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In the Most Paranoid Right-Wing Primary of the Year, the Biggest Existential Threat Is Off-Limits

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In the Most Paranoid Right-Wing Primary of the Year, the Biggest Existential Threat Is Off-Limits


A crowd of several dozen people at the Hangar, a Trump-themed speakeasy, stood and bowed their heads in prayer. An elderly woman whispered meekly, almost imperceptibly, into a microphone. She thanked the Big Man for guiding that bullet away from our big man, President Donald J. Trump, and thanked the assembled for joining in this critical democratic exercise. “Amen,” we said. It was a little after 6 p.m. in late July, and we were deep in the suburbs of Phoenix. The temperature outside was 114 degrees.

We had gathered at the speakeasy, housed in a multicar garage, for a meet and greet with five of the Republican candidates running for Congress in Arizona’s District 8. It may be the most paranoid and incensed and embittered primary race happening in the country.

Arizona has become a hotbed of election denialism (and related conspiracy theories) since 2020, when Biden won the state, the first Democratic presidential candidate to do so since 1996. When a congressional seat opened up in this solidly red district—a stretch that encompasses parts of Phoenix proper, then sprawls northwest into the suburban satellites of Peoria, Surprise, and Sun City and out into the desert, an area sporting the second-, third-, and seventh-largest retirement communities in the country—the race became a contest of right-wing fanaticism.

The big talking points: A crisis of leniency toward criminals. Border wide open. Gangs and foreigners, gangs OF foreigners. Crime all-time high; inflation all-time high. Trans stuff. Los Angeles. The Democrats, who were agents of deep state control. And the weak national Republicans, who had not done enough to wrest that control back.

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Vying for the open seat, in a race that will be decided Tuesday, are Abe Hamadeh, a 32-year-old Army reservist who ran for and lost the 2022 attorney general’s race, and still refuses to concede the result; Blake Masters, 37, one of Peter Thiel’s political pet projects and notorious gun whisperer, who ran for and lost the 2022 Senate race in the state and has at least sort of accepted the outcome; Anthony Kern, a state senator and Jan. 6 attendee who is under indictment with nine felony counts for his role as a fake elector in the attempt to overturn the 2020 election and who is also known for going on a pro-Hitler radio show; Trent Franks, a tea party type who held the seat until 2017, when it came out that he had offered a female staffer $5 million to let him impregnate her; and Ben Toma, the Arizona House speaker, who is endorsed by the outgoing representative from the district. That outgoing representative would be Debbie Lesko, whose signature legislation in Congress was a ban on a gas stove ban that … didn’t actually exist. The “QAnon Shaman,” Jacob Angeli-Chansley, the painted face of the Capitol riot, was also in the race for a little while, attempting a run as the Libertarian candidate.

Hamadeh, the presumptive favorite, has been smeared by Masters and his supporters as a “terrorist sympathizer” and as having “no skin in the game” because he is unmarried and childless. Hamadeh has said that Masters was “having a mental breakdown.” Things had gotten heated.

The Hangar, where all five candidates would speak, was garlanded with flags. There was the American flag (cloth), the American flag (digital), American flags superimposed with logos of the Arizona Cardinals and Miami Dolphins, and an American flag with some John Hancock–esque cursive script citing the Second Amendment. There were Trump flags: “Trump 2024 Take America Back”; “Trump and I Will Not Apologize for It”; “LGBT: Liberty, Guns, Beer, Trump.” The flags hung from the ceiling and on the walls and were draped over the tables as tablecloths. There was catering and Coors Light in a fridge.

Many of the attendees brought and wore their own regalia, sporting Trump hats and tees both contemporary and dating to bygone cycles. One older woman had on a shirt that said: “I’ve never been groped by Donald Trump, but I have been screwed by Joe Biden.” There was a plastic pumpkin with Trump’s face that in any other environment would have read as liberal mockery, but wasn’t, and a poster of Scarface, and one of Humphrey Bogart. The garage, it must also be said, had no windows and no air conditioning. I fanned myself aggressively with a brochure that read “Blake Masters, Deport Illegals.”

