man and a pipe bomb were found, this week, in Silver City,
New Mexico Silver City police have identified the body of a man found, Monday
morning, on the 4100 Block of North Silver City Boulevard.
The body of 43-year-old Michael J. Schwiegart was found by
city workers at around 11:30am, Monday. The body was found in an empty lot.
According to police, there were no outward signs of foul play. The body
has been sent to the Office of the Medical Investigation for autopsy.
Also in Silver City, Construction workers at a new housing
development on Sara Court In Silver City, discovered a live pope bomb, Wednesday
afternoon, where they were working on an excavation project. It's
the third such device discovered in the town in less than two weeks.
The New Mexico State Police, the FBI, and the ATF were notified
and the State Police later detonated the device.

FORMER SAFFORD MIDDLE SCHOOL PRINCIPAL
ACCUSED OF FILMING TEENAGE GIRL IN WASHINGTON
A former Safford Middle School Principal has been accused of taking at least
100-videos of a nude and partially clothed 15-year-old girl at his home
in Port Townsend, Washington, Tuesday.
Rex E. Whipple, who is now principal of Chimacum High School
in Port Townsend, Washington, was formerly charged with "voyeurism",
Tuesday, in Jefferson County, Washington, Superior Court. Whipple appeared
in front of Superior Court Judge Craddock Verser in the County Jail in Port
Hadlock, Washington.
Voyeurism is defined in the charge as photographing or filming
a person without their knowledge or consent, while they are in a place where
they would have a reasonable expectation of privacy. Whipple's wife
turned her husband into authorities after finding out about the videos.
She learned about the videos from her daughter-in-law while Whipple was
visiting Arizona, a report states.
The daughter-in-law found the videos on Whipple's school
laptop computer. Whipple told the judge that he had lost the laptop on his
return trip from Arizona. Judge Verser raised concern that Whipple might
be a flight risk and ordered bail set at $25,000. Whipple was arrested Monday
and was carring almost $4,000 in cash. He had allegedly discussed leaving
Wednesday for Hawaii.
In Washington State, voyeurism is considered a Class C Felony
and carries a penalty of up to five years in prison and/or a $10,000 fine.


House OKs proposal on official
language
The Arizona House has approved a proposed ballot measure that would make
English the state's official language and require that government functions
be conducted in English. Supporters say the measure was needed to encourage
assimilation of immigrants, while opponents say the proposal was divisive
and fanned flames of intolerance.
A similar proposal made it through the Republican-led Legislature
last year, but was vetoed by Governor Napolitano. She had said she believed
non-English speakers should be encouraged to learn the language, but that
the bill didn't do anything toward that end. The House's 34-to-22 vote nearly
along party lines sent the resolution to the Senate. If approved by the
full Legislature, this year's proposal would bypass the governor and be
decided by voters in November.
A similar law approved by votes in 1988 to make English the
state's official language was overturned in 1998. That law was declared
unconstitutional by the state Supreme Court, which ruled that the change
violated free-speech rights.

3/23/06
House signals support for ballot measure on immunity for policE
The Arizona House has given preliminary approval to a proposed ballot
measure that would provide legal immunity to law enforcement officers for
using "police tools" on people who are committing felonies.
Proponents say police tools include handcuffs, guns and other
items used to stop suspects. Opponents say the proposal was meant to protect
Scottsdale-based stun-gun maker Taser International Incorporated.
The proposal also would provide civil immunity to crime victims,
local governments and manufacturers of police tools if a person is harmed
by the tools while committing or attempting to commit a felony or fleeing
while committing a felony. The immunity wouldn't apply if the tools were
used in intentional misconduct.
The proposal, if approved by the full Legislature, would appear
on the November ballot.


