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ARAPAHOE COUNTY, Colo. — Serving on a jury can be incredibly difficult. Citizens put their lives on pause to sit through days of evidence, learning devastating details, and working with complete strangers to reach a unanimous agreement.
One jury out of Arapahoe County faced those challenges with grace, and now consider each other close friends several weeks after their case has concluded. They had no idea what they were getting into when they were first selected to be on the jury that would decide the fate of James Craig, a former Aurora dentist.
James Craig was taken to trial this summer, accused of murdering his wife, 43-year-old Angela Craig, in 2023.
Prosecutors argued James Craig poisoned his wife over 10 days via workout smoothies and a medication intended to treat sinus infections. They also claimed he administered a lethal dose of cyanide to Angela Craig while she was hospitalized on March 15, 2023.
Mark Pray
Six of the jury members sat down exclusively with Denver7: David Lemont, Angie Roberts, Monica Montoya, Brittany Roybal, Lorie Haverland, and Tammi Peterson. Brittany Roybal was an alternate juror and did not participate in deliberations.
“He was innocent. They had to prove him guilty, and they did a good job,” said Peterson.
James Craig was tried for one count of first-degree murder, two counts of solicitation to commit tampering with physical evidence, two counts of solicitation to commit perjury in the first degree, and one count of solicitation to commit first-degree murder. Five of the counts were added to the case during his time in jail.
On July 30, the jury found him guilty on all counts. He was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole.
“We wanted to make sure that we were thorough with everything, so that there was no question and that it was also solidified just in our hearts and minds,” Lemont, who was the foreperson of the jury, said about the verdict. “I feel good even now, looking back, that we really did try our best and we did our due diligence for each count.”
That decision followed 10 days of testimony that the jury had to consider on six different charges. Denver7 asked what evidence stood out to the jury, which included James Craig’s extramarital affairs, emotional testimony from the Craig children, and two blood draws taken on March 15, 2023, that show cyanide levels in Angela Craig’s blood more than doubled while she was hospitalized.
When the jury began deliberations, they ensured every member received the time and space needed to make their own, individual decision on each count. The solicitation charges — in particular, the charge connected to a murder for hire plot James Craig discussed with a fellow inmate regarding the lead Aurora Police Detective on the case — took some time for some jury members to consider.
After one night, the jury returned for deliberations on July 30. That afternoon, they reached a unanimous verdict.
“It was a sense, for me, of unity,” Haverland said. “We are coming out here as a unit. Everybody’s on board. Everybody is feeling good about these decisions, and we’re about to deliver this to the courtroom, and hopefully her [Angela Craig’s] family will be able to begin their healing.”
When coordinating an interview with jurors, the first question Peterson asked Denver7 was whether we could help facilitate a meeting between some of the jury members and the Aurora police detectives who led this investigation.
On Thursday evening, Denver7 surprised the jurors with Aurora Police Detectives Bobbi Jo Olson and Molly Harris, who wanted to meet the jury just as badly.
“I was so disappointed that we couldn’t talk to you, because usually we like to go back and have that conversation. And just because of the immediate sentencing, we weren’t able to,” Olson told the jurors.
“To make a long story short, my husband used to be a police officer in Illinois with me, and he got shot in the line of duty. And so, I’ve been through this process in a different way, obviously, as a victim, and I know how important a jury is,” Harris said. “Y’all ultimately make the decision we can’t. Thank you.”
The appeals process for James Craig has started. A spokesperson with the 18th Judicial District Attorney’s Office said an appeal does not appear to have been filed yet, but James Craig has been appointed a public defender who has requested transcripts of the trial.
On Friday evening, a new “20/20” episode about the investigation into James Craig will air on ABC at 8 p.m. MST.
If you or someone you know is experiencing domestic violence, help is available through Violence Free Colorado or the National Domestic Violence Hotline at 800-799-7233.

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A woman died and an infant was injured when a Mercedes SUV driven by the woman collided head-on with an RTD bus Thursday evening in Aurora.
Police responded to the crash at 5:18 p.m. at East 30th Avenue and East Parklane Drive. The woman and the infant, who wasn’t restrained, were thrown from the vehicle. Both were taken to the hospital.
Police said the woman died shortly after arriving at the hospital. The infant remains hospitalized with serious injuries.
Their names weren’t released.
Several passengers on the RTD bus were checked for injuries. One passenger and the bus driver were taken to the hospital with non-life-threatening injuries.
Police are looking at speed and possible intoxication as possible factors involved in the crash.
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Judith Kohler
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Federal immigration arrests in Colorado surged this summer as the Trump administration charged ahead with its plans to mass-deport undocumented immigrants.
But as arrests have spiked, law enforcement agencies increasingly have detained people without any prior criminal convictions or charges, internal data show.
Between June 11 and July 28, ICE arrested 828 people in Colorado, according to a Denver Post analysis of data obtained by the Deportation Data Project at the University of California, Berkeley. That amounted to more than 17 arrests per day, a more than 50% increase from the first five months of the Trump administration, through June 10, a period covered in a previous Post story. The rate from this summer was also more than five times higher than the daily arrest average from the same time period in 2024.
Of those detained over the summer, only a third had prior criminal convictions noted in the records. Another 18% had pending charges, indicating that nearly half had been neither convicted nor charged with a crime and that their only violation was immigration-related.
That, too, is a shift: In the earlier months of President Donald Trump’s second term, two-thirds of the 1,639 people arrested in Colorado had either been convicted of a crime (38%) or charged with one (29%).
“That tracks with what we would have expected (and) what we’ve been hearing from community sources,” said Henry Sandman, the co-executive director of the Colorado Immigrant Rights Coalition. “The data and the reality disproves ICE’s talking points that they’re going after criminals. We’re seeing tactics increase. They’re trying to increase arrest numbers as high as possible, whatever the reason may be for detaining folks.”
Steve Kotecki, a spokesman for Denver’s ICE field office, did not respond to a request for comment late last week.
The data, obtained directly from ICE by the UC Berkeley researchers through a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit, offers the clearest look at immigration enforcement activities available, as ICE doesn’t post recent information online. For this analysis, The Post examined arrests that occurred in Colorado; arrests that were listed in the dataset as occurring in Wyoming but which took place in a Colorado city; and arrests lacking a listed state but which occurred in a Colorado town or county.
The Post removed several apparent duplicate arrests and a similarly small number of arrests in the region that did not have a specific location listed. The analysis also included a handful of people who appeared to have been arrested twice in the span of several months.
When listing a detainee’s criminal background, the data provides no details about the criminal charges or prior crimes. Illegally entering the country is typically treated as a civil matter upon first offense, but a subsequent entry is a felony criminal offense.
The newly released data includes the same nine-day period in July during which ICE has said it arrested 243 immigrants without proper legal status “who are currently charged with or have been convicted of criminal offenses after illegally entering the United States.” The arrests, the agency said, all occurred in metro Denver.
But the data published by the UC-Berkeley researchers does not fully match ICE’s public representations.
During the same time frame, the agency arrested 232 people, according to the data. Most of those arrested during that time had never been convicted or charged with a crime, at least according to what’s in the records. Sixty-six people had a previous criminal conviction, and 34 more had pending charges.
Kotecki did not respond to questions about the July operation.
The Post previously reported that ICE falsely claimed that it had arrested a convicted murderer in Denver as part of the July operation. The man had actually been arrested at a state prison facility shortly after his scheduled release, state prison officials said last month.
While ICE claimed the man had found “sanctuary” in the capital city — a shot taken at Denver’s immigration ordinances — The Post found that state prison officials had coordinated his transfer directly to ICE. He was then deported to Mexico, and information matching his description is reflected in the UC Berkeley data.
It’s unclear if all of ICE’s arrests are fully reflected in the data, making it difficult to verify ICE’s claims. The researchers’ data is imperfect, experts have told The Post. The records likely represent the merging of separate datasets before they were provided by the government, increasing the likelihood of mistakes or missing data.
Some arrests in Colorado were listed as occurring in other states or had no state listed at all. Other arrests were duplicated entirely, and researchers have cautioned that ICE’s data at times has had inaccurate or missing information.
The anonymized nature of the data, which lacks arrestees’ names but lists some biographical information, also can make it difficult to verify. When ICE announced the results of the July operation, it named eight of the people it had arrested. Court records and the UC Berkeley data appear to match up with as many as seven of them.
The eighth, Blanca Ochoa Tello, was arrested on July 14 by ICE’s investigative branch in a drug-trafficking investigation, court filings show. But it’s unclear if she appears in the ICE data, as she was arrested in La Plata County and no woman arrested in that county was listed in the data.
To verify ICE’s July operation claims, The Post examined arrest data in Colorado and Wyoming, which jointly form the Denver area of operations for the agency. The Post also searched for arrests in every other state to identify any arrests that may have occurred in a Colorado area but were errantly listed under other states.
The overall surge in arrests this summer has come as the Trump administration seeks to dramatically increase detentions and, eventually, the pace of deportations. In early July, Congress approved tens of billions of dollars in new funding for ICE as part of the tax bill.
Nationally, immigration authorities had their most arrest-heavy months this summer, according to data published by researchers at Syracuse University. Immigration officials arrested more than 36,700 people in June, its highest single-month total since June 2019, during Trump’s first term. More than 31,200 were arrested across the country in July.
The Trump administration has also set out to increase its detention capacity to accommodate the mass-deportation plans.
As of late July, ICE planned to triple its detention capacity in Colorado, according to documents obtained last month by the Washington Post. That plan includes opening as many as three new facilities and the expansion of Colorado’s sole existing facility in Aurora.
As of last month, that detention center housed 1,176 people, according to data published by ICE.

