Firefighters evaluated eight students, the bus driver, the pickup driver and the truck's passenger for possible injuries, Buckeye police said.
Lyons purchased the gun legally in April 2024 from a widow whose husband had previously owned it legally. Then, police say Lyons sold it to Jesse Kitagawa Jr., 45, on April 8, 2024, not knowing Kitagawa was a convicted felon.
The gun used to critically injure two elementary school students in Butte County was a modified weapon — also known as a ghost gun — the shooter bought from a felon in Arizona, officials said Tuesday.
Sheriff’s officials said on Tuesday that a convicted felon from Phoenix sold the ghost gun to the school shooter in April.
The suspect, 19-year-old Seth Rabago, was pulled over while driving southbound on Verrade Way near Western Drive on Saturday, according to the Buckeye Police Department. He was driving at 75 mph ...
PHOENIX — Three students and a driver were hospitalized after a school bus crashed with a pickup truck in Buckeye on Wednesday afternoon, authorities said. The crash occurred near Rainbow Road ...
Turf Paradise, Arizona’s first sports franchise, is celebrating nearly seven decades in Phoenix. It will be offering a full card of live, local horse racing on Friday, January 24, and Saturday, January 25. General admission is $5, general parking is free, and gates open at 11 a.m.
Buckeye Fire comes to the rescue of a cat owner as she was fleeing the California wildfires and driving through Arizona. The woman's home and all of her possessions destroyed in the Eaton Fire. As she was on her way to Texas to be with family,
Denova Collaborative Health recently relocated its West Valley clinic to better serve the region’s growing population.
Experts say Trump's moves to step away from global climate action, ramp up domestic oil and gas production and remove incentives for electric vehicles are worrisome. The planet continues to heat up; 2024 was Earth's hottest year on record,
President Trump’s first week in office included a flurry of executive orders with implications for Earth’s climate and environment.
First-week orders could undermine progress on clean energy investments, pollute the air and add few benefits to the economy, especially in Arizona.