Toma, the Arizona House speaker, spoke first. In basically any other district in the country, he would be a decorated and experienced far-right candidate. He was a zealot, he assured the assembled, a zealot who had even passed legislation! He was, according to ubiquitous yard signs that peppered the highways and freeway on-ramps, “endorsed by police.” But he was fighting a startling—for this crowd—allegation: “Lately, there have been some attacks going around,” he told the attendees, ”about me being somehow a Never Trumper. That is patently false. That has never been true.”

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Someone in the audience chimed in, ostensibly coming to Toma’s defense: “There’s a lot of people out there that have been Never Trumpers, and in fact J.D. Vance was not a Trump supporter,” she said. It was not entirely stirring. “I’ve always been a Trump lover,” she clarified in her own defense. Toma excused himself to attend his twin daughters’ birthday party.

Masters came after. He hit the high notes: that there was rampant voter fraud, that millions of illegal immigrants were pouring in, that China was evil, that Democrats were evil, that crime was out of control, that Trump is awesome. “The one thing I want you to remember when you go to vote: I’m the guy who was too conservative and too independent-minded for Mitch McConnell’s taste last cycle,” Masters said. (Masters, for what it’s worth, received a $25 million bonus from Thiel weeks before declaring his candidacy—a payment that was part of five year plan agreed to while Masters was still employed at one of the venture capitalist’s firms.)

In his pitch at the Hangar, he name-checked Vance, his endorser—“he’s a good friend of mine”—and pushed a growing line, popular among his ilk, that “American business needs to work for American workers.” But the biggest hit was the call-and-response: “The correct amount of illegal immigration is how much?” Masters asked. “Zero!” the crowd responded. “Deport them all, by the way!” he lobbed as a rejoinder. Another big hit was when Masters said: “Joe Biden committed treason against this country.” Cheers and applause.

“You guys are wide awake—you’re paying attention,” he encouraged our aged crowd. “I got this young energy,” he promised them.

Then, Hamadeh, who is even younger than Masters, so young he brought his mom along, took the mic. Similar high notes: voter fraud, fake news, illegal immigration, Democrats evil, Trump awesome. He reminded us that he and only he was endorsed by Trump (this would change a week later, when Trump would come out with a surprise co-endorsement of Masters), that he had Trump’s number, that he texted him—though it was not clear if Trump texted back. “These Marxists are not going to hand over the keys of power so easily. We have to take it from them!” Hamadeh said. “We are at war,” he added. He pledged to designate the drug cartels as terrorist organizations, in keeping with Trump’s new bluster about invading Mexico, and promised to ban ranked choice voting, which doesn’t even exist in Arizona.

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Then came Kern. “I was endorsed by President Trump when I ran for the state Senate,” he assured the crowd, before launching into it. (Voter fraud, fake news, illegal immigration, Democrats evil, Trump awesome.) Kern was so committed to election security that he had nine felony counts to prove it. “I was there on Jan. 6,” he said proudly. “I was there to hope Mike Pence would do the right thing.” He continued, wistfully reminiscing: “It was a fantastic event … 2 million people… we were waiting on Mike Pence to do the right thing.” Kern’s flourish: a pledge to defund the DOJ, the FBI, and the IRS. He also called for a boycott of Chase Bank, after they had canceled his wife’s account.

The exterior of the garage, a white metal structure, at dusk. Several American flags hang outside the building, and a number of cars are parked outside.
The outside of a Trump-themed speakeasy, housed in a multicar garage, in the suburbs of Phoenix.
Alexander Sammon

Finally, Franks. He gripped the microphone with two shaking hands. He could have allied himself with Trump via their shared history of sexual misconduct allegations, but no: He went with an anti-abortion line, which the crowd clearly approved of. But when he tied it to slavery—as in, abortion is bad and so was slavery—he started losing the room. People near me began to grumble. He saved voter fraud, fake news, illegal immigration, Democrats evil, Trump awesome for his closer.

