Coffee heat rising

w00t! Vacated!!

So this morning I get back on the phone to the county attorney’s office. First the woman I reach can’t find the cases…turns out she hit a wrong numeral in her search. Then we discover the perps have got NEW case numbers. She succeeds in tracking down all four case numbers…and, it develops, they’ve been vacated!

“Soooo,” say I, ever suspicious, “what does that mean?”

“Well,” says she, “probably they took a plea deal.”

“So I don’t have to show up at all?”

“Nope!”

Hooo-rah!

“Thank you very much,” I say. “And if there’s anything I can do to help out if needed, let me know,”

“Bake us some cookies?” she says. “Just kidding!

🙂

How to Be a “Victim”

As you may recall, after the late, great garage invasion Sheriff Joe and the county prosecutor’s office declared me a “victim” of a couple of gang-banging thugs. The county has an involved victim assistance program, supposedly designed to reassure, protect, and aid victims of crimes.

Yeah.

Beginning way back in November, Sheriff Arpaio’s office started issuing subpoenas — consistently sent to the wrong address, despite repeated corrections from me — demanding that I show up at the trial of one or the other of these two guys. He even sent a deputy to my door to serve one of these papers, all of which inform me that if  I’m not there at 8 in the morning on thus-and-such a day, I will be jailed, and that I have to sit there until a judge dismisses me. Each one has to be answered, by return mail, in the affirmative, to the effect that yes, I have received the latest piece of paper and yes, I promise to show up there, and yes, I know I will be thrown in jail if I don’t show up. I’ve probably received about a dozen of these, partly because they send two or three at a time and partly because the trial has repeatedly been postponed.

It looks like the trial is finally going to happen this Wednesday.

At this point, they’re trying two of the thugs…interestingly, last fall they said one of them had copped a plea. So why we’re having to jump through double hoops is unclear. But that’s far from the most ridiculous aspect of the interminable series of subpoenas.

Silliest aspect? I can’t even begin to identify either of these characters.

One never came anywhere near me or my house, and so I’ve never seen him in my life. The other hunkered down in my garage, on the other side of a dead-bolted door. Two dead-bolted doors, actually, since I locked myself inside my office when it became clear the gent was out there. The only glimpse I got of him was of the back of his head, seen from way across the street as they dragged the guy, kicking and biting, to the paddy wagon.

The only help I can give the prosecutor is to say whether the shirt, the rubber gardening shoes, and an old straw hat that he used to try to disguise himself as a lawn man actually belong to me. This identification could easily be done with a deposition, without dragging me into the courtroom and without exposing me to the attention of the two thugs’ fellow gang-bangers. And without making it obvious, in public, that I live here alone.

The subpoenas punctiliously delete the “victim’s” address. As though they didn’t already know where I live! Hey, folks…they were here. And the night after our boy was released from jail, he came back to retrieve his gun from my back yard — he left the back gate hanging open as a calling card.

Try as I might, I cannot get a straight story from the prosecutor’s office as to how much of my time this fiasco is going to consume. Am I going to be down at the court all day Wednesday? Can I expect this will go on for several days? How much is it going to cost me to park my car downtown all day long? Can I bring a computer so I can do some work while I’m killing time down there? Will they let me take a computer into the courtroom?

I’m supposed to give a presentation at 7:30 on Thursday morning. And since I’m standing in for the group’s president while he recovers from bypass surgery, I have to be there with the organization’s checkbook so as to pay for the Thursday breakfast.

At this point, I have no idea whether I’ll be able to do that or not.

It’s better than last November’s subpoena, which would have had me docked for at least a day of teaching pay — and since my classes met twice a week, that would have meant loss of a fourth of a two-week paycheck. But it’s still a nuisance.

Today I’m going to call the prosecutor’s office again — they’re very nice people; they just don’ t know anything — and if I can’t get a straight story, I guess I’ll have to cancel the presentation and try to get one of the other group members to emcee the meeting and pay for breakfast.

I’m starting to lose patience with this. It’s gone on and on, and it shows some potential to put me at risk, since you can be sure anything I say about either one of the two sh!theads, even “yes, that’s my shirt,” is not going to be appreciated by his fellow sh!theads. And whether they care about their pal or not, they will now know I’m an elderly woman who lives alone, making me a prime target for burglary and possibly other mayhem.

Obviously, the prosecutor’s office needs to get crime victims and witnesses to show up at the courtroom to testify against perps. And that’s fine — I’m happy to be present and to help out to the extent that I can. The issue here is that I can’t help much, or possibly even at all. And the endless badgering from the sheriff’s office has begun to annoy. I’m tired of the threats. And really, I’d like to get a straight story about how much of my time will be absorbed by this — that shouldn’t be too much to ask.

