Boy on life support after being shot in head, Phoenix police say

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Corrections & clarifications: A previous version of this story incorrectly stated the condition of the shooting victim. 

A 9-year-old boy who was shot in the head at his home Monday afternoon is on life support.

The boy was found shot at a residence in the 3500 block of Rosewood Avenue, which is just north of Cactus Road, said Phoenix police Sgt. Vince Lewis. Officials received a call about 3 p.m. from the home.

Lewis said three other children also were in the house at the time of the shooting, as well as the boy’s mother.

The circumstances of the shooting are under investigation, including who pulled the trigger, Lewis said. The investigation has not ruled out the possibility the shooting was accidental, he said.

THE LATEST: Police arrest parents of 9-year-old boy shot by toddler

A gun was found inside the home, he added. The boy’s father, who was not home at the time, was detained by police for questioning about the weapon after he returned to the house, Lewis said in a prepared statement late Monday

Lewis earlier had stressed that while the shooting is under investigation, the tragedy can serve as a reminder about the importance of keeping guns secure inside one’s home.

“In a broader sense, when it comes to gun safety, gun storage, education is very important. Security and safety is very important,” he said. “Gun owners should typically understand the dangers inherent in the weapons and take good care to secure them properly.’’

, The Republic | azcentral.com

Homeless veteran rescues distressed swimmer from Phoenix canal

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A man who identified himself as a homeless veteran jumped into a canal to rescue a swimmer in distress Friday morning in Phoenix.

“I don’t think any of us really thought about the dangers of helping him,” said Richard McNeil, 41. “Where I came from, you just helped people — doesn’t make a difference if I’m homeless or not, I still help people when I can.”

McNeil said as he waited for a bus on 16th Street near Indian School Road at about 8 a.m. he heard splashing and a man crying for help.

McNeil said he and several others rushed to help the man, who was said to be in his 50s. They had pulled him from the Grand Canal before fire crews arrived.

“The man is in stable condition,” said Capt. Ardell Deliz, a Phoenix Fire Department spokeswoman. “He is at the hospital for further evaluation.”

Deliz wanted to remind people “to be careful around canals, and to not enter the canals to swim.”

McNeil said he didn’t want any praise or assistance; he is happy living on the streets. He just hoped the man he helped would “pay it forward.”

, The Republic | azcentral.com

Phoenix police: Driver who died after high-speed chase was suspect in Ahwatukee Foothills murder

Shots were fired after a high-speed police chase that ended in north Phoenix when an undercover officer crashed into a yellow Corvette they were pursuing. The driver was a suspect in an Ahwatukee Foothills murder, police said. Nick Oza/azcentral.com

 

A man sought in connection with an Ahwatukee Foothills murder led Phoenix police on a chase Wednesday afternoon that ended when an undercover officer intentionally crashed his vehicle into the Corvette officers were pursuing and the suspect ended up dead at the scene.

Local television footage showed several officers emerge from unmarked vehicles with guns drawn after the yellow Corvette crashed near Dove Valley Road and North Valley Parkway. Two of the officers fired at the suspect, said Sgt. Alan Pfohl, a Phoenix police spokesman.

Pfohl, however, could not confirm whether it was the officers’ gunfire or a self-inflicted gunshot that killed the man, saying the cause remained under investigation. He said a gun was found inside the car.

“We still still have to investigate the manner of death. We don’t know if an officer (fatally) shot him. We don’t know if it was self-inflicted,” Pfohl said.

A distraught woman who was at the scene spoke briefly to The Arizona Republic and identified herself as the dead man’s sister, but declined to provide her name. His body still was at the scene late Wednesday afternoon, under a blanket just outside of the Corvette.

“Why is his body still there?” she asked a Republic reporter. The woman added: “I was watching on TV … it’s a long story.” She then left to speak with police.

The location was one of several across parts of the Valley that police say are related to a crime spree they believe the driver of the Corvette carried out.

The man, who was not identified, was a suspect in the fatal shooting of a 40-year-old man in Ahwatukee Foothills earlier in the day, Pfohl said.

Man suffered gunshot wound

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Phoenix police received a call of a shooting about 4:30 a.m. Wednesday at an apartment complex near 48th Street and Elliot Road, where officers found a man suffering from at least one gunshot wound. He was pronounced dead at the scene.