RICHARD MACK TO RUN FOR U.S. SENATE
Former Graham County Sheriff, Richard Mack, has announced that he will be
running for the U.S. Senate between now and the first Tuesday in November.
Mack is a native Arizonan and grew up in Safford. He graduated from EAC
in 1975, and later received his BA degree from BYU in Latin-American Studies
and Sociology.
Mack started his law enforcement career in Provo, Utah. He
served as communications Supervisor, an undercover narcotics agent, a detective,
and sergeant. In 1988, Mack moved back to Graham County and was elected
twice as Graham County Sheriff. Mack says that the reason he is running
for U.S. Senate is that he feels that our country is in a most precarious
position. He says, "We are under an historic and disastrous debt."
Our military is being misused and spread far too thin, security
is still enormously inadequate at our borders and freedom has sadly become
a meaningless word used by politicians at Fourth of July ceremonies."
Mack says he's "not a politician." He supports the decriminalization
of marijuana and expects the Federal Government to get out of the way let
the States take care of marijuana enforcement.
Richard Mack is the son of G. Wayne and Ruth Mack. He has
been married to Dawn Beals for 31 years and they have five children.

3/20/06
22-UDA'S CAUGHT IN SAFFORD
A County deputy on patrol early Wednesday morning found 22-undocument illegal
immigrants inside a van that he had stopped for a traffic violation. At
around 4:50am, the patrolling deputy was passed by a blue 1985 Ford van
with a tail light missing and no license plate.
The deputy turned on his overhead lights and signaled for
the van to stop. The vehicle was west bound on highway 70 and continued
into the parking lot of an old Chevron gas station, just East of McDonalds.
As the van began to slow down, the driver and passenger doors opened and
three male subjects jumped from the moving vehicle and began to run North
into a cotton field.
The van continued to roll across the parking lot; the open
passenger side door hit a metal post and the vehicle continued to roll toward
a brick fence. Luckily the van stopped before it hit anything else. The
deputy got out and looked inside the van and found 22 illegal immigrants
crammed into the back of the van.
All of the passengers were illegal immigrants. They were taken
by a Sheriff's van to the Graham County Jail where they were held
for Willcox Border Patrol. The van was towed to the Graham County Yard.


3/17/06
Kyl immigration measure would spend $2 billion on enforcement
Under a measure added to a Senate budget proposal by Senator Jon Kyl, the
government would spend two billion dollars more to enforce immigration laws.
Kyl's provision would provide money for the State Criminal
Alien Assistance Program, which reimburses states and local governments
for the cost of incarcerating criminal illegal immigrants. It would increase
the number of federal prison beds and workers and increase to three-thousand
the number of Border Patrol agents added in 2007. The measure also allows
the government to set up a nationwide system that would help employers verify
workers' citizenship status.

THATCHER GIRL INJURED AND FLOWN
TO TUCSON
Graham County Search and Rescue had to be called out on Friday evening,
to search for a missing 13-year-old girl. Stephenie McClure, 13, of Thatcher
had told her 15-year-old brother that she was going to ride around on her
4-wheeler, at around 2:00pm, Friday afternoon. She left the house and didn't
come home.
Meanwhile, Stephenie's mom, who was pregnant, had earlier
that day had gone into premature labor and had to be flown to University
Medical Center in Tucson. According to Mike McEuen, Thatcher Police Chief,
Stephenie's father, Randall McClure had gone to Tucson to be with his wife
during the emergency and arranged for an aunt to come and be with the kids.
The aunt could not come to the house immediately and Stephenie had left
before the aunt arrived.
After waiting for Stephenie for approximately 4-and-one-half-hours,
the aunt decided to contact law enforcement at around 6:30pm and then Search
and Rescue was called out at around 7:30pm. Law enforcement searched for
about an hour-and-a-half until they found Stephenie near the Thatcher Sewer
Ponds. She had wrecked earlier that day and had been trapped under her 4-wheeler
for approximately 4-hours.
Medical personnel arrived at the scene and had Stephenie airlifted
to Tucson. Stephenie said that she could not feel her legs and she was suffering
from exposure, and hypothermia. There is no word yet on Stephenie's
condition.


3/09/06
UPDATED: Road near Bisbee still closed; propane burn-off slower than expected
It's taking longer than expected to burn off propane gas in an overturned
tanker truck that plunged down a mountainside a few miles west of Bisbee
yesterday morning. State Route 80 west of the Mule Mountain tunnel to the
junction with State Route 90 remains closed until that can be done.
Officials had hoped to have the highway reopened by noon today.
But DPS says it will be tonight at the earliest, and possibly not until
Friday morning, before that will happen. DPS says overnight low temperatures
slowed down the burning off of the propane. In addition, it says once that's
completed it will take several hours for wreckers to remove the tanker from
the bottom of the ravine.
The driver of the tanker was hurt when the truck crashed through
a guard rail Wednesday morning and plummeted 80 feet down an embankment.
The cab caught fire, scorching the tanker.