Over the course of this year, ICE arrested people in Colorado who were originally from more than 60 countries, according to the data. That included 10 Iranians arrested in late June or early July. Six of those people were arrested on June 22, the day after the U.S. bombed Iranian nuclear facilities. Three more were arrested over the next 48 hours.
ICE publicly announced two of those arrests — and nine others nationally — on June 24.
The vast majority of the undocumented immigrants who were arrested and deported were returned to their home countries, though roughly 50 were sent somewhere else, the data show. Nine Venezuelans were sent to El Salvador in the first two weeks of the Trump administration, when alleged gang members were dispatched to a notorious prison there.
ProPublica identified roughly a dozen Coloradans who were sent to that prison. It reported that several were arrested in late January, which matches information listed in the ICE data published by UC Berkeley.
Advocates’ fears of continued arrests have escalated as ICE’s funding has surged. On Aug. 30, several immigration advocates picketed outside an ICE field office in Centennial after a number of immigrants received abrupt notices to check in at the facility.
Four people were detained, said Jordan Garcia, the program director for the American Friends Service Committee’s immigrant-rights program in Colorado.
Among them, he said, was an older Cuban man with dementia. Garcia and other advocates spoke with the man and his son before they entered the facility. The son later came out, Garcia said, and said that his father had been detained.
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No one in Colorado took home the nearly $1.8 billion Powerball jackpot on Saturday, but seven lucky ticket holders across the state still walked away winners.
The seven large-prize tickets sold in Colorado are worth between $50,000 and $1 million, according to a news release from the Colorado Lottery. The prizes include:
Two Powerball players in Missouri and Texas won the nearly $1.8 billion jackpot during Saturday night’s drawing, ending the lottery game’s three-month drought without a winner. The two winners will split the jackpot.
The winning numbers were 11, 23, 44, 61, and 62, with the Powerball number being 17.
The winning ticket in Texas was sold at a gas station-convenience store in Fredericksburg, according to the Texas Lottery.
The $1.787 billion prize, which was the second-largest U.S. lottery jackpot in history, followed 41 consecutive drawings in which no one matched all six numbers. The last drawing with a jackpot winner happened on May 31.
Powerball’s terrible odds of 1 in 292.2 million are designed to generate big jackpots, with prizes growing as they roll over when no one wins. Lottery officials note that the odds are far better for the game’s many smaller prizes. There are three drawings each week.
The Missouri and Texas winners will have the choice between an annuitized prize of $893.5 million or a lump sum payment of $410.3 million. Both prize options are before taxes. If a winner selects the annuity option, they will receive one immediate payment followed by 29 annual payments that increase by 5% each year. Powerball tickets cost $2, and the game is offered in 45 states plus Washington, D.C., Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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Lauren Penington
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AURORA, Colo. — A high-speed collision between a Suzuki motorcycle and an Acura SUV in Aurora on Friday afternoon left a 17-year-old girl and an 18-year-old man dead at the scene, according to Aurora police.
The Aurora Police Department (APD) said the crash happened around 3:30 p.m. on E. Arapahoe Road and E. Peakview Drive.
An investigation revealed that the 18-year-old man was driving the bike at a high rate of speed eastbound on E. Arapahoe Road and crashed into a westbound SUV making a left turn from E. Arapahoe Road onto E. Temple Court.
His 17-year-old passenger was also killed in the crash.
The driver of the SUV, who was the sole occupant, was taken to the hospital with non-life-threatening injuries.
APD’s Traffic Investigations Unit was dispatched to the scene. The intersection was closed for several hours for the investigation and was reopened around 9:43 p.m.
The identities of the two victims have not been released. However, one victim is believed to have attended Grandview High School.
It’s not clear if any citations were issued.
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DENVER — A man convicted of murder in the 2022 death of community activist Ma Kaing was sentenced to life in prison Friday.
Pa Reh was one of four suspects arrested in connection with the killing of Kaing, a mother of four and a community activist who had recently opened Taw Win Oo at the corner of Yosemite Street and E. 11th Avenue in Aurora.
Kaing and her children had arrived home the night of July 15, 2022, at the Hidden Brook Apartments when multiple suspects, including Reh, were exchanging gunfire at a park just south of the apartments.
The group of suspects noticed a vehicle they did not recognize driving around the park and “didn’t believe the vehicle belonged in the area,” according to a Denver Police Department official, who added that each suspect was armed with a firearm and shot multiple rounds at the driver as they passed on 13th Avenue.
Kaing, who was with her family unloading a vehicle after a late night at the restaurant, was struck by a stray bullet. She was pronounced dead at the scene.
Police said at the time they believed the shooting was gang-related.
‘That’s valuable time wasted’: Family calls for changes to 911 following shooting in East Colfax neighborhood
In the days after the shooting, Kaing’s eldest son, Kyaw Lwin “John” Oo, spoke to Denver7, describing the moments during and after the shooting, including the poor response from 911 operators, who he claimed hung up during various 911 calls — an allegation denied by spokespersons from both Denver and Aurora at the time.
Four people were arrested in the shooting about a month later: Nu La, Swa Bay, Lu Reh and Pa Reh.
In July, a Denver jury found Pa Reh guilty of first-degree murder and attempted murder, according to a spokesperson with the Denver District Attorney’s Office. He was sentenced Friday to life in prison.
“Pa Reh and three other men took the life of Ma Kaing, a beloved member and leader of her community, and of Denver. Her murder was an unspeakable tragedy for her family, for her immigrant community and, frankly, for all of us in Denver. Today, Pa Reh was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole for his senseless act of violence. That sentence cannot bring Ma Kaing back, but it can send the powerful message that violence will not be tolerated in Denver,” said Denver District Attorney John Walsh in a statement. “I hope the sentence will also provide some measure of justice and comfort to the many people who knew and loved Ma Kaing. I want to thank the prosecutors, investigators and victim advocates in the Denver DA’s Office, as well as the outstanding homicide detectives with the Denver Police Department, whose incredible work resulted in the successful outcome of this case.”
Nu La and Swa Bay were originally charged with several counts, including first-degree murder, but pleaded guilty last year to second-degree murder as part of a plea deal. They will be sentenced in September.
Lu Reh was convicted earlier this year in connection with the crime.
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Sydney Isenberg
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Federal prosecutors charged 30 people with largely gun and drug-trafficking crimes after a months-long investigation in metro Denver, a mix of federal and local officials announced at a news conference Monday.
Those charged include eight people who investigators believe are members of the Venezuelan gang Tren De Aragua, U.S. Attorney Peter McNeilly said. He said he considers three of the eight gang members to be “leaders.” Two of the leaders were arrested July 30 in Colombia, court records show.
McNeilly could not say how many Tren de Aragua gang members remain in Colorado, whether the local members were taking direction from leaders in Venezuela, or how many of the 30 people arrested in the operation were Venezuelan nationals.
David Olesky, a special agent in charge with the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration, said the federal charges against eight gang members “diminished” Tren de Aragua’s “influence and capabilities” in the Denver area.
The federal investigation started in October when Arapahoe County Sheriff Tyler Brown sought federal assistance to deal with rising crime at the Ivy Crossing apartments on Quebec Street. The subsequent investigation involved at least 40 undercover operations and branched out significantly from the apartment complex.
Federal investigators seized or purchased 69 guns during the investigation, according to court records. Twenty-seven of those guns were connected through ballistics to 67 “separate shooting events,” said Brent Beavers, Denver special agent in charge for the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives.
Court records show those incidents included drive-by shootings, an attempted carjacking and a shootout between two large groups, among others.
“By removing these firearms from the street, we’ve disrupted a dangerous cycle of violence, prevented further harm to our community and sent a clear message to criminal networks,” Beavers said.
The defendants in the federal cases announced Monday were not charged in connection with those shootings.
Rather, the majority of defendants face charges of possessing guns, conspiring to illegally traffic guns, distributing drugs and conspiring to distribute drugs in connection with incidents in which they are accused of selling drugs or guns to undercover federal agents.
If convicted, the defendants face between five and 20 years in prison on many of the charges.
Six of the defendants are also charged with conspiring to commit murder-for-hire. An undercover agent asked the defendants in May if they could hire the defendants to kill two people for $10,000. The defendants allegedly agreed to commit the homicides for $15,000, and one defendant also offered to decapitate the victims and return their heads to the undercover agents for an additional $5,000.
Several of the defendants were arrested after they met up to get ready for the killings, according to an affidavit.
Conspiracy to commit murder for hire can be punished by up to 10 years in prison.
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Shelly Bradbury
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“Last I checked, political affiliation doesn’t exclude you from being a police officer,” the new police chief said.
People line up for a rally for former President Donald Trump at Aurora’s Gaylord Rockies hotel. Oct. 11, 2024.
Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite
In a social media post, the new Aurora police chief defended the Aurora Police Department for recruiting potential new police officers at a campaign rally for former President Donald Trump.
“Last I checked, political affiliation doesn’t exclude you from being a police officer,” said Aurora Police Chief Todd Chamberlain in a blunt response through APD’s account on X, formerly known as Twitter.
In a recent Aurora Sentinel article, some council members described the APD’s presence as irresponsible and said the event at the Gaylord Rockies Resort & Convention Center last week was built on fear mongering and xenophobia. Chamberlain said the APD looks for potential new employees at many local events including parades, college job fairs, churches, and nonprofit organizations.
“We will actively capitalize on large crowds and gatherings to raise awareness about the department, and attract potential candidates to the best agency in the United States, the Aurora Police Department,” Chamberlain said.” We are an apolitical organization committed to public service and dedicated to ensuring the city of Aurora is a safe and vibrant community to live, raise a family and own a business.”
One commenter asked if APD would recruit at events for Vice President Kamala Harris, who is this year’s Democratic presidential nominee.
“If VP Harris came to Aurora, we would absolutely recruit at that event, as well! We’ve previously recruited at Democratic sponsored events,” APD responded.
In APD’s Strategic Recruitment Plan released in 2023, diversity is the top goal. Chamberlain reiterated that in his response.
“The decision by our officers to attend Friday’s rally shows initiative and is in line with our commitment to draw a diverse and large pool of candidates to alleviate our present staffing issues,” Chamberlain said.
From top to bottom, the Aurora Police Department hasn’t been imune the national shortage of officers in recent years. Reputation, safety concerns, and mental health are just a few reasons cited for the shortage. The city took 28 months and went through three interim chiefs before hiring Chamberlain.
Most of the concerns about APD recruiting at the event stemmed from former President Donald Trump’s comments about the Tres den Auragua presence in Aurora apartment complexes. Council members and activists said those comments demonized immigrants. The Republican presidential nominee even drew criticism from Republican Aurora Mayor Mike Coffman.
The use of excessive force that has led to the deaths of Elijah McClain and more recently, Kilyn Lewis, hasn’t helped APD’s recruitment efforts either. Those actions by officers have led to Aurora being the first city in Colorado to be under consent decree by the State Attorney General’s Office.
The Aurora City Council approved the reinstatement of reserve police officers in August 2023 due to lack of interest and dwindling numbers. The program was shut down in 2005 in a City code clean-up initiative.
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John Fabbricatore enforced federal immigration laws in his position as an ICE field office director until two years ago, and now he hopes to help secure America’s borders as a congressman.
The Republican candidate in Colorado’s 6th Congressional District is drawing on his career with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement as he runs against U.S. Rep. Jason Crow in the Nov. 5 election. Crow, a Democrat, just finished his third term in Congress as the representative of the district, which includes Aurora, Littleton, Englewood, Greenwood Village and Centennial.
The odds weigh heavily in Crow’s favor. The nonpartisan Cook Political Report doesn’t consider the fight for the 6th District to be competitive. It’s ranked as solidly Democratic, in part because Crow, 45, won all three of his elections by double-digit percentages and redistricting in 2020 resulted in boundaries more favorable to Democrats.
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John Fabbricatore enforced federal immigration laws in his position as an ICE field office director until two years ago, and now he hopes to help secure America’s borders as a congressman.
The Republican candidate in Colorado’s 6th Congressional District is drawing on his career with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement as he runs against U.S. Rep. Jason Crow in the Nov. 5 election. Crow, a Democrat, just finished his third term in Congress as the representative of the district, which includes Aurora, Littleton, Englewood, Greenwood Village and Centennial.
The odds weigh heavily in Crow’s favor. The nonpartisan Cook Political Report doesn’t consider the fight for the 6th District to be competitive. It’s ranked as solidly Democratic, in part because Crow, 45, won all three of his elections by double-digit percentages and redistricting in 2020 resulted in boundaries more favorable to Democrats.
That’s a change from 2018 when the district was seen as a battleground and Crow won his first race by unseating then-U.S. Rep. Mike Coffman, now Aurora’s mayor.
But this time, Fabbricatore, 52, says voters are looking for a candidate who will prioritize the economy and lower taxes — and he contends that he’s the person for the job.
“They want someone that wants to fight,” Fabbricatore said.
He and Crow share certain traits. They’re both veterans: Fabbricatore served in the U.S. Air Force, and Crow was an Army Ranger. They’re hunters, each having longstanding experience with firearms. Neither hails from Colorado originally, with Fabbricatore raised in New York City and Crow in Madison, Wisconsin.
And the candidates, both fathers of two children, reside in Aurora.
Beyond that, their stances on major issues diverge — including on immigration, which Fabbricatore refers to as his “subject matter expertise.”
He argues jobs are going to immigrants compensated with lower wages, taking positions that could be filled by Americans for higher pay. Fabbricatore says he supports “legal, vetted” immigration and more stringent enforcement of existing laws.
“If we actually just enforce those laws, we will be doing much better than we are doing today with immigration,” he said.
