Ahwatukee Foothills News - 10.27.2021

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COMMUNITY C O M M U N I TP.27| Y P .AROUND 2 2 | B UAFS IP.31 N E S| OPINION S P . 2 7 |P.34| O P IBUSINESS N I O N PP.37 . 3 2 |REAL | S PESTATE O R T S P.RE1| P . 3 5 GETOUT | G E T OP.41 U T | PSPORTS . 3 9 | P.45| C L A SCLASSIFIED S I F I E D PP.47 .45

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Wednesday, October 27, 2021

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Lakes lawyers battle over course spending BY PAUL MARYNIAK AFN Executive Editor

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@AhwatukeeFN |

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last-minute request by Ahwatukee Lakes Golf Course owner ALCR has raised a new legal fight involving what is being spent on the site’s restoration as opposed to what two experts say should be spent. ALCR’s lawyer Daniel Maynard wants Superior Court Judge Sara Agne to exclude from consideration two experts’ estimates that the

New details in teacher-student sex case filed

put the 105-acre site’s restoration cost far more than the $794,787 that has been spent. The estimates come from Buddie Johnson, who put the restoration at $5 million to $6 million, and The True Life Companies, whose consultant projected $12 million. Attorney Dan Maynard has asked Superior Court Judge Sara Agne not to consider those estimates as she decides whether ALCR should pay hundreds of thousands of dollars in penalties for allegedly violating another judge’s

Chili time

timetable for restoring the course. And in weighing Maynard’s request, the convoluted legal history of the Lakes case plays a major role because of the course’s shifting ownership over the last five years. ALCR, company principal Wilson Gee and his top aide, Terry Duggan, all say nine holes on the course will be open for play by Thanksgiving and that the other nine won’t open until

see LAKES page 14

BY PAUL MARYNIAK AFN Executive Editor

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former Ahwatukee private school teacher accused of a sexual relationship with a student that started when she was 15 was allowed to travel out of state even though he allegedly tried to get citizenship in a foreign country to avoid arrest, according to court records. But Justin Walters, 30, of Tempe, on Oct. 11 lost a second bid to travel outside Arizona after the girl’s lawyer complained and the prosecutor objected. “He’s being treated as if nothing is wrong,” attorney Chase Rasmussen said, according to a legal filing by Deputy County Attorney Marcus Beecher. “He’s getting to live his life while my client is suffering with the after effects.” Walters, a former teacher at his mother’s

see WALTERS page 14

Gail Kyle, who calls herself "Gambling Gail," served up her chili as she competed with other cooks during the annual Ahwatukee Chili Cook-Off over the weekend, much to the delight of scores of people who showed up to sample their work. (David Minton/AFN Staff)

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