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Sheriff faults car for his accident
May. 30, 2005 12:00 AM
Sheriff Joe Arpaio insists this is not interesting.
That the citizens of Arizona won't care to read about how he totaled
his county-issued car at a Fountain Hills drugstore.
How he says the car lurched forward uncontrollably, ramming over a
curb and a giant boulder before mercifully coming to rest inches from
a busy street.
Arpaio was not injured in the wreck.
But he was shaken up a bit. Especially in the confidence he had in
his Crown Victoria, which he alternatively referred to
as "stupid," "garbage" and a "lemon."
A diagram of the wreck shows the sheriff jumped the curb at the end
of a parking space, heading straight into a plant and climbing over a
boulder. That impact blew out the front tires and broke the drive
shaft.
The car came to rest on the sidewalk of Palisades Boulevard, one of
the main streets through the town of Fountain Hills.
A simple explanation would be that Arpaio hit the gas instead of the
brake. But he bristled at that suggestion.
"Nooo, naaaah," the sheriff said, shaking his head vigorously before
I could even finish asking him the question.
We were in the parking lot of another shopping center, this time for
a news conference on safe driving. "I'm a big supporter of traffic
safety," Arpaio told reporters.
The campaign was needed, the 72-year-old sheriff said, because
students were getting out of school and "young people, sometimes they
have a problem behind the wheel."
Arpaio insists he did not have any problems behind the wheel.
He says his wreck was caused by something mechanical.
"I've had problems with that car," he said about the 2001 model that
sustained $7,227.21 worth of damage, mainly to its undercarriage and
wheel support. "I was never happy with that car."
The normally media-friendly Sheriff's Office kept quiet about the
April 2 accident.
His office also was hesitant to release the report after I filed a
public-records request. Lt. Paul Chagolla, a department spokesman,
questioned why I wanted the report and dismissively told me it was on
a "list of priorities."
When the Sheriff's Office did give up the report, it also included
several pages of repair records, seeking to bolster Arpaio's claim
that the car had mechanical failures.
Highlighted sections of work orders show the car, over the past year,
had its transmission rebuilt, leaking fuel gaskets replaced and brake
pads and rotors changed out.
But nothing would explain what Arpaio described: a car that suddenly
zoomed forward unstoppably.
"It lurched and I couldn't stop it and I just kept going," Arpaio
said.
That's what he told his deputy who investigated the accident, which
occurred about 10:30 a.m. on a Saturday.
A log of radio traffic shows the state Department of Public Safety
showed up at the scene, but the Sheriff's Office kept the
investigation.
"Mr. Arpaio said he had pulled into the parking lot of the Osco Drug
store and was going to park his vehicle in a space on the north side
of the parking lot when his vehicle would not stop subsequently
striking the curb and stopping in the landscaping," the report says.
The car was towed to Five Star Ford for repairs. A notation on the
repair log asks the mechanic to check for "throttle sticking,"
meaning whether the accelerator cable was frayed or whether something
was making the car act as if the gas pedal were being pressed.
A notation from the mechanic says that portion of the car showed no
problems.
Mark Salem, a Tempe mechanic who hosts a weekend radio show on KTAR-
AM, laughed when I read him those notations.
I initially told Salem everything about the incident except the
driver's name. Salem has worked as a mechanical expert for insurance
companies for the past 15 years.
He said he has done about 25 cases of "mysterious acceleration" and
none has a mechanical reason.
"The inescapable conclusion i
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