The mother and brother of Kyleigh Sousa on Tuesday placed a bouquet of flowers in the 200 block of Apache Trail near an International House of Pancakes restaurant and the Twin Palms Hotel in Tempe in memory of the 21-year-old Arizona State University student. Sousa died May 26 hours after she was robbed and dragged by a heavyset Hispanic man driving a car who grabbed her purse and sped away. A flier placed with the flowers seeks clues in her death and provides phone numbers to call for anyone who may have information in the crime. Photo by Mike Sakal
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wgauthority posted at 9:00 am on Wed, Jul 13, 2011.
If I remember correctly, west valley police have a beautiful picture of an "alleged" murderer with his girlfriend, driving an "alleged" stolen vehicle, speeding on the freeway. Absolutely "NO" idea where they are, but they do have a GREAT picture.
RationalHuman posted at 5:02 pm on Tue, Jul 12, 2011.
Hmm, this article says the cities claim the speed photo enforcement is "revenue-neutral", yet another article in this very same venue made an entirely different claim:
"Tempe says it lost about $15,000 last year on photo enforcement after paying Redflex’s fees and covering staff costs. If Tempe paid the disputed $1.3 million, the city would likely have lost more than $400,000 per year in each of the last three years of its contract."
So now we know - SOMEONE IS LYING.
The question is, who, and who is going to investigate any possible criminal fraud?