It’s beginning to feel like victimizing the victim. I’m not looking forward to whatever happens next…

Where’s Yore Sign? The joys of dealing with the public

Do you have a job that brings you into regular contact with the public? If you don’t, thank your lucky stars. 🙄

This morning on the way home from my Thursday morning meeting, I wanted to get a flu shot. Even though Young Dr. Kildare had suggested I give the flu shots a rest after last year’s nasty reaction to the double-dose version the Safeway pharmacist was foisting on us old bats, the current hysteria about spreading flu and “thousands” of deaths (yeah — heard that one on the news this morning) spooked me. The thing may have no effect for me, given my advanced old age, and it may be too late, since it takes two weeks for the vaccine to kick in. But what the heck: it’s free, and the normal dose has no untoward effects.

So I drop by the Scottsdale pharmacy right across the road from where the business group meets. They’re out of vaccine. Pharmacist says one of the two pharmacies on my direct route home has the stuff.

So I drive across the city, maneuver a cutthroat dog-leg turn across three lanes of rush-hour traffic to get into the Walgreen’s parking lot, trot up to the pharmacy counter, sign up for a shot, get handed a form to fill out and get told to take a seat.

After about 15 or 20 minutes of waiting, I’m about at the point where I’m ready to leave. Just as I’m thinking, “How much longer should I waste my time here?” a fight breaks out.

No joke.

A mid-30ish woman has been standing in line for most of the time I’ve been twiddling my thumbs. Only she hasn’t been standing in line.

two_footprints_black_145148You know how Walgreen’s has this sticker pasted on the floor with little feet on it and big letters reading WAIT HERE? It’s right next to the sign that says

“For your privacy,
please wait here
for
the next available pharmacist.”

Well, this woman has parked herself about ten feet back of the sign. She’s way back at the eyeglasses and cold nostrums display, a good ten or twelve feet away from the “Please Wait Here” station.

One other patron has noticed this and is standing behind her. They’ve both been cooling their heels for quite some time, as have I. One of the two service bays at the counter is open — no one is at the counter.

Along comes an old buzzard: looks to be about 90 or 92. He dodders up to the empty space at the counter, not noticing the silly woman who’s standing halfway to Timbuktu.

When she sees him wander up there and sees the pharmacist start to wait on him, she has a sh!t-fit. First she starts to yell at the old man. Then she starts to scream at the pharmacist! He himself is pushing 75.

So at this point, I give up — I leave the paperwork on the counter and walk out.

There’s another Walgreen’s about two stoplights up the road. The pharmacists in this store are exceptionally nice, and all the hired help evince signs of intelligent life. Nobody is standing in line.

Since I’m presumably in the system and may appear to have just had the shot, I describe to the pharmacist what just happened at the neighboring store and ask if I could please get a flu shot at her store. The pharmacist is flabbergasted.

I say, “Just think of it: we get to drive around on the same streets with that woman!”

She laughs. “Yeah,” she says. “Sometimes the folks who come in here leave me thinking, are you really allowed to drive, too?

We agreed: some people need to have a sign on their car.

Shoring up the Defenses, and Tales of Perps and Dumb Marks

The other day when I remarked that some clown was (or maybe was not) ringing the doorbell after dark but the motion-sensitive coach light near the gate hadn’t clicked on, TB of Blue-Collar Workman commented that it’s a good idea to install motion-sensitive lights high enough to be out of reach of a six-foot-tall man, since, as we know, one thing these guys like to do is unscrew your porch light before kicking in the front door.

That struck me as a real good idea, so I went by HD and bought a couple of China’s best motion-sensitive searchlights. I hate those things—they about put your eye out. IMHO, the dark is supposed to be dark, and I happen to much prefer it that way. Oh well. We’re not in Kansas anymore…

At any rate, Dave the Electrician and his sidekick came by yesterday and installed them. Dave thought it was a great idea. He put one on the west side, where the motion-sensitive light stopped working years ago, and another on the east side, positioned so that walking by on the sidewalk shouldn’t kick it off, but trying to climb the wall sure will. Its range covers the length of the wall that isn’t obstructed by thorny vines…and also, if any dude cares to try to climb through a bougainvillea, he’ll have plenty of light to show him the way.

The one on the west side is especially great, because it comes on if you walk up the driveway or if you walk across the yard on the west side, or if you’ve come over the back wall it will come on when you approach the area where the west-facing sliding door is. This means that when somebody (or somebody’s cat) is out there, I can see through that damn sliding door and spot the poor wretch.

There are a lot of trees out there, and so o’course it’ll be on all the time a light wind blows. I suppose when it gets windy I could bestir myself to walk into the garage and turn off the switch. That requires more ambition than I usually have, though.

