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In Arizona, these young Native American voters seize their political power

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In Arizona, these young Native American voters seize their political power


Left to right: Lourdes Pereira, 23, Matthew Holgate, 23, Alec Ferreira, 25, Shelbylyn Henry, 32, Xavier Medina, 25, and Nalani Lopez, 19. The six voters met with NPR at the Phoenix Indian Center in downtown Phoenix, Az.

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Left to right: Lourdes Pereira, 23, Matthew Holgate, 23, Alec Ferreira, 25, Shelbylyn Henry, 32, Xavier Medina, 25, and Nalani Lopez, 19. The six voters met with NPR at the Phoenix Indian Center in downtown Phoenix, Az.

Grace Widyatmadja/NPR

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Young and Native voters could make or break the 2024 election in Arizona for President Biden. Four years ago, both groups helped Biden win the state by just 11,400 votes, making him the first Democratic candidate to carry Arizona in over 20 years.

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This year, these voters are expected to not only be influential in the race for the White House but also for control of Congress.

In between, there are young, Native voters deciding how to use their electoral power.

But strategists and politicians familiar with organizing Native voters agree: more needs to be done to court this significant voting bloc.

“Native voters are powerful, and we can’t be ignored anymore. We’ve shown that,” said Jaynie Parrish, executive director of Arizona Native Vote. Parrish is part of the Navajo Nation. “And we just need other people to meet us where we are and get on board.”

The battleground state is home to 22 federally recognized Native tribes and nations. The U.S. Census estimates that more than 300,000 people in Arizona identify as Native American. Each tribal government and community, whether it’s rural or urban, has its own unique governance, history and challenges to participating in state and federal elections.

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“We are fighting against structures that weren’t built for us… They weren’t meant for us there. They were trying to kill us all. We’re not supposed to be here,” Parrish said. “We’re not supposed to be voters.”

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Organizers say challenges remain with outreach from the Democratic and Republican parties.

Outreach that goes beyond asking for a vote. Arizona state GOP Rep. David Cook said that Native voters are stereotyped as affiliating with Democrats, leaving votes on the table for the Republican party.

“[Republicans] need to get outside their comfort zone and go out and meet those Americans, those Arizonans in this state,” Cook said, whose legislative district borders five tribal reservations. “That one Native American vote on that reservation, no matter what party, is just as important as my [own] vote.”

Cook said that he has seen limited attempts to bridge that gap from his party in Arizona, something he sees as shortsighted when many conservative issues could overlap with issues in Native communities

“Tribal members on reservations have a lot in common with those people that live off reservations in small rural communities,” he said. “They want good schools and education opportunities. They want good jobs, but really careers to raise families on. They want good roads and bridges and stuff for their kids. And they want to live in safe communities.”

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When asked who is responsible for conducting outreach to tribal members, the Republican National Committee told NPR it doesn’t have a point person but is rolling out voting resources in Navajo. The Arizona GOP did not respond to NPR’s requests about tribal outreach, but there are signs that statewide candidates acknowledge the need to mobilize the community. Kari Lake, a Republican running for Arizona Senate, has a Natives for Kari Lake group.

Democrats have a head start. They formed outreach roles on the national level at the Democratic National Committee, down to the local Navajo County office.

Loren Marshall, 38, is the director of campaigns and engagement for Northeast Arizona Native Democrats, a project of the Navajo County Democrats. Marshall, who wasn’t registered to vote until 2020, works to get tribal members registered to vote and has put an emphasis on courting young voters.

She said she’s encountered pushback from younger voters over not wanting to be active in a system that damaged their communities.

“‘Why would we want to participate or get involved in something that just has not been something that we’ve practiced or something that we’ve done as Natives’,” Marshall said, repeating comments she’d heard.

Still, she said she’s confident turnout will be high for Democrats this year, partially due to their focus on community-based organizing.

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“We’re going to be able to get a lot of folks to come out, and the voter turnout is going to be pretty high,” Marshall said. “It’s going to be a great election year in tribal communities.”

