ReportWire

Tag: Maricopa County Superior Court

  • Judge backs decision to block Federales from Roosevelt Row

    Judge backs decision to block Federales from Roosevelt Row

    Ten months after the Phoenix Board of Adjustment blocked the path to building a controversial taco and tequila spot on Roosevelt Row, a Maricopa County Superior Court judge has done the same, denying an appeal from Federales. Judge Scott Blaney issued a ruling on Monday after weighing written and oral arguments from the city of Phoenix and Federales, a restaurant and bar from the Chicago-based hospitality group Four Corners that faced “unprecedented” opposition from neighborhood residents and businesses…

    Sara Crocker

    Source link

  • Metro Phoenix road rage killer gets 25-year prison sentence

    Metro Phoenix road rage killer gets 25-year prison sentence

    Arizona — the worst state in the nation for road rage and confrontational drivers — has a new face for its road rage scourge: Frank Martin Lawrence III. The 35-year-old recently pleaded guilty to second-degree murder and aggravated assault for chasing down a woman who honked at him, striking her in the face, and running over and killing her boyfriend as he tried to record the burst of violence in 2020…

    Matt Hennie

    Source link

  • Women who accused Phoenix doc of botched surgeries want restraining order

    Women who accused Phoenix doc of botched surgeries want restraining order

    Two metro Phoenix women who sued a Glendale doctor over allegations that he performed plastic surgeries while drunk and disfigured them now claim they’ve been threatened and fear for their safety.

    Wendy Ellsworth and Alicia Armijo sued Dr. Bradley Becker last fall for medical negligence, battery and intentional infliction of emotional distress. Since then, they and their attorney, Robert Gregory, have been on the receiving end of threats, stalking and intimidation that have left them concerned about the safety of their families, according to documents filed with Maricopa County Superior Court on Feb. 15.

    The women and their attorney want to meet with sheriff’s deputies to discuss their safety and allegations of threats. They also are seeking a restraining order against Becker. In the meantime, Ellsworth asked a judge to make her lawsuit against Becker inactive for four months, while Armijo wants to dismiss her case.

    “Because of the fear that Plaintiffs are presently experiencing regarding their personal safety, and their strong belief that either Dr. Becker or those acting on his behalf are seeking to intimidate Plaintiffs so that they will dismiss their action against him, Plaintiffs are not able to continue the instant action until they are able to coordinate recent events with the Maricopa County Sheriff’s Office and to take whatever action is appropriate to secure their safety,” Gregory wrote in a motion filed in Ellsworth’s case.

    In a motion for Armijo’s case, Gregory wrote that Armijo doesn’t want to continue her case while “pursuing her options with the Maricopa Sheriff’s Office” but isn’t “surrendering her claims against Dr. Becker.

    “Plaintiff has expressed to her counsel her concern that continuing with this litigation will constitute an ongoing threat to her personally and will create additional emotional anxiety and fear,” Gregory wrote in the motion.

    Ellsworth and Armijo alleged in affidavits that since suing Becker, they have seen vehicles parked in front of their homes and, on one occasion, Armijo said she spotted Becker in a vehicle outside her home before he sped away. Gregory said he received a threatening phone call from an unknown number in which the callers said they knew who he was and demanded to know where he lived.

    Becker denied the latest allegations in an affidavit filed on Wednesday.

    “I have no information about or involvement in any of the alleged incidents of unknown persons allegedly being parked outside or driving by or near the homes of Alicia Armijo or Wendy Ellsworth, and I also have no information about or involvement with any persons allegedly following Ms. Armijo or Ms. Ellsworth while they walked outside or near their homes or elsewhere,” Becker said in the court filing.

    Richard Kent, one of Becker’s lawyers, also requested that the court dismiss Ellsworth’s lawsuit.

    Phoenix New Times first reported the women’s lawsuits and detailed their experiences with Becker in December. The suits accused Becker of performing plastic surgeries while drunk and botching the operations. Becker, in a court filing, said he “complied with the standard of care” and that he was not impaired during the surgeries.

    click to enlarge

    Raees Mohamed, an attorney for Bradley Becker, said the plastic surgeon is considering defamation suits against women who publicly aired allegations about procedures Becker performed.

    TJ L’Heureux

    Strange cars and demand letters

    In the weeks after they filed the lawsuits — Ellsworth on Sept. 30 and Armijo on Oct. 2 — strange things started to happen, according to their affidavits.