During the Q&A portion, an older woman started her turn by explaining that she paid her student loans every month. “I got a letter in the mail,” she said, and “they told me that my student loan was completely paid off.” Biden’s student loan relief policies have been shot to pieces by right-wing courts, but what little remained had gone to fixing existing loan forgiveness for people who had been defrauded or made payments for years and were unable to dig out of the hole. Here, incredibly, past the two-hour mark in this sweltering garage was someone whose life had been materially improved by student loan policy. I thought I was about to hear a rare voice of dissent, right-wing ideology punctured by the undeniable force of lived experience.

But then, she said, “I never planned on applying for it, never applied for it. I was insulted by it. Had no choice. And then two or three weeks later I got a check in the mail for $300.” She paused, and added mournfully, “I was flabbergasted.”

“They’re buying votes!” Kern responded. “That’s where we’re really in trouble,” said Franks. “They’re just evil,” said Masters. “The political class is pillaging the American people,” said Hamadeh.

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I helped myself to a Coors Light from the fridge. The long desert dusk was turning to darkness when I left. It was 109 degrees.

Phoenix is one of the biggest cities in the United States, with a metro area spanning nearly 15,000 square miles. It is also one of the country’s fastest growing metropolitan areas, expanding by 800,000 people in the past decade alone.

But what makes the place unique is how exceptionally, brutally, inhumanly hot it is there.

Last year, the city endured temperatures of 110 degrees or higher for a record-breaking 55 days, the most ever. This year it is on pace for more. This June was Phoenix’s hottest on record; NASA found that the surface temperature of certain Phoenix sidewalks was 160 degrees. In June. And, as the National Weather Service informed one local news briefing, “July temperatures so far have averaged 6.1 degrees hotter than normal.”

It’s not just the city’s temperature extremes on the high end that are brutal. One of the biggest issues now is the temperature lows, which are still often in the 90s. The fever just never breaks. There is no cool night air. There is no moderation; everything, at all hours, is extreme.

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The extreme heat is an existential danger to residents. There were 645 heat-related deaths last year in Maricopa County, which spans most of the Phoenix metro area—the most ever deaths recorded in an Arizona summer, and a 1,000 percent increase over the figure from just 10 years ago. It’s hard to keep current with this year’s tally, which keeps going up. As of July 23, Maricopa was already looking into 396 possible heat-related deaths in 2024, according to the county public health department, already outpacing last year’s mark.

The heat is also driving people crazy: The National Institutes of Health’s National Library of Medicine has a whole lengthy file on the ways in which this has proved to be true: “Hot summer temperatures can make you anxious and irritable and dull your thinking,” “Reduced cognitive function during a heat wave,” and “Cognitive performance was reduced by higher air temperature.” Getting out of the heat then has the isolating effect of keeping people stuck inside constantly.

Arizona’s political climate is, too, uniquely feverish. The state has four members in Congress that are members of the furthest right Republican caucus (the Freedom Caucus), making it tied with Florida for the most from any state. But there are three times as many people in Florida as there are in Arizona, and 28 congressional representatives there. (Florida is also controlled by Republicans at basically every level.) Arizona, by contrast, has a Democratic governor and attorney general … and somehow, virtually half of its nine congresspeople are the type of extreme right-wing that can’t even work within the already extremely right-wing Republican Party.

Culture war issues burn bright in Arizona, and the Southern Poverty Law Center’s graph of “anti-government and hate groups” in the state has had a straight-up hockey-stick trajectory since 2021. Two members of the Phoenix-chapter of the national conservative group Turning Point USA assaulted an Arizona State professor. When I met with a group of Democrats in the district who were doing letter writing in a heavily air-conditioned living room, the group’s president, Chris Radice, told me: “This area is so red we can’t gather in public places like restaurants or cafés.”)

The red-hot friction happens within factions of the Republican groups too. The front-runners of the District 8 primary are pushing different visions of MAGA and conquest. Hamadeh wants to release that force abroad—bringing the war on terror to Mexico if that’s what it takes. Masters wants to unleash it at home, with isolationism and brutal crackdowns on immigrants, a grand thinning of the workforce that might somehow raise wages. Kern wants to end modern election procedures that have led to Democrats’ winning. But all the candidates agree that everyday Americans have been stripped of control and the only remedy is to seize that control—then exert greater control over the lives of others. Anything short of that is an immediate, existential threat to the Arizona way of life. The only existential threat to the Arizona way of life that nobody talked about while I was in town was climate change: The weather was just the way things were.