The other day TB, trying to make peace with Lady Karma (one expects), fessed up to his youthful life of crime and offered a long series of excellent tips on how to protect your car from break-ins. Some of these are common sense and some are pretty subtle—it’s a worthwhile read, unless you enjoy engaging with insurance companies and car repair guys.

TB’s post reminded me of a hilarious episode that happened here in the neighborhood. My neighbor across the street at the time (this was when I lived in the old house) worked as a kind of man-for-all-seasons for a spectacularly wealthy Scottsdaleite, and since he was largely on call, he would come and go at odd hours.

One morning he was about to leave for work. He’d climbed into his car, turned on the ignition…and realized that damn! he’d left his coffee in the kitchen. So he jumped out of the car, trotted back in the house, poured his coffee and shut off the Mr. Coffee, and darted back out to get back into…a missing car!

Yes! In the time it took the guy to walk into the house, pour a cup of coffee, and walk out, some dude had walked up, seen he’d left the keys in the car, and driven off in it!

😆 😆 😆

So, there you go: Never. Leave. Your. Keys. in. the. Car. Tip of the day.

Image: Motion Detector Attached to a Garage. CHG. Public domain.

Perp Update

So, acting on Evan‘s advice, I decided to give the County Attorney’s office a call and express my concerns about whatever risk testifying against the late, great garage invader might evince, young G.I. being a convicted felon, a member of a violent criminal gang, and charged with armed robbery, kidnapping, and aggravated assault.

Called the number of the Gang Bureau, given on Sheriff Joe’s subpoena. The woman who answered the phone knew all about G.I. Remarked she: “He’s…special.”

Yeah. I’ll bet he is.

She patched me through to the prosecutor in charge of harrying young G.I. He was extremely nice and helpful. First off, he said he thought the charges they were preferring that entailed the garage invasion caper were so minor that G.I. and his pals would hardly notice them. Second, he gave me his phone number and his cell number (!!!), with instructions to call him if anything even vaguely suspicious or alarming happened, and said to call the police if the anyone showed up on the property. However, he said, G.I. is still in custody and will be until the trial. So, since it’s unlikely he memorized my address in his rush to escape the cops or after his captors had beaned him, his co-conspirators are not likely to show up here with any threats.

Then I mentioned, as an afterthought, that if I had to sit around a courtroom for several days, it would mean I would lose a week’s salary—explained that one class meeting for an adjunct section that meets twice a week represents half a week’s pay. Said he: “Oh, hadn’t you heard? The trial has been postponed until January.”

Hallelujah, brother!

By January, of course, I’ll no longer be standing in front of classrooms full of freshmen, and so that moots the whole paycheck problem. Editorial work I can do anyplace where I can sit down and turn on a computer. So, I’m pretty relieved about that.

Mr. County Prosecutor continued: They’re pretty sure he’s going to accept a plea agreement before the trial is scheduled. He said one of his pals has already done so, and they think he will, too. I pointed out that he’s already got at least one felony conviction, plus if he was convicted on the charge of possession of a firearm by a felon, he has two. Thus copping a plea would put him in jail for at least 25 years, and very probably for the rest of his life. I said if I were in that position I wouldn’t be interested in confessing to anything, and anyone who might testify against me most definitely would hear from my colleagues. He said there was something to that, except they have him dead to rights on the pawn shop heist.

So, it doesn’t look like there’s much to worry about where that poor schmuck is concerned.

What a shame. He’s a handsome man, except for the pinpoint irises and the gang tat on the neck. Think of it: once he was somebody’s cute little baby. What do you suppose happens to a person that he turns out to be an armed robber and all-around sh!thead?

Oh well.

This little reminder caused me to reconsider sticking the door screamers on the new Arcadia doors. Damn, but I don’t want to! They look so nice…who needs to junk up a $1,500 door with a stupid plastic alarm?

On the other hand, that one did go off the time the guy tried to get in the westside door. He must have been annoyed. 😀

No question, too, that the sliding doors and windows, especially in back, are the most vulnerable entries to the house. They really should have noisemakers on them. {sigh} That’ll make for a couple of hours of dorking around—have to scrape off the extremely stubborn stickum from the alarms that were removed from the old doors. First, though, I’ve gotta grade some stoont papers.

And so, to work…

 

Summoned by Sheriff Joe

Sonovabitch! The late, great garage invasion is about to cost me even more money and stress. Comes a summons in the mail from the sheriff’s office: my presence is requested (nay, demanded) at a trial for the sh!thead who caused all that flap.

Over the summer I drew down my survival savings by about $7,000 to install new Arcadia doors that actually latch (two of the old ones couldn’t be latched at all), replace the last of the windows that could be opened simply by pulling off a length of rubber weatherstripping, install a new security door in back, and install (expensive!!!) hardened locks on all three security doors. This seriously impoverished me, requiring me to spend money that should have supported me for the better part of another year and making it impossible for me to to replace my 13-year-old car anytime in the near future (or, more likely, ever).

