Author Archive
December 13th, 2007, 4:48 pm by Jill Redhage
Judge Dean M. Fink will officially join the Maricopa County Superior Court bench on Tuesday.
His investiture ceremony is scheduled for Dec. 18 at 12:30 p.m. in the Board of Supervisors Auditorium, 205 W. Jefferson St., in Phoenix. It is open to the public.
Fink began his court career in 2004 as a superior court commissioner. His first assignment as a judge is with Family Court in downtown Phoenix
He earned his undergraduate degree in Political Science from the University of Arizona in 1990, where he was student body president. He graduated from the Columbia University School of Law in 1993.
While in law school, Fink interned with the Anti-Discrimination Board of New South Wales in Sydney, Australia. In 2002, he joined the Arts and Business Council of Greater Phoenix board of directors, and he was board president in fiscal 2006. He has been a member of Arizona Town Hall since 1990.
Fink began he legal career at Fennemore Craig law firm in Phoenix and later worked at the Los Angeles-based firm Kirkland and Ellis, where he focused on lawsuits related to groundwater pollution in the Phoenix metro area. In 2000, he joined the Phoenix-based firm Lewis and Roca.
Fink also recently began a two-year term as president of the University of Arizona’s Bobcats Alumni organization.
Posted in: Maricopa County | Post a Comment »
December 13th, 2007, 2:28 pm by Jill Redhage
A former Scottsdale resident was convicted Wednesday of stealing from and lying to the government when she obtained social security benefits for her disabled son who didn’t qualify for them.
Denise Crouse, 49, now of Georgia, was convicted Wednesday in Maricopa County Superior Court after a three-day trial. According to Attorney General Terry Goddard, Crouse lived in Scottsdale and Glendale between 1995 and 1999, where she collected more than $20,000 in Supplemental Security Income for her son, who was ineligible for the funds because he already had a $1 million trust fund. The supplemental funds are designed to help seniors and the disabled with incomes under $2,000 a year, Goddard said. During trial, Crouse testified that, not including the trust fund, she held assets worth between $1 million and $2 million.
Goddard said Crouse also tried to claim SSI and Medicaid benefits for her son after moving to Georgia.
Crouse will be sentenced on Jan. 18 and faces up to 10 years in prison.
Posted in: Scottsdale | Post a Comment »
December 12th, 2007, 3:10 pm by Jill Redhage
A Cave Creek man was convicted Tuesday of participating in a large methamphetamine distribution ring, Attorney General Terry Goddard announced Wednesday.
After a two-week trial, Thomas Desposito, 41, was found guilty of 13 counts of methamphetamine sale and possession. Goddard said Phoenix police uncovered the distribution ring in 2005, which they said was importing large quantities of the drug from Mexico.
Desposito will be sentenced on Jan. 23. He faces up to 15 years in prison.
Posted in: Cave Creek | Post a Comment »
December 11th, 2007, 6:32 pm by Jill Redhage
A Scottsdale man pleaded guilty Tuesday to harassing public officials and bribing a police officer, announced Attorney General Terry Goddard.
Gregg L. Wolfe, 46, a principal of the Chandler nonprofit Nakami Chi Group Ministries International, was indicted in May on charges of bribing Chandler police officer Bradley Forward for a file regarding an investigation into the nonprofit. He was also charged with filing baseless liens against a Maricopa County Superior Court judge, a public official and public employees involved in a securities law investigation.
Edward Purvis, 38, of Chandler was also indicted in the case and is scheduled to go to trial in February.
Authorities alleged in search warrants that Purvis and Wolfe ran a fraud scheme and used investors’ money for their personal gain. Wolfe admitted that neither he nor Purvis was licensed by the Arizona Corporation Commission to sell securities and that the investments they sold were not registered as securities. Investors’ money was hidden in offshore corporations, Goddard said.
Forward was indicted in January on charges of hindering prosecution, destroying public records, computer tampering and unauthorized release of criminal history.
Posted in: Chandler • Scottsdale | Post a Comment »
December 8th, 2007, 6:49 pm by Jill Redhage
Daniel G. Martin will be sworn in as a Maricopa County Superior Court judge in the Board of Supervisors Auditorium, 205 W. Jefferson St., in Phoenix, on Tues., Dec. 11 at 12:30 p.m. The public is invited to attend.
