Skip to main contentSkip to main content
Register for more free articles.
Log in Sign up
Back to homepage
Subscriber Login
Keep reading with a digital access subscription.
Subscribe now
You have permission to edit this collection.
Edit
Arizona Daily Star
67°
  • Sign in
  • Subscribe Now
  • Manage account
  • Logout
    • Manage account
    • e-Newspaper
    • Logout
  • News
    • Sign up for newsletters
    • Local
    • Arizona
    • Business
    • Crime
    • Nation & World
    • Markets & Stocks
    • SaddleBrooke
    • Politics
    • Archives
    • News Tip
  • Arizona Daily Star
    • E-edition
    • E-edition-Tutorial
    • Archives
    • Special Sections
    • Merchandise
    • Circulars
    • Readers' Choice Awards
    • Buyer's Edge
  • Obituaries
    • Share Your Story
    • Recent Obituaries
    • Find an Obituary
  • Opinion
    • Submit a Letter
    • Submit guest opinion
    • Letters to the Editor
    • Opinion & Editorials
    • National Columnists
  • Sports
    • Arizona Wildcats
    • Greg Hansen
    • High Schools
    • Roadrunners
  • Lifestyles
    • Events Calendar
    • Arts & Theatre
    • Food & Cooking
    • Movies & TV
    • Movie Listings
    • Music
    • Comics
    • Games
    • Columns
    • Play
    • Home & Gardening
    • Health
    • Get Healthy
    • Parenting
    • Fashion
    • People
    • Pets
    • Travel
    • Faith
    • Retro Tucson
    • History
    • Travel
    • Outdoors & Rec
    • Community Pages
  • Brand Ave. Studios
  • Join the community
    • News tip
    • Share video
  • Buy & Sell
    • Place an Ad
    • Shop Local
    • Jobs
    • Homes
    • Marketplace
    • I Love A Deal
  • Shopping
  • Customer Service
    • Manage My Account
    • Newsletter Sign-Up
    • Subscribe
    • Contact us
  • Mobile Apps
  • Weather: Live Radar
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Bluesky
  • YouTube
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram
© 2026 Lee Enterprises
Terms of Service | Privacy Policy
Arizona Daily Star
News+
Read Today's E-edition
Arizona Daily Star
News+
  • Log In
  • $1 for 3 months
    Subscribe Now
    • Manage account
    • e-Newspaper
    • Logout
  • E-edition
  • News
  • Obituaries
  • Opinion
  • Wildcats
  • Lifestyles
  • Newsletters
  • Comics & Puzzles
  • Buyer's Edge
  • Jobs
  • 67° Sunny
Share This
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Bluesky
  • WhatsApp
  • SMS
  • Email

Bookish bedbugs; herbal felony; all-female tattoo shop

  • Jul 10, 2015
  • Jul 10, 2015 Updated Dec 3, 2019

News from the Midwest.

Prosecutors: Man, woman to plead in incense indictment case

MADISON, Wis. — Federal prosecutors say a man and woman from Ashland have agreed to plead guilty to charges that they distributed substances similar to illegal drugs and filing false tax returns.

John Morrison and Anna Novak were indicted in December on multiple counts of distributing substances similar to illegal drugs and fraud.

According to the indictment, Morrison and Novak owned a store called JC Moon. Between October 2009 and November 2013 they sold the substances as herbal incense. The two placed about $575,000 from the store's revenue in their joint personal account and didn't report the income on their tax returns.

Prosecutors said Friday that plea hearings for both Morrison and Novak have been set for August. Their attorneys didn't immediately return emails.

Michigan doctor gets 45 years in prison for hurting patients

DETROIT — Calling the scheme "horrific," a judge sentenced a Detroit-area cancer doctor to 45 years in prison Friday for collecting millions from insurance companies while poisoning more than 500 patients through needless treatments that wrecked their health.

U.S. District Judge Paul Borman this week heard stories of brittle bones and fried organs as patients chillingly described the effects of excessive chemotherapy at the hands of Dr. Farid Fata.

Fata "shut down whatever compassion he had as a doctor and switched it to making money," Borman said.

