More layoffs coming; this time, Maricopa County courts get hit

By Nick R. Martin | March 16th, 2009 | 9:13 pm | No Comments »

The Maricopa County court system, one of the largest in the nation, plans to lay off as many as 80 workers in the coming months to deal with a deep budget crunch as the economy continues to slide.

According to a memo (download Word doc) obtained on Monday, the county’s superior court is being forced to cut $22.5 million from its budget for the next fiscal year, which begins in July. That marks a more than 15 percent cut overall and will mean the court needs to lose dozens of employees.

The court’s head administrator, Marcus Reinkensmeyer, sent the memo to all superior court workers on March 5, telling them about the dire budget situation. “I realize that the months ahead will, no doubt, be very stressful and difficult,” Reinkensmeyer wrote. He asked anyone thinking about retiring or quitting to make the decision soon because “this could possibly save a job for someone else in the court.”

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Hausner guilty of 80 crimes, including 6 murders

By Nick R. Martin | March 13th, 2009 | 2:34 pm | No Comments »


Dale Hausner

Live from the courtroom: Dale Hausner was found guilty today in downtown Phoenix of 80 crimes, including six murders, in the Serial Shooter killing spree.

Hausner hardly looked up from the defense table as a clerk read the verdicts. He sometimes scribbled down notes and whispered to his lawyers, but otherwise showed little to no emotion.

The jury acquitted Hausner on seven of the 87 charges, including the May 2005 murders of Tony Mendez and Reginald Remillard. He was also cleared on two animal shootings and an aggravated assault of a woman walking her dogs, though the jury convicted him of the attacks on the dogs.

Hausner stood accused of hunting down seemingly random pedestrians who were wandering streets of the Phoenix valley on various nights during 2005 and 2006. Authorities said the 36-year-old Mesa man drove around in his silver four-door car, stalking the victims until they were alone and vulnerable.

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Live: Serial Shooter trial verdict

By Nick R. Martin | March 13th, 2009 | 1:12 pm | No Comments »

Serial Shooter verdict about to be read

By Nick R. Martin | March 13th, 2009 | 1:07 pm | 2 Comments »

The jury in the Dale Hausner trial has reached a verdict, and it will be read in a downtown Phoenix courtroom by 1:30 p.m.

Heat CIty will be covering the verdicts live, so stay tuned.

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Amid criminal investigation, Gilbert mayor headed for election loss

By Nick R. Martin | March 10th, 2009 | 9:18 pm | No Comments »


Steve Berman

Voters in Gilbert appear to have ousted Mayor Steve Berman in the town’s primary election Tuesday night amid a criminal investigation into allegations he tried to poison his wife.

Berman came in third out of six candidates running for mayor, earning about 16 percent of the vote, according to unofficial results. Candidate John Lewis appeared to be leading the race with about 41 percent.

Because no one earned more than half of the votes, Lewis will likely face a runoff election in May with the No. 2 vote getter, Donald Skousen, who earned about 20 percent.

The criminal investigation, revealed last week by Heat City, is the latest in a series of public problems Berman has seen over the past couple years. He narrowly dodged a recall election in the middle of his term after the town clerk botched the petition-gathering process. He also was cleared of domestic violence allegations in January after his wife, Michelle Berman, recanted a previous story that he punched her during a fight.

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Report: Feud leaves county officials 'looking over their shoulders'

By Nick R. Martin | March 10th, 2009 | 2:28 pm | No Comments »

These days, Maricopa County officials talk about sensitive issues outside of their offices for fear they’re being bugged. County Supervisor Fulton Brock even warns people at the beginning of phone conversations that someone may be listening in. And shockingly, county officials recently paid $10,000 to have the offices of the Maricopa County Board of Supervisors swept for secret recording devices.

It all signals that the ongoing feud between the various branches of the county government has put employees on edge, according to a report by Yvonne Wingett in this morning’s Arizona Republic. Wingett talked with nearly 20 county workers who all said the competing lawsuits, investigations and volatile public statements are disrupting day-to-day business inside one of the nation’s largest counties.

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Accused Mormon femme fatale tells her story on national TV

By Nick R. Martin | March 9th, 2009 | 5:46 pm | No Comments »

Jodi Arias, the young Mormon woman accused of seducing and killing a popular motivational speaker from Mesa, was featured over the weekend in an hour-long episode of CBS’ “48 Hours Mystery.” In the show, she declared her innocence and talked of the night of the killing when, she said, a pair of masked attackers burst in on her and victim Travis Alexander during a rendezvous at his Mesa house.

The episode featured very little new information about last year’s killing. However, it included in-depth interviews with the lead detective in the case, as well as Alexander’s friends and family members, many of whom are likely witnesses when Arias goes to trial on suspicion of first-degree murder sometime next year. It aired Saturday night, but Heat City has the whole episode streaming above.

