Jul 23 2008
Phoenix News Update - ANOTHER Cop Car stolen
The second police car in two days has been stolen after the officer left it running and unlocked while on a call.
Jul 23 2008
The second police car in two days has been stolen after the officer left it running and unlocked while on a call.
Jul 15 2008
DPS raids South Phoenix drop house
Alleged shoplifters shoot guard at Wal-Mart
5 Investigates Phoenix Kidnapping Epidemic
Man drags tarp wrapped corpse down Scottsdale street; kills himself when police catch him
Top 10 Phoenix Coyotes of all time
Airlift rescue after man falls into ditch
Man arrested in double homicide
Navy to close Phoenix base, move to Luke AFB
Plane makes safe landing despite blown tire
Arpaio to undocumented immigrants: Go back where you came from
Phoenix researchers look for secrets to long life
Dec 03 2007
Nov 21 2007
A 12-year-old girl who died after she was beaten with an electrical cord and doused with hot water as punishment for not doing her homework will be laid to rest Wednesday.
The funeral for the girl begins at 10 a.m. at the Crystal Rose Funeral Home at 9155 W. Van Buren in Tolleson.
Court documents say after the girl died, her family left her dead body in a bedroom until she started to smell.
Police arrested the girl’s father, 34-year-old Jeffrey Duchane Jr., and stepmother, 25-year-old Reiko Troupe, in the girl’s death.
Troupe was jailed on suspicion of first-degree murder and child abuse. Duchane was jailed on suspicion of child abuse.
Police also found the girl’s 9-year-old sister in the apartment. She is in protective custody.
Police several weeks ago said they believed the man to be involved in the “torturing” death of his 12-year-old daughter and the injury of her 9-year-old sister. Duchane told police that he just discovered his daughter Trenay’s bloody, severely burned body in his apartment on the 2500 block of West Ocotillo Road, near I-17 and Glendale Avenue.
Police later discovered that Duchane had known his daughter was dead for four days.
Nov 16 2007
Joe Arpaio on CNN’s “Lou Dobbs Tonight”:
They “called me the KKK“. I think it’s an honor, right? It means we’re doing something,” Arpaio said, according to transcripts of the show.

The Maricopa County Sheriff’s office called it an ‘off-the-cuff remark’.
EVTribune.