PROPANE TANKER CRASHES - INTACT
WEST OF BISBEE
Authorities say a tanker truck with 93 hundred gallons of propane gas stayed
intact, though the cab caught on fire, after the truck plunged down a mountainside,
west of Bisbee, Wednesday. Arizona Department of Safety spokesman, Jim Oien
says DPS Hazardous materials personnel arrived at the scene, Wednesday afternoon.
The tanker was scorched but did not leak during crash. The
tanker was eastbound on Arizona 80 when it drifted off the road, crashed
through a guard rail, and plunged down an 80-foot embankment and flopped
onto its side.
The driver was air-lifted with nonlife-threatening injuries
by helicopter to University Medical Center in Tucson. The accident occurred
about two miles west of the Mule Mountain tunnel leading into Bisbee.
There were no businesses near where the truck rolled off the
road, and no homes or businesses had to be evacuated.


Arizona Senate approves National
Guard proposal
The state Senate has approved a proposal requiring Governor Napolitano to
follow through on her idea to put National Guard troops at the Arizona-Mexico
border to crack down on illegal immigration. The bill also would provide
ten million dollars in state money for that effort. It was approved in an
18-to-11 vote and could receive a final vote by the state House as early
as tomorrow.
The governor has asked the military to pay for sending unspecified
number of additional troops to work at crossing points, assist with cargo
inspection and operate cameras and mobile observation points so they can
report suspicious activity.
Last week, though, Napolitano said she was prepared to spend
state money for the project. She also has said the proposal would intrude
on her authority to command the Arizona National Guard. Arizona already
has about 170 National Guard troops at the border assisting federal and
state officers with communications, fence construction and anti-drug efforts.

Senate approves $1 billion to
help poor with energy costs
The US Senate has approved and sent to the House a bill providing an extra
one billion dollars to help low-income families cope with rising energy
costs.
The measure met resistance from Senator Jon Kyl, who said
the money is slanted toward heating, rather than cooling, and tends to dry
up by the time low-income people need help in the summer.
Kyl says funding from the Low Income Home Energy Assistance
Program reaches only four percent of those eligible for assistance in Arizona.
He pushed for a formula that would guarantee all states a fair share.
The Senate approved a compromise, which calls for half of
the new money for energy bill assistance to be distributed according to
the existing formula. The rest would be considered emergency spending. Kyl
says it should provide Arizona a 57 percent increase over what the original
bill would have offered.


3/07/06
Estimate: Illegal immigrant population hits 12 million
A new report estimates the number of illegal immigrants in the United States
has grown to as high as 12 million.
The Pew Hispanic Center report estimates that undocumented
workers fill one out of every four agricultural jobs, 17 percent of all
office and house cleaning positions, 14 percent of construction jobs, and
12 percent of those who work in food preparation. The report found that
the pace of illegal immigration is increasing, despite government efforts
to crack down.
President Bush has called for a program that would grant temporary
worker status to illegal immigrants already here. The House rejected the
program and instead passed a border security bill last year that pleased
those calling for a crackdown on illegal immigration. The Senate is trying
to address both border security and the temporary worker program, but consensus
has been elusive.

CHURCH OF COGNIZACE SERVED SEARCH
WARRANT FOR POT
Graham County Sheriff's Deputies along with the Graham County Narcotics
Task Force and agents from the DEA, served a search warrant on the Church
of Cognizance, on Klondyke Road, Friday morning, in search of a load of
marijuana.
The Church of Cognizace, which gives Pima, Arizona as the
address of their World Headquarters, considers marijuana a "religious
sacrament", and allegedly use and smoke marijuana in their religious
ceremonies.
The agents and deputies who served the search warrant at the
Church of Cognizance, located about one-half-mile, South of Highway 70,
on Klondyke Road, did not find any marijuana on the church property, Friday.
According to Graham County Under-Sheriff, Dave Boyd, Dan and
Mary Quiantaince, who are the leaders of the Church of Cognizace, and live
at the Klondyke Road church compound, had been arrested in Las Cruces, New
Mexico, for possession and transportation of 172-pounds of marijuana, a
few days earlier. The brother-in-law of Mary Quiantaince, named Joseph Buttz,
47, of Pima, was also arrested by the DEA, about three weeks ago in Missouri
for possession and transportation of 332-pounds of marijuana.
Graham County officials did not find any illegal drug activity
at the Church compound but they did confiscate 5-church lap-top computers,
two regular church computers, and 4-or-5 burlap backpacks used to smuggle
marijuana across the US-Mexico border.

