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Autor Tema: started to use the law to have undercover officers make arrests.  (Leído 63 veces)

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The law has been on the books for years, but it was not until 2008 when Flagstaff police, responding to complaints by merchants, started to use the law to have undercover officers make arrests.
Citing more than $4 billion debts in all, much of it linked to fraudulent deals, the county filed what was then the largest municipal bankruptcy in U.S. history in 2011. The county is still trying to emerge from bankruptcy, and residents face decades of sewer rate hikes.
Quagga mussels, if you’ve only heard a little about them, are no bigger than a fingernail. But their size is no reflection on what they can do to our water supply should they make their way from the Colorado River and Lake Pleasant to Saguaro, Canyon, Apache and Roosevelt lakes on the Salt River or Bartlett and Horseshoe lakes on the Verde.
Katie Spain, Jyssica Pepper, Kayla Hale, Laci Driggers and Emma Johansen lead a balanced offense for the Warhawks. Spain,in some cases, Hale and Driggers each have at least 10 homers and 10 doubles, while Johansen paces the team with a .384 average and Pepper has a team-high six triples.
Gusty winds, lightning storms and dusty conditions passed through the Valley on Labor Day afternoon, according to the National Weather Service.The lightning storm initially rolled through Chandler and moved north into Tempe, Mesa and Scottsdale,moncler outlet, according to the National Weather Service. Strong lightning and heavy winds were reported in the east Valley.Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport had no measurable rain Monday, according to the Weather Service. But wind gusts reached speeds of 35 mph around the area.Tempe received the most rain in the Valley,ANYONE can do his job, with 0.08 inches of rain reported by 5:15 p.m.,in that it blends things. However, according to the Weather Service.The afternoon storms were moving north out of the Valley at relatively fast speeds of 25 mph. The storm moved past Phoenix at about 3 p.m. Monday, leaving mostly clear and sunny skies for the rest of the afternoon.Dust in the Valley dropped visibility to 4 miles in some sections of the Valley. Dust brought down visibility to 1 mile around Sky Harbor Monday morning, according to the Weather Service.A 30 percent chance of rain was forecast by the National Weather Service for Phoenix. Relative humidity should drop to 21 percent by Monday night.

 

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