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Susan Brock loves minors (in a Biblical sense)

  Mike Renzulli has said that a lot of my posts on Libertarian issues are something to the effect "nut job" posts.

My posts are definately not "nut job" posts and I suspect the problem is that Mike Renzulli doesn't understand the Libertarian platform.

The entire platform of the Libertarian Party can be summed up in this simple definition us Libertarians like to call NIFF.

You can do ANYTHING you want as long as you don't initiate force for fraud against another person.
Using that definition almost ALL crimes that are currently victimless crimes would be legal if Libertarians got into power and modified the laws to reflect the NIFF definition.

Of course that means prostitution would be legalize. Drug use would be legalized too. And so would gambling. All which are victimless crimes.

Two interesting things have surfaced. First this kid was a prostitute selling his services to Susan Brock. She paid the kid between $1,500 and $2,000 for the sex acts. With that in mind I find it impossible to call this child abuse. It was a victimless crime, which occurred between two consenting people!

Second as part of the plea agreement Susan Brock agreed to pay the Chandler cops up to $1 million to cover their cost of investigating the incident. Jesus Christ the cops pissed away almost $1 million bucks investigating this victimless crime?

Don't they have any real criminals to hunt down? I guess not, when they are not doing this rubbish they are busy selling marijuana a hundred pounds at a time and stealing the pot back after they sell it. I have posted several of articles of the dope dealing Chandler cops on this list server.


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Susan Brock pleads guilty in sex case

Deal calls for prison term, lifetime probation, sex-offender listing

by Laurie Merrill - Jan. 25, 2011 12:00 AM

The Arizona Republic

The estranged wife of Maricopa County Supervisor Fulton Brock pleaded guilty Monday to three counts of attempted sexual conduct with a minor in connection with an alleged four-year affair with a boy that started when he was 13.

Susan Brock, 48, pleaded guilty after a settlement conference before Pinal County Superior Court Judge Pro Tem Hank Gooday.

Brock will be sentenced March 16 to seven to 15 years in prison for one of the three counts. The plea agreement stipulates that the sentence for the other two counts will be lifetime probation. Also, Brock will have to register as a sex offender for the rest of her life, said Kostas Kalaitzidis, a spokesman for the Pinal County prosecutor's office.

Brock was indicted on 15 counts in connection with more than 30 acts she was accused of committing with the boy in her home, her mother's home, her car, his car, a laundry room and in secluded places in Chandler. None of the acts included intercourse.

She was arrested Oct. 27, after text messages between the boy and Brock were discovered by a friend's parents. She was indicted Oct. 29 on charges of molestation of a minor, furnishing harmful items to a minor, public sexual indecency with a minor, sexual exploitation of a minor and sexual conduct with a minor.

The indictment said Brock began a sexual relationship with the boy in August 2006, when he was 13. Brock's daughter, Rachel Brock, 21, also was accused of molesting the same boy when she was 18 and he was 14. She was never formally charged because Pinal County prosecutors requested further investigation from Chandler police.

A friend of Susan Brock's, Christian Weems, 37, a Chandler political activist, also was arrested. She was accused of deleting incriminating evidence from the victim's Yahoo account after obtaining the password from Brock.

Weems, like Rachel Brock, also was never charged, Kalaitzidis said. He said police were continuing those investigations.

Fulton Brock, Susan's husband of 28 years, immediately distanced himself from his wife, filing divorce papers within weeks of her arrest.

In an op-ed piece he wrote for The Arizona Republic three weeks ago, Brock said, "What my wife did was very wrong. Period. A victim and his family deserve justice and prayers."

According to police, Susan Brock and the boy communicated through their e-mail accounts. She was accused of giving him an iPod, iPod Touch and two iPhones, and coached him to say he was jogging so she could pick him for the liaisons.

At one point, the boy's parents and his high-school principal warned Brock to stay away from the teen.

"Now that Susan Brock has pleaded guilty, it becomes an issue of the court," said Chandler police spokesman Frank Mendoza.

Reach the reporter at laurie.merrill@arizonarepublic.com or 602-444-7966.


If you ask me this is a victimless crime and Susan Brock is being railroaded for "religious crimes". No one is accusing her of raping the kid against his will. They had consensual sex.