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Gilbert Police Investigating Mayor On Suspicion Of Poisoning Wife

By Nick R. Martin | March 7th, 2009 | 1:11 am | 4 Comments »


Gilbert Mayor Steve Berman is shown in this undated photograph in his office. From mayorberman.com

Heat City special report: With Gilbert’s mayoral primary just days away, the town’s police department has opened a criminal investigation into allegations that current Mayor Steve Berman tried to poison his wife.

An investigation began on Jan. 27 after the mayor’s wife, Michelle, made a pair of frantic phone calls to the town’s police chief, saying her husband had threatened to commit suicide and kill her. At the time, it was marked as a “special incident” and was not looked at as a crime.

But according to police records released Friday, the investigation was upgraded last week to a possible felony case after Michelle Berman told police she believed her husband tried to poison her.

The investigation marks the second time in the past year that Steve Berman has been investigated on suspicion of a crime as part of his relationship with his wife. Last July, the Maricopa County Sheriff’s Office looked into allegations that he punched her during a fight. But in January, after Michelle Berman recanted her allegations, the county attorney’s office declined to press charges.

Now, the pair’s turbulent relationship appears to have become even rockier. This time, it’s spilling over into Gilbert town business. The dispute has forced at least six of the town’s officers, including its police chief, to try and sort out the details. Heat City obtained the newest investigative reports through a series of public records requests with the Gilbert Police Department. In all, the reports totaled more than 40 pages.

Steve Berman, who did not return a call for comment, is running for reelection. The town’s primary is Tuesday.

The details

On Jan. 27, police Lt. Mike Angstead received a serious task from Chief Tim Dorn: Look into a pair of frantic voice mail messages the mayor’s wife recently left on the chief’s phone. Dorn forward the messages to his lieutenant. Both included allegations that the mayor had threatened to hurt her and commit suicide unless she lied to the media about their relationship.

“He threatened me,” the mayor’s wife said in one of the messages, according to transcripts included in a police report. “He told me he was going to kill himself and take me with him.”

In another message, Michelle Berman said: “I’m not looking to hurt his reelection but I am looking to stay safe and keep my family safe.”

The messages were left about two weeks after the Maricopa County Attorney’s Office announced it would not seek charges against the mayor.

Dorn asked the lieutenant to follow up, which he did in a tape-recorded phone call. During the call, Michelle Berman repeated many of her claims to him but offered no proof, the report shows. Angstead recommended that she get a restraining order if she felt truly in danger.

Mayor’s own accusations

The following day, the mayor himself called the police chief’s cell phone to respond to his wife’s allegations. “Mr. Berman told me that his wife recently had surgery for a medical condition,” Dorn wrote in his own report. “She had been prescribed pain medication due to the surgery. He believes that the pain medication is now causing her to make irrational and untrue statements, as has occurred in the past when she is under the influence of pain medications.”

Steve Berman told the police chief he would never hurt his wife. His phone call was not tape recorded, the records show.

Last July, when the original allegations of domestic violence surfaced, Dorn turned the investigation over to the Maricopa County Sheriff’s Office. He said at the time the pass was to avoid “any appearance of conflict” because the case involved a high-level town official.

This time, however, the case stayed in the hands of Gilbert police. “No further action taken,” Dorn wrote in the report.

But the trouble didn’t stop there.

Poisoned tea? Call for help

About three weeks later, on Feb. 19, Michelle Berman called the police department for help again, records show. This time she called the town’s main police dispatch, asking for officers to meet her at a house in Gilbert. Two on-duty officers and a sergeant went to the house, and one stood guard outside while the mayor’s wife told them her story.

“Michelle initially indicated that her husband, Steve Berman, had been threatening to blow his head off in front of her is (sic) he lost the Gilbert mayoral election,” officer Randy Gardner wrote in a report about the meeting. “He was telling her not to contact police at all because it would ruin him.”

She then told the officers she had been in the hospital, undergoing several medical tests and procedures because she had come down with severe abdominal pain. It turned out she had an enlarged gallbladder, according to the records.

When a doctor removed the organ in mid-January, “he told her it was the largest gall bladder (sic) he had ever seen in a live person…and if it had not been removed she would have died.”

Michelle Berman told the officers she had recently seen a strange text message on her husband’s phone, which was sent to him by a friend of his. She started connecting the dots. “The message stated, ‘Make sure whatever you use is strong enough to do the job and it can’t be traced back to you,'” according to her account to police.

She told the officers she remembered her husband mysteriously starting to make her hot green tea in the mornings during the holidays. “Michelle also indicated that Steve’s behavior was abnormal and that he was being extremely nice to her,” officer Gardner wrote in the report. Before he would hand her the tea, Michelle said she would see the mayor in the laundry room of their home, where they kept numerous cleaning products. She never saw him putting anything in the tea, however.