Arizona ranks as the top third state where young voters are most likely to shape the presidential race, according to data from Tufts University, and the top state for young voter impact on the Senate election.

NPR spoke with six young indigenous-identifying Arizona voters to discuss what political parties need to do to win over their potentially election-deciding vote this November.

  • Alec Ferreira, 25, San Carlos Apache Tribe, youth program coordinator for the San Carlos Apache Tribe Vice-Chairman
  • Lourdes Pereira, 23, Hia-Ced/Tohono O’odham tribe and Yoeme, archivist at Hia-Ced Hemajkam LLC and program specialist for the Administration for Native Americans
  • Matthew Holgate, 23, Diné, Navajo Nation, director of student engagement at the American Indian College
  • Nalani Lopez, 19, San Carlos Apache tribe and Mandan, Hidatsa and Arikara Nation, student at Scottsdale Community College
  • Shelbylyn Henry, 32, Diné, Navajo Nation, lead Navajo organizer with the indigenous organizing group Wingbeat 88
  • Xavier Medina, 25, Pascua Yaqui Tribe, police officer with the Pascua Yaqui Police Department

Read more of their conversation below. These responses have been edited for clarity and length.

What do people get wrong about you and your community?

Sitting in a classroom at the Phoenix Indian Center in December, the six voters open up about where they are from. Their tribes, hometowns and reservations span across urban and rural areas and state and country borders.

Ferreira: That there’s nothing going on in our community. When in reality, for us in San Carlos, there’s so much going on. Whether it be good or whether it be bad. There’s a lot of opportunities for our people to grow.

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Pereira: I think people, at least specifically with the Hia-Ced, what I’ve heard is like people just call us Mexicans or like, ‘oh, you guys aren’t really Native.’ And you know, the border crossed us. We didn’t cross the border.


Lourdes Pereira, 23, is part of the Hia-Ced O’odham and Yoeme communities. The recent Arizona State University graduate is passionate about preserving tribal culture. She identifies as a Democrat.

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Lourdes Pereira, 23, is part of the Hia-Ced O’odham and Yoeme communities. The recent Arizona State University graduate is passionate about preserving tribal culture. She identifies as a Democrat.

Grace Widyatmadja/NPR

Holgate: I think so many times outsiders will come into our communities just assuming that, ‘I need to be the voice for you or the savior for you,’ when in reality, we have so many educated people and people who are entrepreneurs and pioneers in different areas.

Lopez: People will come onto our reservation to practice shooting their guns because they just think it’s empty farmland or they don’t know that it’s an actual community living there. They just think it’s like farmland in between the two cities.

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What do politicians get wrong?

The six tribal members all agreed on one overarching theme: politicians on both sides of the aisle haven’t taken the time to get to know their communities. They detailed problems with water access, poor infrastructure and fracturing business sectors. Problems they wish they could tell candidates vying for their votes.

Pereira: When they get the opportunity for a photo op, they’re just using students to come out and take a few pictures, and that’s it. I would rarely get an opportunity to say what I’m doing, and if I did speak, it would be 2.5 seconds and they’re gone. They really don’t care. But because you’re Native and because you’re you, they really just want you in the picture.


Matthew Holgate, 23 and part of the Navajo Nation, considers himself an independent that leans Democrat. Holgate is an advocate against human trafficking, with a focus in tribal communities.

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Matthew Holgate, 23 and part of the Navajo Nation, considers himself an independent that leans Democrat. Holgate is an advocate against human trafficking, with a focus in tribal communities.

Grace Widyatmadja/NPR

Holgate: I’ve also had leaders who have really changed my life because they come, they go to my grandmother’s house and they see that she doesn’t have running water… And I think there’s so many politicians who stop at the parade and that’s like the most exposure they’ll ever have.

