ReportWire

Tag: AURORA

  • Man shot to death in Westminster motel after fight, police say

    [ad_1]

    A man was shot to death Tuesday night in a Westminster motel off of Interstate 25, police said.

    Westminster officers responded to the motel near West 120th Avenue and North Melody Drive just after 10 p.m. Tuesday, according to a news release from the police department. The department declined to identify the motel.

    When they arrived, officers found a man inside who had been shot, police said in the release. Paramedics took him to the hospital, where he died from his injuries.

    Investigators believe two men started a fight in a motel room that escalated into the shooting. Neither man has been publicly identified.

    The surviving man was arrested Tuesday night, but released after “new information was revealed about the events of that evening,” police said.

    [ad_2]

    Lauren Penington

    Source link

  • Man killed in Aurora street racing crash with suspected drunken driver

    [ad_1]

    A passenger in a sedan racing down East Alameda Parkway early Saturday morning died after the driver lost control and crashed, police said.

    Aurora officers responded to the rollover crash just west of South Chambers Road on Alameda at about 12:45 a.m. Saturday, according to a news release from the department.

    Police said the BMW sedan was street racing down Alameda from Sable Boulevard when the driver, 19-year-old Edwin Rosales-Sandoval of Denver, crashed on a curve.

    The sedan left the roadway, struck a grocery store sign and rolled, police said. No other vehicles were involved in the crash.

    Paramedics took Rosales-Sandoval and a 17-year-old girl in the car to the hospital with non-life-threatening injuries.

    Another passenger, an unidentified adult man, died at the scene of the crash, police said. He will be identified by the Arapahoe County Coroner’s Office.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Suspected DUI street racer faces charges in fatal Aurora crash

    [ad_1]

    AURORA Colo. — A 19-year-old suspected drunk driver crashed in Aurora early Saturday morning during an illegal street race, killing a passenger and injuring another, according to the Aurora Police Department.

    The single-vehicle crash occurred around 12:47 a.m. at E. Alameda Parkway and S. Chambers Road.

    Police say a BMW sedan was racing east on Alameda Parkway when the driver lost control near S. Chambers Road, crashed into a grocery store sign, and flipped.

    The 19-year-old driver, Edwin Rosales-Sandoval of Denver, was hospitalized with non-life-threatening injuries, as was a 17-year-old passenger, who reportedly suffered minor injuries.

    A third occupant, an adult male, died at the scene. Officials have not released his name, pending notification to his next of kin.

    Police said Rosales-Sandoval drove while allegedly intoxicated and on a revoked license from a prior DUI.

    Police say he now faces multiple charges, including vehicular homicide.

    Coloradans making a difference | Denver7 featured videos


    Denver7 is committed to making a difference in our community by standing up for what’s right, listening, lending a helping hand and following through on promises. See that work in action, in the videos above.

    [ad_2]

    Robert Garrison

    Source link

  • Arvada man gets 12 years jail time for fatal Aurora hit-and-run

    [ad_1]

    An Arvada man took a deal and pleaded guilty this month in a fatal 2024 Aurora hit-and-run on Interstate 225, according to court records.

    Arapahoe County District Court Judge Darren Louis Vahle sentenced Brian Vondersmith, 38, on Friday to 12 years in prison for leaving the scene of an accident involving death, court records show.

    Vondersmith pleaded guilty to that charge, a felony, in a deal that dropped four additional charges from his case: manslaughter, reckless driving, first-degree assault with extreme indifference and vehicular homicide, according to court records.

    Aurora police officers responded to the fatal I-225 crash near Sixth Avenue shortly before midnight on Oct. 20, 2024, according to the department.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Aurora man gets 40 years’ prison time for thousands of child sexual abuse photos, videos

    [ad_1]

    An Aurora man will spend 40 years in prison after pleading guilty to charges related to possessing thousands of images and videos of child sexual abuse, including images and videos of himself abusing children.

    Aaron Marshall Mocalkins, 31, was sentenced in Arapahoe County District Court on Friday after pleading guilty to three felony counts of sexual exploitation of a child.

    Eighteen other counts — including child sex assault and animal cruelty — were dismissed by prosecutors as part of the plea agreement, according to court records.

    Mocalkins was arrested in September 2024 after police linked him to a tip from the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Police chases in Aurora skyrocket after policy change, injuries more than quintuple

    [ad_1]

    Police chases increased tenfold in the six months after Chief Todd Chamberlain broadened the Aurora Police Department’s policy to allow officers to pursue stolen vehicles and suspected drunk drivers, a move that made Aurora one of the most permissive large police agencies along the Front Range.

    Aurora officers carried out more chases in the six months after the policy change than in the last five years combined, according to data provided by the police department in response to open records requests from The Denver Post.

    The city’s officers conducted 148 pursuits between March 6 — the day after the policy change — and Sept. 2, the data shows. That’s up from just 14 police chases in that same timeframe in 2024, and well above Aurora officers’ 126 chases across five years between 2020 and 2024.

    The number of people injured in pursuits more than quintupled, with about one in five chases resulting in injury after the policy change, the data shows. That 20% injury rate is lower than the rate over the last five years, when the agency saw 25% of pursuits end with injury.


