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Click here for the Beauty of Arizona and Continue Below to Where Arizona Needs Help for the Children Please Help
Mother arrested for child abuse; father
arrested for hindering prosecution
12:29
PM Mountain Standard Time on Wednesday, July 2, 2008 Yavapai County Sheriff's Office
UPDATE
JULY 2: The following is a press release from the Yavapai County Sheriff's Office:
On June 26, 2008, Yavapai County Sheriff's Office Detectives from the Criminal Investigations Unit arrested
20-year-old Chino Valley resident Alexander (Alex) Allen for Hindering Prosecution in the 1st degree.
Yavapai Co. Sheriff's Office Alexander
Allen
Since the arrest of the baby's mother, Michelle Murray, for several counts of child abuse
on June 17, 2008, detectives have continued their investigation as to the cause of the injuries. During further interviews
with Allen regarding the case, detectives verified that Allen intentionally lied to them as to the cause of the baby's
injuries during their first contact with him at the hospital. Allen did this in an apparent effort to protect Murray. Both
Allen and Murray had claimed that Murray's two-year-old daughter pulled the baby out of an infant swing and caused the
injuries. Allen's actions hindered the prosecution of Murray by providing false information to detectives and medical
staff. As a result, Allen was arrested for Hindering Prosecution, and booked at the Prescott Detention Center. Additional
charges are still possible. Detective Ross Diskin, the lead investigator in this case, is seeking information
from anyone who has knowledge of child abuse incidents involving Murray and Allen. Detective Diskin may be reached at 928-777-7348.
ORIGINAL REPORT: The following is a press release from the Yavapai
County Sheriff's Office: CHINO VALLEY -- On June 17, 2008, Yavapai County Sheriff's Office
detectives from the Criminal Investigation Section, arrested 26-year-old Chino Valley resident Michelle Murray (aka Swartz)
for several felony counts of abuse involving her two month old baby boy. On June 11, 2008, Allen and Michelle
Murray took their baby to Yavapai Regional Medical Center due to a swollen right leg. The parents told hospital staff another
sibling, a two-year-old girl, caused the injury three days prior. After completing an exam and x-rays, medical staff discovered
the boy had a fractured skull, fractured right femur, partially healed broken clavicle, and multiple rib fractures in various
stages of healing. Based on the findings, YRMC medical staff called Children Protective Services (CPS) and YCSO. The Murray’s
reside in the 1000 block of Buffalo Run Road, Chino Valley. Detectives arrived at the hospital and after interviewing
the parents, learned their initial story to hospital staff was false. CPS took custody of the child and detectives began an
investigation into the cause of the baby’s injuries. During the next few days, Michelle changed her story several times
as to how her baby was injured in an apparent attempt to conceal child abuse. Additionally, even with full knowledge of the
injuries, Michelle could not explain why she waited three days before taking her baby to the hospital for treatment. These
types of injuries, if left untreated, could have resulted in a long term serious medical condition or even death. Detectives
learned that a family member, who had seen the baby’s swollen leg, had to demand Michelle take the baby to the hospital.
Based on the results of the investigation as of June 17, 2008, detectives believe Michelle had a direct roll
in the abuse of her baby and she was arrested and booked at the Prescott Detention Center on six various felony child abuse
charges. Her bond is set at $250,000 dollars. The baby's father, Allen Murray, is cooperating with detectives
as the investigation continues. The other child is also in protective custody. Citizens can contact the Yavapai
County Sheriff's Office with information or questions at (928) 771-3260 or the YCSO website: www.ycsoaz.gov
Police: Daughter molested by mom, former
counselorJackee Coe and Senta Scarborough The Arizona Republic Jan. 18, 2008 02:26 PM A former Mesa family counselor groomed his fiancée
into drugging her 11-year-old daughter with sleeping pills so they could take photographs while they molested her over a three-month
period in 2006, according to police.
William L. Riedel, 43, was arrested Thursday on suspicion of sexual
conduct with a minor and child molestation. His former girlfriend, now 55, whose name is being withheld by The Arizona
Republic to protect the victim's identity, was also booked Thursday on suspicion of sexual exploitation of a minor,
and sexual and child abuse.
The girl was placed in the custody of the state Child Protective Services.
Arvayo said Riedel worked as a former in-home family counselor for an agency in the Valley.
Riedel
told police he met the girl's mother at his Mesa apartment complex and "groomed" the mother to help him molest
her daughter. Police believe the molestation by the couple occurred from January to March 2006.
Riedel purchased
Ambien sleeping pills and had victim's mother tell her daughter to take them for her allergies, police records show. The
mother told investigators that she was intoxicated when she took photographs while Riedel molested her daughter. She also
told police she molested her daughter, but was "sorry."
Police began their investigation after a 13-year-old
classmate of the victim found images of the girl being molested by Riedel. Riedel was living with the woman, then his fiancée,
and her daughter when the classmate found the photographs on a computer. He had been living there for about two months, court
records show.