Moments earlier, the judge called it a "huge, horrific series of criminal acts."

Fata, 50, offered no excuses before getting his punishment. Stone-faced all week in court, he repeatedly broke down in loud sobs as he begged for mercy Friday.

"I misused my talents, yes, and permitted this sin to enter me because of power and greed," Fata said. "My quest for power is self-destructive."

He said his patients knocked on his door for "compassionate care" but "I failed, yes, I failed."

Fata pleaded guilty last year to fraud, money laundering and conspiracy. He didn't strike a deal with prosecutors, so Borman needed much of the week to hear details about treatments. Patients and relatives hired a bus to get to court to watch.

"He preyed on our trust, our exhaustion, our fears," said Ellen Piligian, whose late father, a doctor, was administered powerful drugs he didn't need for a tumor in his shoulder.

Federal prosecutor Catherine Dick had asked for a 175-year prison sentence, while Fata sought 25 years.

"It is not mob justice. It is appropriate for this crime," Dick told the judge, referring to the extraordinary request.

Outside court, many former patients, dressed in yellow in solidarity, were disappointed with the punishment.

"Prosecutors did a fantastic job — and he got 45 years. It's a lifetime sentence for the rest of us," said Monica Flagg, 53, who was treated for cancer before doctors examining a broken leg found she had no cancer. "What about all the grave markers out there that all the victims' families have to look at?"

Defense attorney Christopher Andreoff described Fata, a native of Lebanon, as a broken man without family after his wife and children left the U.S. while the case was pending.

"But his family is still alive," said Liz Lupo, who held a picture of her late mother, Marianne Lupo, outside the courthouse. "I lost my only family."

The sentence, she said, is "not justice at all."

The government identified 553 victims, along with insurance companies. Medicare and insurers paid at least $17 million.

"For most cancer patients, the enemy is the disease they vow to fight," U.S. Attorney Barbara McQuade told reporters. "In this case, the doctor was the enemy in disguise."

Fata will get credit for about two years served in custody since his arrest in 2013. His stay in the federal prison system also could be shortened with good behavior.

His clinic, Michigan Hematology Oncology, had seven offices in the Detroit area and a related business that performed tests to look for cancer. Testifying for the government, two experts from Harvard medical school said they were troubled after looking at a small portion of patient files.

Lincoln woman gets $75K in libel suit against Crime Stoppers

LINCOLN, Neb. — A jury has awarded $75,000 to a Lincoln woman in a lawsuit that accused police and the local Crime Stoppers organization of libel and slander.

A posting on the Crime Stoppers website had claimed 26-year-old Shayla Funk used someone's stolen credit card to withdraw cash from an ATM, the Lincoln Journal Star reported. A video had shown Funk withdrawing cash from her own account in April 2013, but because of an incorrect time stamp on the video, the bank had given police video of the wrong person.

Funk sued the Lincoln-Lancaster County Crime Stoppers Inc. and the Lincoln Police Department, claiming that they libeled her by calling her a thief in posts on the Crime Stoppers website and slandered her in two television segments.

A jury at trial was asked to consider whether Crime Stoppers' work with the police qualified as a joint venture and made them liable for it, too. The jury determined that it did and awarded Funk the $75,000 on Wednesday afternoon.

An attorney for the defendants said he was disappointed in the result, but respects the jury's decision.

Funk on Monday said she wouldn't have questioned Crime Stoppers before the posting.

"I would've just assumed (people shown on the site) were guilty as well," she said.

Now, she said she feels like she's always doing damage control on characterization of her actions.

She said she left her job after being put on unpaid leave for three weeks when someone saw the video. She said that even two years later, when she goes back to her hometown, people still joke, "Hide your credit cards, Shayla's here."

Great Lakes Basin bouncing back from record-low water levels

CHICAGO — Water levels in Lake Michigan have been replenishing at an unprecedented rate since receding by 4 feet in the late 1990s and hitting a record low two years ago, according to government agencies.

Lake Michigan has risen more than 3 feet since January 2013, experts said. The resurging waters mean relief for commercial shipping and recreational activities, but they also have contributed to erosion that poses a threat to beaches and shoreline properties, the Chicago Tribune reported on Friday.

