There have been many strange moments in the first term of Pima County Supervisor Ally Miller.

There are the repeated episodes of leveling serious accusations of corruption and lawlessness that are either later abandoned by Miller or fail to stand up in the face of investigation by outside agencies. There’s her opposition to economic development efforts to aid companies such as Raytheon, the county’s largest private employer. There is the ongoing staff turnover in her office as employees either quit or get canned because Miller’s management style creates a chaotic working environment. There was the time she called 911 to see if someone could have an unflattering Tucson Weekly story taken down from the internet.

But the last two weeks have seen one of the strangest episodes yet: The brief life of the Arizona Daily Herald, a website that popped up for a few days before vanishing after being linked to one of Miller’s most recent hires, Timothy DesJarlais.

DesJarlais, 19, joined Miller’s staff earlier this year as her communications and social-media strategist. He also has developed a rich online fantasy world in which he is the president of the Independent Republic of Dido Place, named for the street on which he lives with his parents.

DesJarlais has also developed the alter ego of Jim Falken, who has also served as the president of the Independent Republic of Dido Place after DesJarlais was “kidnapped” in the imaginary world.

Jim Falken was also the name of the editor of the Arizona Daily Herald. About two weeks ago, county officials started getting emails from Falken, who asked them to start sending press releases to him. A few days later, candidates for the Board of Supervisors, including Miller’s GOP primary opponent emails asking what they thought of a road-repair plan that Miller had recently released.

DesJarlais did not return phone calls from the Weekly asking if he was masquerading as a reporter under a false name while working as the communications staffer in Miller’s District 1 office. But when confronted by Explorer News reporter Logan Burtch-Buus at an Oro Valley meeting last week, DesJarlais refused to comment and then fled into a bathroom.

Miller did not return a phone call from the Weekly seeking comment on the entire bizarre affair. But on Facebook and in interviews with other news outlets, she has insisted that neither she nor DesJarlais had anything to do with the publication and that the entire project was designed to smear her and her staff.

Here’s how the story unfolded:

Thursday, May 12: Pima County supervisors start getting emails from someone identifying himself as Arizona Daily Herald editor Jim Falken. Pima County Supervisor Ramon Valadez, for example, receives the following email:

“I am emailing you today to ask you to add me on Supervisor Ramon Valadez’s press advisory/release emailing list so that I can receive all your most recent updates and such. I am the editor of newly founded paper and would like to stay informed with the workings of your office.”

Sunday, May 15: Several candidates for office in Pima County receive emails from Jim Falken asking if they would comment on a new proposal by Ally Miller to fix Pima County’s roads. Among the recipients is Republican John Winchester, who is challenging Miller in the August GOP primary.

Winchester tells the Weekly he was suspicious because he had never heard of Falken or the Arizona Daily Herald, so he researched Jim Falken on the internet. He soon found several sites that linked Falken to DesJarlais.

“It was very strange,” Winchester says. “The Herald doesn’t exist and it has a WordPress website that has nothing on it, as well as a Facebook and Twitter page that was recently created. … I looked into it and turns out that this young man, Timothy DesJarlais, created this character two years ago and he has a YouTube page where he’s pretending to be president of a nonsense world that he’s created. He’s evidently resurrected the character for this newspaper.”

Winchester does not respond to Falken’s email.

Tuesday, May 17, morning: The Arizona Daily Herald posts its first news story on Facebook, reporting a story about the supervisors passing a ban on texting while driving. The story includes a photo of the supervisors taken by DesJarlais.

Tuesday, May 17, evening: Tucson Sentinel’s Dylan Smith has a phone conversation with DesJarlais. Smith later reports that DesJarlais denies being the Jim Falken who is editing the Herald, although he concedes that he has used that alter ego in the past. He admits to taking the photo that appeared on the publication’s Facebook page, but says he texted the photo to “a friend” who must remain nameless because DesJarlais is not comfortable revealing the friend’s name to the press.