The mother confronted Riedel, told him to leave her house, and called police.
Police seized
the computer and discovered "thousands" of child pornographic images, including photographs of Riedel and the victim's
mother molesting her while the girl appeared to be unconscious or drugged.
One image on the computer's hard
drive shows the victim's mother placing her breast into her daughter's mouth while the girl was drugged, police records
show.
The images also include child pornography widely circulated on the Internet, Arvayo said.
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October 5, 2007 - 3:08AM
Police call child abuse case one of worst ever
Sometimes the beatings came from a military belt. Other times it was a computer cord. When the little girl wasn’t
hit, she was forced to hold her petite frame in a push-up position and read from a book placed below her face. If she didn’t
know the meaning of a word, the lashes continued.
Police arrested a Mesa couple Tuesday in connection with what investigators
are calling one of the worst cases of child abuse they’ve ever seen.
Ezra Emanuel Hazell, 29, and Kristie Marie
Hazell, 25, were taken into custody on suspicion of several counts of child abuse that targeted the man’s 5-year-old
daughter from another relationship, records show.
“Everybody in my life hurts me,” the child
told investigators at Mesa’s Center Against Family Violence.
More than 100 bruises and other injuries covered
her body and she was taken to a hospital to be checked for internal injuries.
Child Protective Services took custody
of the girl and her 4-year-old and infant half-sisters.
Court records show the girl was abused at her home in the
1700 block of South Lemon, near Inverness Avenue and Val Vista Drive, for more than a month.
“It’s horrific,
based on all the visible injuries and mental abuse this child has been through,” said Mesa police spokeswoman Detective
Diana Tapia.
The girl had been in the custody of her father, police said, since her biological mother had also been
suspected of abusing her. The family moved to Arizona from Texas in March. Ezra Hazell claims to be in the U.S. Army on his
MySpace page, but military records could not be immediately verified.
Police were notified of the abuse after the
child told her teacher and a school nurse at Gilbert’s Pioneer Elementary School that her father and stepmother beat
her with a belt nearly every day, records show.
When police interviewed the father, he told investigators that he
and his wife strike the girl, but that they didn’t realize they had hurt her and felt badly.
He said they sometimes
place her in a push-up position for 15 minutes instead of a spanking.
Also, he said the couple has to hit his daughter
because she loses control about twice a week and doesn’t listen or follow instructions. Kristie Hazell would not comment
to police.
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August 13, 2007 - 10:23PM
Mesa police arrest mom on suspicion of child abuse
A mother accused of beating her 10-year-old son until he was bloody inside a Wal-Mart was arrested Sunday by Mesa police.
Witnesses
saw Tina Lynn Tatum, 29, repeatedly strike her son in the head, stomach and back with a closed fist and drag him by his feet
at the retail store located at 1955 S. Stapley Drive, police said.
Tatum is on lifetime probation for child abuse
due to her involvement in the death of her 3-month-old baby in 2003. Tatum’s then-boyfriend, Pedro
Peralta, 32, was sentenced to life in prison for shaking the baby to death. Peralta is serving a second life sentence
for suffocating another girlfriend’s baby to death later the same year.
Tatum was booked on suspicion
of child abuse. Her son is in the care of a family member. | ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
| Rest in Peace |

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| Tyler and Ariana |
Feb 2007 Tucson father now accused of killing two of his children Disturbing new information Monday in the deaths of two children; the body of one believed to have been found
in a storage locker. Monday, a grand jury indicted their father, Christopher Payne,
for both of their murders. The indictment lays out the case against Christopher Payne. Even though Tyler Payne's body hasn't been found... Payne is charged with his murder. Also, there are new clues that the children may have died a slow, abusive death. It's
almost hard to believe the words printed on the page. Up until the indictment, 5-year-old Tyler
Payne, Ariana's older brother was thought to be missing. The indictment reads otherwise. It
says, "Christopher Mathew Payne murdered Tyler Payne." Police have
always suspected foul play in Tyler's death. At one point, dozens of investigators searched the Los Reales Landfill. They never said what they were looking for and in the end; the investigators didn't turn up anything. Tyler's body is still missing. The indictment reads that Payne "... intentionally or knowingly moved a dead
human body or parts of a human body with the intent to abandon or conceal." The indictment
also reveals new details about how Tyler and his 4-year-old sister, Ariana, may have died. Ariana's
body is believed to have been found in a storage locker last month. The indictment says,
"Christopher Payne caused or permitted her bones to be broken." Probably the most disturbing
information... in reference to both children... Payne's indictment says he "failed to seek prompt medical attention
and/or allowed the children to starve to death." Police do not think the children's mother
was involved in the death of the two children. We went by
her home, again Monday night to get her reaction to the indictment. Her boyfriend
told News 4 she's meeting with the family's attorney on Tuesday. He said
they will be releasing a statement to the media, soon
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ Mom Of Murdered Children Gets $1 Million Mother of these children was awarded $1 million. The little boy's remains have not
been recovered.