In recent weeks, Fabbricatore has raised the alarm alongside former President Donald Trump and other conservatives about the presence of Venezuelan gangs in Aurora — while Crow has called out exaggerations and criticized Trump for distorting the problems in certain apartment complexes.
Crow notes that he represents “one of the most diverse districts in the nation,” with nearly 20% of his constituents born outside of the U.S. He wants to use federal grants and other programs to help immigrants and defend them against racist rhetoric.
He said he backed a bipartisan immigration deal that ran aground earlier this year after failing to earn enough Republican support. It would have boosted the number of border patrol agents, immigration judges and officers that oversee asylum cases, as well as established more legal pathways for migrants and others without documentation.
Fabbricatore said in a Denver Post candidate questionnaire that he would not have supported the bipartisan bill, instead preferring another bill with a greater focus on border security.
Gun violence is what motivated Crow to run for office. He backs a ban on assault weapons and supports universal background checks. He’s also working to pass a bill that would apply the same restrictions to out-of-state residents when they purchase long guns and shotguns as they face when buying handguns — requiring that the gun be shipped to a federally licensed seller in their home state, with a background check performed there.
Gun violence is “just an unacceptable, avoidable, ongoing national tragedy,” Crow said. “We don’t have to live with mass shootings.”
Fabbricatore says he believes in gun rights and is instead pushing for investments in mental health.
The candidates differ on abortion. Crow favors abortion rights, saying he aligns with the majority of Coloradans who back legal access to abortion — and he would support a federal law establishing that as a right. Fabbricatore says Congress should leave abortion’s legal status to the states. He opposes abortion, but he says he recognizes a need for exceptions, including in cases of rape.
“Having been someone who worked in sex trafficking and saw what many women went through, I could never tell a woman that she couldn’t have a medical procedure to end what happened to her,” he said.
Fabbricatore points to the economy as his No. 1 issue, saying it’s impacted by energy policy and immigration. He sees Colorado’s potential to participate in the energy sector through solar, wind, fracking and coal.
He says he wants to leave the younger generations with a prosperous economy, reliable job market and reasonable housing prices.
Crow says the nation’s inflation and interest rates are dropping, but he contends that prices are still “way too high for many Coloradans.”
He points to corporate price gouging as a contributing factor. Crow argues that the labor shortage, which drives up prices, could be addressed through immigration reform.
He touted the Inflation Reduction Act’s provisions lowering the cost of many prescription drugs for Medicare enrollees.
“There’s more work to do, but we’re on a good path — and certainly need to keep on the path that we are to make sure things are affordable,” Crow said.
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Megan Ulu-Lani Boyanton
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Sky watchers in parts of Northern California may catch another glimpse of the Northern Lights on Thursday night. NOAA’s Space Weather Prediction Center issued a severe geomagnetic storm watch through Thursday. The center said a fast coronal mass ejection (CME) erupted from the Sun on Tuesday and there is the potential for a G4 geomagnetic storm upon arrival. That means an aurora borealis may become visible across much of the northern half of the United States, as far south as Alabama to parts of Northern California, according to the center. Geomagnetic storms are measured from G1 (minor) to G5 (extreme). The scale is based on powers of 10, meaning a G2 storm is 10 times stronger than a G1 storm and so on.The storm in May that produced auroras across much of California and as far south as Florida was a G5 storm. On Monday, some people in Northern California reported seeing another aurora. NOAA’s aurora forecast dashboard showed a possible view line extending into southern Oregon for Thursday night. Bryan Brasher with NOAA said auroras typically happen up to 250 miles above the surface of the Earth and view lines could extend up to 600 or 800 miles away.“Aurora can weaken and intensify very quickly and there are times where they could be seen south of the view line, but that line is a best guess on the limit to which people could expect to have a chance to see them,” he said ahead of the event.Meteorologist Tamara Berg said auroras are best viewed away from city lights and could be visible Thursday in between passing clouds. Peak viewing is between 10 p.m. and 2 a.m. Aurora sightings are also reported on the NASA-funded science project Aurorasaurus. You can sign up to get alerts from the Aurorasaurus.See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app | Subscribe to our morning newsletter
Sky watchers in parts of Northern California may catch another glimpse of the Northern Lights on Thursday night.
NOAA’s Space Weather Prediction Center issued a severe geomagnetic storm watch through Thursday.
The center said a fast coronal mass ejection (CME) erupted from the Sun on Tuesday and there is the potential for a G4 geomagnetic storm upon arrival.
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You may be able to find the same content in another format, or you may be able to find more information, at their web site.
That means an aurora borealis may become visible across much of the northern half of the United States, as far south as Alabama to parts of Northern California, according to the center.
This content is imported from Twitter.
You may be able to find the same content in another format, or you may be able to find more information, at their web site.
Geomagnetic storms are measured from G1 (minor) to G5 (extreme). The scale is based on powers of 10, meaning a G2 storm is 10 times stronger than a G1 storm and so on.
The storm in May that produced auroras across much of California and as far south as Florida was a G5 storm. On Monday, some people in Northern California reported seeing another aurora.
NOAA’s aurora forecast dashboard showed a possible view line extending into southern Oregon for Thursday night.
Bryan Brasher with NOAA said auroras typically happen up to 250 miles above the surface of the Earth and view lines could extend up to 600 or 800 miles away.
“Aurora can weaken and intensify very quickly and there are times where they could be seen south of the view line, but that line is a best guess on the limit to which people could expect to have a chance to see them,” he said ahead of the event.
Meteorologist Tamara Berg said auroras are best viewed away from city lights and could be visible Thursday in between passing clouds. Peak viewing is between 10 p.m. and 2 a.m.
Aurora sightings are also reported on the NASA-funded science project Aurorasaurus. You can sign up to get alerts from the Aurorasaurus.
See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app | Subscribe to our morning newsletter
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MINNEAPOLIS — Get your cameras ready, Minnesota, because a big northern lights show is expected after sundown on Thursday due to the arrival of a severe geomagnetic storm.
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Space Weather Prediction Center says a coronal mass ejection (CME) left the sun on Wednesday at about 9 p.m. CST, traveling at about 1.5 million miles an hour. It arrived at Earth on Thursday just after 10 a.m. CST.
“This is a very speedy CME. It’s the fastest CME that we’ve really measured that had a total-Earth component in the solar cycle so far,” said space weather forecaster Shawn Dahl.
The storm’s current strength is rated at G4, which means it’s severe, but it has the potential of reaching G5, or extreme strength. The storm could last through Saturday.
Dahl’s team says the storm “could impact ongoing recovery efforts for Hurricanes Helene and Milton” due to possible disruptions to communication satellites, high-frequency radio signals, GPS systems and power grids that have already been strained by the massive storms.
NOAA
NOAA has a spacecraft located 1 million miles from Earth which alerts the prediction center when solar flares are between 15-30 minutes from reaching our planet. Nevertheless, space storm forecasting is a pretty unpredictable science.
You can watch the storm’s activity in real time on the prediction center’s website.
On the upside, auroras are expected to be visible on Thursday night in Minnesota and Wisconsin — if clouds cooperate — and as far south as Alabama.
Bryan Brasher, the prediction center’s project manager, says we’re at the peak of Solar Cycle 25, with each cycle lasting about 11 years. He says this cycle has been much more active than predicted.
All that activity has given Minnesotans plenty of opportunities to marvel at dancing light shows in the sky, with the most recent batch of auroras visible in the Twin Cities and other parts of the state this past weekend.
This current storm could even rival the one in May, which produced incredible auroras over Minnesota, but it’s unclear if it will be as strong or will last as long.
The prediction center says CMEs are “tremendous explosions of solar and embedded magnetic fields.” When a CME hits and envelopes our planet’s magnetic field, the collision of its electrically-charged particles with our atmosphere can produce dazzling waves of color in the sky.
Check out these tips from the pros on photographing the northern lights.
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The Northern Lights may be visible in the D.C. area Wednesday night. WTOP’s Greg Redfern explains how to catch a glimpse.
Here we go again, and so soon!
Aurora finally lit up Virginia skies the nights of Oct. 7 and 8, which was a bit later than had been predicted by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Space Weather Prediction Center as related in my story. That event did achieve the G3 (Strong) level to produce aurora.
SWPC issued an alert Wednesday morning for a G4 (Severe) or greater event for Oct. 10 and 11. As stated in the alert:
“Potential Impacts: Area of impact primarily poleward of 45 degrees Geomagnetic Latitude.
Induced Currents — Possible widespread voltage control problems and some protective systems may mistakenly trip out key assets from the power grid. Induced pipeline currents intensify.
Spacecraft — Systems may experience surface charging; increased drag on low earth orbit satellites, and tracking and orientation problems may occur.
Navigation — Satellite navigation (GPS) degraded or inoperable for hours.
Radio — HF (high frequency) radio propagation sporadic or blacked out.
Aurora — Aurora may be seen as low as Alabama and northern California.”
This Geomagnetic Storm Watch is in effect due to a large coronal mass ejection that occurred Sunday. The coronal mass ejection was caused by a powerful solar flare that lasted for four hours!
This geomagnetic storm and associated aurora event forecast is not predicted to reach the historic levels of May 10 of this year. But, we should be watching the skies because if the forecast holds for G4 (Severe), and especially if G5 (Extreme) levels are reached, it could be quite the sight.
For the D.C. region on Wednesday night, the forecast shows we may detect aurora to the North thanks to our forecasted clear skies
If the Space Weather Prediction Center forecast holds, aurora conditions may be strong enough the night of Oct. 10-11 to allow us to detect aurora visually and with our cameras.
It will be well worth taking a look to the north from a dark sky site with a clear horizon at times when G4 levels — see forecast below — are reached. The higher the number, the better chances for aurora. This forecast can change.
The Space Weather Prediction Center’s three-day NOAA geomagnetic activity observation and forecast is below:
Oct. 10
8 p.m. to 11 p.m. — 8.83 (G4 Severe)
Oct. 11
11 p.m. (Oct. 10) to 2 a.m. — 8.00 (G4 Severe)
2 a.m. to dawn — 7.00 (G3)
Analysis of the CME associated with the X1.8 flare suggests further enhancement 10 Oct into 11 Oct, reaching G4 (Severe) levels is likely with G5 (Extreme) levels possible.
You might be able to visually detect some color in the sky if aurora are present, but they will likely be low on the northern horizon. Wide field binoculars can enhance your view if aurora are present.
Use a camera or smartphone that can take exposures of several seconds — including using “Night Sky” or “Low Light” settings if your camera has them — of the northern horizon. Steady the camera or use a tripod for best image results. The camera may capture aurora your eyes did not.
Our best bet is to monitor WTOP’s weather page for sky conditions, the NOAA, space-related social media sites, EarthSky.org and space.com for updates.
Spaceweather.com — I check this site every day just as I do my local weather — has a daily snapshot of what the space weather in the solar system is going to be like and a current image of the sun.
With our terrestrial weather being such a factor in our daily lives here in the D.C. area, and frankly, the rest of the world, we are also directly affected by space weather, which can produce a variety of events, including Wednesday’s geomagnetic storm and aurora.
Space Weather, like our terrestrial weather, is caused by Earth’s interaction with our star, the sun. We know it will be there every new day and count on it for life-giving warmth and energy. We also have become accustomed to it being well behaved. What many people may not know is that our sun undergoes an 11-year solar cycle that can affect space weather throughout our solar system.
Our sun is a 4.5-billion-year-old star that we have been monitoring since Galileo.
The sun had an episode of disturbed behavior in 1859 that, if it were to occur today, could adversely affect us if we were not prepared.
In 1859 on Sept. 1, the sun experienced a solar storm episode that was observed by solar astronomer Richard Carrington that ended up bearing his name — “the Carrington Event.” This was a watershed event in solar astronomy and also the sun’s effect on the Earth, as nothing like it has been seen since.
If a Carrington-level solar event were to happen today, the affect on modern society’s infrastructure could be potentially catastrophic, especially the electrical grid, which powers everything else. If you think this is unlikely, or too sci-fi to be true, I suggest you read the report by the National Academies of Science published in 2008.
Last year, the sun had a very powerful space weather event on March 12, which, fortunately for us, occurred on the far side of the sun.
You listen to WTOP for “traffic and weather together on the eights.” Maybe now you will want to include a check on space weather too as part of your daily weather routine.
I will be at Peaks of Otter on Wednesday night and I must say, I am excited! I think it may be an all-nighter!
Good luck, aurora chasers …
Follow Greg Redfern on Facebook, X and his daily blog to keep up with the latest news in astronomy and space exploration.
Get breaking news and daily headlines delivered to your email inbox by signing up here.
© 2024 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.
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The city will stop trying to shut down the Edge at Lowry and Whispering Pines Apartments as a third party takes over.
The Edge at Lowry apartment complex, near Aurora’s border with Denver. Sept. 18, 2024.
Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite
The owners of two Aurora apartment buildings at the center of an immigration controversy have allegedly failed to make loan payments on about $9 million in debt, resulting in a court giving control of the properties to a third party.
With the change, it appears that the buildings are no longer under threat of closure by the city.
The buildings in question — Whispering Pines Apartments and part of the Edge at Lowry complex— have gained national attention because of an alleged Venezuelan gang presence.
The owners had used the buildings as collateral to secure loans. The buildings are owned by several LLCs linked to CBZ Properties and a man named Zev Baumgarten. But the owners have failed to make payments on the loans in recent months, according to two lawsuits filed by U.S. Bank in recent weeks against the owners.
The landlords have “reported that gang-related activity at the Property has interfered with collection of rents and repairs,” both of the lawsuits claimed.
The building owners failed to make loan payments in July, August and September, putting them in default, the lawsuits claim. When a loan is in default, the lender can try to take the collateral (in this case, the apartments) as a form of compensation for the unpaid debt.
“The Defendants’ inability to pay operating expenses because they lack the
necessary cash flow from the Property places the rents, issues and profits of the Property in
danger of being lost,” one of the lawsuits argued.