“During detectives’ investigation, it led them to this person, which matched the description of a possible suspect in the shooting,” Pfohl said.

Phoenix police located the man near 65th Avenue and Bell Road in Glendale, and as they attempted to contact him, he ran off, Pfohl said.

Police heard gunshots a short time later and learned that a person had their truck stolen at gunpoint not far from that location, Pfohl said, adding that Glendale police are investigating that incident.

Pfohl said the man drove into Phoenix and later abandoned the truck near Seventh Avenue and Union Hills Drive and from there confronted another person at gunpoint and stole the Corvette that was involved in the chase.

A police helicopter was able to find the car and followed the man into north Phoenix along with several unmarked police vehicles. Pfohl said one of those officers deliberately crashed into the car after it began driving into oncoming traffic.

Pfohl said he didn’t know whether the man threatened officers before police fired on him, but said there were no reports that the man fired shots at police during the chase. He said police never were in communication with the suspect.

He said the two officers who fired their weapons are members of the department’s Special Assignment Unit. One is a 50-year-old with 29 years of service with Phoenix police. The other is a 49-year-old officer with more than eight years with the department.

Pfohl was unable to provide additional information about how the suspect may have been connected to the Ahwatukee homicide victim or any other details about the killing.

One person who witnessed some of the chase was stunned by what he saw.

Glendale resident Derek Montilla said he witnessed the chase as he was driving northbound on 19th Avenue and saw the driver pass his vehicle in the oncoming traffic lane. The driver, Montilla said, was “a blur” and was “driving extremely dangerously.”

Montilla said at first he believed the vehicle was just a “guy in a Corvette being a jerk,” but once he saw the “army of unmarked cop cars” in pursuit, he said “it was pretty apparent it was something bigger.”

Shortly after, Montilla learned from his wife that he had just witnessed a high-speed car chase. His wife was watching the events unfold on live television. At that point, Montilla said, he “just wanted to see it end.”

“You could tell this guy was driving like he had nothing to lose,” he said. “He took off so fast into oncoming traffic that I just knew it wasn’t going to end well.”

, The Republic | azcentral.com

Suspected gunman in fatal Best Buy shooting has died

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The suspected gunman in the fatal shooting at a Best Buy store in Avondale on Monday has died, police reported Wednesday.

Avondale police believe Henry Cota Jr., 27, shot and killed Melissa Mendez, 26, following a history of escalating domestic violence.

Mendez was pronounced dead hours after being shot at the Best Buy store where she worked. Cota, who also had gunshot wounds, died at a hospital Tuesday evening, according to Officer Jaret Redfearn, an Avondale police spokesman.

Police have still not said whether Cota’s injuries were self-inflicted. Redfearn said a gun was recovered at the scene.

The shooting that sent customers running for cover took place just after noon at the store near 99th Avenue and McDowell Road, Redfearn said.

Monday’s shooting began with an initial confrontation outside the store, police said. Cota fired several shots at Mendez, who ran inside the store, officials added. Cota followed her inside and fired more shots in the store.

No further details were provided by police, who said the matter still was being investigated Wednesday.

Police had the area around the store blocked off for hours after the shooting.

Several people who were in the store described a terrifying scene when the shooting broke out.

Fernando Perez, 20, told The Arizona Republic that he and his friend were in the Best Buy shopping for supplies for some speakers when they heard what sounded like a chase and saw a man wearing all black running after a woman.

“After that, we just heard the gunfire,” Perez said. “Then we just ran out of the back door and went all the way to (Raising) Cane’s.”

Melinda Brasher told The Republic she was in Best Buy looking to buy computer supplies when the shooting occurred.

“I heard shots and people running and shouting,”  Brasher said. “So I ran toward the back.”

Another woman was in back trying to open an emergency exit, but was unable to, Brasher said.

“We went and hid in the restroom,” she said, adding the two initially leaned against the door but were afraid the  shooter might fire through the door. “We got up on the toilet seats so it looked like we weren’t there.”

Brasher said they were in there for what felt like forever and kept hearing shots but no words. Then police came into the restroom and the two came out of the stall with their hands up, she said.

Marlene Brasher, Melinda’s mother, said she was next door at Hobby Lobby and phoned her daughter several times to try to figure out if her daughter was OK.