Almost immediately after Smith’s interview with DesJarlais, traces of the Arizona Daily Herald and Jim Falken begin vanishing from the web.

Wednesday, May 18: DesJarlais and Miller ignore phone calls from the Weekly regarding the connections between DesJarlais and Falken.

But Pima County Supervisor Ray Carroll, who has been feuding with Miller since she took office in 2013, does not hesitate to suggest that Miller “absolutely” knew about “this guy’s mischievous activities.”

“It does not surprise me because she is unethical and would do anything to damage the brand of Pima County and then later deny it,” Carroll says. “I just have to say, I’ve never seen anything more crazy than her fake news service by any political activist, let alone an elected official, in all the years I’ve been in office in Southern Arizona.”

Thursday, May 19, late afternoon: Explorer reporter Logan Burtch-Buus confronts DesJarlais at an Oro Valley Town Council meeting about his connections to Herald editor Jim Falken. DesJarlais refuses to comment and runs into the bathroom to avoid Burtch-Buus.

Thursday, May 19, evening: The Weekly, the Sentinel and the Arizona Daily Star post online stories exposing the connections between DesJarlais, Jim Falken and the Arizona Daily Herald.

Friday, May 20, morning: Dejarlais releases a statement to the Arizona Daily Independent, a local pro-Miller blog that spins the story as a cruel media attacking Miller and DesJarlais.

“Regarding the current Arizona Daily Herald site and email address, those accounts are bogus accounts created by someone trying to impersonate me,” DesJarlais says. “As I work for Supervisor Miller and know both Kim (DeMarco) and Marla (Closen) well, I would have no reasons or time to pull any stunts like this. Nevertheless, I do apologize to anyone for the inconveniences caused to them and charge whoever did this to come forward and confess the truth.”

Friday, May 20, afternoon: Miller comes to the defense of DesJarlais. She and DesJarlais tell the Explorer’s Burtch-Buus that DesJarlais has been set up by a man named John Dalton, who asked DesJarlais to send him a photo from the board meeting.

Friday, May 20, evening: KVOA News airs report titled “Pima Supervisor said online impersonator is trying to smear office.” Miller tells the station that she is reporting the situation to the FBI and attributes it to her political enemies.

Saturday, May 21, afternoon: Jim Falken, editor of the Arizona Daily Herald, resurfaces! He sends out an email to try to set the record straight and clear the names of both DesJarlais and Dalton.

This Jim Falken—let’s call him Jim Falken No. 2—explains that his real name is John Dalton and he had an interest in starting a political blog, but decided it would have more credibility if he used a fake name. He recalled seeing the name of Jim Falken a few years ago and decided to adopt it. The entire affair, he explains, is the result of remarkable coincidences and misunderstandings.

“I have gotten into blogging and I wanted to start up my own news platform but to both protect my identity and make me seem objective, I utilized the pseudonym, Jim Falken, which I happened to run across while observing some nation roleplaying and blogs by a Timothy DesJarlais,” Jim Falken No. 2 explained in his email. “Although I did use the same pseudonym as Mr DesJarlais, under no circumstances did I ever intend to assume his identity. All of my social media accounts never used a single picture of him and I never mentioned his name in all of my work.”

“During the Tuesday Board of Supervisors meeting, I was watching it via the county’s online streaming webpage,” the email continued. “During discussion of the Ban on Texting Ordinance, I wanted a picture for my Facebook page and one of my friends gave me Timothy DeJarlais’s number, who apparently was a staffer for Supervisor Miller and usually attended the meetings. I texted him requesting a picture, identifying myself as John Dalton, which he replied rather quickly. I posted up the picture and it did surprise me how quickly he seemed to respond, but it has now dawned on me that he may have confused me with another ‘John Dalton.’ Upon further research, there is another John Dalton out there who has come from Michigan and ran for Arizona delegate during this year’s state convention. It has come to my attention that Mr. DesJarlais has gotten me confused with this John Dalton, although we are two different people with different phone numbers numbers. It also seems others have been confused and alleged that Mr DeJarlais is the owner of the Arizona Daily Herald.”