The lawsuits are getting results: Both buildings have been placed into receivership, meaning a third party, Kevin A. Singer of California, is now in charge of running the properties, collecting rents and more on behalf of the bank.
Mayor Mike Coffman’s office celebrated the orders as a win. “We are thrilled that the property owners and managers have agreed to let a court-appointed, third-party receiver take control of these private properties to finally address the longstanding issues at each of them,” wrote spokesperson Ryan Luby in an email.
Tenants have complained for months about rodents, broken-down appliances, mold and more. Tenants have complained of a lack of services and repairs, while crime concerns have mounted. A video captured six armed men breaking into an apartment at the Edge, although it’s unclear if they are linked to a gang or not. Shortly afterward, a man was shot to death outside the apartments.
Aurora police have linked 10 men to the Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua, and charged at least one with threatening people at the Edge at Lowry.
The city had threatened to close the Edge at Lowry through a criminal nuisance case, but that’s off the table for now, Luby said.

U.S. Bank had commissioned a law firm to investigate alleged gang problems at Whispering Pines, finding that Tren de Aragua had tried to steal up to half of rent payments for the building, The Denver Gazette reported.
On Sept. 29, a local judge placed Whispering Pines under receivership. Another judge did the same for the Edge at Lowry on Monday. The Denver Post reported earlier on the receivership orders.
Singer, a California-based specialist in receivership, was designated as receiver of both properties. Singer didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment about his immediate plans for the properties.
The property owners took out a roughly $2 million loan in April 2022 and another $7.2M loan in Sept. 2023. The owners have paid less than $100,000 of the principal (the actual loan amount) on the first loan and practically none of the principal on the second loan, the lawsuits claim. It’s unclear how much interest had been paid.
The lawsuits were filed against a series of limited-liability companies: 200 Columbia Realty, BZMRS, Whispering Pines Partners and 733 DeKalb Realty. All three share the same address in Denver and are linked to landlord CBZ Management and Zev Baumgarten.
Another related building, Fitzsimons Apartments, was previously closed by the city. But the story is still playing a significant role in national media and politics — with former President Donald Trump set to visit Aurora on Friday.
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By Bianca Vázquez Toness/AP Education Writer
East Colfax Avenue was the best place to find a job. That’s what everyone told Sofia Roca.
Never mind the open drug use, the sex workers or the groups of other migrant women marching the sidewalks soliciting work at the very same Mexican restaurants and bakeries.
On East Colfax in Aurora, Colorado, bosses would speak Spanish and might be willing to hire someone like Roca — a 49-year-old immigrant from Colombia — without legal authorization to work. That was the rationale for going back each morning, fruitless as it was.
“Do you know how to cook Mexican food?” asked one woman when Roca inquired about a kitchen position. Roca’s accent was a giveaway: not Mexican.
“I can learn,” Roca replied in Spanish.
Responded the woman: “We’re not hiring.”
As record numbers of South Americans attempt to cross the U.S. southern border, many are landing in communities that are unprepared for them — and sometimes outright hostile.
Women are leaving Colombia, and to a greater extent Venezuela, to escape starvation and violence, to provide for their children and to seek medical care. They represent some of the more than 42,000 migrants who have arrived in the Denver area over two years. Many didn’t know anyone in Denver. But it was the closest city to which Texas was offering free bus rides, both to relieve pressure on its towns and to make a political point to liberal-leaning cities about immigration’s impact on the border.
From Denver, untold numbers made their way to the suburb of Aurora, lured by cheaper rent and abundant Spanish speakers. But finding a job has been anything but easy, and women face their own particular challenges.
Last year, nearly 900,000 women and girls tried to cross the U.S. southern border, more than a fivefold increase over the last decade, U.S. Customs and Border Protection data shows. Like many of them, Roca came to the U.S. to help her children. Her adult daughter in Colombia suffers from lupus and can’t afford “the good medicines.”
After making it across the U.S. border, Roca told U.S. agents she was seeking asylum. She heard from a shelter worker in El Paso that Denver was offering migrants free housing and Texas would pay to get her there.
Roca arrived in November and stayed two weeks in a shelter. When she went looking for work along East Colfax, she observed an icy reception.
She didn’t know the benefits many recent migrants have received — specifically, a path to a temporary work visa and with it better-paying jobs — were causing resentment among Aurora’s large Mexican community. Many have loved ones in the country illegally or have themselves lived for years in the United States without legal permission to work.
Resentment for newcomers was building in another corner of Aurora, too — City Hall. Aurora officials in February had warned other communities against housing migrants there, vowing not to spend city money to help them. This summer, Aurora’s mayor repeated a landlord’s claim that a notorious Venezuelan gang had taken over an apartment building. Even though police say that’s false, former President Donald Trump took up the claim, mentioning it at his campaign rallies. The mayor last month walked back some of his comments.
Roca never made a deliberate decision to settle in Aurora. To her, it wasn’t clear where Denver ended and Aurora began.
So when Roca’s time is almost up at the Denver shelter, she does the only thing she knows to do: She heads to East Colfax in Aurora.
A man standing by his truck outside a thrift store catches her attention. He says he can help her, but not in Colorado. She can come to Kentucky with him and his family.