“I’ve never been so happy in my life,” said Marlene, describing her reaction when she saw her daughter afterward.

Trudy Frias and her family pulled up to the scene shortly after, unaware of what happened. Frias said that when they parked, they could only see police cars.

Her husband, Larry, jumped up on the trailer their truck was pulling while she used his binoculars to try to see what was going on.

“I saw them wheeling a guy out of the Best Buy,” Frias said. “They had an air mask on him.”

Frias then said she saw a second person who was also on a stretcher being wheeled out to awaiting ambulances.

, The Republic | azcentral.com

Government bills Arizona veteran for $14,000

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PHOENIX (3TV/CBS 5) –Ashely Christopher had just started college, was volunteering at a horse ranch and an elementary school but had a calling to do even more.

So she joined the Arizona Army National Guard.

“I thought the ultimate volunteering would be to join the military,” said Christopher.

She joined a military police unit and became a weekend warrior, always knowing that active duty deployment could be on the horizon.

“I was well-aware joining the military, even in the weekend capacity, that they were needing soldiers. So, given orders, I said cool,” said Christopher.

She was deployed on two occasions. Once to Iraq, the second time to Afghanistan.

“I was proud to do it. I knew that it was a possibility, so, I had no hesitation to go,” said Christopher.

She fulfilled her first three-year initial National Guard commitment and then reenlisted for another six.

In February 2015, Christopher was honorably discharged. She used the VA housing loan to buy a home in Phoenix and she finished her college degree at ASU in social work.

Currently, Christopher is a full-time ASU graduate student in social work, and she works full-time with homeless veterans at the homeless shelter in downtown Phoenix.

“I love my job, I really do. A lot of people complain about their job and I enjoy my job. And even if I didn’t work with homeless veterans I would still serve the community in some capacity. That’s my calling as cheesy as it sounds,” said Christopher.

In August of 2016, 18 months after she left the military, Christopher received a bill in the mail from the Department of Treasury for more than $14,000.

She inquired immediately.

“They said that I didn’t fulfill my end of the contract in the military and so I was being charged for a prorated portion of my enlistment bonus that I got when I reenlisted into the National Guard for six more years,” said Christopher.

That reenlistment came with a $15,000 signing bonus, tax-free for six years.

About a year and a half after that reenlistment, Christopher said she got a call from a readiness non-commission officer who said that because of her military test scores and her security clearance, she was needed for a deployment to Afghanistan. A deployment, she was told, was 125 soldiers short. So, like a good soldier, Christopher complied.

“I’m a soldier. I go where I’m needed,” she said.

But she was hesitant, not because of the deployment, but because it meant being transferred to a unit out of Las Vegas and being retrained. Christopher said she specifically inquired if her transfer would affect her bonus.

“I thought about it and I questioned it. And I was informed by the retention NCOs and all the NCOs that this is for combat purposes, national security. This is a deployment. It’s the needs of the Army. So the bonus at that point is irrelevant, you know, there’s a war to fight,” said Christopher.

She said she was not the only soldier for that deployment that was asked to transfer units and not the only one to inquire about the bonuses. She said she asked repeatedly and repeatedly was told that the needs of the Army dictated the transfer and that she was all good.

So, when she got the bill, Christopher was stunned.

“I just feel like I’ve done everything that you’re supposed to do when you transition back to civilian life. And I was on a really good track and this has just come out of nowhere and just disrupted that,” said Christopher.

The Department of Treasury informed Christopher that they would garnish up to 15 percent of her wages each paycheck and take her taxes until her debt was paid off.

“The payment plan option was to pay $396 a month for 36 months, I believe. And they wouldn’t take a lesser amount. I called them and said can I send you a hundred bucks? And they weren’t flexible with that. Even after I told them that I was a student. They weren’t too concerned with that,” said Christopher.

Christopher said her credit score went from 742 to 605 in two weeks. Her house is on the market and she’s packing to move out to get the cash to pay the debt. At the same time, she has filed papers to dispute the debt and has contacted three of Arizona’s congressional leaders as well as the Office of the Inspector General. So far, everyone has only been able to confirm that her debt is valid, at the same time acknowledging it may not be fair.

She is concerned about other soldiers who may be in the same position.

