A pedestrian was killed in a crash near South Parker Road near Interstate 225 on Sunday morning, according to the Aurora Police Department.
Southbound lanes of South Parker Road are closed at South Peoria Street because of the crash investigation, Aurora police said in a post on X. There is no estimated time of reopening and drivers should seek alternate routes.
The crash occurred around 6 a.m., according to police officials. Additional information about the crash was not immediately available.
Aurora Police Chief Todd Chamberlain speaks during a press conference on Friday, September 20, 2024.
Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite
Aurora police say they have arrested one man and have warrants for two others who were recordedcarrying guns through an apartment complex in a viral video last month.
The men were allegedly seen with handguns and a rifle, “knocking on doors and unlawfully entering apartments” at the complex on Dallas Street around 11:20 p.m. on Aug, 18.
The video went viral and helped to propel Aurora into the national media and the presidential election. Former President Donald Trump and others pointed to it as evidence that the Venezuelan prisongang Tren de Aragua controls parts of the city. City officials and police have forcefully rejected such claims, though they acknowledge the gang has a presence.
On Sept. 12, police filed arrest warrants for the three men on felony charges of first-degree burglary and menacing with a firearm. One man, Anderson Zambrano-Pacheco, 25, is in custody. Two others, Niefred Jose Serpa-Acosta, 20, and Naudi Lopez-Frenandez, 21, are wanted.
The men knocked on the doors of two apartments, forcing their way in and threatening the residents with their guns, police said. There was a fatal shooting outside the building shortly afterward, which remains unsolved.
But police said they haven’t yet “connected” any of the men to a specific criminal organization. Police officials said that verifying gang connections, especially with a foreign criminal organization like Tren de Aragua, is difficult.
“This is not an immigration issue. It’s a crime issue,” said Aurora Police Chief Todd Chamberlain. “We are not overtaken by Venezuelan gangs, Tren de Aragua or any other gang.”
The video was captured at a complex known as the Edge at Lowry.
Shortly after the Aug. 18 video was recorded, police responded to a report of a shooting at the building. One person, 25-year-old Oswaldo Jose Dabion Araujo, was killed. Police believe the video and the shooting are related, but the investigation is ongoing.
The other three men in the apartment hallway video haven’t yet been identified. They are the focus of a “large-scale, multi-jurisdictional operation known as ‘Safe Haven,’” police said. Police later found one firearm that matches the video — a scoped rifle that was hidden in an apartment’s oven.
Police affidavits for the arrest warrants weren’t immediately available.
Edge at Lowry is one of several buildings where landlord CBZ Management has alleged an out-of-control gang takeover. However, city officials say CBZ has failed to care for its properties and allowed them to fall into disarray long before the arrival of hundreds of Venezuelan immigrants.
Aurora Police Chief Todd Chamberlain speaks during a press conference on Friday, September 20, 2024.Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite
Chamberlain, who was recently appointed, pushed back on the idea that Tren de Aragua has taken over the apartment building, saying he has not seen tenants forced to pay rent to gang members. Police have, however, acknowledged complaints of rent theft at three affected buildings. The buildings’ managers have claimed that gang members are stealing rent money and threatening management staff.
Last month, Aurora police announced that they had identified 10 other men with possible connections to Tren de Aragua, pressing charges that included domestic violence, threats and assault, including of a building owner. Those earlier arrests were related to crimes at the apartment buildings and around the metro.
Police would not confirm how the department identified those 10 men as members of Tren de Aragua.
Chamberlain said that Aurora police will continue looking into gang affiliations “to help address the spread of crime.” He said the response to crime concerns would require not just police, but also city government, the property managers, youth services and others. Aurora police have offered to put officers in the buildings, he said.
“We are trying to play catchup over the last two years,” Chamberlain said.
Residents of the buildings are caught in the middle. Dozens have rejected the claims of gang control, and they say they’ve faced threats and racist rhetoric because of the national attention.
Researchers have repeatedlydebunked the idea that immigrants — whether or not they are documented — commit crimes at higher rates than native-born Americans. Other research has found no connection between the number of undocumented residents in a community and its crime rates.
“This is a focus on criminal behavior,” Chamberlain said. “Not a focus on immigration status.”
Coffman wants to give the former president a tour of the city to show he’s wrong about Aurora.
Aurora Mayor Mike Coffman in his office. Sept. 19, 2024.
Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite
On Wednesday night, former President Donald Trump pledged he would be coming to Aurora in the next two weeks. Trump has made the city a focus of his anti-immigration campaign, saying Venezuelan gangs have taken over the city — a claim that the mayor, police and city council members say is false.
When Mayor Mike Coffman, a Republican conservative, got word of Trump’s plans for a visit, the city’s communications people suggested he stay quiet about it.