Martin served as a Maricopa County Superior Court administrative law judge for eight years before his appointment to the bench. In that position Martin presided over cases involving state agencies, boards and commissions.
Martin received the Judicial Award of Excellence from the public lawyers of the State Bar of Arizona in 2006, and he has served as an instructor for the Arizona Government University.
Martin received both a master’s degree (in anthropology) and his law degree from the University of Arizona, and an undergraduate degree from Colorado College in Colorado Springs, Co. After he graduated from law school in 1991, he served as a law clerk for Arizona Supreme Court Vice-Chief Justice James Moeller. He then worked for two Phoenix law firms before joining the state Office of Administrative Hearings.
He currently is assigned to a Family Court calendar in Superior Court’s downtown Phoenix court complex.
Posted in: Maricopa County | Post a Comment »
December 5th, 2007, 12:37 pm by Jill Redhage
Scam artists are mailing postcards to Arizona residents indicating their car warranties are about to expire, said Attorney General Terry Goddard.
Senior citizens have been the primary targets. The cards encourage recipients to purchase extended warranties. The cards appear legitimate and have names similar to official organizations or government agencies. The notices are stamped with phrases such as “final notice” or “priority level: high” to create a false sense of urgency. When the consumer calls the phone number provided on the card, they are usually encouraged to purchase a high-priced extended warranty for their vehicle. Callers are told they must make a down payment prior to receiving warranty information from the company.
The Attorney General’s Office learned of the postcards through the Seniors Strike Back program, which started in May. Hundreds of seniors across the state turned over their junk mail, which has been inspected for scams and fraudulent offers.
Tips for consumers
● Ask yourself: “Is this true?” Many of these offers are sent to consumers whose car warranties expired years ago.
● Always obtain warranty information in writing prior to signing up or sending any money.
● Be leery of companies that solicit by mail.
● Never give out personal identifying or financial information over the phone.
● Ask questions about the soliciting organization. A legitimate company will be happy to answer them.
● Check with the Better Business Bureau to see if complaints have been filed against the company.
If you believe you have been a victim of fraud, contact the Attorney General’s Office in Phoenix: (602) 542-5763 or (800) 352-8431, or visit www.azag.gov to file a complaint.
Posted in: Arizona | Post a Comment »
December 4th, 2007, 12:47 pm by Jill Redhage
The governor is seeking applications for five vacancies on the Commission on Appellate Court Appointments. All vacancies are for non-attorney members of the public. Applications will be accepted until Dec. 12.
The commission is responsible for recommending to the governor new judges and justices for the Arizona Court of Appeals and the Arizona Supreme Court. The commission, led by the supreme court’s chief justice, is composed of five attorneys and 10 non-attorneys. Members serve four-year terms and must be confirmed by the senate.
The Arizona Constitution requires non-attorney members to meet the following criteria:
* Members have lived in Arizona for at least five years.
* Members cannot be judges, retired judges or admitted to practice before the Supreme Court.
* Members must not hold any governmental office, elected or appointed, for profit.
* Members must have been registered with the same political party, or as an independent, for at least two continuous years immediately preceding appointment.
The Arizona Constitution also prohibits having more than two non-attorney commission members from the same county. The commission currently has two members from Pinal County and is not accepting applications from Pinal County residents at this time. Law also requires the commission to be politically balanced; currently, candidates of all political affiliations may apply.
Arizonans interested in applying may do so online. Call the Governor’s Office of Boards and Commissions at (602) 542-2449 or (800) 253-0883 for an application by mail.
Posted in: Arizona • Maricopa County | Post a Comment »
November 28th, 2007, 3:45 pm by Jill Redhage
A Mexican man was sentenced in federal court Tuesday to five years in prison for leading sheriff’s deputies and police officers on a chase that caused an officer to fatally shoot a man.
Ramon Emilio Gil-Galindo, 27, pleaded guilty in June to conspiracy to transport illegal aliens resulting in death before U.S. District Court Judge Earl Carroll, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office.