    Chamberlain, who declined to speak with The Post for this story, has heralded the department’s new approach to pursuits as an important tool for curbing crime. Aurora Mayor Mike Coffman believes the change has already had a “dramatic impact” on crime in the city.

    However, the effect of the increased pursuits on overall crime trends is difficult to gauge, with crime generally declining across the state, including in Denver, which has a more restrictive policy and many fewer police pursuits.

    “You throw a big net out there, occasionally you do catch a few big fish,” said Justin Nix, a criminology professor at the University of Nebraska Omaha. “But you also end up with the pursuit policy causing more accidents and injuries.”

    More people died in police chases in this Denver suburb than in the state’s biggest cities

    Impact of Aurora’s pursuits

    Eighty-seven people were arrested across more than 100 pursuits in Aurora between April and August, according to an Oct. 15 report by the independent monitor overseeing court-ordered reforms at the Aurora Police Department.

    Of those 87 arrestees, 67 had a criminal history, 25 were wanted on active warrants, 18 were on probation and seven were on parole, the monitor found.

    “What we find is that people who steal cars, it’s not a joyriding thing, it’s not a one-off, they tend to be career criminals who use these vehicles to commit other crimes,” Coffman said. “There seems to be a pattern that when we do apprehend a car thief, they tend to have warrants out for their arrest, and we do see the pattern of stealing vehicles to commit other crimes. So we are really catching repeat offenders when we apprehend the driver and/or passengers.”

    The soaring number of pursuits was largely driven by stolen vehicle chases, which accounted for 103 of the 148 pursuits since the policy change, the data shows.

    Auto theft in Aurora dropped 42% year-over-year between January and September, continuing a downward trend that began in 2023. In Denver, where officers do not chase stolen vehicles, auto theft has declined 36% so far in 2025 compared to 2024.

    Denver police officers conducted just nine pursuits between March 6 and Sept. 2, and just 16 so far in 2025, data from the department shows. Four suspects and one officer were injured across those 16 chases.

    “I think there are broader societal factors at work,” Nix said of the decline in crime, which has been seen across the nation and follows a dramatic pandemic-era spike. “When something goes up, it is bound to come down pretty drastically.”

    Aurora officers apprehended fleeing drivers in 53% of all pursuits, and in 51% of pursuits for stolen vehicles between March and September, the police data shows.

    Coffman said that shows officers and their supervisors are judiciously calling off pursuits that become too dangerous. He also noted that every pursuit is carefully reviewed by the police chain of command and called the new policy a “work in progress.”

    “I get that it is not without controversy,” Coffman said. “There wouldn’t be the collateral accidents if not for the policy. So it is a tradeoff. It is not an easy decision and it is going to always be in flux.”

    Thirty-three people were injured in Aurora police chases between March 6 and Sept. 2, up from six injured in that time frame last year. Those hurt included 24 suspects, five officers and four drivers in other vehicles.

    One bystander and one suspect were seriously injured, according to the police data.

    The independent monitor noted in its October report that it was “generally pleased” with officers’ judgments during pursuits, supervisors’ actions and the post-pursuit administrative review process, with “two notable exceptions” that have been “elevated for additional review and potential disciplinary action.”

    The monitor also flagged an increase in failed Precision Immobilization Technique, or PIT, maneuvers during pursuits, which it attributed to officer inexperience. The group recommended more training on the maneuvers, which are designed to end pursuits, and renewed its call for the department to install dash cameras in its patrol cars, which the agency has not done.

    “It sounds reasonable,” Coffman said of the dash camera recommendation. “They are not cheap and we need to budget for it.”

    ‘No magic number’

    It’s up to city leadership to determine if the benefits of police chases outweigh the predictable harms, and there is no “magic number,” Nix said.

    “When you chase that much, bad outcomes are going to happen,” he said. “People are going to get hurt, sometimes innocent third parties that have nothing to do with the chase. You know that is going to be a collateral consequence of doing that many chases. So knowing that, you should really be able to point to the community safety benefit that doing this many chases bring.”

    The majority of large Front Range law enforcement agencies limit pursuits to situations in which the driver is suspected of a violent felony or poses an immediate risk of injury or death to others if not quickly apprehended.

    Among 18 law enforcement agencies reviewed by The Post this spring, only Aurora and the Arapahoe County Sheriff’s Office explicitly allow pursuits of suspected drunk drivers. The sheriff’s office allows such pursuits only if the driver stays under the posted speed limit.

    Aurora officers pursued suspected impaired drivers 13 times between March and September, the data shows, with five chases ending in injury.


    Omar Montgomery, president of the Aurora NAACP, said he is a “cautious neutral” about the policy change, but would like Aurora police to meet with community members to explain the impact in more detail.

    “People in the community do not want people on the streets who are causing harm to other individuals and who are committing crimes that makes our city unsafe,” he said. “We want them off the streets just as bad as anyone else. We also want to make sure that innocent people who are not part of the situation are not getting harmed.”

    Topazz McBride, a community activist in Aurora, said she has been disappointed by what she sees as Chamberlain’s unwillingness to engage with community members who disagree with him.