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I met up with the QAnon Shaman, Jacob Angeli-Chansley, at a Chipotle on the Sunday Joe Biden dropped out of the presidential race, a stunning development that surprised Angeli-Chansley not in the slightest. It was 108 degrees.

We both got burrito bowls. Angeli-Chansley, who had been running as a Libertarian, told me he would not be representing the 8th Congressional District in Congress come January because he couldn’t get on the ballot. He saw that as a result of structural bias in our corrupt election laws: Libertarians by nature don’t like answering the door, he said, which makes it much more difficult to get the signatures required to win a ballot line. Angeli-Chansley said he also felt bad asking unpaid volunteers to put in the necessary hours to door-knock, plus he had already forsworn political donations, so that meant that paying people to door-knock was out of the question.

Candidates speak to a crowd in front of several American flags inside a garage.
From left, Republican candidates Anthony Kern, Trent Franks, Blake Masters, and Abe Hamadeh speak to a group of potential voters before the primary for Arizona’s 8th Congressional District.
Alexander Sammon

Did he get close to the 800 names and signatures required to run, I asked? “No, dude,” he told me. “Not even.” He had let his campaign website lapse. “Shamanforcongress.com,” he sighed. (As of publication time, the site was still live.)

Actually, he said, he wasn’t really interested in politics. He was concerned primarily with the spiritual. He was making OK money selling merch and had an incipient coaching business, but he was giving away most of his lectures on the video platform Rumble and doing a ton of free consultations without signing up many paying clients. “I don’t like to make people pay for truth,” he said, a stance that put him in a bit of a bind.

He may not have signed them up as paying clients, but it seemed to me he was very clearly the spiritual leader of the Republican field in the district, and maybe even nationally. I told him as much. The events of Jan. 6 had been recast as a heroic display of patriotism by Trump and his allies, who were pledging pardons. Angeli-Chansley, with his cinematic getup of horns and face paint, was initially a symbol of the event and had since evolved into its most iconic martyr. He had served 27 months of a 41-month sentence in prison for his role, including, he said, over 10 months in solitary confinement.

Angeli-Chansley was a true native son of the district, he told me, though its exact confines have changed somewhat during his near four decades of life because of redistricting. He was shaped by, and had shaped, its political culture, more so even than the aspirants competing to represent it. Masters lived way out in Tucson; Hamadeh in Scottsdale.

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Like the rest of the field, Angeli-Chansley was concerned about fake news, which he saw everywhere. He felt an urgent need to overhaul the current election system. He was suspicious of the undue influence that corporations wielded over American life. Big Pharma, for instance. He had, at his fingertips, an exhaustive recall of various proven conspiratorial occurrences in American history, like Operation Paperclip, a government program to bring scientists in Nazi employ to the U.S. after World War II.

Without the face paint, and free of his horns—the feds still hadn’t given them back, he said—Angeli-Chansley sounded a lot like many of the people I was meeting and talking to about Republican politics in Arizona. I told him he would’ve fit right in at the Hangar. He wasn’t convinced that the candidates were as serious as him. “Talking points,” he suspected. He wouldn’t be voting in the Republican primary, as a registered Libertarian, but I asked him to pick a favorite candidate anyway.

Kern, he told me, would be his favorite. “We met in the sauna of an LA Fitness years ago,” he said. Angeli-Chansley had seen Kern at the Arizona Capitol recently, though he claimed he was there not as Kern’s guest, as the Fake News reported. The two of them had also been at the Capitol in Washington on Jan. 6, 2021, but, he told me, they hadn’t gone together.

Not even four years ago, Angeli-Chansley was the cartoon rendering of American extremism. Now, it seems, the suspicion, distrust, and spiritual malaise he espoused was right at home in the Republican Party, central to the politics of his district, and probably common among plenty of other Americans too. He was a centrist, Angeli-Chansley told me, and though initially I suppressed a laugh, I began to suspect that there was a kernel of truth there—especially when it came to trust in government. (Also, he had some criticisms of Trump, including that he didn’t like the VP pick of Vance.)