Some of the Great Lakes, the world's largest source of freshwater, have experienced below-average levels for years. The unusually long period of time that Lake Michigan waters remained at a low level created concern.

"It just stayed below average for 15 years, which was the longest persistent below-average (stretch) on record," said Drew Gronewold, hydrologist for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. "People were asking, 'Will the water levels ever go up again?'"

But for the first time in nearly two decades, the water levels of the Great Lakes exceeded their historical averages in late 2014.

At their highest levels since 1998, Lakes Michigan and Huron saw the second-largest gain over a 24-hour period since the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers began keeping records in 1918. The two lakes are considered one body of water, for measurement purposes, because they're linked by a strait.

Numerous factors can cause fluctuations in lake levels, including air temperature, humidity and wind speeds. But research suggests that a strong El Nino, an ocean current that brought about warmer waters and greater evaporation rates, was the main culprit that contributed to the 15-year drought.

"The bottom line was, in the Great Lakes, water was warming faster than the air," Gronewold said. "When you have warmer water temperatures and colder air, there is more evaporation."

Water levels in Lakes Michigan and Huron fell to a record low of 576 feet, nearly 3 feet below the historical average, in January 2013. Although a couple of feet might not seem significant, it can have a huge impact on the shipping industry.

Large freighters would have been forced to shed as much as 7,000 tons of cargo per trip around the time of the drop. With the restored lake levels, one freighter was able to ship almost a full load of ore at 70,000 tons across Lake Michigan last month, according to Glen Nekvasil, vice president of the Lake Carriers' Association, an organization that represents 16 American companies that transport raw materials.

Rain-induced runoff, higher amounts of precipitation and lower temperatures, as well as ice cover from the past two winters, were the main catalysts of the rejuvenation in the Great Lakes Basin.

"All three components have led to a surge in water levels," Gronewold said. "It's not just more rain. It's not just less evaporation."

In addition to Lakes Michigan and Huron, the largest of the Great Lakes, Lake Superior, also experienced significant gains between 2013 and 2014. It rose about 2 feet over that time, the highest net increase it has ever recorded over a two-year period.

The water levels of Lakes Michigan and Huron remain less than a foot below average.

Suburban Chicago library reopens after no more bedbugs found

PALATINE, Ill. — A suburban Chicago library has reopened after the discovery two dead bedbugs.

The Arlington Heights Daily Herald reports the Palatine Main Library reopened to the public Friday morning after being closed since the Wednesday evening discovery of the vermin.

The library posted a statement on its website saying a team including a bug-sniffing dog was brought in to search the 90,000-square-foot building and verify it was bug-free. No bedbug larva or eggs were found.

The dead bedbugs were found on a chair in the library's digital media center. Library Assistant Director Melissa Gardner said the library threw away the chair.

Library Director Anthony Auston says inspectors believe the bugs fell off an exposed patron.

Indiana excise police seize moonshine, still in Lake Station

LAKE STATION, Ind. — Authorities say they've seized moonshine and a still that it was made in from a property in Lake Station.

Indiana State Excise Police say officers made the seizure Thursday while serving a search warrant. Officials say the officers found a copper still in a shed and the alcoholic beverage that was made in the still inside the residence. Preliminary testing found the beverage's alcohol content was 132 proof.

The residence's owner, 50-year-old Anthony J. Metz, was issued summonses for preliminary misdemeanor charges of possession of untaxed alcoholic beverages and possession of unlicensed equipment for production of alcoholic beverages.

Phone numbers listed for Metz in Lake Station were disconnected.

Man accused of calling 911, using pepper spray on officers

LITTLE FALLS, Minn. — A Little Falls man is accused of calling 911, then using pepper spray on officers who responded to his house.

A criminal complaint filed in Morrison County says 46-year-old Scott Garman placed multiple 911 calls to dispatchers early Tuesday and was angry about officers who had been to his home earlier.

Little Falls police responded and found Garman on his front porch with a can of pepper spray. The complaint says he refused orders to put the can down and sprayed the officers who eventually took him into custody using a stun gun and their batons.

