Arizona
Witness recounts odd moments before and after Shayna Feinman vanished in northern Arizona
SELIGMAN, AZ (AZFamily) — A witness is revealing more about the mystery disappearance of an Arizona woman.
The witness lived on the property with 35-year-old Shayna Feinman, who vanished two months ago.
She’s bothered by what happened the last time she saw Feinman and by what happened to other people on the property.
The Yavapai County Sheriff’s Office has said multiple people are not cooperating in the investigation.
This witness, who we are referring to as “Kelly” to protect her identity, helped file the missing person report after Feinman was missing for more than a week.
She said it took two people getting arrested on other charges before she felt comfortable sharing what she heard and saw the night Feinman vanished.
Kelly saw Feinman after an argument with their property manager.
Then, she was gone.
“If she was still alive, I feel like things would make sense,” said Kelly.
Kelly said that the argument she heard was because their property manager told Feinman she could no longer live in the cabin.
“They were yelling and screaming at each other. He’s like, ‘You have to leave. I’m calling the sheriff.’ She’s like, ‘I need to get my phone and keys,’” Kelly remembered hearing.
Kelly said Feinman was walking toward the back of the property where her car was and then was never seen or heard from again.
Kelly said Feinman and her boyfriend would often leave for days at a time, so at first, she wasn’t alarmed, but after more than a week, Kelly and their neighbor, who was watching Feinman’s dog Stormy made a missing person report on March 9.
“She would have her car; she would have Stormy. All those things would be missing, not just her,” said Kelly.
Kelly said she was upset by her property manager’s reaction and recalled what he told her.
“You shouldn’t have made the missing persons report because you’re just making a big deal out of nothing,” she recalled him telling her.
The Yavapai County Sheriff’s Office said at this point they can’t rule out foul play and multiple people are not cooperating in the investigation.
Feinman’s sister told Arizona’s Family those two people are the property manager and Shayna’s boyfriend.
Kelly said the official police search of the property was done two weeks after they made the missing person report, but she said prior to that, Feinman’s boyfriend didn’t help or say much about her disappearance.
“Hey man, you’re not calling, you’re not texting, how come you’re not out here looking for your girlfriend? I’m out here in the snow with her dog, and you’re just MIA,” Kelly said.
Kelly said by the time Easter rolled around, she left to go stay with a neighbor because she felt uneasy about what was happening.
She said she felt comfortable sharing this now after the property manager and boyfriend were arrested on other charges.
Court documents show they were arrested late last month for vehicle theft, and the property manager, for possessing a weapon he shouldn’t have.
Kelly has her own theory of what happened, but it still leaves so much mystery as to where Feinman is.
“I think that she’s not alive. I think that she got into some kind of accident with one of them, or both of them, or something, because she would be found by now if she was still out there,” Kelly said.
Last week, YCSO increased the reward for information in Feinman’s disappearance to $10,000.
YCSO is asking for anyone who may have information about Shayna’s whereabouts on or after March 9, 2024, or if there is camera footage that may be relevant or seems suspicious, to please call either YCSO at 928-771-3260 or Silent Witness 800 932-3232.
People may also file a tip online at yavapaisw.com
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Copyright 2024 KTVK/KPHO. All rights reserved.
Arizona
Arizona girl who vanished 32 years ago has been found alive, sheriff says
An Arizona girl who vanished in 1994 has been found alive, the Gila County sheriff said Wednesday.
Christina Marie Plante disappeared from Star Valley, Arizona when she was 13 years old, the Gila County Sheriff’s Office said. She was last seen on May 19, 1994, around 12:30 p.m., after leaving home on foot to go to a stable where her horse was kept, according to a missing persons poster. She was last seen wearing shorts, a t-shirt and tennis shoes, and was considered “missing/endangered and under suspicious circumstances,” according to the sheriff’s office.
Sheriff Adam J. Shepherd said in a news release that the girl was reported missing at the time, and “extensive search efforts” involving local and regional resources were conducted. Plante was listed in national missing children databases, and missing persons posters were distributed around the region, state and country.
