A prominent Valley resident died today, but it remains a mystery who the person is. Phoenix police said they were called to a northeast Phoenix home for a call of an unknown death and discovered a person dead and alone.Police said the prominent person has two young children who are away at camp, and until the kids are notified, the person
Prominent Valley figure dead; cops won’t say whoJune 23rd, 2007, 8:41 pm · 2 Comments · posted by Katie McDevitt2 CommentsLeave a Reply |







Is the person Rod Beck?
dear sir madam– i want to move to your town–you have so many pedophiles in positions of power and so many sociopathic child abusers–i can think of no better place to study the absokute and total degeneration of american culture–i guess the home of the brave has changed a bit–now–its the home of cowardly school bullies who are so devoid of human child rearing ability they traumatise the children of others–and the police??
well- i guse they approve of systematic child abuse also–as does your judiciary–
what a stench–clean your act up–you are a disgusting little absess on the face of civilisation–
and yes-we have these idiots in australia too– kevin
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US school suspends boy for sketching gun
Thursday Aug 23 18:54 AEST
AP - Officials at an Arizona school have suspended a 13-year-old boy for sketching what looked like a gun, saying the action posed a threat to his classmates.
The boy’s parents said the drawing was a harmless doodle and school officials overreacted.
“The school made him feel like he committed a crime. They are doing more damage than good,” said the boy’s mother, Paula Mosteller.
The drawing did not show blood, bullets, injuries or target any human, the parents said.
The East Valley Tribune reported that the boy said he did not intend for the picture to be a threat.
Administrators of Payne Junior High in nearby Chandler suspended the boy on Monday for five days but later reduced it to three days.
The boy’s father, Ben Mosteller, said that when he went to the school to discuss his son’s punishment, school officials mentioned the seriousness of the issue and talked about the 1999 massacre at Colorado’s Columbine High School, where two teenagers shot and killed 12 students, a teacher and themselves.
Mosteller said he was offended by the reference.
Chandler district spokesman Terry Locke said the crude sketch was “absolutely considered a threat,” and that threatening words or pictures are punishable.