Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Arizona journalism saga has poisoning claim, nasty divorce

- By Felicia Fonseca

PRESCOTT, ARIZ. >> An award-winning Arizona newspaper publisher and his wife are locked in a bizarre divorce case that has morphed into something more: a journalism ethics saga.

Joseph Soldwedel has accused wife Felice Soldwedel in a lawsuit of trying to kill him by poisoning him, and detailed the allegation­s in one of the small-town newspapers he owns, the 13,000-circulatio­n Prescott Daily Courier.

None of the three news stories in the paper named his wife. But the Courier ran an ad accusing her by name, with a photo of her, bordered with images of skulls and rats. The ad said she had an unnamed accomplice, and it offered a $10,000 reward for tips.

Soldwedel’s wife of eight years calls the poisoning claims ludicrous and says he is retaliatin­g against her for seeking a divorce.

“I’ve had people call me, text me, ‘Felice, is that you in the paper? Oh my god,’” she told The Associated Press. “It almost makes you feel like you want to leave town. He made me look like this horrible person.”

The lawsuit alleging poisoning seeks $18 million from Felice Soldwedel and was filed a week after a prosecutor said there was no evidence of a crime and declined to file charges.

“It’s highly problemati­c for a publisher to be using the editorial resources of the paper to pursue a personal vendetta,” said Edward Wasserman, dean of the graduate journalism school at the University of California, Berkeley. He added: “The whole thing is pretty bizarre because someone who is not the publisher would not get that kind of attention, absent law enforcemen­t taking it seriously.”

Soldwedel said the coverage was proper and he wanted to ensure law enforcemen­t thoroughly investigat­es his claims. The Prescott paper did not run a story about the police investigat­ion clearing his wife, he said, because “we don’t think it’s concluded.”

“I’m hoping to get her into court and to get it into trial and bring up enough evidence to the surface that police could not ignore it,” he told the AP.

Soldwedel’s father built Western News and Info Inc. by buying smaller newspapers across Arizona. Joseph Soldwedel, now 66, delivered newspapers as a boy and at 23 became publisher of a paper in the chain. He has run the chain that owns and partially owns 13 newspapers for more than three decades.

In 2001, he won an award from the Arizona Newspaper Associatio­n after launching a newspaper to investigat­e southern Arizona law enforcemen­t and government agencies. He did so after he said police entered his home on what he claimed were false pretenses.

Felice Magana joined Western News in 1999 and worked as an advertisin­g sales executive. They married in 2010; it was the third marriage for both of them. They signed a prenuptial agreement guaranteei­ng she would receive $900,000 if they divorced and $1 million if Joseph Soldwedel died.

He is now seeking to annul the marriage and invalidate the agreement. The divorce case will be tried in February, and Joseph Soldwedel’s attorney is expected to raise the poisoning allegation­s to try to nullify the prenuptial agreement, said John Mull, the lawyer representi­ng Felice Soldwedel.

In 2016, Soldwedel said he had shortness of breath, headaches and fever that he first attributed to the flu. But he began to suspect he had been poisoned and sent hair and nail samples to a Colorado laboratory to test. The lab’s general manager, Kaily Bissani, told the AP that thallium — a heavy metal once used in rat poison — was found at levels six to 15 times higher than normal.

A toxicologi­st Soldwedel hired to interpret the results said there was a “strong probabilit­y” he was intentiona­lly poisoned because Soldwedel didn’t have any environmen­tal exposure to thallium.

Soldwedel said he believes his wife slipped poison into his food, and his attorney requested police investigat­e in September 2017. Prescott police searched Felice Soldwedel’s computer and cellphone records and found nothing to indicate she poisoned him .

In October 2017, police collected their own samples of his hair and found no signs of thallium or illicit drugs. But by then, Soldwedel said, he had cut his hair and undergone therapy to rid his body of heavy metals. He said he has mostly recovered.

 ?? MATT YORK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this Nov. 20, 2018 photo, Joseph Soldwedel, the publisher of the Prescott Daily Courier, poses for a photo in Phoenix. Soldwedel, the owner of a chain of small Arizona newspapers, and his wife Felice are locked in a nasty divorce dispute that includes allegation­s of poisoning.
MATT YORK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this Nov. 20, 2018 photo, Joseph Soldwedel, the publisher of the Prescott Daily Courier, poses for a photo in Phoenix. Soldwedel, the owner of a chain of small Arizona newspapers, and his wife Felice are locked in a nasty divorce dispute that includes allegation­s of poisoning.

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