Source

Expert: Deal means Brock avoids longer sentence, victim avoids testifying

Posted: Tuesday, January 25, 2011 3:11 pm | Updated: 8:42 pm, Tue Jan 25, 2011.

By Mike Sakal, Tribune | 2 comments

A plea deal in the high-profile case of Susan Brock, 49, who had a three-year sexual relationship with a teenage boy, means an embarrassing trial has been avoided and Brock will serve less time than if she had been found guilty.

But perhaps most importantly, the deal worked out for the estranged wife of Maricopa County Commissioner Fulton Brock means a young victim won't be victimized again by having to testify, a sex offender expert says.

After more than four hours during a court proceeding in Maricopa County Superior Court on Monday, the deal was reached as Susan Brock pleaded guilty to three counts of attempted sexual conduct with a minor for the relationship which began when the boy was 13. She is facing seven to 15 years in prison, will have to register as a sex offender when she is released from prison and also will be on lifetime probation, according to the plea agreement.

Two days after Brock was arrested by Chandler police, she was indicted on Oct. 29 of 15 counts in connection with more than 30 acts she was accused of committing with the boy in her home, her mother's home, her car, his car, and in secluded places in Chandler after she would pick him up from his school or home. None of the acts included intercourse, but did include oral sex, police said.

Brock will be sentenced March 16 to between seven and 15 years in prison for one of the three counts. The plea agreement stipulated that the sentence for the other two counts will be lifetime probation. Brock will have to register as a sex offender for the rest of her life. The amount of counseling she will have to undergo will be implemented at the time of her sentencing.

Dr. Sandra Nettles, of Deer Valley Counseling in Phoenix, counsels sex offenders, including numerous educators involved in sexual misconduct with underage students. She told the Tribune on Tuesday she does not agree with plea deals, but said they are expected and all too common.

"Attorneys representing sex offenders tell their clients that if you go before a judge or a jury, you're going to get 30 years to life," Nettles said. "But, if you plead guilty to this, you can get 12 to 15 years."

The benefit, however, is that a young person doesn't have to go into court, face the abuser and testify, she said.

Nettles also said that such cases of sex abuse are common and such "relationships" can go on for a long time before the offender is caught.

"It's not rare, but it's not rampant," Nettles said. "If the family is active and addresses the issue head-on and gets the victim some counseling, they can come out alright later on. It's a traumatic experience. If the family of a sexual abuse victim tries to sweep a relationship under the rug like it never happened, that victim can have problems in life later on - including substance abuse, hypersexuality, and an inability to have a healthy relationship with a partner. Having problems after going through such a sexual relationship, also can lead to suicide."

The relationship in Brock's case came to light when family friends intercepted messages on the boy's iPod Touch that included references to sex acts, a police report said. The boy's father also provided police with a printout from his home computer, on which he had installed a program that reads and stores text - including chat messages.

Fulton Brock filed for divorce from his wife soon after she was charged, and now the Brocks' 21-year-old daughter, Rachel, also is accused of molesting the same boy when she was 18 and he was 14. Rachel Brock has not been charged in that crime, but the investigation is ongoing.

A friend of Susan Brock's, Christian Weems, 37, a Chandler political activist, also has been arrested in the case. Weems is accused of deleting incriminating evidence from the victim's Yahoo account after obtaining the password from Brock.

"What a tragedy for him (Fulton Brock) and his family," said attorney Mel McDonald, who represented Jennifer Mally, 26, a former Paradise Valley High School English teacher who was arrested in 2007 after a 5-month sexual relationship with a 16-year-old boy. "It's just sad." McDonald added, "The catastrophe for Susan Brock is the age of her victim. The older the victim, the better disposition you can get for your client. When an adult is sexually involved with a person who is 14 or younger, it becomes a dangerous crime against children. What Susan Brock pled to is a very predictable result. She started the relationship with the boy when he was 13. She was warned by school officials and the boy's family to stay away from him, and that indicates some kind of obsession with the boy."

McDonald said the plea agreement seems harsh since Brock never had sexual intercourse with her victim.

"Her life is pretty well over. She has a pretty ominous set of options facing her even after she gets out of prison. She will be a registered sex offender, she'll be on lifetime probation and she'll be required to undergo counseling," he said. "Some people will think she'll be free, but she really won't be. Her life as she knew it, will be over."

Theron Hall III, the attorney who represented Susan Brock, did not return several phone calls from the Tribune seeking comment.


