Serial killer's brother gets 18 years for stabbing

By Nick R. Martin | June 15th, 2009 | 1:32 pm | No Comments »


Jeff Hausner

The brother of serial killer Dale Hausner was sentenced to 18 years in prison today for nearly stabbing a man to death in 2006 in a Phoenix parking lot.

Jeff Hausner, 42, was convicted last month of attempted murder and aggravated assault for luring a man named Timothy Davenport to a church parking lot near 73rd Avenue and Camelback Road and stabbing him multiple times in the back.

The 18-year sentence was added atop an eight-year prison stint Hausner was already serving for stabbing another man around the same time.

In both cases, authorities believe he was accompanied by his younger brother, Dale, and a friend named Samuel Dieteman, both of whom were part of a broader, yearlong killing spree that later became known as the Serial Shooter case. That belief is based largely on testimony and statements by Dieteman, who admitted to being present for the stabbings, as well as taking part in two murders and numerous other shootings in the summer of 2006.

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Playboy lures CEO away from company that owns the E.V. Tribune

By Nick R. Martin | June 1st, 2009 | 3:14 pm | 2 Comments »


Scott Flanders

The adult entertainment company Playboy has lured chief executive Scott Flanders away from Freedom Communications, owner of several Arizona newspapers, giving him the job recently vacated by the daughter of founder Hugh Hefner.

For more than three years, Flanders has been the president and CEO of Freedom Communications, which owns the East Valley Tribune in Mesa, the Yuma Sun and numerous other newspapers and TV stations nationwide. Under Flanders’ watch, Freedom has lost major footing in the media world, slashing hundreds of jobs and becoming seen as a risky borrower with little likelihood of repaying its debts.

Now, one of the most recognizable brands in the world hopes Flanders can do for it what he could not do for Freedom — steer the company toward success.

Playboy Enterprises, based in Chicago, has suffered the same fate as many other media outlets in recent years with advertising and readership migrating to the web. The company lost $13.7 million in the first three months of 2009, shortly after the resignation of Christie Hefner, the founder’s daughter who led Playboy for two decades.

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Mom 'kept it together' trying to save Tyson girl

By Nick R. Martin | May 29th, 2009 | 11:39 pm | No Comments »


Mike Tyson

The frantic call came into 911. “My baby, she’s choked!”

Sol Xochitl, the ex-lover of boxing legend Mike Tyson, had just found their 4-year-old daughter hanging by the neck from an electrical wire inside her central Phoenix home. As Xochitl begged for emergency crews to hurry to the house, she could be heard counting out CPR pumps on little Exodus Tyson’s lifeless chest. “One, two, three, four…”

Her efforts ultimately could not revive the girl. Exodus was pronounced dead a little more than 24 hours later at St. Joseph’s Hospital and Medical Center in Phoenix.

Now, the drama of those few panicked moments Monday has emerged through police statements and a transcript of the call Xochitl made to 911. They show the young mom remained focused on trying to save her daughter as the girl quickly expired.

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Final trial begins in Serial Shooter case as accomplice fights death

By Nick R. Martin | May 21st, 2009 | 10:25 pm | No Comments »


Samuel Dieteman

He has arguably been one of the most important witnesses for Maricopa County prosecutors in recent memory. With Samuel Dieteman’s lengthy and detailed cooperation in the Serial Shooter case, authorities were able to link extra murders to serial killer Dale Hausner and convict him on six in all.

But despite the help of their star witness, prosecutors have continued to have one fact looming over them all the while: Dieteman himself, at one time, was a cold-blooded killer.

On Wednesday, the same team that relied heavily on Dieteman’s help since 2007 began proceedings in Maricopa County Superior Court to end his life. If they succeed, he will join Hausner, his former roommate, on Arizona’s death row.

Dieteman pleaded guilty in 2007 to the murders of Claudia Gutierrez-Cruz and Robin Blasnek, as well as conspiracy to commit murder for his three-month role in the yearlong killing spree that became known as the Serial Shooter case.

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End of an era: Judge refuses to force Tucson Citizen to keep printing

By Nick R. Martin | May 19th, 2009 | 2:07 pm | 2 Comments »


Terry Goddard

A federal judge today refused to force the owners of the Tucson Citizen to continue publishing the newspaper on a temporary basis, essentially ending any hope the afternoon daily would be sold or its staff would keep their jobs.

U.S. District Judge Raner C. Collins declined a request by Arizona Attorney General Terry Goddard to intervene in the matter, saying the state was unable to immediately prove the closure breaks federal anti-trust laws. The judge’s decision means Saturday’s commemorative edition of the state’s oldest newspaper was officially its last.

“Along with thousands of Citizen readers and subscribers throughout Tucson, we are disappointed with the judge’s ruling,” said Goddard’s spokeswoman, Anne Hilby in a statement released this afternoon.

Gannett Co., the media chain that owns the Citizen, announced on Friday it was stopping the presses on the 138-year-old publication after a four-month search turned up no viable buyer for the newspaper. The company plans to modify the paper’s website, tusconcitizen.com, into a hub for local commentary, staffed by at least two people, with no news or sports coverage.

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ABC 15 employees endure 10 percent pay cut this summer

By Nick R. Martin | May 18th, 2009 | 8:37 pm | No Comments »



ABC 15 in Phoenix announced station-wide cuts the same day as another Arizona media outlet, the Tucson Citizen, announced it was shutting off its presses. Heat City file

Friday, it turns out, was a worse day for Arizona media than we thought. Besides the radical changes at the Tucson Citizen and mass layoffs that went with it, the entire staff at Phoenix’s ABC affiliate, KNXV-TV (Channel 15), learned their parent company will be picking their pockets to help ease steep financial losses throughout the media chain.