    Armijo called Ellsworth on Oct. 22 and said that Becker had allegedly driven by her house in Surprise. She recognized the surgeon as he drove slowly by, she said in the court filing, but the vehicle sped off before she was able to get the full license plate number. Armijo said her 14-year-old son also witnessed the event and “could attest to seeing a man fitting the description of Becker.”

    Kent said Armijo was spreading a “false narrative” on social media and in the press, according to the court document filed on Wednesday.

    “The fact that Ms. Armijo never made any reference to this alleged event that occurred on October 22, 2023, until almost four months later — when she is desperate to keep her lawsuit from being dismissed and while she is in the process of attempting to drum up additional media attention for her claims — is further evidence that her allegation is not credible and not a basis for the Court to take any action other than dismissing this lawsuit,” Kent wrote.

    Gregory, Armijo’s attorney, filed a motion on Feb. 16 to dismiss her lawsuit.

    About a week after Armijo claimed to see Becker in October, Ellsworth said an unfamiliar car parked outside of her home, according to court documents. As she went on a walk with her son in their neighborhood, she noticed a black sedan idling outside her home. When she walked to the end of her driveway, it abruptly sped off.

    Ellsworth and Armijo did not notice anything suspicious for several weeks. Then, New Times reported on their lawsuits on Dec. 29. That was followed by coverage from at least two national media outlets.

    Afterward, “many women who had undergone cosmetic surgery by Dr. Becker contacted me and/or Alicia about similar experiences they had had at the time of their respective surgeries. More specifically, these women informed us that Dr. Becker appeared to be in an altered state of mind at the time of their surgeries,” Ellsworth said in her affidavit.

    On Jan. 18, Ellsworth hosted a meeting with 10 of those women at her house. Gregory also attended. Between Jan. 22 and Feb. 8, nearly all of the women received letters from Raees Mohamed, an attorney for Becker, according to the affidavit. None of the women had filed a lawsuit against Becker at the time they received the letter, making them question why they received the letter.

    Mohamed told New Times that the surgeon is considering a defamation case against some of the women. He added that he decided which women to send the letter to based on their statements about Becker on social media.

    ‘It was very intentional and threatening’

    In her affidavit, Ellsworth alleged that in late January, she and her husband were walking around their neighborhood with their children when a white sedan approached them from the opposite direction.

    “Instead of going wide to avoid us like normal drivers would do, the white sedan deliberately drove dangerously close to us, making us concerned they would deliberately strike one of the kids,” Ellsworth said. “They narrowly missed striking the kids a couple times. We turned around as they drove by to see who was in the vehicle but were unable to identify the occupants because of the darkness. Instead of leaving the scene, the vehicle drove to the east end of the street, turned around, and again approached us very slowly as if to strike us.”

    Ellsworth said the car then intentionally drove close to the family again, despite having to drive on the other side of the street.

    “It was very intentional and threatening,” Ellsworth said. “My husband and I were terrified by the incident and didn’t know what to think about it as we live in a very upscale neighborhood in Gilbert and never experienced anything like this before.”

    On Feb. 8, Ellsworth noticed two cars idling in front of her house. Her son tried to take a picture of a license plate, but the flash went off. A woman with blonde hair in a messy ponytail jumped out of a sedan and got in the other vehicle, which quickly left. Ellsworth and her son saw two men in the sedan. Afraid, they went inside and called for Ellsworth’s husband. The vehicle stayed on the street for a short time, then sped away.

    “This time, the incident felt deeply personal, unnerving and terrifying,” Ellsworth wrote in her affidavit. “My fear is that the driver(s) of the vehicle(s) intended to either harm us, intimidate us or worse, harm my family. I am uncertain who they were/are.”

    She told Armijo about the incident, who said she had seen an identical vehicle parked on the route to the school of Armijo’s child, and that there had been two different drivers.

    The same night Ellsworth saw the two cars, Gregory received a phone call from an unknown number. The caller demanded to know the location of his home and said they knew who he was, according to court documents.

    “Because of the many threatening actions taken against Wendy Ellsworth, Tyler Ellsworth, women who are contemplating legal action against Dr. Becker, and against myself, the Plaintiffs and I will be speaking with Maricopa County Sheriff’s Office to explore our options in order to protect ourselves and our families,” Gregory wrote.

    Becker, in his affidavit filed on Wednesday, said he was not involved in the incident in early February.

    “That unknown person was not me; I do not own or drive a white sedan, was not near Ms. Ellsworth’s home any time in early February 2024, and have never driven my vehicle close to Ms. Ellsworth or her family in a threatening manner or in any manner that posed potential injury or harm to them,” Becker said.

    Becker also said he has not driven by the homes of either woman and that he has not made any calls to Gregory.