SV MAN GIVEN PROBATION FOR KILLING
ROOMMATE
A 26-year-old Sierra Vista man was given 4 years supervised probation from
a Cochise County Superior Court Judge, for accidentally killing his roommate,
on May 17, 2005.
Eric Michael McCray pleaded guilty to negligent homicide in
connection with the death of Todd Stansbury, 21, whom he shot in the neck
with an semi-automatic pistol in the home they shared in Sierra Vista.
According to court testimony, McCray was married to the daughter
of one of Todd Stansburry's aunts. Also, evidence showed that McCray and
Stansbury had been arguing when McCray pointed the handgun at Stansbury
and pulled the trigger.

Senate backs 'three sentencing'
sentencing law
The State Senate has voted to ask Arizona voters to approve a ``three strikes''
law to get tough on violent crime by requiring life sentences for felons
convicted twice before of violent or certain other serious crimes. The Senate's
17-to-12 vote sent the resolution to the House. Passage by that chamber
would put it on the November ballot.
Arizona law already provides for longer prison sentences for
repeat offenders, but the state doesn't have a three-strikes law. The measure
would require a life term for a third conviction for any of an assortment
of offenses. No early release would be permitted except for commutation
of sentence after 35 years.
More than 20 other states have three-strikes law, and the
bill's sponsor said failure to enact a similar law would encourage hardened,
violent criminals to move to Arizona.


3/05/06
SPD CHASES AND ARRESTS MOTORCYCLE RIDER
Safford Police were called to the Valley Apartments, early Monday morning,
to a call of a man beating on an apartment door and threatening the resident.
When Safford Police arrived they talked to the resident and he said the
man who threatened him took off on a motorcycle.
Just about that time, a motorcycle rider was seen leaving
the Valley Apartments parking lot at a high rate of speed. Officers tried
to flag him down but he went around one officer on foot with a flashlight
and a patrol car in the parking lot before speeding off into the night.
Safford officers chased the motorcycle rider through the southernstreets
of Safford, until he ended up near the Safford Stake Center, off of 20th
Street. The persued rider wrecked his bike on the grass of a residents near
the Stake Center and took off on foot, but was quickly captured and handcuffed
by pursuing Safford Officers.
34-year-old Francisco Rene Perez, of Safford, told officers
that he thought he broke his shoulder when he wrecked his bike. The officers
took him to the Mt. Graham Regional Medical Center for medical care.
Meanwhile, officers found out that there was a warrant out
for Perez's arrest. He was wanted for Theft of Transportation, a Class 3
Felony, Trafficing in stolen property, a class 2 Felony, and Theft, a Class
6 Felony. After being treated at the hospital, Perez was taken to the Graham
County Jail.

Drought pushing more animals into
southern Arizona communities
Wild animals left parched by the ongoing southern Arizona drought are increasingly
venturing into area communities as they search for water and food.
An Arizona Game and Fish Department official says droughts
often lead to more animals visiting populated areas. The official, Bob Fink,
says the water used on golf courses is ideal for wildlife, as are other
areas where water is stored, such as bird baths.

Local elections are first test
of new voter ID requirement
Local elections on March 14th will serve as the first test of a new requirement
that Arizonans show their identification when casting votes. The requirement
is part of Proposition 200, a 2004 voter-approved that also denies some
government benefits to illegal immigrants. Voters with insufficient identification
can cast a provisional ballot, but may be asked to return to an election
office with valid ID within 72 hours to have their ballot counted.
Officials say they don't know whether people with ID problems will return
to prove their ballots should be counted. Election officials are hopeful
a blitz of media attention and public education efforts by the government
and public groups have hit the mark. Supporters of the new requirement say
it will help deter voter fraud, while critics say it will hinder voter participation.