ABC 15 staffers will each get one week of pay taken from their paychecks between now and July 31, according to a memo obtained this weekend by Heat City. That amounts to roughly a 10 percent pay cut during that time.


Brian Lawlor

The cuts were ordered by Brian Lawlor, the head of television for the E.W. Scripps Co., which owns ABC 15. In an email to employees on Friday, Lawlor said the cuts are meant to be temporary but executives would “continue to evaluate” the situation over time.

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State attorney general sues to keep Tucson Citizen alive

By Nick R. Martin | May 15th, 2009 | 7:06 pm | No Comments »


Attorney General Terry Goddard

The office of Arizona Attorney General Terry Goddard filed a federal lawsuit late today to prevent the closing of the Tucson Citizen, the state’s oldest newspaper, just hours after its parent company announced it would print its final edition tomorrow.

The lawsuit alleges the closure would violate federal antitrust laws. The Citizen is owned by the Virginia-based Gannett Co., which planned to shutter the newspaper but provide financial backing to and share profits with its largest competitor, the Arizona Daily Star. The lawsuit said the plan essentially amounts to an illegal agreement to end newspaper competition in Tucson.

“Newspaper readers and the Tucson community as a whole will be harmed by the elimination of the historic quality competition that has spurred the Star and Citizen to journalistic excellence,” the lawsuit said.

The attorney general’s complaint also names Lee Enterprises, the owner of the Star, claiming it is taking part in an effort to create a newspaper monopoly in the city. The lawsuit was filed just before 5 p.m. in Arizona’s U.S. District Court.

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'Worth more to its parent dead than alive,' Tucson Citizen to print final edition

By Nick R. Martin | May 15th, 2009 | 5:09 pm | No Comments »

Tucson Citizen

The Tucson Citizen is scheduled to print its final edition tomorrow and lay off most of its staff after its parent company refused to sell Arizona’s oldest newspaper to interested buyers.

Saying it is “no longer viable” to keep the Citizen alive in print, the Virginia-based Gannett Co., the nation’s largest newspaper chain, opted to fold the hard-copy edition of the newspaper and convert its website into a hub for local opinions, the parent company announced today. The shut down and layoffs come after Gannett reportedly turned down an offer from California investors to buy the newspaper for $500,000, an offer far below the company’s $800,000 asking price.

“Dramatic changes in our industry combined with the difficult economy — particularly in this region — mean it is no longer viable to produce two daily printed newspapers in Tucson,” said Bob Dickey, Gannett’s head of newspapers, in a written statement.

Gannett will continue to own a stake in a special partnership with Tucson’s largest newspaper, the Arizona Daily Star, which is owned by Lee Enterprises. This means the company will continue to help the Star pay for certain costs of producing its own newspaper in return for sharing profits.

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Implicated in killings but never charged, suspect is found guilty in separate stabbing

By Nick R. Martin | May 14th, 2009 | 5:44 pm | No Comments »


Jeff Hausner

He has been implicated — by another man’s testimony — as the third person involved in the Serial Shooter killing spree. Yet Jeff Hausner, the brother of convicted serial killer Dale Hausner, has never been charged with a single homicide.

Today, a Maricopa County jury convicted Jeff Hausner of attempted murder and aggravated assault in a case that may end up being the last chance authorities have to keep him in prison for many years.

Earlier this year, an acquaintance of the Hausners testified that he heard Jeff Hausner bragging about being involved in at least three homicides linked to the Serial Shooter crime spree. The testimony of acquaintance Samuel Dieteman came as part of the marathon murder trial against Jeff’s brother, Dale, who was subsequently convicted of six murders, including those three, and numerous other convictions.

Dieteman himself has pleaded guilty to two of the murders in the crime spree, saying he accompanied Dale Hausner on numerous shootings during the summer of 2006.

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Why Heat City has grown a tad cold (and where else you can read my work)

By Nick R. Martin | May 1st, 2009 | 10:06 pm | 3 Comments »


May issue of Phoenix magazine

This is good news. Heat City has lost a little steam over the past couple weeks while I have been hard at work on some freelance projects. This means I make a little more money and you get to read my work in more publications.

This month, for example, you can pick up the new issue of Phoenix magazine to find three pieces I wrote. The first is on the new $340 million criminal court tower being built in downtown Phoenix (written prior to the announcement that the Maricopa County sheriff’s and attorney’s offices were conducting a criminal investigation into the project.) A second story is about the many stalled high-rise projects in downtown Tempe — and why some local business owners are happy about it. The third is about the locally-crafted online comic strip, Monster Commute, which is a good read five days a week. None of the stories are online, so you have to buy the magazine or find it at your nearest library if you want to read them. But I’m looking into the possibility of reprinting some of the articles here.

In another arena, I also recently contributed to a new project called MediaCritic. Based out of Arizona State University and launched by Dan Gillmor and some other talented digital journalists, it’s the seed of a project devoted to media criticism that its founders hope will grow into a nationwide conversation on the subject. Currently, it’s focused on Phoenix critics exclusively, but it is expected to eventually branch out to other cities.

I’m all for it and was happy to offer a few exclusive posts to the site. In the first one, I wrote about my experiences covering Phoenix-area media since January. It’s based on the feedback that many of my readers have given me through email and Twitter to stories I’ve posted about local media. The response has been surprising and well worth writing about.

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