    TJ L’Heureux

    Source link

  • Neo-Nazi, 2 others face trial in killing of gay Phoenix man

    Neo-Nazi, 2 others face trial in killing of gay Phoenix man


    Neo-Nazi skinhead Cory Young, his wife Shannon Young and co-defendant Angel Mullooly now face a July 22 trial for their alleged roles in the beating death of Jake Kelly, a 49-year-old gay Phoenix man.

    The trio appeared in court on Tuesday before Maricopa County Superior Judge Daniel Martin for a pretrial conference for their alleged involvement in Kelly’s homicide in August.

    Mullooly, 34, and Young, 44, stood in shackles and dirty orange scrubs as Martin scheduled the trial’s start date for this summer. Shannon Young, no longer in custody, appeared in street clothes. On Dec. 13, the 38-year-old woman’s bond was reduced from $50,000 to $5,000. She made bail a week later, according to the Maricopa County Sheriff’s Office.

    The Youngs each face one felony count of interfering with a police investigation. Mullooly is charged with second-degree murder and is being held on a $1 million bond. Cory Young, a tattoo artist with a violent prison record, is being held on a $100,000 bond.

    Martin asked about a motion to have Cory Young’s bail lowered. The motion was filed in mid-January by Young’s then-attorney, Jacob Fausette, who recently left the case. Veteran defense attorney Richard Gaxiola replaced Fausette as Young’s counsel on Jan. 31.

    Gaxiola told the judge that he was withdrawing the motion to lower Young’s bail. He was waiting to receive the case file and said he needed to review it before proceeding.

    Gaxiola is known for successfully defending violent career criminals, alleged murderers, gang members and, most notably, members of the Hells Angels Motorcycle Club.

    After the hearing, Gaxiola declined to discuss the case with Phoenix New Times.

    “I can tell you at the onset that Cory is presumed innocent under the law, and we will present a defense in accordance to the actual facts,” he said.

    Kelly’s face was “completely pulverized” and he suffered multiple fractures of his skull, face, sternum and ribs, when he was attacked on Aug. 27. He also received numerous internal injuries, underwent several surgeries and was placed on life support.

    Kelly’s mother, Jan, later authorized the withdrawal of life support. Kelly was pronounced dead on Sep. 8.

    click to enlarge

    Jake Kelly was beaten and left in the driveway of his north Phoenix home on Aug. 27. He died from his injuries on Sept. 8.

    Courtesy Jan Kelly

    ‘He killed my Jake’

    Jake Kelly shared a house with the Youngs near Cave Creek Road and Union Hills Drive. He officiated at Shannon Young’s wedding to Cory Young. All three were friends with Mullooly, who lived nearby.

    In interviews with police, the Youngs allegedly said they did not know how Kelly came to be battered and bloodied to the point of near death. The couple said all three of them went to a party on Aug. 27 and returned home drunk. The Youngs said they heard a loud bang outside, went to investigate and discovered Kelly lying in the driveway, semiconscious and nonverbal.

    They did not call 911. Instead, they brought Kelly in, bathed him, changed his clothes, put him on a couch and waited 16 hours before taking him to the hospital. They claimed no one else was present when they found Kelly.

    But in court documents, police described texts and statements to witnesses that contradict the Youngs’ account.

    One witness said Shannon Young texted her a photo of Kelly in a bathtub, bleeding from his injuries. The witness said Young allegedly told her later that “Cory and Angel fucked him up.”

    In cell phone data obtained by a police warrant, Mullooly allegedly sent a text message to his girlfriend, saying, “I fucked up Jake 2X babe.” Another text from Mullooly to the same woman supposedly showed a photo of Kelly bleeding in front of a garage door, with Cory Young “crouched down, holding Jake’s head” and Shannon Young standing to the side.

    As she has for nearly all hearings in the case, Jan Kelly attended the status conference on Tuesday. Kelly has said her son’s killing was a hate crime.

    Kelly said Cory Young looked at her twice during Tuesday’s hearing.

    Is Kelly concerned for her own safety if Young is released?

    “No, I’m really not,” she said. “He killed my Jake. He’s already done the worst he could do to me.”

    Jake Kelly’s remains were cremated and are in her possession. She explained that one of her other sons also died young and wanted his ashes transported to Costa Rica, where she had taken her boys to Tamarindo, a popular surfing destination.

    “Jake’s little brother died and wanted his ashes spread in Costa Rica,” she said. “I’m thinking if I get the chance to do that, I’ll take Jake, too.”





    Stephen Lemons

    Source link