Arizona
Adventure-loving real estate agent killed after car goes off 1,000-foot cliff — as her dog walks away unscathed
An adventure-loving real estate agent was killed when her car veered off the side of a steep Arizona mountainside Friday — though her four-legged best friend miraculously survived the 1,000-foot tumble, according to authorities and family.
Kristin Little, 39, was traveling on the Thumb Butte Loop Road around 5 p.m. when her car went off the cliff, and she was ejected halfway down the precipitous drop, the Yavapai County Sheriff’s Office said in a news release.
Sheriff deputies spotted the car at the bottom of the embankment and hiked down to Little’s body, the sheriff’s office said.
Because of the tough terrain and approaching sunset, authorities waited until the morning to retrieve Little, but members of the department remained with her body throughout the night.
While Little was tragically killed, her beloved dog, CJ, who was with her in the vehicle, somehow escaped the wreckage unscathed and was brought to Little’s parents’ home by deputies, according to Fox 10.
“When Krissy rolled her car, CJ must’ve bounced out and when the rescuers got to the location they found CJ next to Krissy’s body,” her mother, Jinger Cutting, told the station.
The heartbroken parent called her daughter “the light of my life.”
Little was a real estate agent based in Prescott and loved the outdoors.
“She and I hiked all the time, all the time,” her mother said. “We would take off, and we would meet at my office or somewhere downtown, and we would just go hiking out on Thumb Butte, or we’d go hiking somewhere around the lakes.”
Little’s body was taken to the medical examiner Saturday morning. The investigation into the crash is still underway.
Arizona
Study: Mexican community faces barriers to nature access in southern Arizona
Arizona
Diamondbacks prospect Druw Jones hits for cycle in Double-A – Arizona Sports
Arizona Diamondbacks prospect Druw Jones needed a home run to complete the cycle when he dug into the batter’s box in the eighth inning of a Double-A game on Wednesday night.
Jones, playing for Double-A Amarillo, stayed behind the baseball and drove an inside pitch to right-center field for his first home run of the season, earning the first cycle in Sod Poodles history.
🚨 DRUW JONES CYCLE 🚨
The @Dbacks prospect becomes the first @sodpoodles player to notch the milestone! pic.twitter.com/5U9ubTtIga
— Minor League Baseball (@MiLB) April 30, 2026
The 22-year-old knocked out the toughest leg first with a triple to right field in the third inning against the Midland Rockhounds (Athletics). Jones zoomed from home to third base in 11 seconds, Corbin Carroll-esque speed, for his first triple of the season.
Jones singled in the fifth on a ground ball that skipped under shortstop Joshua Kuroda-Grauer’s glove on what would have been a tight play at first base, and in the sixth, he doubled to right field.
His home run came off right-handed pitcher Mitch Myers to give Amarillo a 9-2 lead in a 10-2 win — infield prospect Cristofer Torin went back-to-back with Jones.
The last Diamondbacks major leaguer to hit for the cycle was Aaron Hill, who did so twice within 11 days of each other in 2012. The most recent cycle in Major League Baseball came from Minnesota’s Byron Buxton on July 12.
Jones is the No. 16 prospect in Arizona’s system as ranked by MLB Pipeline and No. 17 by Baseball America.
Known for his defense, the outfielder has gotten off to a slow start statistically with a .229/.345/.343 slash line in his first 19 games playing Double-A baseball. He hit .286 in Cactus League this past spring and performed well in the World Baseball Classic for Team Netherlands.
Arizona
Chandler, RWCD ruling: Could residents save on property taxes? – KTAR.com
PHOENIX — Chandler residents may be one step closer to ending about $1.7 million a year in property taxes paid to the Roosevelt Water Conservation District after the Arizona Supreme Court upheld the city’s water agreement.
The court ruled that Chandler’s water agreement with the Roosevelt Water Conservation District remains enforceable through 2086, ending a yearslong dispute over water deliveries and taxes paid by thousands of property owners.
“Nearly 27,000 Chandler households have paid Roosevelt Water Conservation District property taxes for years without water benefits. That ends with this ruling,” Chandler Mayor Kevin Hartke said in a Wednesday announcement.
Why were Chandler and RWCD in court over a water agreement?
City officials said the dispute began when the district, known as RWCD, stopped honoring its agreement to provide water to Chandler. The most recent version of that deal was signed in 2002.
Last year, Hartke told KTAR News 92.3 FM that RWCD would sometimes let water go to waste rather than sell it to the city.
RWCD was formed more than a century ago to irrigate about 40,000 acres of farmland in Chandler, Gilbert, Mesa and southeastern Maricopa County. As those lands urbanized, Chandler continued purchasing water through the district’s water rights.
The court rejected RWCD’s argument that Chandler waited too long to sue.
“Water is a critical public resource, and this ruling restores a key component of Chandler’s 100-year assured water supply,” Hartke said.
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