    “Do I trust them to use the process effectively and responsibly with all fairness and equity to everyone they pursue? No. I do not trust that,” she said. “And I don’t understand why he wouldn’t be willing to talk about it. Why not?”

    Montgomery also wants police to track crashes that happen immediately after a police officer ends a pursuit, when an escaping suspect might still be speeding and driving recklessly.

    “They are still going 80 or 90 mph and they end up hitting someone or running into a building,” he said. “And now you have this person who that has caused harm, believing that they are still being chased.”

    The police department did not include the case of Rajon Belt-Stubblefield, who was shot and killed Aug. 30 by an officer after he sped away from an attempted traffic stop, among its pursuits this year. Video of the incident shows the officer followed Belt-Stubblefield’s vehicle with his lights and sirens on for just under a minute over about 7/10ths of a mile before Belt-Stubblefield crashed.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Aurora water main break shuts down Alameda Avenue for repairs

    [ad_1]

    Part of westbound Alameda Avenue in Aurora was shut down Monday morning for repairs after a water main break, according to city officials.

    The closure of westbound Alameda Avenue at Moline Street started at 7 a.m. Monday and is scheduled to last between 24 and 48 hours, according to Aurora Water.

    Drivers should use alternate routes and expect delays in the area, Aurora Water officials said.

    This is a developing story and may be updated.

    [ad_2]

    Lauren Penington

    Source link

  • 9 taken to hospital after I-225 crash in Aurora

    [ad_1]

    Nine people were taken to the hospital Friday night after a seven-vehicle crash on southbound Interstate 225 in Aurora that closed the highway several hours, police officials said.

    The crash happened on I-225 near Parker Road at 10:24 p.m., Aurora police said on social media. Police initially reported the crash involved nine vehicles, but later revised that to seven vehicles.

    While nine people were taken to the hospital, only one had serious injuries, spokesperson Matthew Longshore said Saturday.

    Investigators believe the crash happened when one driver, a 17-year-old boy, failed to yield to other vehicles that were slowing down for a separate crash.

    The teen hit “numerous” vehicles and injured himself and a teen passenger, Longshore said. He was arrested on an outstanding felony warrant when he was released from the hospital and was also cited for the crash.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Driver cited after fiery semi crash closes I-70 in Aurora

    [ad_1]

    One person was cited for careless driving after a fiery crash between two semitrucks closed Interstate 70 in Aurora for several hours Friday morning.

    The crash happened on eastbound I-70 just west of E-470 at 8:26 a.m. when the driver of a 2020 Volvo semi rear-ended a 2026 Peterbilt semi before crashing into the median, according to the Colorado State Patrol.

    The Volve tipped onto its side, spilled plastic cargo into westbound lanes and caught fire.

    Flames fully engulfed the Volvo, and the fire shut down both directions of I-70 as emergency crews worked to douse the flames and clean up spilled diesel.

    Fire crews contained the fire by 9:25 a.m., and most lanes were reopened by noon, the state patrol said.

    Neither driver reported any injuries, and the Volvo driver was cited for careless driving.

    Initial reports that the crash involved three semis were later revised.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Aurora I-225 shooting suspect targeted victim after dating the same woman, affidavit says

    [ad_1]

    A Honduran man accused of shooting and seriously wounding another driver on Interstate 225 in Aurora appeared to target the victim because the victim was dating the man’s ex-girlfriend, according to Aurora police.

    Celin Villeda-Orellana, 38, is facing charges of attempted first-degree murder, first-degree assault, menacing and illegal discharge of a firearm in the shooting on eastbound I-225 near East Sixth Avenue in the early hours of Oct. 18, the Aurora Police Department announced Friday.

    All of the charges are felonies.

    Villeda-Orellana was arrested on suspicion of federal weapons charges on Thursday after Aurora police pulled him over and searched his car as part of the shooting investigation.

    Investigators believe he was making plans to flee the country, Chief Todd Chamberlain said at a news conference Friday, and Aurora police needed additional time to get an arrest warrant. Villeda-Orellana is currently in U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement custody.

    According to an arrest affidavit, Aurora police first responded to the crash on eastbound I-225 at 1:14 a.m. and found the 30-year-old driver of a white Ford Focus had crashed into the west highway barrier wall. The man appeared to have multiple gunshot wounds to his neck.

    He was taken to the hospital and is still on a respirator with life-threatening injuries, Chamberlain said.

    Another driver who witnessed the crash and called 911 told police he saw a dark-colored car pull up next to the Ford and heard a loud pop that he thought was a car backfiring. The Focus veered left, then turned sharply to the right and hit the highway barrier, according to the affidavit.

    Detectives used traffic cameras to track the victim’s car and realized he was followed by a dark-colored Honda Pilot after leaving the house of a woman he was dating.

    The Honda was registered to Villeda-Orellana at a home in the 10000 block of East Exposition Avenue.

    Aurora investigators first contacted Villeda-Orellana outside his home on Tuesday, and he agreed to go to the police station and answer questions.

    Villeda-Orellana told police he knew the woman the victim was dating — he allowed them look at his phone, and her name had hearts around it — but denied being in a relationship with her, according to the affidavit.