After hearing the allegations, Sgt. Benny Fisher stepped outside the house and called his commanding officers. The report shows all the officers there were instructed to write about the experience.

Following up

When another officer, Sgt. David Meyer, contacted the mayor the next day, Steve Berman told him it was all a misunderstanding. His friend had sent him the mysterious text message by mistake. It was intended for a pool cleaner as a warning to avoid being caught putting too much acid into a swimming pool. “But the message didn’t go to him. It went to me,” Steve Berman told the officer, according to the report.

He blamed the allegation’s on his wife’s supposed prescription drug abuse, and said he knew, because of the previous domestic violence allegations, he would be the prime suspect if she died. “Guess who’s screwed?” the mayor said, according to the report. “If anything happens to her, I’m toast.”

On Feb. 23, Lt. Angstead, the original officer tasked with investigating the matter, and Meyer followed up with Michelle Berman. She said she was interested in having the police department pursue and investigation, and she gave the officers her medical records. She also volunteered to let them run more tests on her.

The following day, Feb. 24, Angstead added the possibility of a criminal charge to the investigation. If the investigation proves Michelle Berman’s allegations, the mayor could be charged with a class-six felony — adding a poisonous substance to his wife’s drink.

Previous trouble

The allegations Michelle Berman leveled against her husband last July were startling. Along with the accusing the mayor of hitting her, she also said he once plotted to kill a fellow town council member who he blamed for his 1993 election defeat.

She told Maricopa County Sheriff’s investigators, as well as the East Valley Tribune, that Steve Berman had also threatened to kill her and beat her father. She filed for divorce and wound up obtaining an order of protection.

During multiple investigations that followed, authorities learned that two of Steve Berman’s ex-wives and his step children had also accused him of domestic violence. Those people had reported the allegations to police, but no charges ever resulted.

Ultimately, with Michelle Berman, investigators were unable to back up many of her claims. And eventually, she recanted her statements and reconciled with her husband. The restraining order was dropped, the divorce was ended, and no charges were ever filed.

The credibility of Michelle Berman’s newest accusations are unclear. But according to the newly released reports, police officers have told her they are taking them “very seriously.” The investigation is ongoing.

Survivor suffers stroke on final day of closings; likely a result of shooting 3 years ago

By Nick R. Martin | March 1st, 2009 | 3:12 pm | No Comments »



Paul Patrick, right, listened to testimony earlier this year in the trial of his alleged attacker, Serial Shooter suspect Dale Hausner. Now, Patrick, the “face of the victims,” is recovering from a stroke doctors believe may have been caused by complications of his shooting. Photo by Julio Jimenez

Paul Patrick has had the effects of the Serial Shooters stuck inside him, quite literally, for nearly three years. A survivor of one of the dozens of random attacks that took place in the Phoenix area in 2005 and 2006, Patrick has existed with some 80-100 shotgun pellets lodged inside his body ever since.

On Thursday, one of those pellets apparently caught up with the 48-year-old survivor. Patrick suffered a stroke and collapsed at his Phoenix home as he was preparing to attend the final day of closing arguments in the trial of Serial Shooter suspect Dale Hausner. Patrick’s mother, Mary, said doctors believe the stroke was likely caused by one of the pellets shifting inside his body, which created a blood clot that moved into his brain.

Now, as jurors continue to deliberate on 87 charges against the Serial Shooter suspect, Patrick — considered the victim in three of those charges — lies almost motionless in a hospital bed. He is alive, but the left side of his body is paralyzed from the stroke.

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Goddard to Thomas: You're wrong about speed cameras

By Nick R. Martin | February 27th, 2009 | 2:11 pm | 4 Comments »


Click image to read the opinion

There appears to be a battle brewing between two of the top prosecutors in the state over the legality of charging drivers with a crime when they caught speeding by freeway cameras alone.

Earlier this week, Maricopa County Attorney Andrew Thomas, a Republican, announced his office will refuse to prosecute drivers who were caught on camera going more than 20 mph over the speed limit on Valley freeways, a speed which is considered a crime in Arizona. The decision was based on an analysis of the law done by his office. He said the law requires an eyewitness to physically see the crime taking place for a prosecution to take place.

Today, state Attorney General Terry Goddard, a Democrat, released his own opinion on the law, essentially telling Thomas he’s wrong about the analysis. “Mr. Thomas’ conclusions do not appear to be supportable as a matter of law,” Goddard wrote in the 10-page opinion.

The AG’s analysis came in response to a request from Roger Vanderpool, the director of the state Department of Public Safety, which manages the freeway cameras. The earlier opinion by Thomas basically shot down a number of criminal speeding cases the agency had referred to Maricopa County prosecutors.

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