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Finding their political voice

Whether or not they were old enough to vote in 2020, all six referenced the last presidential election as a defining moment where they felt their voice was heard. Native Americans have only had the right to vote in federal elections for 100 years — a right several reflected was still fought for by their elders for decades after. To these six, the act of voting also honors that past.

Henry: You hear it all the time: ‘Vote. Your vote matters. Your vote matters.’ And for so long ours didn’t. It felt like we had no influence, no power. So 2020 was where everything kind of turned around. And it showed a lot of people, and it showed a lot of us, the potential we have. So ever since then, I keep up with the voting.


Shelbylyn Henry, 32, belongs to the Navajo Nation. She found her political voice during the 2020 presidential election, as she watched her community grapple with the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic.

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Shelbylyn Henry, 32, belongs to the Navajo Nation. She found her political voice during the 2020 presidential election, as she watched her community grapple with the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic.

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Ferreira: I heard a lot of the politicians saying that ‘Hey, we need the Native vote.’ We didn’t necessarily show up in 2016 as much as we should have… It didn’t feel like it mattered until 2020. That was the first time it felt like it mattered because it was the first time that we decided the election.

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Holgate: Voting and politics in general, is more of a family thing for me… As an indigenous person.. we’re fighting for land, and for water and for natural resources. And it just feels so lonely at times, especially being in an urban setting where most of your friends are non-Native, urban. They have no clue about what we’re facing back home or what our families are facing. And that’s always a struggle. I think it’s a lonely journey, voting and stuff for me.

Local issues stay top of mind


For Xavier Medina, 25, who belongs to the Pascua Yaqui Tribe, his job as a tribal police offer influences his political opinions. Despite previously identifying as a Democrat, he now sees himself more in the middle, and is primarily concerned about public safety in his community.

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For Xavier Medina, 25, who belongs to the Pascua Yaqui Tribe, his job as a tribal police offer influences his political opinions. Despite previously identifying as a Democrat, he now sees himself more in the middle, and is primarily concerned about public safety in his community.

Grace Widyatmadja/NPR

Medina: Something that I have personal encounters with every time I clock in with my job is a huge drug issue. A lot of fentanyl [has] leaked into my community where there’s countless overdoses to the point where I’m afraid of running out of Narcan and doing CPR on these subjects.

Holgate: Education’s so huge for us in Native and indigenous populations. But I think something that I’m starting to look at now is how do I empower students from tribal nations in high school to graduate?

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Pereira: We are a border tribe. And specifically with Hia-Ced O’odham ancestral territory Aravaipa, which is a sacred spring, was desecrated. We had to actually go back to rebury our ancestors. And it was the most disturbing thing…these are sacred cemeteries that [former President Donald Trump] blew up with his wall.

Ferreira: The lack of economic opportunities, lack of things for our kids to do and thus leads to more problems right there in itself. Of course, we’re just barely scratching the surface of it. But crime is running rampant in my community. It’s not something I’m proud of. It’s something that’s quite scary, to be honest with you.

Choosing a political party? It’s complicated

These young millennial and Gen Z voters have experienced both the current Biden and former Trump administrations. They have kept the receipts of what has helped, hurt and not changed in their communities.


Nalani Lopez, 19, lives in the Salt River Pima-Maricopa Indian Community. She’s also part of the San Carlos Apache and Mandan, Hidatsa and Arikara tribes. This year is Lopez’s first presidential election, and despite supporting Biden in 2020, she’s unsure if she’ll back him this time.

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Nalani Lopez, 19, lives in the Salt River Pima-Maricopa Indian Community. She’s also part of the San Carlos Apache and Mandan, Hidatsa and Arikara tribes. This year is Lopez’s first presidential election, and despite supporting Biden in 2020, she’s unsure if she’ll back him this time.

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Ferreira: Honestly, I am somebody who doesn’t necessarily subscribe to the Republican Party or the Democratic Party. I fit right in between…when I hear about these two options. I’m not inspired. I know I probably shouldn’t be saying that, but it’s the truth. I don’t feel like I’m going to make America a better place by voting for one or the other because at the end of the day, we still see the same issues on our reservation.