KSTP-TV says Garman is charged with fourth-degree assault and obstruction.

More cowbell! Detroit suburb seeks to set ear-ringing record

ROYAL OAK, Mich. — The Detroit suburb of Royal Oak wants to hear a lot more cowbell.

The Daily Tribune reports the "more cowbell" line from a 2000 "Saturday Night Live" TV sketch is part of the inspiration for an effort to break the Guinness World Records mark for the most people to ring a cowbell at once.

The attempt is Aug. 1 during the Cowbell Classic 10K and 5K run.

Matt Flynn, race director for Ultimate Fun Runs, says they're ordering 3,000 cowbells to be rung for five consecutive minutes. He says: "It's probably more difficult that you think because that's a long time to listen to cowbells."

The event benefits the Royal Oak Historical Society. That's appropriate, since the area was home to a 19th century cowbell-making business.

Department updates policy after suit over removal of hijab

DEARBORN HEIGHTS, Mich. — A Detroit-area police department has updated its policy on booking and photographing people who wear a religious head covering.

Malak Kazan sued in U.S. District Court in Detroit in January. She said she was forced to remove the traditional Muslim head scarf, known as a hijab, in the presence of men during booking and while in custody after being arrested last year in Dearborn Heights for driving with a suspended license.

Her lawyer Amir Makled tells The Detroit News the change went into effect Monday with a U.S. District Court judge's order.

According to the updated policy, a female officer will be present for removal if needed and removal will be done in a private area, if possible. Makled says it "could be the model policy" for other communities.

Judge: Girl charged in baby's death not competent for trial

PAINESVILLE, Ohio — An Ohio juvenile court judge has ruled that an 11-year-old girl charged with fatally beating an infant in February is not competent to stand trial.

Lake County Juvenile Court Judge Karen Lawson made the determination Thursday. She says the girl has significant mental health issues that make her incapable of understanding court proceedings.

The girl will be held at a juvenile detention center for 90 days after which the murder charge will be dismissed.

Lake County Prosecutor Charles Coulson says he's disappointed in the decision.

The girl has been held in a juvenile detention center since Feb. 6, the day 2-month-old Zuri Whitehead died in surgery. Police say the baby was severely beaten while staying at a Wickliffe home with the girl and her mother.

Man charged with impersonating St. Louis police officer

ST. LOUIS — A man has been charged with false impersonation of a law enforcement officer after authorities say he pretended to be a St. Louis police officer and checked passengers on the MetroLink train for valid tickets.

St. Louis police say Shaun Steven Arnold, who was charged Wednesday, rode the MetroLink on June 28 "in full St. Louis police officer uniform" as he checked passengers. According to court documents, a man confronted Arnold, who is in his 30s, that day near a MetroLink station. Arnold insisted he was an officer but could not provide identifying information.

Police say it is not clear where Arnold got the uniform, but that it had not been reported stolen.

Arnold's bail was set at $1,000. It was not immediately clear if he has an attorney.

Federal agent: Man said he would kill Obama with slingshot

MADISON, Wis. — A Secret Service agent has testified that a Wisconsin man charged with threatening to kill President Barack Obama said he planned to carry out an assassination with a slingshot.

Secret Service Special Agent Jeffrey Ferris testified Thursday at a detention hearing for 55-year-old Brian Dutcher of Tomah. He says Dutcher made the statement in an interview after being detained.

Prosecutors say Dutcher traveled to La Crosse, where Obama was scheduled to make a speech earlier this month. An affidavit says Dutcher told a library security guard he would "take (Obama) out" if he got the chance.

The Wisconsin State Journal reports defense attorney Joseph Bugni asked that Dutcher be released to a friend.

But Magistrate Judge Stephen Crocker ruled Dutcher was a danger and a flight risk and ordered that he remain in custody pending a trial.

Eastern Wisconsin teen hopes to bake her way into college

SHEBOYGAN, Wis. (AP) — Saving for college tuition starts in the kitchen for a local teen who aspires to one day have her own bakery.