The death occurred shortly after a Pinal County Sheriff’s deputy stopped Gil-Galindo for speeding on May 10, 2006. Gil-Galindo, who was transporting eight undocumented travelers in a stolen pickup truck, sped away as the deputy approached the vehicle, prosecutors said.
A chase ensued. Eventually a Coolidge police officer threw stop sticks, then shot at the truck several times when Gil-Galindo tried to run him down. One bullet struck and killed Ramiro Aragon-Guerrero, who was sitting in the front seat, prosecutors said. The truck escaped at approximately 100 miles per hour, but was later recovered.
Authorities said Gil-Galindo was in the country illegally and had been deported previously on October 27, 2005, through Nogales, Ariz.
After he’s released from prison, he’ll spend five years on probation.
Posted in: Pinal County | Post a Comment »
November 28th, 2007, 12:58 pm by Jill Redhage
Attorney General Terry Goddard joined 11 other states Wednesday in a lawsuit against the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency over new regulations reducing public access to information about toxic chemicals.
The lawsuit seeks to invalidate the EPA’s revised regulations and return to the former reporting requirements so that public access to environmental information is not restricted, according to a press release from the attorney general.
The suit involves the country’s only public database of toxic chemical use, storage, and release. Companies are required to provide information for the database, including the types and amounts of toxic chemicals stored at the company’s facilities and the quantities they release into the environment.
“These new regulations put our communities at risk,” said Goddard in a prepared statement.
“In Arizona, we’ve seen fires involving toxic chemicals, and knowing what chemicals are involved helps firefighters and public safety personnel take the necessary precautions to protect themselves as well as the surrounding neighborhoods. Without this information, our public safety personnel and our neighborhoods are at much greater risk of being exposed to unknown hazards during a fire or chemical spill,” he said.
In December 2006, the EPA issued revised regulations that, according to the attorney general, have weakened the utility of the public database by reducing the amount of information companies must report about the toxic chemicals covered by the program. For many toxic chemicals, the EPA’s new regulations substantially increased the quantity of chemical waste a facility can generate without providing details about it, Goddard said.
“Citizens have a right to know about these dangerous substances, and agencies and emergency responders need to have this information to protect the health and safety of our communities,” said Arizona Department of Environmental Quality Director Steve Owens in a press release.
Congress enacted, and President Ronald Reagan signed into law, the Toxics Release Inventory program (the public database) in 1986, after the Bhopal toxic chemical catastrophe in India. In 1984, a deadly cloud of methyl isocyanate accidentally released from a Union Carbide plant in Bhopal, India, and killed or seriously injured more than 2,000 people. Shortly thereafter, a serious chemical release occurred at a sister plant in West Virginia.
The 11 other states involved in the suit are: California, Connecticut, Illinois, Maine, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania and Vermont.
A copy of the complaint is available on the Attorney General’s Web site at www.azag.gov. The lawsuit was filed today in U.S. District Court in New York State.
Posted in: Maricopa County | Post a Comment »
November 27th, 2007, 12:54 pm by Jill Redhage

Mark Merila
The man charged with killing two Mesa teenage girls in 1984 has been returned to Arizona and has pleaded not guilty.
Mark Merila, 43, was extradited from California and pleaded not guilty to the murders Friday before Maricopa County Superior Court Judge Michael Gordon.
In Aug. 2006, a grand jury indicted Merila for first-degree murder in the deaths of 16-year-old Kelly Cooper and 14-year-old Ermalinda Ianuzzi. The indictment came 22 years after the girls’ bodies were discovered hidden under desert brush near the Arizona Canal about five miles north of Mesa.
DNA evidence taken from Cooper’s clothes and “other investigation techniques” tied the case to Merila, said Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio in Aug. 2006. The match was made in 2005 through the nationwide DNA database.
After authorities located Merila in San Diego, he admitted to Maricopa County detectives that he was celebrating his 20th birthday on Aug. 25, 1984, in the area where the bodies were found.
“He admitted to having sex with an unknown girl. He did not confess to any murder,” Arpaio said.
Sheriff’s officials said they are still pursuing a second suspect in the case.
Posted in: Mesa | 1 Comment »
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