After more than a week of staying with the family in Kentucky, Roca learns the man’s wife works in el negocio, or “the business.” There is not much work in Kentucky, so she earns her money through sex work, she tells Roca, while her kids play a few feet away.
A few days later, a Mexican man in his 30s pulls up outside the couple’s trailer in a pickup truck.
He’d seen a picture of Roca and liked her — and would pay $1,000 for two nights with Roca, the wife says. Roca would keep $600, the couple would get $400.
In her month in the United States, Roca has come to understand she’ll have to make sacrifices in this country. But subjecting herself to the whims of a stranger in such an intimate and vulnerable way?
“No,” she tells the woman. “I’m not going anywhere with anyone.”
The man is told to leave. The insults start immediately.
How are you going to earn money, girl? asks the woman. You’re not going to just live here for free.
Back to Aurora and East Colfax Avenue.
On most days walking along Colfax, Roca says, men would solicit her for sex, holding up their fingers to signal how many hundreds of dollars they were willing to pay.
As she looked for work in March, she came across what looked like an old motel. A man behind a plexiglass window urged her to try the bar in the back.
At a few Mexican cantinas around Aurora and Denver, “ficheras,” as the women are known in Spanish, sell beers at a markup to men and pocket the profits. It can be a fast way to earn money, but also a route to sex trafficking.
“I don’t think I have to do that yet,” Roca said. “But this street — it only offers prostitution.”
Since returning to Aurora, Roca had discovered she has few options for establishing legal residence or working legally in the U.S. She told U.S. Border Patrol officials she plans to plead for asylum at her deportation hearing, but she doubts they will grant it.