Instead, Coffman told Denverite he’s decided to “lean into” the former president’s visit. Why? He wants to give Trump a tour and show him that, in fact, Venezuelan gangs have not taken over the city. (City officials have, however, acknowledged the apparent presence of the gang and the consequences for the residents of several apartment buildings.)
Coffman’s message to Trump: “Bring it on. Come here. I’m excited for you to come here so I could show you that the narrative that is being presented nationally about this city isn’t true, that there are no apartment complexes under gang control, that the city’s not under gang control, Venezuelan gang control.”
The mayor clarified he had not actually spoken to Trump.
Coffman, who says he’s a Reagan Republican, plans to vote for Trump, despite how the candidate has spread rumors that he says have harmed the city. Coffman’s policies are more aligned with Trump than Vice President Kamala Harris, he said.
So, how will Coffman host Trump?
But if Trump holds an Aurora rally, the mayor will not be there to introduce the candidate. Instead, he wants to start a conversation with the former president.
“I’m not a rally person,” Coffman said. “I’d love to show them the city, as well as have a briefing provided by law enforcement about where we are in terms of, for instance, that video, identifying those individuals in that video and arresting them,” Coffman said.
The mayor is managing a major PR crisis for Aurora that is being stoked by his own party.
“This narrative, if allowed to bake in, could hurt the city,” Coffman said.
AURORA, Colo. — A group helping support new immigrants arriving to Colorado said Thursday the recent negative spotlight in Aurora is taking away the focus from their efforts to help newcomers from all around the world.
The Aurora Economic Opportunity Center (AEOC), which has been around for nine years, continues providing support to new-to-country folks, despite some of the challenges that inflated news stories about gang activity in Aurora have caused.
Politics
Trump referenced Aurora gang activity during the debate. Aurora responded.
“We’re more diverse than probably anywhere else in the whole country,” said Mateos Alvarez, the Executive Director for AEOC.
That’s one of the many reasons Alvarez said he believes makes Aurora unique.
“There’s over 120 different languages, customs that exist in a small area, and therefore it is a gateway, or an entryway, for people from all over the world who come to the United States, (who) come here to Aurora and feel connected,” added Alvarez.
He said the negativity surrounding the city has diverted the attention from their mission of helping immigrants with work authorization and jobs.
“For us, we’re hopeful that the rhetoric will change and it’ll be more about like, ‘How do you provide opportunities for folks to be self sufficient, successful,’ and where they can contribute back into the community,” he said.
Aurora
Trump claimed Aurora is seeing high levels of crime. Data shows otherwise
Denver7 spoke with Luis Meza, a recently-arrived immigrant from Colombia who said his main focus has been getting a job.
“We want work. We don’t want handouts, we want a job opportunity,” Meza said, in Spanish. “You have to have faith things will get better.”
Alvarez said they have assisted hundreds of new immigrants with work authorization and jobs, as well as helping those who are interested in starting their own businesses.
“I’ve never run into a human being who doesn’t want prosperity, who wants to be independent and who wants that opportunity to be successful,” he added.
Former President Donald Trump, who has falsely claimed Aurora is being “taken over” by gangs and who promised “large deportations” of immigrants from the city if he is re-elected later this year, said Wednesday he will visit Aurora “in the next two weeks.”
Aurora city leaders told Denver7 Thursday they hope the former president’s visit will help change the narrative that Aurora is a dangerous place to live.
One of those leaders, Mayor Mike Coffman told Denver7 he hopes a potential Trump visit would help change the false narrative that Venezuelan gangs had taken over the city.
Watch Denver7’s full interview with Coffman in the video player below.
Full interview: Aurora Mayor Coffman on potential Trump visit
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.
Denver-based artist, Anna Charney, works on a mural on the side of the Mango House.
Molly Cruse/Denverite
For the last few weeks, spray cans and aerial lifts have been scattered outside buildings along a stretch of East Colfax as teams of artists from all over the country gathered to participate in the fifth annual Colfax Canvas Mural Festival.
Among those artists is Danielle Seewalker, a Húŋkpapȟa Lakȟóta citizen from the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe and a Denver-based artist who exploded onto the art scene in the last few years.
Over the last few days, SeeWalker and Cante Eagle Horse — a Denver-based tattooer and artist and member of the Cheyenne River Sioux Tribe — worked together to design a mural on the side of DIA Market in Aurora.
Coming back from a ‘crappy experience’ with Vail
Earlier this year, the Town of Vail canceled SeeWalker’s residency after someone raised concerns about a piece of artwork she created — unrelated to the residency — commenting on the war in Gaza.