We talked for two and a half hours. He knew a lot about civics, the structure of American government and its various institutions. He hated lobbyists. We got along nicely. “I don’t even see you as a journalist,” he told me. “I see you as a human being.” (Also: “The feds will just take your shit and shoot your dog,” he said. “Did they shoot your dog?” I asked. “No,” he said. It hadn’t come to that kind of standoff. “I turned myself in.”)

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Finally, I asked him about the heat. Before he was the face of Trump’s conquering army, Angeli-Chansley had marched on the Arizona State Capitol in a climate change protest in 2019. I asked him if he was still concerned about the threat of the rapidly warming climate to the American way of life, the Arizonan way of life.

He wasn’t. “You know how I know climate activists aren’t serious?” Angeli-Chansley asked. “Because they aren’t calling for Tesla coils.” I confessed to limited knowledge on that particular technology. “Free, unlimited electricity,” he told me. The Tesla coil, I later learned from Wikipedia (a site Angeli-Chansley had warned against as a Fake News hub), is a 19th-century transformer circuit that carries very high voltages with very low currents. It exists, and is most commonly seen at places like children’s museums, where you can touch a glass orb and see the electricity follow your finger.

It was 111 degrees when I got back in the car. One of the brochures from the meet and greet had melted into the passenger seat of my rental car.

Whoever wins the primary—be it Masters, Hamadeh, Kern, Franks, or Toma—will have to go up against Democrat Gregory Whitten in the general.

When I met Whitten at a coffee shop the day after my Chipotle run with Angeli-Chansley, Whitten was not in campaign mode. He already had the Democratic nomination sewn up; he was running unopposed. At 12:30 p.m., it was only 104 degrees, which Whitten noted was not really that hot.

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Whitten was actually from the district—neither Masters nor Hamadeh lived in 8, he reminded me. He had worked in politics for years, dating back to the first Obama campaign. He had lived in Washington. He was committed not to partisanship but to constituent services, ready to walk into any room and hear out the concerns of any affinity group.

Democrats had been content to not even contest this district in the past. Outgoing Republican congresswoman Debbie Lesko won 96.5 percent of the vote as recently as 2022. Even serving as a poll worker in this part of the country can be a formidable enterprise; signing oneself up to the face of the opposition in a race already nationally known for nastiness seemed like a frightful proposition.

“Oh, they’re gonna tear me apart,” said Whitten, when I asked how he anticipated the next few months playing out. He told me he had had conversations with his wife about the threats they anticipated once the Republican candidate has been settled upon.

Why, then, was he doing this, I asked? Whitten was resolute: He believed he could win. He believed he could pull off a historic upset. The district was changing and growing, and it wasn’t that red according to official partisan lean. It had a large Latino population, it was set to benefit greatly from the construction of a new Taiwan Semiconductor plant, which was being built with much fanfare as part of the Biden administration’s CHIPS and Science Act, a multibillion-dollar commitment to reshoring high-paying manufacturing jobs in a critical industry.

“I think people will recognize that when I tell them: ‘I work for the taxpayers, I work for you,’ ” he told me. “I don’t believe everyone is going to buy into these crazy politics.” He was going to break the overheated partisanship a simple sell: “My job is to make sure the district is taken care of.”

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We shook hands, and I walked back out into the scalding afternoon heat. According to preliminary data from the European Union’s Copernicus Climate Change Service, it was the hottest day in recorded history on planet Earth. In Phoenix, the high was 111 degrees, with a nighttime low of 85.

It was a really nice idea that better constituent services might break the fever. But considering the political climate, it might have been the wildest thing I heard all weekend.





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Sam Leavitt says running helps rhythm, needs to stay healthy

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Sam Leavitt says running helps rhythm, needs to stay healthy


TEMPE — Sam Leavitt has run the ball more to begin this season than any other four-game stretch of the Arizona State quarterback’s career.

Leavitt’s 15 rushes against Baylor set a new career high after his 12 carries against Texas State were among his previous career highs (also 13 in the Peach Bowl).

