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    Home»Sedona News»Electronic Speed Sign Vandalized – $200 Reward Offered
    Sedona News

    Electronic Speed Sign Vandalized –
    $200 Reward Offered

    February 25, 2020No Comments
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    logo_ycsoCottonwood AZ (February 25, 2020) – The Yavapai County Sheriff’s Office is asking for your help in locating the vandal or vandals who damaged a large amount of property in the Cottonwood area.  

    On 02/17/2020 at approximately 7:42 AM, Yavapai County Sheriff’s Deputies responded to a criminal damage report in the areas of Rancho Vista way, Peila Ave, Bonita Ln., Arrowhead Lane, and Monte Tesoro Dr, in Cottonwood.   Upon investigation, deputies discovered that 30 mailboxes had been damaged. They also discovered an electronic speed sign had been vandalized on Camino Real in Cottonwood. It is unknown if the sign is salvageable. The sign was originally purchased by the county for $4824.00 in June of 2018.  

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    Anyone who provides information leading to an arrest or arrests, in this case, could earn a $200 cash reward.  To earn your reward, you must call Yavapai Silent Witness at 1-800-932-3232 or submit a tip at yavapaisw.com. All tips are anonymous.  You never have to give your name.

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    The Politics of Pain

     

    The Politics of Pain

    If there’s one thing nearly every living organism on this planet shares, it is the ability to feel pain. The pain of hunger. Of loneliness. Of illness. The pain of broken bones and broken bodies, broken hearts and broken homes. The pain of poverty, depression, the death of someone we love—and, eventually, the anticipation of our own death. Pain, in all its shapes and shadows, is the one certainty life gives us all. No one escapes it.

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    The Politics of Pain

     

    The Politics of Pain

    If there’s one thing nearly every living organism on this planet shares, it is the ability to feel pain. The pain of hunger. Of loneliness. Of illness. The pain of broken bones and broken bodies, broken hearts and broken homes. The pain of poverty, depression, the death of someone we love—and, eventually, the anticipation of our own death. Pain, in all its shapes and shadows, is the one certainty life gives us all. No one escapes it.

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    The Politics of Pain

     

    The Politics of Pain

    If there’s one thing nearly every living organism on this planet shares, it is the ability to feel pain. The pain of hunger. Of loneliness. Of illness. The pain of broken bones and broken bodies, broken hearts and broken homes. The pain of poverty, depression, the death of someone we love—and, eventually, the anticipation of our own death. Pain, in all its shapes and shadows, is the one certainty life gives us all. No one escapes it.

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    The Politics of Pain

     

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    The Politics of Pain

     

    The Politics of Pain

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    The Politics of Pain

     

    The Politics of Pain

    If there’s one thing nearly every living organism on this planet shares, it is the ability to feel pain. The pain of hunger. Of loneliness. Of illness. The pain of broken bones and broken bodies, broken hearts and broken homes. The pain of poverty, depression, the death of someone we love—and, eventually, the anticipation of our own death. Pain, in all its shapes and shadows, is the one certainty life gives us all. No one escapes it.

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    The Politics of Pain

     

    The Politics of Pain

    If there’s one thing nearly every living organism on this planet shares, it is the ability to feel pain. The pain of hunger. Of loneliness. Of illness. The pain of broken bones and broken bodies, broken hearts and broken homes. The pain of poverty, depression, the death of someone we love—and, eventually, the anticipation of our own death. Pain, in all its shapes and shadows, is the one certainty life gives us all. No one escapes it.

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