    He initially told police he was at home asleep at the time of the shooting, but detectives looked at his Google Maps location data and found he was near the woman’s home around 9:30 p.m. on Oct. 17 and traveling near I-225 in the early hours of Oct. 18.

    Villeda-Orellana then took his phone back from police, but agreed to give them his passcode, allowed them to search his apartment and gave a DNA sample.

    Aurora police interviewed the woman who was dating the victim on Wednesday, and she told investigators she had dated Villeda-Orellana for several months before telling him she just wanted to be friends.

    About three weeks ago, he showed up at her house when she was with the victim, and then showed up drunk at her workplace the next day, according to the affidavit.

    Detectives searched Villeda-Orellana’s Honda after pulling him over near 11th Avenue and Havana Street on Thursday and found a 9mm shell cashing, a Girsan 9mm handgun under the driver’s seat and a Honduran passport, according to the affidavit.

    He was arrested on federal weapons charges and was still in ICE custody on Friday. Aurora police are working to transfer him to the Arapahoe County Jail, agency officials said.

    “This department has and always will be shoulder and shoulder with our federal partners. The impact that (Homeland Security Investigations) and ICE had on this event was pivotal,” Chamberlain said.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Pedestrian killed in Aurora hit-and-run crash on East Colfax

    [ad_1]

    A man was struck and killed in a hit-and-run crash on East Colfax Avenue near Chambers Road on Tuesday night, according to the Aurora Police Department. 

    [ad_2]

    Katie Langford

    Source link

  • Westbound I-70 reopened in Aurora between Tower Road and Airport Boulevard

    [ad_1]

    Westbound lanes of Interstate 70 reopened Thursday morning in Aurora following a crash between Tower Road and Airport Boulevard.

    The Colorado Department of Transportation announced the news on social media at approximately 8:47 a.m. Thursday. By 10:42 a.m., CDOT reported the roadway had reopened.

    The Aurora Police Department said on X that a vehicle rear-ended a box truck and became stuck underneath it. The “at-fault driver” was taken to the hospital with moderate injuries, police said.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Sixth Avenue closed in Aurora after crash that injured 2

    [ad_1]

    Sixth Avenue is closed in both directions between Toledo and Vaughn streets following a crash that hospitalized two people, according to Aurora police.

    [ad_2]

    Joe Nguyen

    Source link

  • Pickleball boom in Colorado fuels growth of new destinations

    [ad_1]

    Pickleball is rapidly growing across Colorado, fueling a wave of stand-alone and all-in-one entertainment venues opening in Denver and nearby communities.

    No longer limited to local park courts, at least four pickleball destinations have emerged this year in Louisville, Thornton, Aurora and Denver, with several more projects underway.

    “You could Google indoor pickleball clubs, and there’s a lot now in the Denver Metro, but I think everybody offers a little something different. So I’m excited about it. I think there’s room for all of us,” said U.S. Army veteran Liz Tanji, who, alongside her husband Michael, recently opened Ace Pickleball Club, a national pickleball franchise, in Colorado.

    Ace Pickleball Club is led by husband-and-wife team Liz and Michael Tanji in Aurora, Colorado on Oct. 6, 2025. (Photo by RJ Sangosti/The Denver Post)

    Ace Pickleball Club, at 6626 S. Parker Road in Aurora, marks the Tanjis’ second location, building on the success of their first in Omaha, Neb., which opened in May.

    Recognizing the rapid growth of pickleball, the shortage of public courts and the challenges of playing outdoors in cold weather, the Tanjis said Aurora was the perfect place to introduce a dedicated facility.

    The club, which used to be a Big Lots store, has nine courts and a drill area and offers lessons.

    Tanji said she and her husband learned to play during the COVID shutdown and loved the sense of community.

    “Pickleball really is a sport for everyone, and we’re so excited to share it with the Aurora community,” Tanji said.

    The evolution of pickleball

    Pickleball was invented in 1965 on Bainbridge Island, a short ferry ride from Seattle. Three dads, Joel Pritchard, Bill Bell and Barney McCallum, are credited with creating the game when their kids grew bored with their usual summertime activities.

    In 2024, there were an estimated 19.8 million pickleball players in the United States, a 45.8% increase from 2023, according to a 2025 Topline Participation Report by the Sports and Fitness Industry Association.

    Although the sport is often linked to older participants, the largest age group of pickleball players are between 25 and 34. The sport gained more than 1 million participants under the age of 18 between 2022 and 2023.

    Kelli Alldredge, president of Chicken N Pickle, began her journey with the company not as an executive, but as a passionate customer. As an avid tennis player, she was introduced to pickleball in 2016 through friends and quickly fell in love with the fast-paced, fun nature of the sport.

    “It kind of was love at first sight,” she said. “I started playing every Sunday at our original (Chicken N Pickle) location, and that’s where I met the founder and the rest is history.”

    Covering more than three acres and over 45,000 square feet, the Thornton Chicken N Pickle venue features eight professional-grade pickleball courts. (Photo provided by Chicken N Pickle)
    Covering more than three acres and over 45,000 square feet, the Thornton Chicken N Pickle venue features eight professional-grade pickleball courts. (Photo provided by Chicken N Pickle)

    The indoor and outdoor entertainment center opened in the Thornton community earlier this summer, marking its first Colorado location.