“I don’t think it was really part of the game plan. It was kind of just what happened,” Leavitt said Tuesday of the new career high. “More so taking what the defense gives me. Try not to do that throughout the rest of the season as much, keep my body a little healthier. But yeah I’m just trying to win the game at the end of the day.”

Leavitt missed one game last season due to a cracked rib sustained while fighting for extra yards against Utah. Arizona State saw firsthand how valuable he is to the offense when it rolled quarterback Jeff Sims out at Cincinnati, one of two Big 12 losses the team had.

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“(Leavitt) ran more (at Baylor) than we like to usually run quarterbacks, but he did because it was needed in the game,” ASU coach Kenny Dillingham said.

While the usage is higher than any other stretch in his career (10.5 rushes per game), he’s also picked his spots well. Of his 42 rushes, 14 have been for first downs, and six of those have come on third or fourth down.

He’s also had nine explosive runs, defined by ASU defensive coordinator Brian Ward as pickups of at least 12 yards, including a 52-yard scramble against NAU.

His 220 scramble yards — distinguished from designed run plays, according to PFF — are the most in the country and 63 more than the next-best Power Four quarterback (Auburn’s Jackson Arnold).

TCU coach Sonny Dykes told reporters the Horned Frogs should prepare better for Leavitt’s scrambling after facing athletic SMU quarterback Kevin Jennings, but the numbers indicate a different story.

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Jennings has nearly as many scrambles (13) as Leavitt (16), but his production is far below at 6.5 yards per scramble compared to Leavitt’s 13.8. Stripping away the outlying 52-yarder, Leavitt would still average 11.2 yards per scramble. Leavitt also has doubled up Jennings’ yards on designed runs (59 to 28).

“The SMU quarterback was more of a ‘run around to throw.’ This quarterback is more of a runner. He wants to run, and he’s very effective. He’s very fast, he’s very elusive and he does a good job getting down before you tackle him,” Dykes said.

Sam Leavitt in better rhythm passing when running the ball

Four of Leavitt’s six touchdown passes on the year have come after he carried the ball within the previous four plays, his level of engagement higher when feeling the hits.

“Early on, I like to kind of get the juices out, you know, butterflies out by running it a little bit, but later in the game I’m kind of settled in already,” Leavitt said.

After ASU lost to Mississippi State, Dillingham emphasized the importance of Leavitt feeling a rhythm early in games, with the QB run game as a way to get “feisty” signal callers feeling it.

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Leavitt rushed the ball twice before he attempted a pass against Baylor and once before his first pass against Texas State. He then had two carries in the final 14 minutes of the Baylor win and three carries in the second half against Texas State.

Catch ASU-TCU on Friday at 6 p.m. MST on the Arizona Sports app, ESPN 620 AM or 98.7 FM HD-2. It will be televised on FOX.




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Arizona family devastated after rollover crash on I-10 kills 3 people

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Arizona family devastated after rollover crash on I-10 kills 3 people


BUCKEYE, AZ (AZFamily) — A Valley family is reeling from an unimaginable tragedy and searching for answers after a deadly rollover crash left three people dead and one seriously injured.

The crash happened on Thursday in Buckeye along Interstate 10 near Palo Verde Road. According to the Arizona Department of Public Safety, 48-year-old Isreal Vasquez was pronounced dead at the scene. Two young boys, ages 6 and 9, later died at the hospital.

Authorities said the family’s vehicle rolled over, but it’s still unclear what caused the crash. DPS is asking anyone who was in the area at the time to come forward with information.

Arizona’s Family spoke with members of the family who said they are relying on memories to get them through this dark time.

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“They were always laughing and making jokes and being silly,” Ariana Lopez, a cousin, said. “I think about the crash and it comes back and hurts all over again.”

Lopez is hanging on to each one of them right now. She has recalled each moment.

“It breaks my heart because she was a single mom, and it was always the three of them together,” Lopez said. “And then to lose her whole life — her two sons and her dad as well — it’s heartbreaking.”

Lopez said while she looks back at each photo, she only has a few words she wishes she could say to them if they were here.