Source

Police report: Susan Brock, husband, met with LDS official and victim's parents in 2009

by Laurie Merrill - Jan. 26, 2011 11:30 AM

The Arizona Republic

Susan M. Brock and her husband, Maricopa County Supervisor Fulton Brock, met with a local president in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and the parents of a boy at the center of Brock's sex case more than a year before she was arrested, according to a Chandler police report.

The report says the parents of the victim, 17, whom Susan Brock pleaded guilty to attempting to molest, met with LDS Stake President Mitch Jones in October 2009 to discuss "frustration with Mrs. Brock's interference in (their) son's life," said the report released Wednesday.

The father of the victim asked Brock if she was having "sexual relations" with his son and she denied it, the report says.

Fulton Brock said Wednesday he did not know the nature of his wife's relationship with the Chandler teen.

"My wife was untruthful to me. She was untruthful to the victim's parents," he said in a statement. "I knew nothing of this inappropriate sexual behavior until the police arrested my wife. But I certainly know enough now to divorce her and be the best Dad possible to three children who really need me."

The police report says that Susan Brock told the boy her husband did not know the extent of their relationship.

"Fulton is not going to find out, he hasn't found out about anything we've done we've done in the past three years, we've done a pretty good job hiding it," she said, according to the police report.

The reports says she paid the $100 for each of between 15 to 20 sexual acts, including one instance in a computer room while watching pornography.

The boy told police he had as many as 30 sexual contacts with Brock over the last three years, the report says.

Susan Brock was indicted on 15 counts of sexual contact with the boy starting when he was 13, but in a plea bargain Monday, pleaded guilty to three counts of attempted sexual misconduct. She faces a prison sentence of between seven and 15 years. The presumptive sentence is 10 years, according to the plea agreement.

The other 12 felony counts were dropped with conditions that Brock remain on life-time probation, register as a sex offender and only use her computer for business purposes.

She also must pay up to $1 million in Chandler Police Department expenses.

During the meeting with Jones in October 2009, the victim's mother "angrily" gave back to Brock an iPod Brock had given the boy. Fulton Brock took possession of it.

In October 2010, Fulton Brock admitted to police that the meeting the previous year had taken place.

The report says that Susan Brock told the boy, "If this ever went in the public or the police ever came to my door, I'd kill myself before I let them get their hands on me."

The victim told the Brock daughters about their mother's threats, police said, which he said he never took seriously.

The boy reported that after the information was made public last October, Susan Brock told him, "I am going to kill myself and I love you." She also promised to change her will to leave him $300,000 "so he could go to college and become the best lawyer ever."

Susan Brock is also reported to have said that if her husband ever found out about her activities, he would leave her.

Fulton Brock filed for divorce from his wife of 28 years within weeks of her arrest, later saying that what his wife did was wrong.

Court papers also indicate Susan Brock was going to get help for an "addiction" and was taking too many pills.

The boy asked her at one point if she had told her husband how many acts they had committed. She reportedly replied, "Look, I don't want to talk about this anymore. I've admitted to two times and that's it."


Source

The Susan Brock Sex Scandal

By James King Thursday, Feb 3 2011

The sexual relationship between Susan Brock, the now-estranged wife of Maricopa County Supervisor Fulton Brock, and a teenage boy didn't start with a kiss.

It started with a handjob in the backseat of Brock's Lexus as it sat parked in a partially developed neighborhood near the Chandler airport in October 2007, according to police records.

The boy, then 14, was seated behind the driver's seat. As he and Susan Brock were alone in the car, she crawled over the seat, disrobed the boy, and grabbed his penis.

"Why don't you look at me?" she asked the boy as she massaged his genitals. "Would you ever kiss me?"

When it was over, the boy asked Brock to "take me home, please."

The tryst near the Chandler airport was one of at least 30 similar sexual encounters — many of which occurred at the home of the county supervisor and involved the use of at least three vibrating sex toys — that the boy told police he and Brock shared over a three-year period.

Supervisor Brock maintains that he knew nothing of the affair, that he was "shocked" to learn of the allegations against his wife. But the report released by the Chandler Police Department after Susan Brock's guilty plea last week suggests that the county supervisor learned of suspicions that there was a sexual relationship between the boy and his wife about a year before she was charged with molesting him.

