-
The Navajo Nation Council is urging Attorney General Kris Mayes to continue prosecuting operators of fraudulent sober living homes in the Phoenix area that allegedly targeted Native Americans.
-
Attorney General Kris Mayes says a popular genetic testing company violated Arizona law by not informing state officials of a data breach that impacted millions of customers.
-
Attorney General Kris Mayes’ office has submitted its first order for more than 55,000 units of an opioid overdose treatment drug for distribution to Arizona counties.
-
Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes had filed a lawsuit against pharmacy benefit managers and pharmaceutical manufacturers for allegedly artificially inflating the price of insulin and other diabetes drugs.
-
A Chino Valley resident has bought the land slated for a controversial mine in the middle of the Cedar Heights neighborhood.
-
A hearing has been set for later this month in Attorney General Kris Mayes’ attempt to halt a mining project that’s proposed for the middle of a Chino Valley neighborhood.
-
Attorney General Kris Mayes described the proposed mine as a “nuisance” in a statement and said it is a threat to health and safety as it would bring dust, noise and traffic to the nearby community.
-
The indictment comes after state officials promised a crackdown on massive Medicaid billing fraud, particularly on illegitimate group homes that scammed the state Medicaid program by submitting fraudulent charges through the American Indian Health Program.
-
Attorney General Kris Mayes is among more than 40 state AG’s who filed a lawsuit against Meta, alleging the company designed harmful features on its social media platforms to purposefully addict children and teens.
-
An Arizona grand jury has indicted three people on 19 felony counts related to the ongoing wide investigation into fraudulent sober living homes that targeted Native Americans.