“Despite exhaustive ground searches, interviews and investigative follow-up, no viable leads were developed” at the time of her disappearance, Shepherd said,and the case remained open.Over the decades, investigators re-examined evidence and pursued any new information that became available, he said.
The sheriff’s office eventually established a cold case unit, which focused on unresolved investigations, Shepherd said. Detectives in the unit used “advances in technology, modern investigative techniques and detailed case review” to develop new leads that “ultimately led to a breakthrough,” Shepherd said.
Shepherd did not say where Plante was found, or share any circumstances of her disappearance “out of respect for Christina’s privacy and well-being.” Shepherd said that investigators have confirmed her identity, and that her status as a missing person “has been officially resolved.”
Shepherd said that the case “underscores the importance of cold case review initiatives and the impact of evolving technology in bringing long-awaitd answers to families and communities,” and said the sheriff’s office “remains committed to pursing all unresolved cases.”
Arizona
Arizona State University researcher warns against overtrusting AI in Iran strikes
PHOENIX (AZFamily) — The U.S. military’s AI-powered battlefield intelligence system can compress targeting decisions that once took days into minutes or seconds. But in that push for speed, a preliminary inquiry by the Pentagon found the U.S. relied on outdated intelligence and struck an Iranian school, killing about 170 people, mostly children.
It turns out there’s a lot of research on what happens when humans deploy AI in battlefield settings and why things can go wrong.
“AI is not ready for prime time,” said Nancy Cooke, director of ASU’s Center for Human, AI, and Robot Teaming, on the latest episode of Generation AI. “It is unreliable. It can do unexpected things. And humans may have the tendency to overtrust it.”
Cooke has spent years studying what happens when humans team up with artificial intelligence in high-stakes scenarios. In her research on simulated drone pilot teams, she’s watched AI perform its assigned tasks flawlessly while simultaneously making the humans perform worse.
AI-powered tools like the Maven Smart System, the Pentagon’s battlefield intelligence platform that identifies and prioritizes targets, create a risk for over-reliance on AI recommendations, she said.
Large language models appear deceptively human-like, Cooke explained, but “they’re very much not like human intelligence, although people may think so and then overtrust them as a result.”
Three-person drone experiment
Cooke’s research team created simulated three-person drone teams, then substituted AI for one human pilot. The AI executed its core functions without error, controlling airspeed, heading and altitude.
But something unexpected happened.
“[The AI pilot] acted like there was no one else on the team,” Cooke said. “It did not anticipate the information needs of its fellow team members. And as a result, the coordination of the whole team broke down.”
The humans changed their behavior, too. Thinking they were working with a superior AI, the research subjects decided to follow the machine’s lead. “AI isn’t anticipating information needs. So, I’m going to stop doing that too,” seemed to be their subconscious logic.
The result: teams with AI got reconnaissance photos slower than all-human teams, despite AI’s superior individual performance.
“Even though AI may be fast, the combination of AI working with humans may be slow and bad,” Cooke said.
“It Shouldn’t Be Trusted”
Both over-reliance and under-trust of AI pose challenges on the battlefield, but Cooke is convinced one error is more serious.
“Definitely over-trusting is worse. Because it shouldn’t be trusted. It’s going to give you bad information a lot of the time. Not all of the time. And it’s going to be fast, but that’s not necessarily better,” she said.
The Maven Smart System represents exactly what worries her most. The Pentagon has praised the system for combining eight or nine different intelligence systems into one, condensing targeting decisions from days or hours into minutes.
“So many things can go wrong,” Cooke said. “You have all these different system components that haven’t been tested. They have no safeguards on them. We don’t know how they play off of each other and work together. It’s just a recipe for disaster.”
The Anthropic precedent
Some AI companies are drawing their own red lines. The Pentagon labeled Anthropic a supply chain risk in March after the company refused to grant the military a license to use its products for “any lawful purpose,” without restrictions for domestic mass surveillance or autonomous lethal weaponry.
Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei said he objected, in part, because he did not believe the company’s models could reliably handle such grave tasks.