“It’s always nice to look at those memories, and it reminds you life is so short — hug your loved ones,” Lopez said. “Thank you for always being there for us. We need to make him proud.”

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The family has started a GoFundMe to help with medical bills, three funerals and child care.

See a spelling or grammatical error in our story? Please click here to report it.

Do you have a photo or video of a breaking news story? Send it to us here with a brief description.



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Arizona high school football Week 4 rewind: Upsets, statements and comebacks

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Arizona high school football Week 4 rewind: Upsets, statements and comebacks


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There were comebacks, statements, big performances and upsets across Arizona in Week 4 of the high school football season. The Arizona Republic looks back — and ahead — as teams start to separate from the pack.

What we learned

Chandler Basha cemented its No. 1 ranking in the state with another punishing performance, a 42-14 rout of No. 4 Gilbert Williams Field on Friday, Sept. 12. The Bears can line up in various formations and strike fast. This time, head coach Chris McDonald, also the offensive coordinator, often flanked out three receivers, including running back Noah Roberts, way outside. He had them bunched together, causing the secondary to adjust.

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It was “pick your receiver” for Brodie Vehrs. He would wing it to a target, who followed the blocks from the other two receivers for big gains. Then, lulling the defense, Vehrs would simply hand off to tailback Josh Gaines, who gutted the middle of the defense for scoring runs of 19 and 23 yards in a 21-point third quarter that put the game away.

The Bears sent another team that was feeling great about itself to the film room, seeking answers. Basha will wear down teams with its size, athleticism and depth. McDonald’s defense is so stacked that he’s got guys not starting who have Division I scholarship offers.

Biggest question

How good is Chandler Hamilton?

We know about two-time defending Open state champion Peoria Liberty (2-1) and Basha, but are the three Hamilton blowouts telling us they’re right with those two teams?

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The Huskies hung 63 on ALA Queen Creek, 62 on Phoenix Sandra Day O’Connor and now 54 on Queen Creek Casteel. What we know now is ALA Queen Creek’s defense is nothing close to last year’s Open semifinal defense. The Patriots are 0-3, giving up 143 points. SDO and Casteel are both 1-2.

The Huskies might get a little more resistance next week against 2-1 Phoenix Brophy, which lost its only game to Basha (42-6) in the season opener. But the sophomore sensations of QB Jax Sculley and WR Roy Oliver III are special, the running game keeps defenses guessing.

Coach Travis Dixon has got something really good going in his second season leading his alma mater. They may have to wait until Oct. 24 to know how great this team is. That’s when the Huskies face Basha.

Biggest takeaway

Maybe the biggest shocker was ALA West Foothills’ 21-14 win over No. 1 (4A) Tucson Mica Mountain.

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It was the Guardians’ first signature 4A win since moving up from 3A, where they lost to Tucson Pusch Ridge in last year’s championship game. They came into the season with adversity, losing quarterback Hudson Mitton and head coach Chad Mitton, Hudson’s dad. Hudson is now at Mesa High. Chad Mitton is not coaching. A few key players transferred out. And, after getting dominated by Snowflake in a 30-10 loss last week, there were more questions than answers.

Consider those questions answered.

Mica Mountain, the defending 4A champion, saw its 17-game winning streak end against a more physical, more confident, tougher team. Bryan Rauzan, who took on the head coaching position before the season began, can build off of this. But they still have a brutal 4A schedule remaining with games that include Phoenix Arcadia, Phoenix Northwest Christian, Peoria, Phoenix Thunderbird and improved Phoenix St. Mary’s.

Best bounce back

Chandler junior quarterback Will Mencl has been one of the emerging stars in the first three games. Despite putting up 319 passing yards and 70 rushing yards last week in California, it wasn’t enough in a 24-23 loss to Cathedral Catholic. He bounced back with a career night in a 49-29 win over ALA Queen Creek, completing 31 of 35 passes, piling up 569 yards total offense with seven total touchdowns.

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His first two varsity seasons ended with injuries, but Mencl is doing things that are putting him in the early Player of the Year conversation as he tries to make this a big bounce-back year for the Wolves (2-1), who went 5-6 last year and didn’t get into the eight-team Open playoff for the first time.