3/03/06
PRESCRIBED BURN ON 4-BAR MESA
The U.S. Forest Service and the Clifton Ranger District will be conducting
a prescribed burn on 4-Bar Mesa in Northern Greenlee County this weekend.
Forest Service personel will attempt to burn 350-acres of pinon, juniper,
and grassland in the area, which is near Highway 191.
Motorists and campers can expect smoke to visable from the
4-Bar Mesa area through this weekend.

Report finds sharp rise in treatment
rates for meth abuse
The number of people seeking treatment for methamphetamine abuse is rising
sharply.
A government report finds the number more than quadrupled
from 1993 to 2003. The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration
report says 28,000 people were admitted across the country for treatment
in 1993. That number rose to nearly 136,000 patients in 2003. The study
also finds more states in the West than in any other region exceeded the
national average of admissions for meth treatment.
But Arizona was only one of those states to have an admissions
rate below the national average. Arizona had 36 admissions per 100,000 people
ages 12 or older in 2003. That's compared to the national average of 56
admissions per 100,000 people.


Study: Lifting weights helps control
belly fat in women
Researchers say just two one-hour sessions of weightlifting a week can help
women battle bulging bellies.
A new study focuses on intra-abdominal fat. That's the deep
fat that wraps around organs and is linked to heart disease. A cardiologist
at St. Luke's Hospital in Kansas City says ``the number-one complaint''
for aging women is tummy growth.
The study broke 164 overweight and obese Minnesota women from
24 to 44 years old into two groups. One participated in a two-year weight-training
program. The other got a brochure recommending 30 to 60 minutes of exercise
most days of the week.
The weight-training women had just a seven percent gain in
intra-abdominal fat. That compares to 21 percent for the other group. And
the weight-lifters also cut body fat percentage by almost four percent.
The National Institutes of Health paid for the study presented Friday at
an American Heart Association conference in Phoenix.

Immigration debate begins in Senate
The US Senate has takn up what a key senator called the ``gigantic task''
of tightening US borders against illegal immigration. The Senate Judiciary
Committee is holding the first of what are expected to be a series of session
trying to put together an immigration reform bill.
Republican Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania chairs the panel.
He says the aim is to protect the nation's borders while maintaining the
flow of low-wage workers for US business.
The House passed a border security bill last year -- to the
satisfaction of conservatives clamoring for an immigration crackdown. But
that came only after House leaders beat back an attempt by some GOP members
to include President Bush's proposal for a temporary worker program. In
contrast, the Senate is wading right into the thorny guest worker issue.


Governor prepared to have state
pay for troops at the border
Governor Janet Napolitano says she's prepared to use state money to pay
for sending National Guard troops to the Arizona-Mexico border to crack
down illegal immigration if the military declines to pick up the bill.
Yesterday's statement is the closest the governor has come
to committing state money for her proposal to send troops to the border.
When asking the military in late December to pay for her proposal, Napolitano
had said her plan would be impossible without complete federal funding.
Last week, she didn't rule out state funding for her plan,
but cautioned that doing so would likely reduce Arizona's immigration assistance
from the federal government. Her idea is to expand the National Guard's
border presence from its current role in helping in anti-drug efforts to
performing other duties to give federal agents more time catch illegal border-crossers.
The governor says the military has made no decision on her
request.

03/02/06
MAN OFFERS TRUCK DRIVER 25K FOR LOAD OF COPPER
The price of copper is getting so high that truck drivers are being offer
top dollar for their loads.
That's just what happened to Jim Berry, a truck driver
for J & B Trucking, as he was hauling a load of copper from Morenci
to Miami, Tuesday afternoon. Berry was having problems with his semi truck
on Highway 70, coming into Safford from Morenci, with a full load of copper
ingots.
Berry was checking the fluids in his semi when saw a van with
two men in the vehicle pull up behind his rig. The passenger got out and
asked if he needed any help. Berry said "no", if he couldn't fix
the truck, he had a cell phone and he could call someone if he needed help.
The man then told Berry that he would give him $25,000-dollars,
cash, for the 44,000-pound load of copper on his truck, and he asked he
would deliver it to someplace in Phoenix. Berry refused. The man then asked
him if he would alow them to get another vehicle and transport the copper
themselves for the same price. Berry refused again. The man left and Berry
contacted the Safford Police Department and reported the incident. Berry
told officers that he didn't know if the incident was a prank or possibly
a test of some sort.