    Covering more than three acres and over 45,000 square feet, the venue features eight professional-grade pickleball courts, including six indoor and two covered outdoor courts, along with a chef-driven restaurant, a lively sports bar and a variety of games and gathering spaces.

    As it grows, Chicken N Pickle is shifting its focus toward acquiring complementary entertainment and hospitality concepts, as well as exploring city partnerships to build public pickleball court facilities, with particular emphasis on key growth markets such as Houston, Phoenix and Denver.

    Rising construction costs and uncertainty surrounding international economic headwinds have played a role in the shift, the company announced in a July news release.

    Designed for all ages and abilities, Chicken N Pickle venues offer adaptive pickleball programming and inclusive spaces that welcome everyone, from seasoned players to first-timers and families. (Photo provided by Chicken N Pickle)
    Designed for all ages and abilities, Chicken N Pickle venues offer adaptive pickleball programming and inclusive spaces that welcome everyone, from seasoned players to first-timers and families. (Photo provided by Chicken N Pickle)

    Alldredge said they are interested in opening a second location in the Denver market and are actively looking for the right opportunity. She said they’re open to different possibilities, such as building next to city-run public courts or partnering with a similar concept. New construction is on hold for now.

    “We’re just kind of hit the pause button and exploring all of our options. But two things are for sure, we’re still growing, and we absolutely want a second store in the Denver market,” Alldredge said.

    What’s next for pickleball enthusiasts?

    Denver residents can also look forward to another destination that includes pickleball to open by the end of this year. Moodswing, a 3.5-acre, $10 million entertainment venue, is set to debut in Denver’s Elyria Swansea neighborhood.

    Located at 3625 E. 48th Ave., it will include 43,000 square feet of indoor space and 33,000 square feet outdoors. It will feature 125 parking spaces, six indoor and six outdoor pickleball courts, golf simulators, a coffee shop and co-working area, a full bar and kitchen serving Mediterranean and Italian-inspired cuisine and an outdoor live music area.

    Construction at Moodswing at 3625 E. 48th Ave. (Photo provided by Moodswing)
    Construction at Moodswing at 3625 E. 48th Ave. (Photo provided by Moodswing)

    Moodswing’s owners are the founders of Denver-based development firm Perpetual First, which includes Improper City and Rayback Collective owner Justin Riley, former Improper City General Manager Giovanni Leone and former Hagerty Insurance Manager Colton Cartwright.

    Cartwright said coming out of the pandemic, people were still trying to figure out how to reintegrate into society, which helped lead to the idea of Moodswing.

    Cartwright said that in 2022, he and Riley went out to play pickleball and experienced a “holy cow” moment as they observed how people connected and interacted on and off the court.

    “It’s just like a nice, natural icebreaker. It’s low barrier to entry, super fun and approachable, whether it’s your 8-year-old niece or nephew, or your 85-year-old grandma or grandpa and everyone in between. And so that’s what really drew us and made us think it was a cool opportunity,” he said.

    Moodswing had plans to open earlier this year, but setbacks in the permitting process and how to access the property caused delays.

    “It’s been quite the journey, you know, over three years working on this project,” he said.

    “There’s been so much support and so much excitement around it, and (we) just really cannot wait to get these doors open.”

    [ad_2]

    Jessica Alvarado Gamez

    Source link

  • Aurora police sergeant arrested on suspicion of child sex exploitation

    [ad_1]

    An Aurora Police Department sergeant who worked with school resource officers was arrested by the FBI on suspicion of child sex exploitation, police officials said Wednesday.

    Aaron Bunch was arrested on federal charges related to sending and receiving child sexual abuse material online, Aurora police said in a statement.

    Bunch was a supervisor of school resource officers, but there is no evidence that any students or children in Aurora Public Schools, Cherry Creek School District or the Aurora community were “impacted or victimized,” department officials said.

    He was put on unpaid administrative leave, and the department launched an internal investigation into conduct and policy violations.

    In a statement, Aurora Police Chief Todd Chamberlain described the allegations as disturbing.

    [ad_2]

    Katie Langford

    Source link

  • Colorado woman among 3 activists charged with alleged ‘doxing’ of ICE agent in Los Angeles

    [ad_1]

    A Colorado woman and two other activists opposed to President Donald Trump’s immigration raids in Los Angeles have been indicted on charges of illegally “doxing” a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent, federal prosecutors said.

    Ashleigh Brown, a 38-year-old woman from Aurora, is among the three accused of following the unidentified ICE agent home, livestreaming their pursuit and posting the agent’s address online, according to a statement from the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Central District of California.

    Once they arrived at the agent’s home, prosecutors allege the women shouted “ICE lives on your street and you should know,” according to the indictment.

    The defendants are each charged with one count of conspiracy and one count of publicly disclosing the personal information of a federal agent, the statement said.

    Brown, who is being held in federal custody without bail, also faces charges of assault on a federal officer in a separate case stemming from a protest in Los Angeles in August, according to court records.

