Arizona
Immortal Consciousness & Dr. Duran: Arizona woman leaves cult to find happiness, advocacy
No matter what expert you ask, they’ll say there are still thousands of cults in the United States.
A Gilbert, Arizona woman says many of them are all around us in Arizona – and she would know.
She says she experienced a cult firsthand and wants to help others avoid what she fell for.
Arizona woman leaves cult to find happiness, advocacy
Immortal Consciousness & Dr. Duran
Flipping through childhood photos, everything seems normal.
But, Brooke Walker sees it differently now.
“We celebrated Halloween, we celebrated Easter,” she said.
She says she was raised in a cult. “100%. Unfortunately.”
As an 8-year-old girl, her parents moved her family to a Mesa neighborhood to live with another family and join the church of Immortal Consciousness.
“Looking for faith, but also something different than what they had,” she said. “You know, the mainstream stuff.”
What they found was a church leader and medium who said she could speak with and summon a 14th-century Englishman named Dr. Duran.
“You could be heavily corrected by the spirit for what you’re doing,” Walker explained.
She played for us her recording of what they called “a trance.” Eventually, the church leader would speak as Duran.
“I had a lot of mixed emotions about it. Mostly, I’m surprised about the amount of power it used to hold over me,” Walker said. “This is what the teaching is telling me. This is what the spirit is telling me. All these things are, if something is wrong, it’s me. I’m the problem. So you create this belief set that if anything goes sideways, must be your fault.”
The church headed north. About 150 members lived in Tonto Village.
Walker turned 19 and was in an arranged marriage arranged by Dr. Duran. The wedding was held in a room and was officiated by the 700-year-old spirit.
“You’re going to be in a relationship with who the spirit says you’re in a relationship with,” Walker explained.
After two babies, her husband left, telling her he needed to leave.
“Everybody continued telling me after that, ‘It’s about you. He just doesn’t love you and won’t tell you the truth.’ So, I spent 10 years believing that,” she said with tears in her eyes.
‘You should be in environments where you are allowed to ask questions’
Now, things are different.
Walker lives in Gilbert and is happy with her new life.
She spends her time in front of a microphone.
“I’m here for you, and I’m here to support you, and I’m here to share with you a space that you can get past that,” Walker said on her podcast.
She started the podcast out of her house called “How to Leave a Cult.”
“For me, it’s about creating a place where people can get some tools to heal,” Walker said. “Most people think of a cult, and they immediately go to the worst of them, right? Drink the Kool-Aid, Jim Jones stuff, Waco stuff … so, you have these extreme sides to it,” she explained.
She says the church she was raised in wasn’t extreme like that, but she says it had all the trademarks of a cult.
The church has long denied that publicly, and Walker says it disbanded years ago.
Cults are all around us in many forms, she says, which is why she believes her podcast can be healing for people.
“You should be in environments where you are allowed to ask questions. You should be in environments where you’re making the decisions for yourself about your life. I feel like nobody is a better advocate for who you are, what you need, how to parent, than you are as a person, and when somebody says they have a better way, that’s where we get sideways,” Walker said.
She’s already recorded multiple podcasts, using her story to connect to others. Ultimately, she hopes to help anyone leave a cult.
“You’re leaving your family behind. You’re leaving your faith behind. Leaving all your friends behind. Probably leaving your means of living behind. Leaving a cult is a really f—— hard thing,” Walker warned.
Arizona
Arizona is among the worst states to move to, study says. Here’s why
A new study has ranked Arizona as one of the worst states to move to for two years in a row, largely due to what it calls a poor quality of life.
The study conducted by Consumer Affairs analyzed the best states to move to in the United States, putting Arizona at the bottom of the list.
Before Arizonans get too defensive about the Grand Canyon State, Consumer Affairs used factors such as affordability, safety, economic strength and education to measure each state, leaving out factors like entertainment, retirement benefits and other considerations that may be important to people living here.
Popular states such as California and New York also landed at the bottom of the list due to their lack of affordability, even though they both have some of the best health care and education in the nation, Consumer Affairs noted.
Here’s why the study says you shouldn’t move to Arizona. Do you agree?
Why you shouldn’t move to Arizona
Arizona ranked No. 10 out of the worst states to move to, scoring especially poorly in quality of life.