“I don’t have high expectations from the government. But I would like there to be some clear definitions or greater acknowledgment with handling of money in the future. So that if the debt is valid, they say, ‘Hey, we need you to do this mission but it’s going to cost you this amount of money. Do you still want to go?’ Selfless service with a price tag,” said Christopher.

Just recently Christopher received a letter from the Department of Treasury after filing her federal income taxes and knowing she was owed a refund.

The letter stated:

“As authorized by federal law we applied all or part of your federal payment to a debt you owe.”

Christopher would never see a penny of the $800 plus Christopher was to receive.

“I knew that I had a refund coming a little bit and then I also knew that there was a chance they could take a percentage of it. I didn’t think they would take 100 percent but they did,” said Christopher.

A public relations spokesman with the Arizona National Guard said they are not the ones who initiated the action against Christopher.

Attempts to reach someone in the Nevada Nation Guard have gone unanswered.

U.S. Representative Ruben Gallegos’ office did put Christopher in touch with the Office of the Inspector General.

Christopher said they have been helpful and responsive so far. But the debt remains and she expects her wages to be garnished any time.

Copyright 2017 KPHO/KTVK (KPHO Broadcasting Corporation). All rights reserved.

 

Posted: Feb 21, 2017 9:49 AM TST

Updated: Feb 21, 2017 12:07 PM TST

Funnel cloud forms in Scottsdale

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SCOTTSDALE, AZ (3TV/CBS 5) – Arizona is not used to this weather.

People in Scottsdale were surprised when they saw a cold air funnel cloud near Talking Stick Resort on Sunday afternoon.

A cold air funnel is a high based, weak circulation that occurs in a cool air mass. It develops well above the earth’s surface. Since it is high based and weak, they rarely impact the earth’s surface, although they can look threatening.

Unlike typical tornadoes, cold air funnels develop in a shallow cool air mass and often behind a cold frontal passage.

The cloud is part of a storm system that brought rain to the Valley and snow to the high country.

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[READ MORE: Storm fills up Valley rain gauges; snow blankets Flagstaff]

Posted: Feb 20, 2017 8:32 AM TST Updated: Feb 20, 2017 9:51 PM TST

Drug catapult found at Arizona-Mexico border fence

A catapult was being used to throw bundles of marijuana over the Arizona-Mexico border into Douglas.

 

U.S. Border Patrol agents discovered a catapult used to throw bundles of marijuana over the Arizona-Mexico border into Douglas, according to U.S. Customs and Border Protection.

While patrolling an area near the Douglas Port of Entry on Feb. 10, agents saw several people quickly retreating from the fence as the agents approached, officials said.

When agents arrived, they searched the area and located two bundles of marijuana, weighing more than 47 pounds combined, as well as a catapult system attached to the Mexico side of the border fence.

Mexican law-enforcement authorities responded to the area and seized the catapult system, which was dismantled by the U.S. Border Patrol, officials said.

Body of missing Casa Grande man Cody Virgin found

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2013 Dodge Dart was found abandoned in a desert area near Silver Bell Estates, outside of Arizona City. When he did not show up for work, he was declared a missing person, officials said.

Virgin had worked as a correctional officer at La Palma Correctional Center in Eloy beginning in June 2015, according to Jonathan Burns, the public-affairs director of CoreCivic.

In a Facebook video posted Friday, Lamb said Virgin had met a girl on Facebook and was planning to meet her in Arizona City the night he went missing.

“We began looking into Facebook. We received information that led us to William Randolph. He agreed to come down to the station in Arizona. Detectives found several inconsistencies with William’s statements and William gave several different accounts of his whereabouts.”

Lamb said they recovered a handgun at Randolph’s place of work and found blood at the scene. Randolph was then arrested. Lamb on Friday said they were still working to determine Randolph’s connection to Virgin.

The investigation is still ongoing, and anyone with information is encouraged to contact the Pinal County Sheriff’s Office at 520-866-5111.

Republic reporter Eric Newman contributed to this article. 

, The Republic | azcentral.com

‘Breaking Bad’: IRS attorney busted on methamphetamine distribution charges

The Internal Revenue Service headquarters in Washington.

Andrew Harrer | Bloomberg | Getty Images
The Internal Revenue Service headquarters in Washington.

This Tax Man allegedly “broke bad.”

An Ivy-League educated lawyer with the Internal Revenue Service has been arrested on federal charges of conspiring to distribute the illegal drug methamphetamine, authorities said Wednesday.