“Anthropic was spot on. They’re not ready,” Cooke said. “And I don’t know that they’re going to be ready in a very long time.”
Her position goes further than timing concerns. Some decisions, she argues, should remain exclusively human: “decisions to target something, decisions to shoot.”
Information overload
Cooke’s wildfire research reveals another dimension of the challenge of partnering humans with AI. Drones can collect vast amounts of reconnaissance data, but processing it remains “a complex cognitive task to go over reels and reels of video.”
Her research found that too much information creates its own problems, leading to decision paralysis and worse outcomes; the opposite of what AI integration promises to deliver.
The pattern holds across domains: AI excels at narrow technical tasks but struggles with the contextual awareness and anticipation that effective teamwork requires, she said.
“I think you have to make sure that people realize that this is not human intelligence and humans have a lot to offer,” Cooke said. “The best combination would be good human intelligence coupled with good technology.”
The escalation question
Critics argue that moral qualms about autonomous weapons put the U.S. at a disadvantage against adversaries like China or Russia, who might deploy fully autonomous systems.
They worry about next-generation weapons that can decide to fire on their own. In a world where milliseconds might be the difference between life and death, these critics argue human-in-the-loop weapons won’t be able to keep up.
Cooke sees it differently: she thinks autonomous systems run the risk of friendly fire and may be vulnerable to foreign hacking, turning advanced weapons into threats against their own operators.
More broadly, she views the AI arms race as inherently escalatory, potentially raising the risk of countries opting for a weapon of last resort: a nuclear bomb. “People are pushing to, you know, move fast and break things. And indeed, we will.”
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Arizona
Why is gas so expensive in Arizona? What to know
Arizona Republic reporter Jose R. Gonzalez tells why gas is costing more
Arizona Republic reporter Jose R. Gonzalez talks about Phoenix-area gas prices rising while residents deal with the higher cost at the pumps.
The average price of regular gasoline in the United States surpassed $4 per gallon in late March.
But as high as that rate may be, it remains lower than the highest average price recorded by AAA. The price of gasoline in June 2022 wins that dubious distinction. And in Arizona, where the average reached $4 before the national rate, prices are still not at their highest recorded amount.At least not yet. The difference between prices on March 31 and the highs recorded in June 2022 are rather narrow.
Here’s what we know about the stretches between current gas prices and those recorded as the highest ever and why these highs are different from nearly four years ago.
Why is gas so high right now?
The Strait of Hormuz, a narrow shipping channel connecting the Persian Gulf to the Gulf of Oman was shut off by Iran for countries exporting oil to the U.S., after the U.S. and Israel attacked Iran on Feb. 28.
Why was gas so high in June 2022?
Sanctions on the world’s second-highest producer of oil, Russia, for that country’s February 2022 invasion of Ukraine was the principal reason for record-setting gas prices.
What is the current average U.S. gas price compared to the highest recorded price?
As of March 31, the average rate of regular gasoline in the U.S. was $4.018, according to AAA. The average price of regular gasoline reached its highest price in the U.S. on June 14, 2022, when it sold at a rate of $5.016, according to AAA.
What is the current average Arizona gas price compared to the highest recorded price?
As of March 31, the average rate of regular gasoline in Arizona was $4.682, according to AAA. The average price of regular gasoline reached its highest price in Arizona on June 17, 2022 when it sold at a rate of $5.388, according to AAA.
What are the current average Phoenix-area gas prices compared to the highest recorded prices?
As of March 31, the average rates of regular gasoline by city or areas in the Valley, according to AAA, are listed below. Also listed, are the city’s or area’s highest recorded prices and their dates, according to AAA.
- East Valley: $4.956 – $5.700 on June 16, 2022
- Glendale: $4.956 – $5.715 on June 15, 2022
- Peoria: $4.965 – $5.716 on June 16, 2022
- Phoenix proper: $4.966 – $5.699 on June 15, 2022
- Phoenix-Mesa: $4.913 – $5.688 on June 15, 2022
- Scottsdale: $4.970 – $5.726 on June 15, 2022
- West Valley: $4.944 – $5.712 on June 15, 2022
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