    The Aurora woman was part of a small group of protesters who gathered outside the Edward R. Roybal Federal Building on Aug. 2 to protest immigration enforcement and raids in Los Angeles, according to court documents.

    During that protest, Brown hit one of the Federal Protective Service officers trying to detain a man who jumped on the hood of a government car leaving the Roybal building, the criminal complaint alleges.

    The Federal Protective Service is a U.S. Department of Homeland Security agency responsible for protecting federally owned and leased buildings.

    Brown’s federal assault case is still ongoing.

    Prosecutors said the second suspect accused of doxing an ICE agent, a 25-year-old woman from Panorama City in Los Angeles, is free on $5,000 bail. Authorities are still searching for the third defendant, a 37-year-old woman from Riverside, California.

    “Our brave federal agents put their lives on the line every day to keep our nation safe,” Acting U.S. Attorney Bill Essayli said in a statement. “The conduct of these defendants are deeply offensive to law enforcement officers and their families. If you threaten, dox, or harm in any manner one of our agents or employees, you will face prosecution and prison time.”

    Doxing is a typically malicious practice that involves gathering private or identifying information and releasing it online without the person’s permission, usually in an attempt to harass, threaten, shame or exact revenge.

    Attorneys for the women could not immediately be reached on Monday. An email was sent to the Federal Public Defender’s Office asking if its attorneys are representing the defendants.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Aurora teen sentenced to 35 years in prison for deadly rental hall shooting

    [ad_1]

    A 17-year-old who pleaded guilty to second-degree murder in a shooting at an Aurora rental hall was sentenced to 35 years in the Colorado Department of Corrections, the district attorney’s office said.

    Xavier Garcia, 17, was arrested after a shooting during a party in the 2000 block of Tower Road on March 23, 2024.

    The victim, 19-year-old Joseph Martinez, was standing against a wall when a fight broke out and Garcia approached him, pulled out a handgun and shot him in the chest, according to the 17th Judicial District Attorney’s Office.

    Martinez was taken to the hospital and later died.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Six months after Jeanette Vizguerra’s ICE detainment, her attorney says still in ‘legal limbo’

    [ad_1]

    AURORA, Colo. — For more than six months, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) has detained a prominent immigration rights activist in Aurora. The length of time violates her constitutional rights while subjecting her to “prolonged detention,” her attorneys assert.

    53-year-old Jeanette Vizguerra was detained by ICE on March 17. Her legal team believes Vizguerra was targeted for her criticism of U.S. immigration enforcement policies and practices over the years.

    On Monday, Vizguerra’s lawyers filed an amended version of their Writ of Habeas Corpus, which is a court filing that challenges an individual’s imprisonment. The attorneys added on a new claim, arguing that Vizguerra has been detained for too long and should be released to continue her fight against deportation from outside the Aurora facility.

    The filing describes Vizguerra’s case as being stuck in “legal limbo.”

    “According to the government, she already was deported. That’s what we’re fighting about,” lead attorney on Vizguerra’s case Laura Lichter said. “Someone could be fighting for a couple of years before these cases are actually resolved… Essentially, by providing this motion today, which essentially amended the original petition, it basically said, this has gone on long enough. This has gone on past a reasonable amount of time to have somebody facing detention while they are actively fighting their legal right to contest the government’s action.”

    Jacob Curtis

    Jeanette Vizguerra’s attorney argues she has been detained for too long, and should be released from ICE custody.

    Since Vizguerra was first detained, a crowd rallies in her name outside of the Aurora ICE Processing Center on Monday evenings. This week, the crowd was there awaiting announcement of the attorney’s new filing.

    “We are here because in 2013, ICE messed up,” Lichter told the crowd on Monday. “They didn’t have a removal order. The facts are clear. They didn’t even do the paperwork correctly, and so they sat on it for about a dozen years, until this administration, we believe, went after Jeanette, targeted her for who she is, for what she represents, for what she says.”

    Vizguerra addressed the crowd gathered on Monday evening, speaking through a phone call and translator. She told the group that for the first time in her six months of detainment, she felt her health was deteriorating.

    “I want to make sure that the six months I’ve spent in here are not gone to waste,” the translator said, speaking on behalf of Vizguerra.

    Denver7 reached out to ICE for a comment on the new filing in Viguerra’s case, but did not receive a response.

    “She’s now been detained longer than six months. At this point, the burden shifts to the government to establish that her continued detention is actually necessary. They’re not going to have much of a basis to do that,” Lichter said. “Why? Because Jeanette is not dangerous. She’s not going to run away. She’s not any threat to anyone. She wants to be right here, doing exactly what she’s doing, fighting her case, fighting for her legal rights, but in the warm embrace of her family, with her community, outside of a private prison.”

    Lichter, who began working with Vizguerra long before she was detained in March, said complicated immigration cases can last for years before reaching a resolution.

    “Immigration law, because of its complexity, because of the politics, because of the different interpretations — whether that’s an administration through an executive order or different courts — is something that’s constantly changing,” Lichter said. “So, you will have cases that can go on for years and years and years, especially if that person has the resilience to be able to continue to fight for their rights.”

    Vizguerra is a citizen of Mexico who entered the U.S. in 1997. The filing from her attorneys states that “at the age of 25, she fled to the U.S. with her husband and daughter due to the persecution her husband experienced at his job from criminal organizations.”