Toy Box Killing
Published: August 10, 2006
Last week, a Maricopa County grand jury indicted former Phoenix resident Eric Natzel on two counts of felony child abuse
in the brutal August 2005 death of his 2-year-old daughter Abbey.
Eric Natzel was playing a video game when his baby died.
Police in Michigan arrested the 27-year-old Natzel and are holding him in lieu of $500,000 bond at the Lenawee County Jail
in Adrian, a small city near the Ohio border.
A few days after the indictment, Phoenix homicide detective Jack Ballentine flew to Michigan to see if Natzel would speak
with him. However, Natzel told Ballentine that his attorney in Arizona previously advised him not to discuss the case.
Ballentine also interviewed acquaintances of Natzel's in the town of Owasso (about half an hour from East Lansing, the
home of Michigan State University), where Natzel had been living since shortly after his daughter died.
Early on the evening of August 27, 2005, Natzel told his wife, Amy Minor, in a phone call that he had found his daughter
inside a cardboard toy box with a domed lid.
According to Amy's later account, Natzel had claimed before hanging up the phone that the baby was "choking."
But phone records later indicated that Natzel did not call 911 for assistance until more than 30 minutes after that. When
paramedics got to the couple's apartment in north Phoenix, Abbey Minor was dead.
Natzel was unemployed at the time, and was staying at home with Abbey while his pregnant wife worked full-time at a Phoenix
pharmacy. Natzel told police that he had been spending his days tending to Abbey inside their apartment as he played hour
upon hour of video games.
Natzel insisted that he never physically abused Abbey, whom he told police was named after the Beatles' famous record Abbey
Road.
But an examination of the baby's body at John C. Lincoln-Deer Valley Hospital shortly after she died revealed fresh abrasions
on her forehead, small bruises above both eyes and a bundle of inexplicable bruises. The back of the baby's head also was
badly swollen.
Detective Ballentine interviewed Eric Natzel and Amy Minor at the hospital separately on that night last August.
Amy defended her husband in that first, brief interview, but later turned against him and alleged that he had been physically
abusing her for some time.
Ballentine asked Natzel that night to explain the many bruises on the baby's body.
"They weren't there this morning," Natzel told the detective, noting that he'd showered with his little daughter sometime
before noon. "I don't even remember seeing them when I picked her up [out of the toy box]."
Natzel also conceded that Abbey had been in his sole care and custody from the time his wife had left for work in the early
afternoon (a few hours after the shower) until he had allegedly "discovered" her in the toy box.
. Natzel left the hospital that night with his parents. His wife Amy left with her parents. At the time, she was just a
few weeks away from giving birth to her second child.
Last February, a county medical examiner concluded that Abbey had suffocated inside the toy box but listed the manner of
her death as "undetermined," not as a homicide or an accident.
Dr. John Hu wrote that he could find no evidence of internal injuries, bone fractures, or any sign of what's known as "shaken-baby
syndrome."
The pathologist also noted that the bruises, however plentiful, did not kill the little girl.
Importantly, though, Dr. Hu concluded that many of the multiple injuries the child suffered — particularly the ugly
and fresh cluster of bruises in the middle of her back — had been "intentionally afflicted" by another person.
That comported with Ballentine's theory that Eric Natzel had smashed Abbey with his fists, probably after crunching her
into the domed toy box.
Many more months of continued investigation ensued, including consultation with medical experts in Arizona and elsewhere,
before county prosecutors decided that they had enough evidence to convict Natzel of child abuse.
For myriad reasons, child abuse cases akin to this can be difficult to prove beyond a reasonable doubt. Prosecutors often
must rely on expert witnesses to try to convince jurors that the accused committed the crime.
Natzel faces more than 20 years in prison if convicted on the more serious of the two felony counts, which is classified
as a dangerous crime against a child. |
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ARIZONA LAWS
Arizona: Assembly Bill HB2348 passed the
Arizona Senate on 5/26/04. This bill allows disposition of community property, calculation of spousal maintenance and determination
of child support to occur with consideration of criminal conviction for acts against the spouse or child. It also included
the following: 1) No custody or unsupervised visitation to sex offenders or murderers. 2) Courts shall consider financial ability when ordering
services, evaluations, etc. 3) Evaluator will swear and affirm on EACH evaluation that he/she is up to date with the training. 4) 6 hours initial training on child abuse. 5) 6 hours initial
training on domestic violence. 6) 4 hours every other year on child abuse and domestic violence. 7) Minimum standards for training created
by Domestic Relations Committee. 8) 2 more senators and 2
more House members on Domestic Relations Committee.
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