Medina: Before I was a police officer, I worked in behavioral health, and that had more of a Democratic atmosphere. Now, being a police officer, it’s the polar opposite, working in a predominantly far-right conservative atmosphere. It’s just like, well, where do I place it? Because both leaders don’t adequately express the needs of my people or for myself.

Lopez: I remember, [in 2020,] I would Instagram message people like, ‘if you can vote, please vote for Biden,’ because I just remember it being such a close election during that time. I wasn’t able to vote… but now for 2024, I’m not super impressed by either candidate… They’re not really seeing community problems up close and personal.

Will Biden keep their votes?

Despite a hesitancy for Trump, these voters are also unclear on Biden’s record. Ferreira was able to link the reopening of a sawmill on the San Carlos Reservation to funds from the Inflation Reduction Act, Biden’s landmark climate bill. Still, he called it a PR flop. Pereira said she hasn’t seen any change — the border wall, which she also notes has disrupted local ecosystems on Hia-Ced ancestral territory— is still up. Henry expressed disappointment over Biden’s handling of the Israel-Hamas war.

That said, the Biden administration has boasted billions of dollars to Tribal communities from bills and agency projects aimed at COVID-19 pandemic relief, infrastructure, business and climate. But making that clear is a different challenge.

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Alec Ferreira, 25, works as the youth program coordinator for the San Carlos Apache Tribe Vice-Chairman. Ferreira, who identifies as an independent, told NPR he doesn’t feel inspired by any of the candidates running for president.

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Alec Ferreira, 25, works as the youth program coordinator for the San Carlos Apache Tribe Vice-Chairman. Ferreira, who identifies as an independent, told NPR he doesn’t feel inspired by any of the candidates running for president.

Grace Widyatmadja/NPR

Henry: Trump is never going to be a choice for me. Biden, it’s very much on the scale of closer to no, but it’s so complicated… I’m gonna go by actions, not by party, not by who’s telling me who to vote for. So it’s just going to be a lot more research and keeping an eye open on the news and different news media too.

Medina: As Native people in the room, we have a sentimental part in our environment and making sure our environment is protected… That’s what predominantly got me to vote for Biden. Trump, I’m not the most confident of giving my vote to still, but I try to be as open-minded as I can be to this upcoming election, but it’s a lot of pressure to choose one side.

Lopez: I think a lot of young voters, once they vote for someone, they’ll vote for them, but they won’t really keep up with what they’re doing. If you just ask a random person like, ‘Oh, do you know [Biden’s] record?’ They’re not going to know. I just don’t think it’s something that a lot of people keep track of.

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Pereira: I at least have to acknowledge that with Biden was [U.S. Secretary of the Interior] Deb Haaland. And that was huge for us in Indian Country. Me, just even being a Native woman, that was major.

Holgate: I’m leaning towards President Joe Biden just for the sake of continuing some of the work that we’ve been able to do… President Trump’s office really lacked the voice of Native people, and it felt it was more liaisons. Whereas you see in President Biden’s cabinet, there’s an actual Native person there who has lived in our shoes or in the place that we know and the hardships.

Ferreira: [Biden] doesn’t have everybody’s vote. He has a lot of work he still has to do. There is so much work that needs to be done within Indian Country…Nothing’s ever a lock. In these past four years, things have gotten a lot more expensive, too. Yeah, Biden has given a historic amount of money to Indian Country, but the cost of everything in this country is a lot more.

A final message to politicians? ‘It’s our time.’

Holgate: My message to Republicans and Democrats is just to see us and to acknowledge us…Come to our table. Or bring us to your table.

Lopez: I don’t like when people come to our communities just to take a quick picture for 30 seconds and go back on their way. I really want people to take the time to listen to what we have to say, especially from the people and community members.