    In February of 2009, Vizguerra was convicted of criminal possession of a forged instrument for having a fake Social Security card. At the time, Vizguerra said her Social Security card was made up of digits from her birth date, and did not belong to another person. She ended up serving a 23-day sentence after her conviction.

    That year, Vizguerra was placed in removal proceedings. She applied for a form of relief that would have authorized a judge to cancel the deportation and grant permanent residency if certain requirements were met. That application was denied in 2011, but an alternate request for voluntary departure was granted, giving Vizguerra 60 days to leave the country.

    Vizguerra’s attorneys claim she appealed that decision. In 2012, learned her mother was struggling and flew back to Mexico to see her mom one last time. That departure “triggered a subsequent, automatic withdrawal of her appeal,” according to Vizguerra’s legal team.

    Vizguerra returned to the U.S. in 2013, when the amended court filing states she was “apprehended shortly after her entry and charged criminally for illegal entry.” She was convicted in that case and sentenced to probation.

    When Vizguerra was released from criminal custody, she was turned over to ICE in El Paso, Texas. She was able to return to Colorado, and required to report to the Denver ICE Field Office in Centennial, court documents state.

    “The government believes that Jeanette is subject to reinstatement, that she was essentially deported and then illegally came back in the country,” Lichter said. “What we’ve said is, no, it wasn’t a deportation. She left on an order of voluntary departure because her mother was dying.”

    It was while Vizguerra was in Texas that a removal order was reinstated — a point in the timeline that’s debated by her attorney.

    “They made a mistake back in 2013. over a dozen years ago. They didn’t have the right facts to establish their assertion that Jeanette is actually someone who should be detained, facing the immediate threat of removal,” Lichter said. “Even if they were right, they didn’t even fill out their paperwork according to their own rules and procedures. Nothing has changed about that.”

    The filing continues to detail Vizguerra’s timeline, claiming she was granted a stay of removal by August of 2013.

    “Since that time, ICE repeatedly granted extensions of that stay of removal, with her most recent stay expiring in 2024,” the filing reads.

    Jeanette Vizguerra’s legal team says she’s in ‘legal limbo’ six months after arrest

    Read our previous coverage below

    Vizguerra was forced to seek sanctuary at a Denver church in 2017 under the first Trump administration after a hold on her deportation was not renewed. Denver7 spoke with her more than two months into her stay at First Unitarian Church in 2017 — the same year she was named to TIME Magazine’s list of the 100 most influential people in the world alongside President Trump.

    She was given a two-year reprieve, which allowed her to stay in the country until March of 2019 after Sen. Michael Bennet and then-Rep. Jared Polis — now Colorado’s governor — introduced so-called private bills to give her a path to become a permanent resident. But her two-year stay was not renewed and Vizguerra was further denied a U Visa — which allows undocumented victims of certain crimes to live legally in the U.S.

    A timeline provided by ICE showed Vizguerra was twice granted a stay of deportation in both 2021 and 2023, lasting for a year each.

    Denver

    Woman who sought sanctuary in CO church reacts to removal of ‘sensitive areas’

    When Vizguerra was most recently detained, a spokesperson with ICE told Denver7 Vizguerra would “remain in ICE custody pending removal from the United States.” The statement continued, calling Vizguerra “a convicted criminal” with “a final order of deportation issued by a federal immigration judge.”

    ICE asserted Vizguerra has received legal due process in immigration court throughout the process.

    Court records show that Vizguerra’s team has previously asked the judge to consider releasing her on bond. A decision on bond has not been made yet.

    “If the judge agrees with us, she could order Jeanette to be released, or she could order that Jeanette have a bond hearing. We would hope where the burden is going to be on the government, for them to prove that they have a right or a need to keep her detained,” Lichter said.

    The federal government will respond to their filing within the next three weeks, according to Lichter. Then, Vizguerra’s team will have two weeks to file any counterarguments they may have.

    After that, Lichter said both sides will be awaiting the judge’s ruling in the case.

    COLETTE CALL TO ACTION.jpg

    Denver7 | Your Voice: Get in touch with Colette Bordelon

    Denver7’s Colette Bordelon covers stories that have an impact in all of Colorado’s communities, but specializes in reporting on crime, justice and issues impacting our climate and environment. If you’d like to get in touch with Colette, fill out the form below to send her an email.

    [ad_2]

    Colette Bordelon

    Source link

  • Aurora driver sentenced to five years in prison for hit-and-run that killed man, dog

    [ad_1]

    A judge in Arapahoe County’s 18th Judicial District court sentenced an Aurora driver to five years in prison, followed by five years of mandatory parole, for the fatal killing of a 65-year-old man and his dog.

    On the night of April 3, Michael Graham-Hyde, 73, killed Rafael Alberto Buitrago and his dog, Nova, while they were on a walk near East Wesley Drive and East Caspian Circle.

    Graham-Hyde told police he had been awake for 38 hours after returning from an overseas trip when he fell asleep at the wheel and hit Buitrago and Nova, according to an arrest affidavit.