Emily Schultz, 16, of Cleveland, is spending the summer baking and selling her treats at the Sheboygan Farmers Market each Wednesday through a partnership with her summer employer, The Hickory House Food & Spirits. She gets to use their commercial kitchen to do her baking and, in turn, she waitresses for them on weekends, Sheboygan Press Media (http://shebpr.es/1NJqgWm ) reported.

This entrepreneurial spirit is driven by her goal to save money to attend Lakeshore Area Technical College's Lakeshore Culinary Institute next fall after she completes her final year of homeschooling with her mom, Deanne Schultz.

An associate degree in culinary arts from LTC requires 70 credits of coursework over four semesters, according to their website. In total, tuition and book costs will be $13,286.

Emily started working at The Hickory House a year ago as a dishwasher because, at the time, she was too young to work in the kitchen. Now, in addition to waitressing, she does some work as a line cook, The Hickory House owner Kristine Kielisziewski said in an email.

"We're trying to teach her how to be an entrepreneur," Kielisziewski said. "This is our first year at the market, and hope it will turn out to be a wonderful venture for both Emily and The Hickory House. She is a wonderful young lady with a good head on her shoulders and a hard worker, which is pretty rare in kids these days."

Deanne said Emily's work experience at Hickory House really showed her how a restaurant works from back to front.

It was at The Hickory House that she really got to practice baking professionally and provided further motivation to someday run her own business, but baking has always been part of her dream, she said.

"I wanted to open my own bake shop ever since I was able to pull a chair into the kitchen and help my mom out," Emily said.

Her mom said this started at about age 3 or 4. She said if Emily heard her in the kitchen, she would stop playing with her toys and hurry to see what was going on.

"Sometimes at that age, helping isn't always helpful and there wasn't much she could do, but she would sit and watch," Deanne said. "To me, it was just an early indication that she was interested in cooking."

Deanne home-schools her children, which makes incorporating Emily's culinary aspirations into curriculum flexible. In the past, she required Emily to make one meal a week of a recipe of her choice as a way to include cooking in her lesson plans, Deanne said.

Over the years, Emily took cake decorating classes at Wally's Studio & A Piece of Cake in Sheboygan Falls, as well as several cooking tutorials at Blackwolf Run in Kohler.

Emily has also been that designated cake-maker for special family occasions like birthdays, anniversaries and other holidays, her mom said.

Although she is a little nervous about the transition from homeschooling to college, she's looking forward to improving her skills.

"I'm somewhat nervous, because I'm not very social," Emily said. "But I'm excited to start actually learning new techniques and stuff like that."

___

Information from: Sheboygan Press Media, http://www.sheboygan-press.com

This is an AP Member Exchange shared by Sheboygan Press Media

Minneapolis tattoo shop employs all-female staff

MINNEAPOLIS — When many people think of getting a tattoo, they likely expect to go to a shop run by men.

That's not surprising, because male tattoo artists in the United States vastly outnumber their female counterparts.

But these days, more women than men are sporting ink. Polls show about 23 percent of women have tattoos, compared to 19 percent of men.

Jackalope Tattoo in Minneapolis, one of the few tattoo shops in the nation with an entirely female staff, aims to capture that growing market, Minnesota Public Radio News reported.

The shop's artists rapidly and repeatedly puncture the skin on their clients' shoulders, forearms and rib cages. But the prevailing sound in the room is laughter.

As artists tease each other from their workstations, patrons like Caroline Johnson join in.

"It's just a happy-go-lucky environment," said Johnson, who recently came to the Minneapolis shop for the fifth time. "It's nice to hear people interacting like friends. When you're going through something kind of painful — getting needles shoved in your skin — it's really comforting."

At first, tattoo artist Nichelle Gabbard describes the atmosphere in Jackalope Tattoo as family-like. But she's quick to clarify.

"It's like working with a bunch of sisters instead of working with a bunch of brothers who are gross and inappropriate," she said.

The shop employs seven female artists. That's a scenario that is almost unheard of in what remains a very male-dominated profession, said owner Bambi Wendt, who has been tattooing in the Twin Cities for more than a decade.

"The shops have been almost all male," Wendt said of the places she has worked. "Sometimes (there was) one other chick. But that was pretty rare."