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Ferreira: Remember who is running the table right now. It’s our time. Native people, we decided at the last election. We can very well decide the next one.



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Racial equality in education: Arizona ranked 18th – KTAR.com

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Racial equality in education: Arizona ranked 18th – KTAR.com


Arizona is ranked 18th in the nation when it comes to racial equality in the classroom, according to WalletHub.

The personal finance website compiled its 2026 list of Best States for Racial Equality in Education by looking at differences between Black and white students when it comes to test scores, college attainment and high school graduation rates.

The rankings are based on a weighted average of six metrics, but did WalletHub not provide a breakdown of each category.

However, statistics from the Center for the Future of Arizona support the idea that Arizona has work to do when it comes to racial equality. African American students in Arizona have an average college attainment rate of 38%, while white students have an average rate of 54%.

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That difference is also evident in other education areas, with a gap of 11 percentage points between Black and white high schoolers in graduation rate.

WalletHub analyst Chip Lupo called the high school graduation rate the most “alarming” data set for the Arizona. He said if the study included the state’s large Hispanic population, the results might have been different.

“It would be interesting, if those numbers were included, where the gaps would be. Again, Arizona has a high Hispanic population, as [does] New Mexico, and New Mexico was at number three. So maybe Arizona could take a look at what their neighbors are doing there to kind of bridge those gaps,” he said.

How can Arizona increase racial equality in the classroom?

Lupo said Arizona can boost its ranking and improve racial equality in schools by increasing the representation and funding for public education.

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“One thing [to] do is to build more diversity within the school system. More Black administrators and more Black teachers kind of create more of a familiarity for Black students and more mentors. … Increased funding and a more concerted effort to increase diversity among the school systems, I think, would go a long way in bridging that gap,” he said.

WalletHub ranked Wyoming, West Virginia and New Mexico as the best states for racial equality in the classroom, with New Jersey, Connecticut and Wisconsin at the bottom of the list.

Funding for this journalism is made possible by the Arizona Local News Foundation.

We want to hear from you.

Have a story idea or tip? Pass it along to the KTAR News team here.

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Judge orders Arizona couple to prison over Medicaid fraud

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Judge orders Arizona couple to prison over Medicaid fraud


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A Phoenix federal judge on June 1 gave a New River couple multi-year prison sentences for deliberately defrauding Arizona’s Medicaid program of $12 million.

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Thvoughn Lynden Curry and his wife, A’lexis Daneen Curry, who were both 34 as of Feb. 1, according to the federal government, were first arrested in 2023 in connection with massive fraud that bilked Arizona’s Medicaid program out of an estimated $2.5 billion. The schemes disproportionately targeted vulnerable Native Americans trying to get sober from alcohol and drug dependence.

In some cases, patients were plied with drugs and alcohol while they stayed at so-called sober living homes to keep the scheme going. A class action lawsuit filed in 2024 alleges extreme harm and wrongful deaths from the schemes.

The couple received slightly different sentences connected with the same fraud scheme that involved their Mesa-based “1 Family Clinic, LLC” billing Medicaid for services they never provided.

During the June 1 sentencing, U.S. District Court Judge G. Murray Snow told Thvoughn that because of a prior criminal history, he will be going to prison for 7.3 years, while his wife will be imprisoned for a shorter time of 5.8 years. The couple has six children, including four that they had together, and three of the children are under age five, according to court records and testimony during the sentencing.

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Snow told A’lexis Curry that he wished he could do something for her children, “but I don’t know how.” The crime she committed is just “too serious” and deserves a significant sentence of incarceration, he said.

Snow sentenced the Currys individually. He asked each if they had anything they wanted to say to the court, and both said no. Neither showed any emotion when they were sentenced.

The couple was out of custody and in street clothes during the sentencing, and Snow is allowing them to be at home with their family for 21 days before they must self-surrender and start serving their sentences.

The couple asked that they be incarcerated at a facility near Fort Lauderdale, Florida, which is in the vicinity of where A’lexis Curry’s mother lives and where their children will be staying.