    He got out of his SUV, saw Buitrago and “panicked,” choosing to drive away when he saw another car coming because he thought the other driver would stop and help, police wrote in the affidavit.

    Graham-Hyde stood before Arapahoe County District Court Judge LaQunya Baker at Monday afternoon’s sentencing hearing and expressed deep remorse for crashing into Buitrago and fleeing the scene, a decision he said fills him with shame that he will carry for the rest of his life.

    [ad_2]

    Jessica Alvarado Gamez

    Source link

  • Aurora PD releases 911 call, bodycam video from police shooting that killed 17-year-old

    [ad_1]

    AURORA, Colo. — Aurora Police Chief Todd Chamberlain on Friday released the 911 call and officer body-camera video from a police shooting that killed a 17-year-old boy last week.

    The shooting happened on Sept. 18 at the Conoco gas station in the 200 block of South Havana Street near East Alameda Avenue.

    In a press conference Friday, Chamberlain said the incident began at 7:33 p.m. when the suspect — identified as 17-year-old Blaze Aleczander Balle-Mason — called 911 and told the operator he had a loaded 9mm pistol in his pocket and planned to “shoot up” the gas station and surrounding area. He also reportedly said he wanted to shoot responding officers.

    Three officers arrived at the scene at 7:43 p.m. with a “tactical plan” in which one officer was armed with a rifle, the second with a pistol and the third with a “40mm less-lethal launcher.”

    Chamberlain said his officers approached the suspect, identified themselves as police and ordered the teen to show his hands. The 17-year-old ignored those commands, according to the police chief, and advanced toward the officers with one hand concealed in his pocket.

    The officer with the “less-lethal launcher” fired “multiple rounds” at the 17-year-old, striking him, according to Chamberlain. The rounds, however, had “little to no impact or effect” on the suspect.

    Chamberlain said his officers retreated around the corner, and the suspect began to “chase” police. The teen’s hand remained in his pocket, according to the police chief.

    As the suspect neared the officers, one officer fired his weapon, striking the 17-year-old. Officers provided life-saving measures until medical personnel arrived.

    The teen was taken to the hospital, where he was pronounced dead.

    • Watch Chief Chamberlain’s full press conference in the video player below

    Aurora PD releases bodycam video from police shooting that killed 17-year-old: Full press conference

    According to Chamberlain, the time between when officers first made contact with the suspect and when shots were fired was 15 seconds.

    Investigators did not recover a handgun; however, Chamberlain cited the suspect’s 911 call, his failure to show his hands, the ineffectiveness of the “less-lethal” rounds, and his advancement toward officers as reasons for the lethal action.

    “This incident — and there is no getting around this — this incident is tragic for everyone involved, and I mean that sincerely, for everybody involved,” Chamberlain said. “I mean, it’s tragic for the suspect. It’s tragic for the people that were there, that witnessed [it]. It’s tragic for the city of Aurora. It’s also incredibly tragic for the officers that were involved in this.”

    Denver7 has been working to get answers about the police shooting, including why a mental health crisis team wasn’t dispatched, considering the teen threatened violence against officers in his 911 call.

    “They are not for calls that involved active violence or the threat of active violence, and that’s what this call was,” Chamberlain responded. “This call was not a mental health call…. [Officers] are trained also in crisis intervention. Every member of our organization goes through a suicide by cop training… they understand de-escalation. So all of that stuff is part of what they have in their toolkit, all of that was exploited, all of that was used.”

    Aurora

    Chief shares why mental health officers did not respond to Aurora PD shooting

    The Sept. 18 incident comes just weeks after Aurora police shot and killed Rajon Belt-Stubblefield, an unarmed Black man, after a confrontation following a traffic stop. Chamberlain said in both cases, his officers worked to prevent lethal force but were forced to use it.

    “In both of these cases, whether people like it or not, the suspects’ actions created these rapidly evolving, life-threatening situations,” Chamberlain said Friday. “Our officers exploited de-escalation; our officers exploited communication; our officers attempted to exploit other tools and alternatives other than lethal force. Unfortunately, on both of these incidents, the suspect and the suspects did not allow that to occur. That is not something that is unknown; that is factual data. That is factual information that we have seen through the collection of evidence at this point in both of these investigations.”

    Xavier Davis, president and lead mentor for ROYAL mentoring group, works with at-risk youth to stop violence in Aurora and Denver.

    “We got two people that lost their lives that were unarmed,” he said of the recent police shootings of the Aurora teen and Rajon Belt-Stubblefield. “The shootings, the killings, are just, they’re just totally unnecessary.”

    Davis said both adults and young people that he works with are feeling more on edge than ever because of economic uncertainty, which is something police should be aware of. He is also calling for changes to police training.

    “We would rather him be in a hospital with a bullet in his leg than dead,” Davis said of the shooting victims. “When you have shootings like this, it creates more of a distrust with the community.”

    Police said this incident is being investigated internally and by the district attorney’s office.

    Coloradans making a difference | Denver7 featured videos


    Denver7 is committed to making a difference in our community by standing up for what’s right, listening, lending a helping hand and following through on promises. See that work in action, in the videos above.

    [ad_2]

    Sydney Isenberg

    Source link