“It was a crappy experience,” SeeWalker said. “It violated First Amendment rights. The piece, ‘G is for Genocide,’ had nothing to do with my residency, it had nothing to do with Vail. It was something I had done months prior for a different exhibition.”
Indigenous artists Danielle SeeWalker and Cante Eagle Horse’s mural on the side of DIA Market in Aurora. Earlier this year, the Town of Vail canceled SeeWalker’s residency after someone raised concerns about a piece of artwork she created — unrelated to the residency — commenting on the war in Gaza.Molly Cruse/Denverite
SeeWalker did not only turn down other job opportunities because of the residency with the Town of Vail, but she also says that she was disappointed that she was not given a chance to defend her work.
Aaron Vega, the executive producer of Colfax Canvas, called SeeWalker’s experience earlier this year “gut-wrenching.”
But he believes mural festivals like Colfax Canvas, “do a great job of making sure that artists are seen and heard and have an opinion.”
“Mural festivals that really speak to the community, and work with artists like Danielle and make sure that they are seen and heard, I think, are going to be more valuable in the long run,” Vega said. “Because the truth is when we’re all gone … the thing that will be remembered is the art.”
Murals are ‘part of the landscape of our lives’
That same sentiment is shared by other mural artists.
“[Murals] become a substantial part of the landscape of our lives,” Denver-based artist Anna Charney said. “…What attracts me to murals is the power to bring artwork to various communities and see immediately how your artwork affects communities or neighborhoods or people individually.”
But unlike other art mediums, painting murals comes with its own unique set of challenges.
Battling Colorado’s unpredictable weather, a small army of wasps, cracking walls, chipped paint, and the occasional heckler are just a few of the challenges the Mango House team has faced over the last few days, but Ally Grimm — a street artist who goes by the pseudonym A.L. Grime — says that this is just a small price to pay for creating art that is accessible to the public.
“Often art gets put behind glass cases or behind closed doors,” A.L. Grime said. “So it’s awesome to get to share narratives out in the street and get to really leave our work with communities.”
Mural artists shine a light on the humanity of Venezuelan immigrants
SeeWalker and Cante Eagle Horse are just one of four teams of artists participating in this year’s Colfax Canvas Mural Festival.
Across a parking lot from the DIA Market, three Denver-based artists have spent the last few days painting the side of Mango House, a former JC Penney building that is now a community center for refugees.
“We’re painting Maria Corina Machado, who is the opposition leader in Venezuela,” Venezuelan-American artist Ally Grimm, or A.L. Grime, said. “Since Mango House is a refugee resource center, we wanted to paint someone who really represents this idea of going home.”
Ally Grimm, who goes by the pseudonym A.L. Grime, looks up at the mural of Maria Corina Machado — a Venezuelan opposition leader — she is painting with artists ILL.DES and Anna Charney on the side of Mango House in Aurora.Molly Cruse/Denverite
And while she and the rest of the Mango House artist team — ILL.DES and Anna Charney — started planning the mural before Aurora made national headlines about a “Venezuelan gang takeover,” she hopes that the mural provides “a reminder that at the end of the day, we’re all people and we all deserve a little bit of humanity.”
Colfax Canvas Mural Festival is on Saturday, Sept. 14, from noon to 5 p.m. at Fletcher Plaza in Aurora, at the intersection of Colfax and Emporia.
Colfax canvas artists work to finish the portrait of of the Venezuelan opposition leader, Maria Corina Machado, on the side of Mango House. Artist A.L. Grime, a Venezuelan-American, says that Machado is a symbol of hope for many Venezuelan refugees.Molly Cruse/Denverite
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
The presence of a Venezuelan gang in Aurora became a talking point in Tuesday’s presidential debate, with former President Donald Trump once again using the situation to argue for an immigration crackdown.
In his first answer, Trump name checked Aurora, along with an Ohio town with a large Haitian population, claiming that criminal immigrants “are taking over the towns, they are taking over buildings, they are going in violently.”
It was at least the third time in recent weeks that Trump has referred to the presence of Venezuelan gang members in Aurora. It is part of Trump’s consistent portrayal of immigrants as dangerous and violent, though researchers have consistently found no link between immigration and crime.
Trump’s claims about Aurora can be traced to allegations made by the landlord of several apartment buildings; the company claims that Venezuelan gang members have “taken over” its buildings, trying to kick out apartment managers and extort rent payments. The apartments, owned by CBZ Management, are home to hundreds of people, including many new immigrants who were placed there by local nonprofits.
Local officials acknowledge that the gang Tren de Aragua has a presence in the Denver metro area, but claim it is relatively small, and dwarfed by the activities of domestic gangs. Police have acknowledged allegations of rent theft at the affected buildings.