To make the story even more bizarre, Brock's 21-year-old daughter, Rachel, is accused of having a sexual relationship with the same boy when he was 13. Rachel Brock was 18 at the time.

The heavily redacted police report suggests that the relationship between Susan Brock and the boy was unearthed by the boy's girlfriend in October 2010. She apparently discovered messages sent between Brock and the boy that were stored on an iPod Touch that Brock had bought for him. The girl took the information to her parents (whom police say already weren't fond of their daughter's relationship with the boy), who told the boy's parents.

"[It's] obvious you have uncovered my darkest secret that I have been trying to forget about for a very long time," the boy wrote in an e-mail to his girlfriend's mother after his relationship with Brock was exposed, "but I really need you right now. I can't share this with anyone besides you all . . . This is very unfair. I wasn't able to see [your daughter] unless I played by [Susan Brock's] rules, and I was afraid [your daughter] would dump me if I didn't see [your daughter]. I am begging you."

He went on to tell his girlfriend's mother, "I was a robot during that. I was told what to do, and if I didn't, I feared losing [your daughter, whom] I lost in the end anyways."

The following account also is based on police records:

The boy's girlfriend appears to have known nothing about the relationship between her boyfriend and Susan Brock before finding the messages, even though Brock had arranged meetings for the young couple to have sex after the girl's parents forbade their daughter from seeing the boy.

In one such meeting, Brock drove the two to a mall in Chandler. She parked the car, went into the mall, and left the two children in the car, where they had sex.

Brock had left a sex "kit" in the car for the couple, which included sexual lubricants, a pink vibrator, and condoms. When the two teens finished having sex, the boy text-messaged Brock. She returned to the car and drove the two home. She even got rid of the used condom, which she told the couple to put back in the sex "kit" for disposal when they were done.

While the boy's girlfriend may have been in the dark about the relationship between Brock and the boy, his parents suspected such a sexual relationship as early as October 2009 — about a year before Brock was charged.

Chandler police Sergeant Joe Favazzo tells New Times that the Brock family and the family of the boy were friends. They met as members of the same Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints temple, and on at least one occasion, they vacationed together, Favazzo says. On a vacation, Favazzo says, Rachel Brock and the then-13-year-old boy began a sexual relationship that continued for about a year — when her mother began her relationship with the boy.

The boy's parents, meanwhile, grew suspicious of Brock's relationship with their son. Brock would often pick up the boy from school and bring him lunch, which worried the boy's parents.

His parents' concerns got to the point that they told the school not to allow Brock to pick up their son anymore, and the principal of the school even told the county supervisor's wife that if she stepped foot on school property, he would call police.

The parents of the boy called a meeting at their church to confront Brock — and her husband, Fulton — about the relationship.

During a 2009 meeting with LDS stake president Mitch Jones, the father of Brock's victim asked her point-blank whether she was having a sexual relationship with his son. Brock denied it — with her county supervisor husband sitting in the room with her.

Following the meeting, the boy's parents "angrily" returned the iPod that Susan Brock had given their son. Fulton Brock took possession of the iPod, the police report states.

At that point, the boy's school, his parents, and the church all were at least suspicious of a sexual relationship between the boy and Susan Brock, and Fulton Brock was aware of the suspicions. However, when she was arrested last October, Fulton Brock issued a statement saying, "Even with this statement, I am not sure how to express what such a shocking emotional punch to your heart and family feels like. I am stunned." Susan Brock, estranged wife of Maricopa County Supervisor Fulton Brock, pleaded guilty to three counts of alleged sexual conduct with a minor. Susan Brock, estranged wife of Maricopa County Supervisor Fulton Brock, pleaded guilty to three counts of alleged sexual conduct with a minor.

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Fulton Brock has since filed for divorce from his wife. Following her guilty plea last week, he continued to deny any knowledge of the relationship.

"My wife was untruthful to me. She was untruthful to the victim's parents. I knew nothing of this inappropriate sexual behavior until the police arrested my wife," Brock says in a statement to New Times. "But I certainly know enough now to divorce her and be the best dad possible to three children who really need me."

The supervisor did not respond to a request for an interview, but his PR representative, Jason Rose, offered the following explanation as to how Brock remained ignorant to his wife's three-year sexual relationship with the son of family friends.