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Hamilton QB Jax Sculley talks team’s win over Casteel

Hamilton High School QB Jax Sculley discusses the team’s 54-14 win over Casteel on Sept. 12, 2025.

Best starts

Tolleson is off to its first 3-0 start in 12 years, behind the special connection between quarterback Youngman Lee and wide receiver Rico Blassingame in a 32-27 win over Avondale West Point. Youngman, a summer move-in from the Seattle area, completed 15 of 29 for 335 yards and four TDs. Blassingame, who has committed to Minnesota, caught nine passes for 153 yards and a TD. In his first three games in Arizona, Lee has completed 37 of 53 passes for 826 yards and nine TDs with two interceptions. Blassingame has 19 catches for 276 yards in three games. How much of a difference has Lee made? Last year, Tolleson went 1-9, following a 3-7 2023 season.

Meanwhile, St. Mary’s is 3-0 for the first time since 2006, behind sophomore QB Luke Horn, who was 15 of 24 for 426 yards and four TDs in a 48-0 win over Tucson Empire. Junior receiver Anthony Cannon had seven catches for 201 yards and one TD. Horn has thrown for 1,021 yards and eight TDs in the first three games.

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Best comeback

Scottsdale Saguaro had the host Tucson Salpointe Catholic Lancers in a 17-0 halftime hole. The Lancers took their first lead, 28-24, with six minutes left. Saguaro took the lead back, 31-24, with 2:38 to play. Salpointe drove down the field before starting QB Matt Avelar (26 of 35, 321 yards, four TDs) got knocked out of the game with an injury. Enter senior Rayce Alvarez, who threw a TD pass with 40 seconds left for a 34-31 victory.

Saguaro (1-2) turned the ball over on the second play of its next possession. Saguaro’s two losses (the other to Scottsdale Desert Mountain) have been by a total of six points. R.J Gory had 14 catches for 173 yards and three TDs for the 3-0 Lancers, who now have to make two straight trips to the Valley (Mesa Red Mountain Sept. 19 and ALA Queen Creek Sept. 26) with another trip to the Valley on Oct. 17 to face Basha.

Best final quarter

Watch out for Tempe Marcos de Niza, which improved to 3-0, after a 27-point, fourth-quarter eruption in a 41-28 win over rival Tempe McClintock. The Padres have scored more than 40 points in each of their first three games. They trailed McClintock, 14-7, in the first half. Defense fueled the comeback with interceptions by Keilor Hemmings, Alejandro Gomez and Brian Irick.

“We are going to play for each other and we are going to play for four quarters,” coach Anthony Figueroa said.

Best small-school statement

In a football rivalry that began in 1904, host Eagar Round Valley, now in 3A, outlasted 2A St. Johns 38-21. Round Valley took a 25-7 halftime lead, recovering a pooch kick and scoring on a Brenton Walker 34-yard pass play with four seconds left. Round Valley (4-0) recovered two other onside kicks in the game. Still, St. Johns has inspired the White Mountains community and reignited the rivalry, starting the season 3-0 before suffering its first setback to a team that has a shot at winning the 3A title.

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Look ahead

Key 4A games to keep an eye on Thursday, Sept. 18, include Gilbert Mesquite (2-1) against St. Mary’s at Phoenix Washington, and Arcadia (3-0) hosting Glendale Deer Valley (3-0).

On Friday, Sept. 19, Williams Field (2-1) will see how it responds from the Basha loss with a game at Chandler.

Hamilton will travel to Phoenix to take on Brophy Prep (2-1) at Central in another pivotal 6A game.

In a key 5A game, defending champion Goodyear Desert Edge (3-0) travels to play ALA Gilbert North (3-0).

Richard Obert has been covering high school sports since the 1980s for The Arizona Republic. He also covers Grand Canyon University athletics and the Arizona Rattlers. To suggest human-interest story ideas and other news, reach Obert at richard.obert@arizonarepublic.com or 602-316-8827. Follow him on X, formerly Twitter:@azc_obert

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