She had gotten in touch through Facebook with a friend from Colombia living in the northeastern U.S. “She’s told me she can get me a job at a hotel and I can stay with her,” she said.
Two days later, with about $80 in her pocket, Roca boarded a Greyhound bus paid for by the city of Denver. (The Associated Press is not identifying her new location. Roca is afraid the Cuban couple might seek her out after she spoke about them in the media.)
Roca’s friend followed through on her promises, connecting her to a job cleaning hotel rooms. She walks through the city with ease — and anonymously.
“It’s a huge difference from my life in Denver,” she says. “There’s less chaos, and no one has disrespected me.”
She’s not sure how long she’ll stay. But Sofia Roca will never live in Aurora, Colorado, again.
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The most powerful eruption on the sun in years is extending the range in which the northern lights will be visible to possibly as far south as Pennsylvania – maybe even into the Philadelphia region – and the best chance to see the colorful auroras is predicted to be Saturday night.
The explosion, known as a coronal mass ejection, occurred Thursday. Scientists say it is strongest CME recorded since 2017, and it flung clouds of magnetized plasma into the solar system, creating a geomagnetic storm headed towards Earth.
MORE: Earth will gain a ‘mini moon’ for two months in the form of a tiny asteroid
The charged particles emitted from the sun interact with the Earth’s magnetic field, creating the array for colors in the night sky known as the northern lights or aurora borealis. In normal conditions the northern lights are only visible within the range of about 1,500 miles from the North Pole. Because of the power of this CME the aurora will be more intense, pushing the viewable range of the lights much further south.
But predicting when and where the northern lights will appear is difficult, even for experts.
“The challenge is actually understanding how severe the eruption is on the sun,” Derrick Pitts, chief astronomer at the Franklin Institute, said, “and how far down it will reach from the poles of the planet, down towards the mid-latitudes.”
Thursday’s eruption was the second CME this week. Both were accompanied by solar flares that emitted intense bursts of electromagnetic radiation traveling at the speed of light that reached the Earth about 8 minutes after each occured.
The magnetized plasma from the CME travels slower and can take 15 hours to several days to reach the Earth’s magnetic field, which results in the delay between Thursday’s eruption and the peak of the expected celestial event. It also makes it difficult to predict precisely when the northern lights will become more intense.
Today’s X9 (R3) flare was prolific, but impulsive (imagery courtesy of jhelioviewer). Still, the flare was associated with a CME and analyses and model runs are being conducted at this time. Updates will come later, stay tuned! pic.twitter.com/lMGQOIoR4l
— NOAA Space Weather Prediction Center (@NWSSWPC) October 3, 2024
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Space Weather Prediction Center maintains an aurora dashboard on its website. It has maps that show nightly predictions of the range of the aurora, other maps that forecast where the aurora will be visible in the next few minutes and more information.
There had been a chance the northern lights would be visible in the region on Friday night but cloudy skies interfered.
On Saturday night, the geomagnetic energy will be stronger and the National Weather Service predicts the sky over Philadelphia will be mostly clear.
The best opportunity to see the northern lights will be as far away from light pollution as possible. Pitts suggested going at least 60 miles north of Philadelphia to get away from the city’s lights – the closer to the Pennsylvania-New York border, the better.
Shawn Dahl, coordinator of NOAA’s Space Weather Prediction Center, said it’s a good idea to stake out the night sky around midnight.
“Usually we’re talking about a four-hour window – two hours before midnight, two hours after midnight – but that window of time can broaden the stronger the activity,” Dahl said. “The less strong the activity, that window can shorten up, but still a good time to start looking is a couple hours after dark, especially if conditions are favorable.”
Look low on the horizon for the aurora, Dahl said. If you can’t see anything, try taking a picture with a smartphone and other digital camera, both sometimes can pick up the lights better than the naked eye.
Autumn and spring are the best seasons for the aurora borealis because of the greater tendency for geomagnetic storms. This year, it also is a particularly active time because of the sun’s solar cycle: Every 11 years the sun’s magnetic poles flip and ahead of this happening there are more frequent CMEs, solar flares and sunspots.
The solar cycle will peak between the end of this year and early 2026. This period is called a solar maximum, Dahl said, which means the sun gets a little more “stressed out” and releases more energy.
So there could be more opportunities to see the northern lights during the next 18 months, but it’s impossible to say for sure. Pitts noted that not only do do the eruptions have to occur, they also have to be directed towards Earth so the geomagnetic storm collides with the Earth’s magnetic field.
Managing Editor Jon Tuleya contributed to this article.
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Michaela Althouse
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The Edge at Lowry and Whispering Pines are the latest CBZ properties in Aurora to face closure over habitability concerns and crime.
Jeraldine Mazo, a resident of Aurora’s Edge at Lowry apartment complex, speaks during a press conference to “set the record straight” on an alleged “gang takeover” of the property. Sept. 4, 2024.
Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite
Aurora Police Chief Todd Chamberlain threatened to shut down The Edge at Lowry and other apartment buildings where new immigrants are living.
Chamberlain says the goal is to make the landlord create safe, healthy living conditions.
But at a Thursday press conference, Edge at Lowry renters said they fear they’ll be left homeless by the city action.
The Edge made international news when a security video from Aug. 18 went viral, showing six men with guns entering an apartment. Shortly after the video was captured, a gunfight erupted outside the building and 25-year-old Oswaldo Jose Dabion Araujo was killed.
Former President Donald Trump and multiple media outlets have claimed the building has been taken over by the Venezuelan prison gang Tren de Aragua, a claim residents and Aurora police have denied. (He’s also falsely claimed the gang controls the whole city.)
On Sept. 20, the police department notified the owner, CBZ Management, that the properties were a criminal nuisance.
Chamberlain outlined a string of crimes committed around the apartments over the past few years. Those included carjacking, home invasion, aggravated assault with a firearm, murder and other gun crimes.
The threat to shutter the buildings was first reported by the Denver Post.

“Property owners are excepted to be vigilant in preventing or deterring crime on or in their property and will be held responsible for the use of their property by tenants, guests and occupants,” Chamberlain wrote. “APD is aware that there is no property management company present at this property and ownership has no plans to replace on-site property management services.”
Beyond criminal issues, Chamberlain cited a series of habitability concerns: “trash accumulation, leaking pipes, broken windows, unlawful vehicles and other public safety concerns.”
Chamberlain said it amounts to a significant public safety concern.
“If your property continues as a specified crime property despite this notice, I will authorize a civil proceeding seeking closure of the structure as well as the imposition of civil penalties against you, as the owner of the property,” Chamberlain wrote.
The chief gave the landlord 10 days to respond.
Residents of the Edge at Lowry have been rallying for weeks, asking the city to get the property owner to bring their apartments up to compliance.
The city earlier closed another CBZ property, the Fitzsimons Apartments at 1568 Nome St. Hundreds of people were kicked out of their homes by Aurora police, and the Edge at Lowry residents fear the same fate.

The renters held their Thursday press conference at another CBZ property, Whispering Pines, where Edge at Lowry resident Moises Didenot described a rental nightmare.
His family has dealt with mold, broken appliances and rodents. All of that’s bad, but it’s not as bad as homelessness, he said. He begged the city not to kick the tenants out.
“How is it that right now, when it’s starting to get cold and winter’s coming,” Didenot said. “They’re going to throw us out onto the streets.”
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Delmar Parkway was easy to forget.
The neighborhood in Aurora, on the border with Denver between Colfax Avenue and 6th Avenue, has the same problems as many neglected urban areas: trash piles, reckless drivers, poor lighting, vandalism, syringes, fireworks and bullet casings.
Oldtimers and newcomers differ on what they think the neighborhood’s future should be. But most people Denverite has spoken to agree: Neither cops, politicians, nor journalists have seemed to pay much attention.
That changed in late August. A camera captured armed men entering an apartment in a half-century-old apartment complex, The Edge at Lowry, at 12th Avenue and Dallas Street.
Minutes after the men entered the apartment, where many Venezuelan immigrants live, gunfire erupted outside the complex, and 25-year-old Oswaldo Jose Dabion Araujo was shot dead.
“We had been used to gunshots, obviously,” says Madeleine Schaffner, who lives a few blocks away. “But for a lot of us, I think that felt like the breaking point. That’s too close. We can’t be having shootouts in the street.”
The incident didn’t just shake the neighborhood. The video of the armed men spread internationally and put this area at the center of the United States’ debate over immigration.
As the story blanketed national media, TV crews pointed their cameras toward the renters. Reporters from New York rushed to the building. They aimed microphones at neighbors and scribbled down anonymous quotes.
Then, the Colorado Republican Party and former President Donald Trump pointed to the video as proof that the “sanctuary city” of Denver had dumped the Venezuelan prison gang Tren de Aragua in the “quiet suburb” of Aurora. Overnight, Delmar Parkway became a symbol of election-year fears about a supposed foreign takeover, not just of an apartment building but, falsely, of an entire city.
Armed vigilantes have threatened to confront the apartment residents; a white supremacist spewed hate speech at a city council meeting; and a billboard at the state border has mocked the situation.
Meanwhile, Trump himself has promised to come to town.
“You may never see me again, but that’s OK,” Trump said at a political rally in New York on Sept. 18. “Got to do what I got to do.”
And yet many of the people living in this national spotlight feel totally ignored.
Around the neighborhood, new immigrants worry the media is misrepresenting the story and that racist rhetoric is putting them at risk — just as they’re trying to build new lives.
Other residents from across the political spectrum are banding together, looking for a way forward.
“We want to be safe here,” Schaffner says. “We don’t really care who’s doing it. We just don’t want people to shoot guns here.”
She and other neighbors are trying to sort truth from fiction. They’re trying to be seen.
“No one’s ever come and talked to us,” says another resident, electrician David Bottoms. “Really. No one.”