Wendt said misogyny is common in the industry. Other Jackalope artists agree. They recall the co-workers who commented more on their bodies than their work — and patrons who rejected the very idea of a "girl" wielding a tattoo machine.

Tattoo artist Katie Kroeck will never forget the time a male tattoo artist said, "Oh, let me warm my hands in your thighs."

That kind of behavior inspired Wendt to launch Jackalope in 2013.

"I think that the industry is ready to see a kinder, gentler side," she said.

There are those who assume an all-female staff means all kinds of cuteness. Indeed, a fair number of flower motifs and cat designs do come out of Jackalope.

On a recent afternoon, client May Weiss came in to have an artistic representation of her family's beloved feline, Virgil Tibbs, tattooed on her wrist.

"He was named after a character from my dad's favorite TV show, 'In the Heat of the Night,'" she said.

It's an ideal assignment for Kroeck, 27, who has "Cat Lady" tattooed on her knuckles.

Still, the artists get plenty of requests for skulls, barbed wire and classic pinup girls — some with a modern twist.

"Zombies," Gabbard said. "Zombie pinups are pretty popular these days."

As it turns out, the all-female aspect of Jackalope is reflected less in the content of tattoos than in the experience that customers have while getting them.

Nicole Luck, who chose the shop for its low-key feel, came in for tattoos of matching sparrows on each forearm — one for each her two children, ages 5 and 1.

"Some places can be a little more intimidating or tough," Luck said. "Is it OK to say, 'That's not the vibe you guys have?'" she asked the Jackalope staff with a laugh.

For some, the fact that Jackalope has a completely female staff makes little difference.

But the judgment-free atmosphere cultivated there has been a draw for members of the transgender community and for women who have had mastectomies and want their chests tattooed, Kroeck said.

"It's really great to have females working in the tattoo industry just as much as anything else where someone's going to be laying their hands on your body," she said.

That can be important for customers who have been through tough experiences.

"You never know someone's personal history," Kroeck said. "Sometimes they survived some crazy trauma. Emotions can be triggered by the pain of the tattoo. Why not put someone in the most comfortable setting for them in that point?"

Sunlight fills the studio. That alone makes Jackalope a standout in an era of decidedly dark tattoo shops. Instead of heavy metal music, the pop-rock sound of Madonna pumps through the speakers.

Wendt said there is room for all kinds of tattoo shops but hers offers an alternative to the typical one.

"I've had people who won't get tattooed by women; they just won't," she said. "It doesn't hurt my feelings. If that's not what you're looking for, that's not what you're looking for and I can't change that for you."

Wendt does want to make one thing clear: Just because Jackalope has an all-female staff doesn't mean it only takes female clients.

"People ask me that," she said. "They're like, 'Oh, does that mean you don't tattoo dudes?' It's like, 'Of course we tattoo dudes. We just tattoo rad dudes.'"

Related to this collection

Midget Mascot Dispute

Midget Mascot Dispute

Members of the Little People of America pose outside of Freeburg High School while delivering superintendent Andrew Lehman a petition requesti…

Arizona Daily Star
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Bluesky
  • YouTube
  • Instagram
  • Arizona Daily Star Store
  • This is Tucson
  • Saddlebag Notes
  • Tucson Festival of Books

Sites & Partners

  • E-edition
  • Classifieds
  • Events calendar
  • Careers @ Lee Enterprises
  • Careers @ Gannett
  • Online Features
  • Sponsored Blogs
  • Get Healthy

Services

  • Advertise with us
  • Register
  • Contact us
  • RSS feeds
  • Newsletters
  • Photo reprints
  • Subscriber services
  • Subscription FAQ
  • Licensing
  • Shopping
© Copyright 2026 Arizona Daily Star, PO Box 26887 Tucson, AZ 85726-6887
Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Advertising Terms of Use | Do Not Sell My Info | Cookie Preferences
Powered by BLOX Content Management System from bloxdigital.com.
  • Notifications
  • Settings
You don't have any notifications.

Get up-to-the-minute news sent straight to your device.

Topics

News Alerts

Breaking News