"'How could I have missed all of this' is something Fulton will probably wrestle with for a very long time," Rose tells New Times. "I think the explanation may very well be that Fulton believes the best in people . . . And when your longtime wife and [the] mother of your kids says something so definitively, you believe it."

Susan Brock has pleaded guilty to three counts of attempted sexual conduct with a minor, a far cry from the 15 felony counts on which she was initially indicted. In exchange for the plea deal, Brock will be placed on lifetime probation and faces anywhere from seven to 15 years in prison when she's sentenced on March 16.

Rachel Brock's been charged with three counts of sexual conduct with minor and one count of transmitting obscene material to a minor for her alleged relationship with the boy. She has since been released from custody as she awaits further court action.

Fulton Brock, meanwhile, was pegged to become the chairman of the Maricopa County Board of Supervisors, but he removed his name from consideration in wake of his family's bizarre sex scandal.


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Political leaders: Maricopa County Supervisor Fulton Brock needs to stop hiding

by Edythe Jensen - Feb. 1, 2011 10:48 AM

The Arizona Republic

Until his wife was arrested on sex charges in October, Maricopa County Supervisor Fulton Brock was a regular at social functions and political gatherings in his Southeast Valley district that includes Chandler, Tempe, Ahwatukee Foothills, Queen Creek and portions of Gilbert and Mesa.

But lately, Brock, 58, is rarely spotted in the communities he serves, some civic leaders said.

Maricopa County Supervisior Fulton Brock Although most agree that the extreme turmoil in his personal life justifies Brock's temporary retreat from public life, several said if he doesn't get back into it soon his political career could be over.

"It's difficult to carry on as if nothing has happened when everything has happened, and for a while people will understand," said Tom Freestone of Gilbert. A former Maricopa County supervisor from Mesa, state senator and justice of the peace, Freestone said elected officials give up their privacy when they seek public office, and voters will expect Brock to re-engage soon.

Last month, Susan Brock, 49, pleaded guilty to three counts of attempted sexual conduct with a minor in connection with an alleged four-year affair with a boy that started when he was 13. She will be sentenced March 16 to possibly seven to 15 years in prison.

Within weeks of the arrest, the supervisor filed for divorce, and in December the couple's 21-year-old daughter, Rachel Katherine Brock, was arrested in connection with alleged sexual conduct with the same boy; no charges have been filed against the daughter.

Efforts to reach Brock were unsuccessful. His public-relations consultant, Jason Rose, said the supervisor hasn't missed a county board meeting, "is fulfilling his job as supervisor" and has received support and encouragement from many.

Former Chandler Mayor Jim Patterson said Brock's personal life may be in shambles but being out in public is a requirement for local politicians.

"I don't think there's any question that in today's political world, you've got to be involved," he said. "When you are in public office you live in a glass house and you give up your privacy."

If Brock stays out of the limelight for too long, voters may believe he's too distracted to concentrate on his public duties, Patterson said.

Jerry Brooks, another former Chandler mayor and former Republican District 21 chairman, said Brock has gone from being one of the district's most visible Republicans to a near recluse.

"My suspicion is he won't run again, Brooks said. "Until this happened, he was more active (in District 21 Republican affairs) than any other elected official. We haven't seen him since."

Tempe Mayor Hugh Hallman disagrees with the perception that Brock is hiding. Hallman said he has met with Brock on several occasions in recent weeks, and the supervisor has been engaged and responsive. Although he has not seen Brock at public events, Hallman said there have been no events in Tempe that would call for the supervisor's appearance.

Former state Sen. Jamie Sossaman of Queen Creek said Brock has appeared at many public functions over the years and before his wife's arrest and was well-respected by constituents.

"It wasn't really his fault, and I don't think this will hurt him politically if he starts to show up again. But if he tries to hide and crawl into a hole, I think that will hurt him," Sossaman said.

Chandler Mayor Jay Tibshraeny declined comment. Efforts to reach Mesa Mayor Scott Smith were unsuccessful. Chandler's Boyd Dunn, the most recent former mayor, said it would be inappropriate to speculate about Brock's political future because the criminal investigation isn't over.

A police report released last week disclosed that the victim's parents met with Fulton and Susan Brock and Chandler Mormon Stake President Mitch Jones in October 2009 to discuss "frustration with Mrs. Brock's interference in (their) son's life." The father of the victim asked Brock if she was having "sexual relations" with his son and she denied it, the report says.