In his email, Jim Falken No. 2 (aka John Dalton No. 2) appears eager to set the record straight and clear DesJardais’s name. But calls to the number on his press release go unreturned.

Miller seizes upon this development as vindication of DesJarlais and another step toward justice. She writes on her Facebook page: “We have received a confession from an individual named John Dalton, which will be turned over to the FBI to investigate and let the process work prior to convicting someone.”

Sunday, May 22, morning: The local media receive an email from John R. Dalton Jr. Dalton says he is the real and—to the best of his knowledge—only John R. Dalton Jr. in the Tucson area.

Dalton explains that he has “nothing, nor have ever had anything, to do with any part of the current scandal surrounding Supervisor Ally Miller and her staff member Timothy DesJarlais” and that he only learned of the story of the Arizona Daily Herald after “my name was strangely mentioned by Supervisor Miller and I started receiving comments on my Facebook wall from her about an FBI investigation.”

“I later learned through the news what was going on,” Dalton continued. “Note: I do not know Supervisor Miller, but I did shake her hand a few months ago at a 4Tucson event. Timothy DesJarlais has never been a friend of mine, although we did speak at some point, months ago, regarding the AZGOP convention in Mesa, Arizona.”

Dalton added that “the e-mail sent to you using my name is fraudulent in its entirety. The person who wrote the e-mail obviously did so as an act of desperation and made some very big mistakes. The person says that he is not to be confused with the other ‘John Dalton out there who has come from Michigan and ran for Arizona delegate …’  In this section of the e-mail, it is apparent the person is referring to me, yet at the end of the e-mail he signs off using the full legal name of the only John Dalton, in the entire city of Tucson, who is from Michigan and was a state delegate, John R. Dalton Jr. (me).”

Dalton seconded Miller’s call for an investigation: “Since Supervisor Ally Miller has already filed complaints with the authorities to investigate who the idiot is that is behind all of this, it is my hope that an investigation goes forward, so we can bring the person responsible up on criminal charges and placed behind bars. On top of this, once a name is released, it is also my full intention to file a civil case in court against the individual or individuals. I do not take lightly to someone using my name for illicit activities.”

In an interview with the Weekly, Dalton says he has been confused by Miller’s threats to report him to the FBI.

“I have nothing to do with these websites or this fake name—Jim Falken or whatever,” Dalton says. “It’s frustrating to be accused of something that I have no clue about. It’s confusing, but at the same time, I want to get to the bottom of what the heck is going on. Ally Miller is posting stuff with my name on it. She should figure out who this is first.”

Monday, May 23, morning: Pima County Board of Supervisors Chair Sharon Bronson asks County Administrator Chuck Huckelberry to investigate exactly who was doing what with whom in the short life of the Arizona Daily Herald.

“I have become increasingly concerned over the last several days with the identify theft claims made by John R. Dalton Jr. … and Pima County employee Timothy DesJarlais, as reported by the local media,” Bronson wrote.

“To assure transparency and full disclosure and in the interest of serving justice, I am requesting that an investigation be undertaken to determine the extent of county staff involvement and any county resources used in same and in the creation and demise of the online Arizona Daily Herald,” she continues. “Please determine the appropriate agency to conduct this investigation. If you feel such action on your part requires Board approval, please advise me to that end and I will place the matter on the Board of Supervisors June 7th agenda for consideration.”

Pima County Supervisor Ray Carroll, who has frequently tangled with Miller, said he supported the call for an investigation by county officials.

“It’s time this was investigated by the appropriate law enforcement body,” Carroll said. “We can’t let Ally Miller go unsupported in her effort to find the real Jim Falken.”

Monday, May 23, afternoon: The Weekly’s deadline is here! But more is sure to come, so keep an eye on the blog for real-time updates into the strange tale of Jim Falken and the Arizona Daily Herald.

Getting hassled by The Man Mild-mannered reporter

12 replies on “Stop the Presses!”