Wearing a National Rifle Association t-shirt, Bottoms cools down from a hot day of pulling bindweed. His dogs dart around the yard. Far away, police sirens whine.
Not one bullet zips through the air — not on this Saturday night in September. Bottoms treasures quiet evenings like this one. He says they’ve been all too rare.
Like countless people nationwide, Bottoms has watched the stories about his neighborhood on TV, from the home he shares with his father. It’s been in their family for decades. And the family has been in Aurora since the late 1800s, when the town was still called Fletcher.
Bottoms remembers his childhood spent playing soccer at Del Mar Park and swimming in the Highline Canal.
“We had a rope swing,” he says. “We’d go up there and catch crawdads. We’d build stupid little rafts and stuff like that.”
His grandparents farmed dryland wheat. They were there before Fitzsimons Army Hospital and Lowry Air Force Base brought the city new life — and also after the military left, gutting Aurora’s economy.
His family was there when nearby Colfax Avenue thrived, and they saw what happened after I-70 took traffic elsewhere and Aurora sprawled onto the plains, taking Old Aurora’s economic energy and the middle class with it.

In the 1970s, Colfax began to turn from a thriving business corridor to an open civic wound, with crime and desperation bleeding into the Delmar Parkway neighborhood.
In the ‘80s, a new chapter began with the arrival of Mexican immigrants.
Over the years, those immigrants started businesses. Spanish became the neighborhood’s second language. The bakery Panaderia el Paisa Bakery, the candy shop Dulcería El Pachangon, the ice cream shop Nevería La Mexicana and the church Iglesia Liberación y Poder de Dios opened blocks away.
And now, new Venezuelan immigrants are redefining the community again.
In recent years, millions of immigrants have left Venezuela for countries around the world. They’re fleeing gangs, crime, corrupt police and an economic crisis.
Over the past two years, more than 42,000 new immigrants, most from Venezuela, have arrived from the border to Denver, many bused here by Texas Gov. Greg Abbott.
Some of those immigrants were looking for cheaper housing. With help from the City of Denver and nonprofits, some moved into Delmar Parkway — many at the Edge apartments. ( Denver does not have information on where individual immigrants were placed by nonprofits and cannot say how many new immigrants moved into the Edge specifically.)
The arrival of hundreds of new people, many of whom have nothing, has meant changes for the neighborhood. There are new faces, new music and new people contributing to the culture of the community.
There’s also been a steady ramp up in reports of crime and complaints from residents. And the new arrivals have often been left to live in squalor, with the city accusing landlord CBZ Management of running the Edge and other apartments as a “slumlord.”

Since 2021, 54 complaints have been filed with the City of Aurora, including about broken heating, flooding, black mold, exposed wiring and other problems at the Edge. Repeatedly, the complaints noted, the landlord would not respond.
Local elected officials, especially Aurora City Council member Danielle Jurinsky and Mayor Mike Coffman, described the situation in increasingly alarming terms, with both saying that the Edge and two other CBZ apartments had “fallen” to or been “taken over” by Tren de Aragua. Police have repeatedly pushed back on that claim, though they say that men connected with the gang have carried out a string of violent crimes around the buildings.
In a joint statement, Coffman and Jurinsky clarified a gang had not taken over Aurora and that police were responding to the situation in the apartments. Coffman now says Tren de Aragua is not in charge of the apartments at all.
But it was too late. The video of the armed men lit a combustible situation, bringing national attention.

Michael Davis listens to the blues and watches a kid zip her scooter over chalk drawings on the sidewalk. Originally from Denver’s East Side, Davis has lived in his Delmar Parkway house for 12 years.
By the time he moved in, the neighborhood had been struggling, in ways, for decades. Government offices and facilities had moved elsewhere. And there was little investment in Old Aurora.
So, Davis found a deal on a house much cheaper than anything he could find in Denver. He bought his home for around $75,000. Now, it would cost around $400,000.
Sure, there are gunshots, he says, but it’s not as bad as the East Side was in the ‘80s and ‘90s.
Back then, the Bloods and Crips warred across Colorado Boulevard.

“My auntie got murdered on the East Side,” Davis says. “It was much rougher back then.”
And crime in Delmar Parkway, he says, is nothing new.
After the video of armed men went viral, friends and family started checking in on Davis.
Like many residents, he felt the reality on his block didn’t match the overblown national claims.
“Nobody’s taking over,” he says. “I walk my dog every day by [the apartments]. And, I mean, it is a rough apartment complex over there. It’s been rough.”

Every time a shot goes off, Denise Taylor’s 10-year-old grandson dives to the floor.
“Grandma,” he asks. “Do you know what’s going on?”
“Baby, I don’t know,” she replies. “It’s just out of control.”
Taylor grew up in Gary, Indiana. She left after violence swept her community and looked for a fresh start in Colorado. She’s lived a block from the Edge for the past 12 years, with her three grandchildren.

Over the past year, she says she’s heard more gunfire than ever before, sometimes daily.
“You’ll never know when the shots are going to blast out,” Taylor says. “The bullets don’t have no names.”
Crime data supports the idea that the area has seen changes in crime recently, compared to the rest of Aurora.

Data Source: Aurora Police Department
Citywide, felony and misdemeanor crimes dropped after peaking in the pandemic, according to Aurora police records of crimes reported between Jan. 1 and Aug. 31 for each year since 2019. But for the blocks around the Edge and other CBZ-owned apartments, crime either stayed at high levels or rose slightly.
The data also show crime isn’t new in these areas. The neighborhoods around CBZ’s buildings — and around Colfax Avenue — generally saw more felonies than the rest of the city since 2019.

Data Source: Aurora Police Department
David Pyrooz, a University of Colorado Boulder sociology professor who studies crime statistics, and Catherine Durso, a University of Denver computer science and statistics professor, reviewed Denverite’s data analysis. Both say these trends suggest something has changed in the areas surrounding these apartment complexes.
But this data does not address what changed, they stressed.

Police also have made a series of arrests of men alleged to have committed violent crimes at the Edge and other CBZ-managed properties; they accused the men of connections to Tren de Aragua.
Separately, officers arrested one man and are seeking several others who they say appeared in the viral August video, and also recovered a rifle from a nearby apartment. Police haven’t confirmed any connections to the gang among those people.

Data Source: Aurora Police Department
And yet even as the violence near the apartments has frightened people like Taylor, her family also has formed connections with the Venezuelan immigrants who live there.
Taylor’s grandson has Venezuelan friends. She lets them play together at the Edge, trusting his new friends’ parents, but she checks in with him frequently.
By dark, he must return home.

After the August shooting, city officials threatened to close the Edge, in part because of longstanding habitability issues.
Denverite reporters saw rodents, mold, broken appliances and clogged drains at the apartments. The three CBZ apartments have totaled 30 fire code violations since 2020. The city is suing the company over the alleged unlivable state of some of its apartments, while the landlord has blamed the city for failing to respond to the alleged gang activity. The city is pressuring CBZ to sell one of its other buildings.
CBZ has declined to respond to Denverite’s requests for comment.
Around the apartments, many new immigrants feel they’ve been caught in the middle — abandoned by the city and landlord, scapegoated by the media and politicians.
“I don’t know what happened, whether it’s true, whether it’s a lie,” says Cris Guzmán, raising the possibility that the video of the armed men was fabricated.

We meet Guzmán relaxing with friends on the sidewalk across from the Edge, long into the night. Some neighbors, like David Bottoms, think the men are an intimidating sight — but to Guzmán, it’s more like an outdoor living room. Even near midnight, he is quick to offer a white plastic chair or a cooler for strangers to sit.
“It’s a perfect night,” he says.
He’s trying to learn English, but that takes time. He’s finding work, but not enough of it. He misses his wife and child he took from Venezuela to Mexico City. He left them to journey across the border, into the United States, looking for better jobs.
And he’s exhausted by how his home has been invaded by reporters who are spinning stories he doesn’t trust.
“I’ve never seen anyone with a gun here,” he says.
As he tells it, the news stations and social media users have been pushing lies. It’s not residents committing most of the crimes, he says, but people from outside taking advantage of them. He doesn’t trust that journalists are getting the story right. They don’t spend enough time in the community to understand it.
That’s a common feeling around the apartments. As the uproar grew, renters at the building held a rally for the press in August. They wanted to put the focus on the condition of the apartments and the landlord’s failure to help. No gang runs the Edge, they insisted.
“They’re trying to say that here there are delinquents, that here there are criminals. Here there are moms, there are families, there are fathers. To me … the only criminal here is the owner of the building,” resident Moises Didenot told reporters at the time.