Quality of life was measured by the state’s Social Progress Index, average air quality, weather, environmental protection and number of national parks. Due to Arizona’s extreme summers and Phoenix’s consistently poor air quality, it’s easy to see why Arizona ranked No. 44 in quality of life out of 50 states, even though the Grand Canyon is one of the most popular national parks in the nation.
However, Arizona also ranked poorly in other categories, sitting at No. 42 in health care and education, No. 41 in safety and No. 34 in affordability out of 50 states.
There was one category Arizona did impressively well in, ranking No. 5 in economic strength even as one of the youngest states in the country. Still, Arizona’s economic power wasn’t enough to boost its ranking.
Top 10 worst states to move to
Arizona wasn’t alone; some of the biggest states in the country were also considered the worst states to move to in 2026.
- New Mexico
- Louisiana
- California
- Arkansas
- Oklahoma
- Nevada
- Alaska
- Mississippi
- Oregon
- Arizona
Top 10 best states to move to
- Utah
- New Hampshire
- Idaho
- Minnesota
- Massachusetts
- Maine
- North Dakota
- Pennsylvania
- Iowa
- South Dakota
Arizona
WATCH: Arizona’s health insurance marketplace is seeing dropping enrollment
PHOENIX — Arizona’s ACA marketplace enrollment fell from 363,000 to just over 255,000 in a single year — a nearly 30% decline and the third-largest annual drop in the country.
Rising premiums and expired tax credits are driving the trend, with the average benchmark plan premium in Arizona now at $532 — up 30% from 2025.
In the player above, ABC15 Data Analyst Garrett Archer takes a look inside the numbers on how healthcare premiums are impacting health insurance enrollment.
This story was reported on-air by a journalist and has been converted to this platform with the assistance of AI. Our editorial team verifies all reporting on all platforms for fairness and accuracy.
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Arizona
Arizona man pleads guilty after illegally living in forest for years among ‘1,000lbs of trash’
A man in Arizona has pleaded guilty to violating federal fire restrictions and unlawfully residing in a national forest, after authorities said he spent years living at a makeshift campsite surrounded by what officials described as “approximately 1,000 pounds of trash”.
Mark Aaron Gatz was arrested on 25 June at his illegal campsite in Arizona’s Tonto national forest, according to court records. A United States Forest Service (USFS) officer wrote in documents submitted to court that Gatz had been operating an “illegal campsite” with a “hot wood burning campfire” despite fire restrictions and that he had told investigators that he had been living in the forest for about eight years.
The officer wrote that a records check found that Gatz had previously received multiple citations and was the subject of six outstanding federal arrest warrants for earlier violations, including for building fires during fire restrictions, constructing on national forest service lands, unsanitary conditions and occupying national forest as a residence.
Gatz “said that he knew about current fire restrictions but had to have fire to eat”, authorities said. The documents show that USFS officers made contact with Gatz multiple times over the last year or so, and issued him warnings as well as a violation notice for having campfires during fire restrictions.
Notes from officers’ previous encounters with Gatz earlier this year, submitted into the court docket, state that authorities observed “trash such as clothing, pans, tools, and plastic cups scattered throughout the campsite along with a structure that was four feet in height build using wood panels”.
During an encounter with Gatz in May, officers reported observing “approximately 1,000 pounds of trash” at the site, which they said included tires, plastic bags, trash bags, aluminum cans and other items. They also wrote that they found that the campfire site had been left unattended by Gatz the previous day while still hot.
In a separate report filed by law enforcement from an encounter in February, one officer wrote that “upon arrival at the camp, I was flabbergasted by the amount of debris in the area”.
Investigators said that during that encounter, the debris consisted of three ladders, six to eight totes “overfilled with debris”, five 55-gallon drums, eight tires, multiple bicycle frames, 5 gallons of motor oil, plywood and other “miscellaneous lumber”, and they wrote that trash was scattered over approximately half an acre of Forest Service land and creating what officers described as public safety concerns.
In a separate report from July 2025, officers said they observed what they described as a “large messy campsite” while patrolling the area due to complaints “from the district office abut one large messy camp”.
“There was roughly half an acre of resources ruined due to so much trash and goods on the ground for an extended period of time,” the officer wrote.
This week, after Gatz pleaded guilty, he was sentenced to time served and three years of probation, according to court records.
A representative for Gatz did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
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