In statements released through Rose, Brock has denied knowing about his wife's actions.

Under state law any person "who reasonably believes that a minor is or has been a victim of abuse" must report the alleged abuse to authorities. Communications and confessions to clergy are exempt, but personal observations of clergy are not. A phone message left for Jones at his Chandler home was not returned.

Chandler activist Christian Hart Weems, 37, also was arrested in December on suspicion of obstructing a criminal investigation and conspiracy to commit computer tampering. Police say Weems, a friend of Susan Brock's, helped Brock by deleting potentially incriminating files in the victim's Yahoo Account. Weems has not been charged.


Maricopa County Supervisor Fulton Brock gets special jail visitation rights!

Maricopa County Supervisor Fulton Brock gets special jail visitation rights! - "The Sheriff's Office granted Brock special visitation rights so that he could visit his wife without being recorded and with no set time limits"

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Maricopa County Supervisor Fulton Brock warned on jail visits to wife

by Yvonne Wingett and JJ Hensley - Mar. 4, 2011 12:00 AM

The Arizona Republic

A top Maricopa County Sheriff's Office official has warned county Supervisor Fulton Brock that his visitation rights may be revoked if he continues to violate jail policies by delivering food to his wife in jail.

Brock's wife, Susan Brock, was arrested on sex-related charges in October and is being held in the Estrella Jail. On Jan. 24, she pleaded guilty to three counts of attempted sexual conduct with a minor. She is awaiting sentencing.

Sheriff's Deputy Chief Jack MacIntyre said he warned the county supervisor against taking food to his estranged wife after learning of Brock's actions.

"He did it once, and I called him immediately and said, 'That's wrong, and if I hear about it happening again, your visitation will be denied,' " MacIntyre said.

After police arrested his wife, Fulton Brock said through a public-relations spokesman that he was "appalled and crushed" by details of the sex scandal. Within weeks of her arrest, the supervisor filed for divorce, yet continued to visit his wife in jail, sometimes taking their children and food with him.

The Sheriff's Office granted Brock special visitation rights so that he could visit his wife without being recorded and with no set time limits. Those "courtesy visits" are not unusual in high-profile cases. On Feb. 8, The Arizona Republic asked for Susan Brock's visitation logs and audio and video recordings made by the Sheriff's Office during those visits. The agency has not yet produced the materials.

Bringing outside food to inmates is prohibited in the jails for security reasons, primarily to prevent contraband from being smuggled to inmates through food. It also reinforces the notion that all inmates are treated equally.

In Sheriff Joe Arpaio's jail, that means dining on a notoriously unpalatable menu that meets U.S. Department of Agriculture dietary guidelines but contains little or no salt or flavor.

Asked about the visits and the food, the supervisor told The Republic, "I am not going to discuss any activity or behavior or comment about my wife." But he acknowledged that he was "chastised because I actually brought my wife some Scriptures. I didn't even know you weren't supposed to bring a Bible down there."

Brock added, "I think many people recognize me and just allow me to come in. I fully understand why it's important and what inmates can do and what they shouldn't do, and that's basically about all I really want to say. I support the sheriff; I support his policies."

The sheriff's policy on visitation provides for courtesy visits, which jail commanders can authorize at their discretion. The policy states that the courtesy visits "may be used for such matters to include, but not be limited to, death notification by the family member or out-of-state visits that have unique circumstances."

The visits are also authorized for bondsmen and medical providers.

These courtesy visits were allowed by the Sheriff's Office under that policy because of Fulton Brock's position as a high-profile locally elected official visiting a defendant in a case that received extensive media coverage.

Brock has been a longtime political ally of Arpaio's and is his strongest supporter on the Board of Supervisors.

Recently, Brock met with Senate President Russell Pearce, R-Mesa, to suggest legislation that would retroactively allow county officials to accept and use a controversial $456,000 bus that supervisors believe the Sheriff's Office purchased illegally.


Don't these pigs have any REAL criminals to arrest?

Source

Maricopa County Supervisor Fulton Brock's daughter rearrested

by Laurie Merrill - Mar. 26, 2011 01:33 AM

The Arizona Republic

Nearly three months after she was released from jail, County Supervisor Fulton Brock's daughter, Rachel, has been re-arrested and charged with molesting the same Chandler boy her mother sexually abused, according to a statement from Brock.

