Donkey And Woman

Donkey And Woman




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Donkey And Woman
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Authorities say that 35 year old Misty Dawn Nixon of cave springs was arrested Friday after taking officers on a chase. The chase started at reeseberg Rd and ended at pleasent hope. Originally a officers responded to a woman having sexual relations with the callers pet donkey, when the officers approved the seen they saw Nixon wiping her mouth.. officers quitely watched as Nixon talked very vulgar to the innocent animal, Nixon then saw officers and took off on her scooter, she left behind a large purple dildo, Nixon was finally captured and charged with eluding officers, aggravated barn yard sodomy, and criminal trespassing


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A state clemency board on Tuesday declined to reduce the sentence of Trent Bouhdida, who is pictured with his son.


Trent Bouhdida/Tom Carlson



The Arizona Board of Executive Clemency declined to shorten the 16-year prison sentence of Trent Bouhdida, a 29-year-old man who, in 2015, sold an undercover cop an ounce of marijuana.



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Méndez is a former prosecutor, while Quiñonez is a former agent with the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives. Johnson is a former detective with a 21-year tenure at the Phoenix Police Department. Freni spent 30 years working for the Phoenix Police Department.



A childhood friend of Bouhdida's, Matin Muhammad, also wrote a lengthy letter: "Words are inadequate to express the value of Trent to his friends, family, and community and what it would mean for him to be free."


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Katya Schwenk is a staff writer for Phoenix New Times. Originally from Burlington, Vermont, she now covers issues ranging from policing to far-right politics here in Phoenix. She has worked as a breaking news correspondent in Rabat, Morocco, for Morocco World News, a government technology reporter for Scoop News Group in Washington, D.C., and a local reporter in Vermont for VTDigger. Her freelance work has been published in Business Insider, the Intercept, and the American Prospect, among other places.




Twitter:

@ktyschwnk




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The Watkins Jail, one of six jails operated by Maricopa County, has a 1,600-bed capacity.


James Deak



Maricopa County's Watkins Jail on South 28th Drive.


A shift summary showing that 19 posts were left vacant in Lower Buckeye Jail recently.


KEEP PHOENIX NEW TIMES FREE...
Since we started Phoenix New Times , it has been defined as the free, independent voice of Phoenix, and we'd like to keep it that way. With local media under siege, it's more important than ever for us to rally support behind funding our local journalism. You can help by participating in our "I Support" program, allowing us to keep offering readers access to our incisive coverage of local news, food and culture with no paywalls.




Katya Schwenk is a staff writer for Phoenix New Times. Originally from Burlington, Vermont, she now covers issues ranging from policing to far-right politics here in Phoenix. She has worked as a breaking news correspondent in Rabat, Morocco, for Morocco World News, a government technology reporter for Scoop News Group in Washington, D.C., and a local reporter in Vermont for VTDigger. Her freelance work has been published in Business Insider, the Intercept, and the American Prospect, among other places.




Twitter:

@ktyschwnk




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Gustavo Arellano



October 16, 2014


4:00AM


Dear Mexican: I've heard that the Tijuana donkey show featuring a female whore is not real other than the fact that they do bring out a donkey and do some simulation for people who are drunk.
Dear Gabacho : You're right. And after months of research, the Mexican can confirm the full history of donkey shows, the supposed borderlands specialty in which women have sex with donkeys before a live paying audience. Not only are they not a thing in Tijuana (or Juárez or Acapulco or anywhere in Mexico frequented by tourists), they're actually a wholesale gabacho invention that says more about how America projects its fevered perversions onto Mexicans and Mexico than anything about Mexicans themselves. None of the Tijuana Bibles, the infamous X-rated comics of the Great Depression that showed all sorts of depredations, make any mention of such shows south of the border (the excellent 1997 anthology, Tijuana Bibles: Art and Wit in America's Forbidden Funnies, 1930s-1950s , even points out that the foul funnies got their name not because they were made in Mexico but "as a gleefully sacrilegious pre-NAFTA slur against Mexicans"). The earliest published account even mentioning donkey sex shows in Mexico doesn't pop up until 1975, in the book Binding with Briars: Sex and Sin in the Catholic Church. Before that, mentions of "donkey shows" in newspapers, books, or magazines were exactly that: donkeys on display at county fairs, and nothing else.
But after porn star Linda Lovelace claimed her then-husband was going to force her to get "fucked by a donkey in Juárez, Mexico" in her 1980 memoir, Ordeal , the act quickly seeped into mainstream American culture. Three years later, the search for a donkey show in Tijuana is a plot point in the Tom Cruise film, Losin' It ; by the mid-1980s, a pioneering ska band called themselves The Donkey Show — based out of San Diego, no less. Really, the biggest culprit in spreading the donkey show myth is Hollywood. In the past decade alone, there's been mention of the act in at least a dozen high-profile projects, from The 40-Year-Old Virgin to Two and a Half Men and more. This proves once again that Hollywood's stereotyping of Mexicans hasn't changed in a century — but what else do you expect from screenwriters (notwithstanding the awesome writers at the new ABC sitcom Cristela and the upcoming Fox cartoon Bordertown , for which I'm a consultant) who know Mexicans mostly as their nannies, car washers, gardeners, cooks, and the janitors in their offices?
Are there sex shows between humans and animals in Mexico? I'm sure there are, just as there are in the United States — in fact, the earliest account I could find of people paying to see a woman-donkey coupling is in the November 1915 issue of the St. Louis-based medical journal The Urologic and Cutaneous Review , in which a doctor recalled a case 25 years earlier in which spectators at such a show (including "a judge, sons of a social reformer, and a secretary of a girl's aid society") were criminally tried after a woman died during the copulation. But leave it to gabachos to stereotype such debauchery as being as exclusively Mexican as the Aztec pyramids and a corrupt government. Pinche gabachos . . . Ask the Mexican at themexican@askamexican.net , be his fan on Facebook, follow him on Twitter @gustavoarellano, or follow him on Instagram @gustavo_arellano!

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Katya Schwenk





August 10, 2022



6:00AM








Katya Schwenk





August 9, 2022



6:36AM




"Numerous clinical staff reported in interviews that they have missed medication passes on several occasions," the consultants found. When they looked at the available data, they found that med passes were missed 38 times in the three-month period of September through November.

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August 9, 2022 by: Carolyn Droke Twitter

August 2, 2022 by: Carolyn Droke Twitter
Over the winter break, you may recall that NBC made the decision to bring back “Fear Factor” for a limited run because the world had apparently gone long enough without seeing Joe Rogan on television (despite modest ratings, NBC nevertheless did not renew “Fear Factor” because there’s only so much Joe Rogan the world can contain). You may also recall that, during “Fear Factor’s” brief run, there was a challenge that NBC — after seconds and seconds of intense soul searching — decided not to run. It involved contestants drinking donkey semen. Donkey spunk. Equine splooge. Then they chased it with urine because, obviously.
Thank GOD the television executives over in Denmark apparently have no such souls to search, as they felt no compunction about airing it. Speaking of soulless, TMZ has the video. The women who won the challenge are surprisingly adept at drinking what Rogan calls simply, “protein and cells.” It is easier when there’s no pubic hair with which to contend.
Here’s the video evidence. Drink it in, folks.

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