The summons is for the 20th, a Tuesday. That means I’ll miss the noon class on that day, and very probably this trial will go several days: I may miss class on Wednesday and maybe even more than that. You have to sit there in the courtroom until they call you and until the judge decides you can be dismissed.

I do not get paid if I’m not in class. So unless I can quietly put someone up to standing in for me, I’m going to get screwed royally here. And, given my plan to quit teaching at the end of this semester, I really can’t afford to do without several days of pay.

Just to complicate matters, I donated money to the church during the silent auction, which obviously I should not have done. And during a recent art studio tour, I purchased an interesting necklace, first because I wanted it and second because I realized that if I could study it closely, I could create something similar and sell the things myself. Neither of these was radically costly in the large scheme of things, but taken together they drained this month’s budget. If several hundred dollars of income are sucked out of said budget, I won’t have enough to make ends meet either this month or next.

Nothing gets your attention like a summons from Joe Arpaio. It’s like getting a summons from the Gestapo or the KGB…this is a cynical and irrational fellow. So add that little jolt to the stress of wondering how I’m going to eat and pay the bills.

It is, however, as nothing compared to the content of this subpoena.

As the “victim,” my address is not published in the public record, as if our boy and his pals don’t know where I live…

They’re charging the perp with armed robbery, kidnapping, and aggravated assault.

This represents a real problem.

In the first place, the guy did not kidnap me and did not assault me. He never got close enough to see me, much less lay his hands on my dainty little person. The cops told me that where the garage invasion was concerned, they were going to charge him with criminal trespass and burglary—the latter because he grabbed a shirt, a tattered old sun hat, and a pair of muddy clodhoppers to create his disguise as a gardener. So this means either they’ve trumped up the charges (not at all unlikely in the Arpaio regime) or that he actually did grab and attack someone.

And in the second place, as a witness, I’m instructed to call the “Gang Bureau” on the 19th to confirm that the trial is actually on for the following morning. Charming.

Pretty clearly this character is a dangerous thug of long standing. Not only that, but pretty clearly he’s a member of a violent gang. That means that showing up in court and testifying against him could put me at serious risk, not just from him but from his pals. And that risk may not only be immediate, it may be long-standing, as these guys take their time waiting for an opportunity to inflict revenge on me.

There’s no way I’m going to testify on phony charges, no matter how richly the guy deserves to be taken off the streets. So if the charges of kidnapping and aggravated assault stem from his adventures in my garage, we’re looking at a huge waste of everyone’s time and about $500 that I will lose for nothing.

If, however, the charges had to do with the armed robbery of the pawn shop he and his pals stuck up or with some other caper, then these gents truly are dangerous and could do me some serious harm.

Hm. Come to think of it… This casts a different light on a wacky little incident that took place a couple of nights ago. The doorbell at the front gate rang, after dark. Cassie went batshit. Looked out the front window and couldn’t see anyone, and the motion-sensitive light was off. A few minutes later it rang again: still no sign of a person out there.

The kids across the street at Pretty Daughter’s house were banging around across the street; she also has one of these battery-operated doorbells. I installed mine because Satan or an even more previous homeowner removed the hard-wired doorbell to the house. I had to jimmy it because hers rang on the same preset frequency, causing mine to go off every time any of her many relatives and friends would show up at her door. So I thought she must have adjusted the settings on hers and one of the kids’ friends rang it.

But later when I took the dog for a walk I realized you can walk right up to the gate and not turn that light on—I actually had to enter the gate before the motion sensor kicked on last night. However, the gate was hanging open when I went out…you’d think if someone had entered the gate, it would have turned on the light. If you were careful and savvy, you could, suppose, approach the gate without triggering the motion sensor by keeping your head way down.

A common strategy for burglars and home invaders around here is to ring your doorbell either to see if you’re home or to try to get you to open the door so they can push their way in. Usually they unscrew the lightbulbs in motion-sensitive lights around the doors, so that you can’t see them. But my light bulbs were in place and intact.

It’s mighty unlikely that Pretty Daughter has installed a new battery-run doorbell and, for unknown and highly unlikely reasons, fiddled with it in exactly the same way I’ve fiddled with mine. She’d have no reason to do so, and it would be a pretty weird coincidence if she flipped the same set of switches in the same order that I’ve flipped mine.

I don’t open my door to strangers. But there’s nothing to stop a vindictive sh!thead from shooting you through the door. Or through the window. Or, with the kind of arms gang members carry, right through your block wall. Or from throwing a pop bottle full of gasoline through your window.

So. This episode not only is going to cost me still more money, it may put me at some risk and certainly is going to cause additional worry. And cause me to revisit the question of whether I should sell this house and move.