Jack Vitayanon, a Washington, D.C., resident who is an attorney in the IRS’s Office of Professional Responsibility, allegedly conspired with others in Arizona and Long Island, New York, “to distribute methamphetamine” since mid-2014, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Brooklyn.

“The defendant — a federal attorney working for the IRS’s Office of Professional Responsibility — broke bad and supplemented his income by selling distribution quantities of methamphetamine,” said U.S. Attorney Robert Capers.

The phrase “broke bad” refers to hit television show “Breaking Bad,” which depicted high school chemistry teacher Walter White becoming a meth manufacturer to make money after receiving a diagnosis of cancer.

The Office of Professional Responsibility’s mission is to ensure that tax practitioners, preparers and others in the tax system “adhere to professional standards and follow the law,” according to the IRS’s website. Vitayanon’s LinkedIn page, which says he has worked at the IRS for nearly five years, details how he has conducted investigations of attorneys, accountants and IRS agents “based on reports of suspected misconduct.”

Vitayanon, 41, was in custody in Washington as of Wednesday afternoon after his arrest. He has yet to appear before a federal judge there.

Vitayanon’s LinkedIn page says that he is also an adjunct professor of law at the Georgetown University Law Center in Washington.

He graduated from Dartmouth in 1997 with a bachelor’s degree, and got his law degree from Columbia University. He also holds a master’s of law degree in taxation from New York University School of Law. Vitayanon previously worked at the prestigious Debevoise & Plimpton firm in New York City, and a small boutique tax firm.

A affidavit filed in support of criminal complaint against Vitayanon suggests that his alleged meth dealing came to light in early December when authorities investigating meth distribution on Long Island seized a Federal Express package containing 460 grams of the drug at a private residence in Oceanside, New York.

After being arrested, the intended recipient of the meth allegedly told authorities they had paid a source in Arizona $8,600 for the shipment. The recipient allegedly said they had originally been put in touch with that source in September 2014 by Vitayanon, who himself was using the source to purchase meth, the affidavit said.

The affidavit went on to say that the intended recipient of the meth shipment agreed to cooperate with agents from the Department of Homeland Security to investigate Vitayanon, and ended up negotiating with him to buy shipment containing an ounce of meth from him.

Those negotiations allegedly occurred via internet-based video chats and text messages.

During a video chat on Dec. 15, “Vitayanon was observed in his Washington, D.C., apartment smoking what appears to be methamphetamine from a glass pipe,” according to the affidavit.

The affidavit accuses Vitayanon of eventually sending two separate shipments, totaling three ounces of meth, to the recipient on Long Island.

It also claims that Vitayanon asked the recipient to split up a $1,650 payment for the initial ounce he sent that person in mid-December between Vitayanon and the source in Arizona. That payment, according to the affidavit, included Vitayanon’s expenses from shipping and what he called “my Ubers.”

When authorities searched Vitayanon’s apartment, they found suspected meth, drug paraphernalia, packaging material, as well as “drug ledgers,” prosecutors said.

An IRS spokesman, when asked about Vitayanon on Wednesday, said “We cannot comment on specific personnel matters.”

“The IRS holds its employees to high standards and does not tolerate inappropriate behavior,” the spokesman said. “When questions arise, the IRS works closely with the Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration and other law-enforcement authorities to pursue appropriate legal action. The IRS strongly emphasizes that it will take any and all actions against inappropriate employee conduct, up to and‎ including dismissal.”

 

Dan Mangan    | Jim Forkin

Man dies after falling from South Sixth Garage

 

A man has died after falling from the Sixth St. Garage on the north side of Sixth Street early Thursday afternoon. The University of Arizona Police Department shut down the south entrances and shuttle-bus pickup lane on the south side of the Sixth Street Garage for several hours to investigate.

The 21-year-old man was not a UA student, according to UAPD Sgt. Cindy Spasoff, the information officer on the scene. The man was spotted on top of the garage shortly before noon, and was later found on the ground near the center stairwell, where medical personal treated him.

UAPD is “currently unsure” on the details of what happened, but the man was transported to Banner University Medical Center-Tucson for treatment, where he was later pronounced dead.

Police are investigating the death as a suicide.

Police know the identity of the man, but are not releasing his name at this time. His family has been notified, police said.