Susan Brock pleaded guilty in January to charges in the case.

It was unclear early Saturday on what charges Rachel Brock, 21, faces in her second arrest. In December, she was arrested on three counts of sexual conduct with a minor and one of furnishing obscene materials to a minor.

The Pinal County Attorney's Office released Rachel two days later, Dec. 31, without formally charging her because they requested more information from the Chandler Police Department.

Fulton Brock, who immediately distanced himself from his wife of 28 years by filing for divorce shortly after her arrest, released a statement late Friday.

"The heartbreak continues. I have learned my daughter has been re-arrested. I have not yet seen a copy of the formal charging documents.

"My understanding is that my daughter is accused of having an inappropriate relationship with a minor when she was 18 years old. My goal was always to lead my family in living a life of doing right and following God's laws."

In her first arrest, court papers said Rachel Brock had sexual contact with the boy on a trip to California when he was 13, in her car in Chandler, at a Brock-owned property and in a bathroom when he was 14.

She also was accused of sending nude photographs and a sexually explicit videotape of herself to the boy's cellphone.

Her mother, Susan, 48, originally faced 15 child-abuse counts for allegedly abusing the same boy starting when he was 14 years old and she was 45, the court documents report.

Reports did not say whether the mother and daughter knew of each other's alleged activities with the reported victim. Chandler police say Rachel's activities began before her mother's, but there was overlap.

Fulton and Susan Brock met with the local president of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and the parents of the victim in Susan Brock's sex case more than a year before she was arrested, according to a Chandler police report.

Between the October 2009 meeting and her October 2010 arrest, Susan Brock committed 15 more illegal acts involving her teenage victim, according to the indictment.

In a plea deal, Susan Brock admitted to attempting to perform sex acts on a Chandler boy at her home, in her car and in a bathroom when he was 14. The plea bargain dismissed 12 counts and reduced the severity of the remaining three.

Ssuan Brock faces prison time for one count, as well as lifetime probation, registration as a sex offender terms and other restrictions.

Susan Brock was never charged with sexual intercourse, but with acts such as masturbation, oral sex and giving the boy pornography.

In sentencing set for April, Susan Brock faces a presumptive sentence of 10 years on one count of attempted sexual conduct with a minor, according to Pinal County Superior Court Judge Pro Tem Hank Gooday. She could be sentenced to anywhere from seven to 15 years, Gooday said.

"At some point you will get out of prison and you will be placed on life-time probation," Gooday said. "As long as you do what you are supposed to do you won't have to go back to jail."

In exchange for her plea, the Pinal County Attorney's Office agreed not to proceed with a host of charges, including child prostitution, molestation of a child and conspiracy to tamper with evidence.

In addition to registering as a sex offender, Susan Brock must renew her driver's license yearly to enforce the registration and pay up to $1 million in costs to the families of the victim and his former girlfriend.

Chandler police accused Susan Brock of providing places for the boy and the girl to have sex. She was alleged to have given them condoms and provided transportation.

As part of the plea, Susan agreed to allow the boy to keep anything she gave him, which reportedly included an iPod, iPod Touch and two iPhones. She also agreed to relinquish claim to phones seized by police.

A friend of Susan Brock's, Christian Weems, 37, a Chandler political activist, also was arrested in December in the case, but also not formally charged. Weems was accused of deleting incriminating evidence from the alleged victim's Yahoo account after obtaining the password from Susan Brock.

It was unclear early Saturday whether Weems has been rearrested.

Weems made headlines seven years ago after police say she left her infant son in a broiling car for 90 minutes. She was not formally charged in that case.

In an op-ed piece he wrote for The Arizona Republic, Fulton Brock said, "What my wife did was very wrong. Period. A victim and his family deserve justice and prayers."

At one point both the boy's parents and his high school principal warned Fulton Brock to stay away from the teen.

In the op-ed piece, Fulton Brock said. "As for my daughter who has been accused of similar things I am doing all a Dad can do, including helping her through therapy... I recently decided not to accept my turn as chairman of the Maricopa County Board of Supervisors to focus on being an even better Dad to my three daughters who need my care more than ever."

More articles on Fulton and Susan Brock

For more articles on Susan Brock's affair with a minor check out this web page and this web page.
 

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