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Prosecutors say that when A’lexis applied to enroll as an Arizona Medicaid provider, there was a warrant out for Thvoughn’s arrest on felony fraud charges. A’lexis told Medicaid that she would be the sole owner of 1 Family Clinic, but investigators say Thvoughn was an owner, too.

Prosecutors said that between approximately Feb. 1, 2021, and March 31, 2023, the Currys routinely billed Arizona’s Medicaid program for services that were not actually provided. Throughout the course of the scheme, the Currys billed an average of more than 12 hours of service per member per day despite being open just eight hours per day on weekdays, five hours on Saturdays, and closed on Sundays, the government said.

Both were convicted Feb. 20 after a four-day bench trial of one count of conspiracy to commit health-care fraud, three counts of health-care fraud, and eight counts of transactional money laundering.

Snow ordered the duo to pay restitution of $12 million to the Arizona Health Care Cost Containment System, known as AHCCCS, which is the state’s Medicaid program. Medicaid is a government health insurance program primarily for low-income people or those who have disabilities.

The husband and wife must also forfeit several properties to the U.S. government, including the nearly 4,000 square-foot six-bedroom, four-bathroom house where they have been living with their family. The home is valued at nearly $900,000.

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Other items that the couple purchased with AHCCCS money included vacations, a 2021 Range Rover, a 2022 Mercedes LT GLE 43 C4 and a 2019 Lamborghini Urus for more than $300,000, prosecutors said. Federal court records indicate the couple filed for Chapter 13 bankruptcy in 2024.

Both the state of Arizona and the federal government have filed charges against multiple defendants in connection with the AHCCCS fraud, which was first disclosed to the public at a multi-agency press conference in 2023.

The U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Arizona has charged 12 defendants in cases related to the fraud, and at least seven, including the Curry couple, have already been sentenced. Thvoughn Curry received the longest sentence of any federal defendant to date, court records show.

Snow told Thvoughn that what he’d done was “quite dishonest and quite devastating.” It was also deliberate and went on for a long time, he said.

Among the federal defendants whose cases are still pending is Farrukh Jarar Ali, a 41-year-old citizen of Pakistan who was indicted in 2025 for wire fraud and money laundering in connection with an alleged $650 million scheme involving at least 41 substance abuse treatment clinics in Arizona, prosecutors say.

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Another federal defendant connected with the Arizona Medicaid schemes is Rita Anagho, a former nurse practitioner who, on May 29, 2025, pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit health-care fraud and wire fraud. Anagho also faced state charges and, on May 6 in Maricopa County Superior Court, was sentenced to 3.5 years in prison. Anagho’s nursing license was revoked last year.

The Arizona Attorney General’s Office has indicted 140 individuals and entities connected to the widespread fraud and 41 individuals and entities have been convicted, the office reported in May.

Reach health-care reporter Stephanie Innes at stephanie.innes@usatodayco.com or follow her on X@stephanieinnes or on Bluesky: @stephanieinnes.bsky.social.





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Deadly hantavirus case in Arizona; plans for new homes at golf course site withdrawn | Nightly Roundup

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Deadly hantavirus case in Arizona; plans for new homes at golf course site withdrawn | Nightly Roundup


1 dead from hantavirus in Arizona county; future for Arizona golf course site unclear after company withdraws housebuilding plan; and more – here’s a look at your top stories on FOX10Phoenix.com for Monday, June 1, 2026.

1. Hantavirus kills resident in Mohave County

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Hantavirus kills Mohave County resident

A person living in Mohave County has died from the hantavirus, according to health officials there. Officials say the death is not related to the outbreak that happened onboard the MV Hondius cruise ship.

2. Nancy Guthrie case: Veteran investigator speaks out

3. Plans for new homes at former golf course withdrawn

4. Woman accused of faking terminal cancer in scheme

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5. Arizona attempted murder suspect arrested

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