  1. Time to consider a regional government to replace Ally and cohorts in the fictional world of Tim and the bean stalk.
    How many road and street departments do we need in Pima County to waste time and money identifying pot holes?
    How many Building, Planning and Zoning folks to we need to figure out who has Jurisdiction and legal authority over West Gardner Avenue or which police or fire department to call in case of an emergency?
    Think about it, how much duplication, how much bureaucratic nonsense are we willing to continue to pay taxes and not have money to repair pot holes in Pima County?
    How many police departments, chiefs, sergeants, detectives, staff are we willing to finance crisscrossing Pima County?
    Pima County Supervisor Ally Miller and her “assistant” Timothy DesJarlais act like they have the Alice in Wonderland “Golden Road” under their collective hat. Ally plays the Queen of Hearts and young Mr. Desljrlais the white rabbit in a new Lois Lane and Clark Kent Superman version of newspaper journalists Pima County/Independent Republic of Dido Place chapter.
    Really Folks, how much longer do we pay Ally in Wonderland?

  2. Meanwhile, nine noble families fight for control of the mythical land of Westeros. Political and sexual intrigue is pervasive. Robert Baratheon, King of Westeros, asks his old friend Eddard, Lord Stark, to serve as Hand of the King, or highest official. Secretly warned that the previous Hand was assassinated, Eddard accepts in order to investigate further. Meanwhile the Queen’s family, the Lannisters, may be hatching a plot to take power. Across the sea, the last members of the previous and deposed ruling family, the Targaryens, are also scheming to regain the throne. The friction between the houses Stark, Lannister, Baratheon and Targaryen and with the remaining great houses Greyjoy, Tully, Arryn, Tyrell and Martell leads to full-scale war. All while a very ancient evil awakens in the farthest north. Amidst the war and political confusion, a neglected military order of misfits, the Night’s Watch, is all that stands between the realms of men and icy horrors beyond. (Written by Tfilm78 and Cajunman)

  3. Why does Ally Miller still enjoy financial support from major Republican donors (the usual suspects) when she is clearly unstable? Please stop it.

  4. For people who want a real collaborator, someone who’s an expert in working to build coalitions, public policy, and political advocacy, Miller’s primary opponent is John Winchester.

    Visit WinchesterForSupervisor.com and click on “donate now”.

    Rumor is that the folks at the Winchester campaign have instructed their credit card processor to refuse donations from anyone calling himself “Jim Falcon”, or listing their employer as “The Arizona Daily Herald”.

  5. It’s all a setup!

    Ally Miller is the only person on earth that can save Pima County from the evil Liberals.

    Stop the lies and smears.

  6. Greetings Professor Falken.
    Would you like to play a game?
    How about a nice game of Global Thermonuclear War?

  7. This DesJarlais kid is obviously in way over his head and crazy Ally Miller has no problem using him for her odd schemes and will have no problem making him the scapegoat when they inevitably trace this back to him. The only fair thing to do is give him immunity and let him spill the beans on Ally. Of course this is her doing. Who else cares enough to do something like this?

  8. Darn, the FBI will probably drop Supervisor Miller’s request for investigation and that of her former boy-assistant and we will never know the real part she played in the fairyland tale of the Arizona Daily Herald now that editor in chief Timothy Desjarlais has quit his county job.

    Love it, I looked for wagers in my note here on May 30th about how long Desjarlais would last, and the answer is: he quit his job at Miller’s office; last Friday, June 10.

    In over his head and with no adult supervision he can go forward with his campaign for the Marana School Board and if he is not successful there follow the current Republican County Chairman another unsuccessful GOP office seeker to glory leading the Republican County Party to Donald Trump’s ground breaking for the “tall wall” paid for with the donated Mexican Peso.

    Think about, “One flew over the cuckoos nest”, where the insane inmates took over the insane asylum, Donald Trump, the original birther and his latest theory on President Obama’s role in helping terrorist groups, Ally Miller’s filling pot-holes with golden bricks and Timothy Desjarlais writing a new movie script for the Ally in Wonderland series.

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