Taylor and her grandson stopped by the apartments to see what was happening during the press conference. The 10-year-old joined the rally, demanding justice for his friends who lived there. Taylor, on the other hand, had doubts about the idea that there was no gang presence in the building.
An alleged Tren de Aragua member is facing domestic violence charges after being accused of threatening a woman with a gun at the Edge, according to an affidavit. In a separate incident, police say the man broke into an apartment where two people were sleeping and threatened them with a gun. Five more men, according to police documents, entered the same apartment, saying “they run this place.”
Other crimes have been tied to the gang across the metro area, though police leaders maintain the presence of the gang is small and that the department is working to keep it that way.
“I ain’t gonna say they got a gang over there,” Taylor says. “But it just feels like there’s no peace.”
Jhon Harrinson, who came to Aurora two years ago, stands in front of his house a few blocks from the Edge. He lives here with his family, including his newborn daughter, who is a U.S. citizen.
He says he’s embarrassed when Venezuelans commit crimes. And he fears the blowback.
When he first came to the neighborhood, things were quiet. And he liked it that way. There weren’t so many car thefts and nightly gunshots.
“The safety issues started to be heard more since the Venezuelans started renting in the buildings,” he says. “We’ve been living here for two years now, in this same house, and it was only then that this started.”

Mayor Mike Coffman says it’s a mistake to collectively blame the residents of the apartments for crime.
“There’s a criminal element that preys upon the Venezuelan migrant community,” Coffman told Denverite. “And when you have a concentration, like at those apartment buildings, I think that criminal element will superimpose themselves on top of that community and exploit them.”
Still, Harrinson worries about how people from the United States interpret the news. He hopes they don’t assume all Venezuelans, or all Spanish speakers, are the problem.
“It affects us because the majority of people in the neighborhood are Hispanic,” he says. “Others look at us distrustfully, thinking that we are doing something wrong. And that is not the case.”
Nanci Angulo wears a bulletproof vest that reads “SECURITY.”
Her military garb looks out of place at El Paisa Panaderia on Colfax Avenue, a few blocks from the Edge. Smells of cinnamon and yeast waft from the shelves. Working men fill round metal trays with stacks of sweet pastries.
Angulo has lived in Denver for a year and has worked at the panaderia for most of that time. She misses the police work she did back in Venezuela, and she’s happy to be keeping the shop safe.
“I thank God for being here, having the job I have and being part of a better economy here in this country,” she says.
Before she started working security, people living outside on Colfax would steal bread and soda from the store, and money from customers. That mostly stopped after she started.

But beyond the store’s doors, she sees society’s ills on Colfax Avenue. People are homeless and desperate, she says. They have smashed the store’s windows. They’ve robbed workers walking to their cars at night. These kinds of crimes have been going on for years. In some cases, impoverished new immigrants have been absorbed into the poverty that has racked the area for decades.
She’s not alone in seeing it. A store manager told Coffman about a 12-year-old girl who was caught stealing food to sell on Colfax to support her family.
“It’s sad that it’s part of a desperation,” Coffman said. “What, food? Stealing food? …The craziness of all this is [many new immigrants] cannot apply for a work permit until they’re here for 150 days.”

When she was in her late 20s, a year and a half ago, Madeleine Schaffner moved from a rental in Denver’s upscale Highlands neighborhood to a home built in 1911 in Delmar Parkway, where she could afford to buy. She fell in love with the community, with its helpful neighbors and nearby cultural amenities.
“I feel like when I first moved here, it was actually pretty chill,” Schaffner says. “It wasn’t too crazy. I didn’t really hear gunshots for the first few months of living here, which was nice.”
But gunfire started blasting almost nightly a few months after she moved in. Bullets nearly grazed her home, she says. And drivebys and gun fights between people on foot ramped up.

On Aug. 18, when rapid fire erupted at the Edge, she assumed she had heard a mass shooting.
“Obviously it’s very justified to feel scared right now,” she says.
Schaffner started looking for community organizations to join. Nothing focused on safety seemed to exist, outside of the social media site Nextdoor. So, she and her friends on her block called a community meeting.
They knocked on doors, posted on Nextdoor and eventually brought together a small group from the neighborhood to Denver’s Schlessman Library on a Saturday morning.

The group talked about the need for traffic-calming infrastructure to slow down the cars zipping around the community. Others complained about the lack of lighting, sluggish police response and an absentee city government.
They decided they could help each other out.
“If there’s a shooting, we can let each other know,” she said. “We can see if anyone has videos, kind of collect evidence, and then hopefully also have that power in numbers to contact our representatives.”
Though the neighbors all want greater safety, there’s a lot they don’t agree on.
Bottoms, the NRA member, blames people, not guns for the shootings. He wants the feds to close the southern border to the United States and Denver to stop funding handouts to new immigrants.

If that happened, he believes maybe the gunshots would stop. Maybe his dad’s truck wouldn’t have been stolen. Perhaps the fights in front of his home would cease, and he wouldn’t find so many diapers in his trash bin.
Meanwhile, Schaffner wants to avoid talking about crime in the context of immigration. Doing so, she fears, puts innocent people in the crosshairs.
“There’s people coming and targeting innocent people at that apartment and threatening them and saying, ‘We’re going to take back our neighborhood,’” Schaffner says. “It’s just inviting more violence into the area, which nobody wants.”
The whole political conversation in the United States is odd to Baiyu Hua, who attended the recent neighborhood meeting.

Growing up in China, he never heard gunshots. In Aurora, he often hears them nightly.
“I understand the unique history of this country and the choices of the people,” he says. “And that’s why people have chosen the right to bear arms. And I respect that very much.”
But the cost of that choice is high, he explains.
“It’s a really bloody price, in my point of view,” Hua says. “I think we all know as Americans, we’re paying the price every single day.”
And it’s not just the shootings. Other crime in the neighborhood goes unaddressed. When Baiyu and his wife Miranda Hua walk Colfax Avenue at night, they see drug deals, sex trade, graffiti and broken windows.
“For one reason or another, certain parts of the city were ignored,” Baiyu says. “It was allowed to decay to a certain point of where you can no longer ignore it.”
Around the world, people view the United States as a “shining city on the hill,” Baiyu says. Then they arrive and experience urban decay, something far worse than they saw back home.
“It should be a rude awakening to any authorities in the U.S., from the city to the federal level,” Baiyu says.

When the community group recently met, they mostly avoided fighting over immigration, neighborhood divisions and gun control. Unlike national politicians, they came together, rather than pushing each other away.
“I was proud of our group for staying very respectful,” Schaffner says.
“Politics need to stay out of it,” Bottoms says. “It has to stay out of it for any part of this to work.”
Denverite reporters Kevin Beaty and Rebecca Tauber and CPR reporter Molly Cruse contributed to this story.
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The building at 1568 Nome St. is one of several that are getting national attention about the Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua.
Items left in Aurora’s Fitzsimons Place apartments after a recent closure forced residents to hastily move out. Aug. 13, 2024.
Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite
The city of Aurora has reached a legal agreement with the owners of 1568 Nome St., an apartment complex at the center of speculation about the presence of Venezuelan gang members in the city, according to documents released by the city.
In the documents, the building’s owner agrees to list the property for sale and pay abatement costs in order to avoid prosecution for a raft of legal violations. The agreement is dated Aug. 12, 2024, the day before the city closed the complex, leaving more than 300 people scrambling for housing. Residents complained of mold, animals, trash and crime.
That closure, and its surrounding circumstances, garnered national attention, resulting in a presidential debate call-out and a potential, but still unofficial, visit to Aurora by former President Donald Trump.
At the time, city officials said the closure was necessary after years of unsafe conditions that went unaddressed by property owner Zev Baumgarten, who is represented in documents as both Nome Partners LLC and CBZ Management
The correspondence outlined in the documents was between city attorneys and Walter Slatkin, a Denver-based lawyer representing Nome Partners LLC. In it, Nome Partners LLC agreed to pay the city up to $60,000 for abatement costs associated with the closure and trash removal at the property. The company also agreed to actively market the property for sale within six months of the abatement’s completion.
The agreement, signed by Slatkin on Aug. 8, 2024, also waived Baumgarten’s right to a speedy trial in the case. This resulted in the delay of his jury trial for dozens of building code violations, which was originally going to happen on Aug. 27.
The case is now set for trial on Feb. 14, 2025, although he could avoid trial altogether if Nome Partners LLC holds up its end of the legal agreement with city attorneys.
Michael Brannen, a spokesperson for the city, said if Nome Partners LLC pays the city back for costs accrued during the abatement and lists the property for sale before his trial date, Aurora will file a motion to dismiss with prejudice all pending claims, actions, summons, and suits against Baumgarten and his business entities. That means the case would be closed and could not be brought back to court.
The city says this particular agreement is only for the property on Nome St. and is not tied to other properties managed or owned by Baumgarten, Nome Partners LLC, or CBZ Management. Two other complexes, Whispering Pines and The Edge at Lowry, have both been featured in coverage spanning the globe following speculation about their ties to the Tren de Aragua gang.
The attorney who signed the agreement with the city has not yet responded to Denverite’s request for comment.
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