Senate hearing focuses on immigration
issues
Senators are giving a glimpse of immigration issues that are expected to
come to the forefront in Congress.
A subcommittee was told Wednesday that smugglers coming across
the US-Mexico border are getting more violent. One Arizona sheriff says
deputies now expect to be attacked as they patrol the region. Cochise County
Sheriff Larry Dever says smugglers themselves will confront and attack rival
gangs in shootouts on public streets. One landowner complained that hundreds
of illegal immigrants are moving past his ranch every night.
President Bush and President Vicente Fox of Mexico spoke last
week about how to improve security along the border. Tension flared between
the two countries in January when men in military-style uniforms were filmed
in Texas unloading what appeared to be bundles of marijuana. Some alleged
the men were from Mexico, others claimed they were American soldiers.

SEARCH CONTINUES FOR COCHISE COUNTY
MAN
The Cochise County Sheriff's Department continues to investigate a missing
person case involving Ronald Harland Stanwood Jr., who was last seen May
2005, in the Pearce/Sunazona area.
According to Stanwood's sister, Laura, who lives in Safford,
her missing brother is a "nationally known" monster truck driver,
who appeared on television with "The Rock", "Stone Cold"
Steve Austin, and "The Gravedigger".
According to Laura, Ronald moved to Arizona when was 13. Stanwood
is currently taking medication and if he does not have it available, he
may experience episodes of amnesia. Ronald Stanwood is 31-years-old, 5-feet,
7-inches tall, and 145-pounds.
Anyone with any information about Ronald Stanwood Jr., is
encouraged to contact the Cochise County Sheriff's Office.


MAN INJURED IN SINGLE-VEHICLE
ACCIDENT
Graham County dispatch received a call from a man who had assisted a single-vehicle
accident victim, Monday night, and gave him a ride home.
Adam Torrio, 25, of Solomon was traveling on Solomon Road
and noticed a wrecked vehicle and an injured man on the side of the road.
Torrio stopped to help the man who was identified as Gary Scott Attebery,
53, who lives on Stockton Road.
Attebery was bleeding from the back of his head and he asked
Torrio to give him a ride home. Torrio drove Atteberry home and then called
Graham County Dispatch to report the accident. Deputies weren't able to
find Attebery until around 11:00am, Tuesday morning.
Attebery told deputies that he was Westbound on Solomon road,
at around 9:00pm, Monday night when a coyote ran out infront of his vehicle.
He swerved to miss the coyote and lost control of his vehicle. No citation
was issued in the incident.

OVER 1000-LBS OF POT FOUND OVER
WEEKEND
Law enforcement in Southeastern Arizona seized over 1000-lbs of marijuana
over the weekend.
At around 6:30am, Saturday on U.S. Highway 191, North of Douglas,
U.S. Border Patrol agents encountered two men driving a stolen Dodge pickup
heading North.
When agents attempted to stop the vehicle, the men turned
around and headed back south. Agents temporarily lost sight of the pickup
but found it again near Arizona 80 and Golf Course Road in east Douglas.
There, the two men hit an impassable wash and ran from the pickup. Officers
from the Douglas Police Department and Immigration and Customs Enforcement
got involved and helped capture the men. The agents found 659-pounds of
marijuana in the truck.
On Sunday morning on Arizona 82, just north of Patagonia,
Santa Cruz County Sheriff's deputies found 364-pounds of marijuana
in an abandoned 1998 Chevy Van, according to Sheriff Tony Estrada. He said
the driver probably had car problems and abandoned the load.

Western-state governors call for
guest worker plan, immigration reform
The Western Governors Association has called on Congress to pass comprehensive
immigration reform including a temporary guest worker program.
The proposal sponsored by Governor Napolitano and Utah Governor
Jon Huntsman calls for a guest worker program to supplement areas where
there are documented shortages of US workers. It says there should be proper
background checks and screening by the federal government for immigrants
allowed to work under the program.
The proposal also calls for reimbursement for local and state
governments for costs associated with dealing with illegal immigration.
In addition, it seeks passage of a comprehensive national immigration policy
that will strengthen security along the US-Mexico border.