Complaints from residents about criminal activity have also surfaced. Cindy Romero said she captured video of armed men entering an apartment at The Edge at Lowry, which she shared with local media. She told CBS News that she regularly saw people with automatic weapons and witnessed shootouts, with the police offering little help.
However, many residents of the apartments say the talk of gang control is false or exaggerated. At a recent press conference, some said that the video of the armed men was a “one-time” event. And they also said that they were more concerned about their landlord and the mismanagement and neglect of the building.
Apartment residents also said the attention on the situation has made them the subject of death threats and racist rhetoric from outsiders.
Trump previously talked about the Aurora apartments on a podcast and at a speech in Michigan, where he stoked fears of “migrant crime.” Researchers have repeatedlydebunked the idea that immigrants — whether or not they are documented — commit crimes at higher rates than native-born Americans. Other research has found no connection between the number of undocumented residents in a community and its crime rates.
Trump also raised other contested — and sometimes unfounded — claims about immigrants, including that recent immigrants are eating house pets in Ohio. “They are eating cats and they are eating the pets of people that live there,” he said. Officials in Ohio say that’s not happening.
During the debate, Vice President Kamala Harris defended her record on immigration, portraying herself as a prosecutor who has cracked down on trans-national criminal organizations. And she blamed Trump for sinking a bipartisan immigration proposal earlier this year.
“He preferred to run on the problem, instead of fixing it,” she argued.
More on the claims in Aurora
Police officials in Denver and Aurora have linked members of the Tren de Aragua gang to several specific crimes, including an attempted murder at Fitzsimons Place and the robbery of a Denver jewelry store. Aurora police say they’ve arrested 10 people suspected of being Tren de Aragua members in recent weeks.
Officials in Denver and Aurora strongly dispute the idea that the gang has taken control of any part of either city.
Rep. Jason Crow, the Democrat who represents Aurora in Congress, earlier said that the “gang issues are being grossly exaggerated and misrepresented,” arguing that gang activity in the city is “consistent with trends across Colorado” and that violent crime is declining across the metro.
“We have isolated incidents of gang activity that’s being addressed by federal and local law enforcement and the metro gang task force,” he recently said. “They are doing exactly what law enforcement should be doing. And they’re addressing it with focus and with intentions. And I’ve talked to them and I’m confident they are going to continue to do so.”
The flow of immigrants to the Denver metro area dropped dramatically after President Joe Biden enacted new policies limiting asylum claims over the summer — though only after more than 40,000 people arrived in recent years. The issue of recent immigration is likely to dominate not just the presidential election, but also contested Congressional elections in Colorado.
She was eight months pregnant when she was forced to leave her Denver homeless shelter. It was November.
Ivanni Herrera took her 4-year-old son Dylan by the hand and led him into the chilly night, dragging a suitcase containing donated clothes and blankets she’d taken from the Microtel Inn & Suites. It was one of 10 hotels where Denver has housed more than 30,000 migrants, many of them Venezuelan, over the last two years.
First they walked to Walmart. There, with money she and her husband had collected from begging on the street, they bought a tent.
They waited until dark to construct their new home. They chose a grassy median along a busy thoroughfare in Aurora, the next town over, a suburb known for its immigrant population.
“We wanted to go somewhere where there were people,” Herrera, 28, said in Spanish. “It feels safer.”
That night, temperatures dipped to 32 degrees. And as she wrapped her body around her son’s to keep him warm enough that he could sleep, Ivanni Herrera cried.
Seeking better lives, finding something else
Over the past two years, a record number of families from Venezuela have come to the United States seeking a better life for themselves and their children. Instead, they’ve found themselves in communities roiling with conflict about how much to help the newcomers — or whether to help at all.
Unable to legally work without filing expensive and complicated paperwork, some are homeless and gambling on the kindness of strangers to survive. Some have found themselves sleeping on the streets — even those who are pregnant.
Like many in her generation, regardless of nationality, Herrera found inspiration for her life’s ambitions on social media. Back in Ecuador, where she had fled years earlier to escape the economic collapse in her native Venezuela, Herrera and her husband were emboldened by images of families like theirs hiking across the infamous Darién Gap from Colombia into Panama. If all those people could do it, they thought, so can we.
They didn’t know many people who had moved to the United States, but pictures and videos of Venezuelans on Facebook and TikTok showed young, smiling families in nice clothes standing in front of new cars boasting of beautiful new lives. U.S. Border Patrol reports show Herrera and the people who inspired her were part of an unprecedented mass migration of Venezuelans to America. Some 320,000 Venezuelans have tried to cross the southern border since October 2022 — more than in the previous nine years combined.
Just weeks after arriving in Denver, Herrera began to wonder if the success she had seen was real. She and her friends had developed another theory: The hype around the U.S. was part of some red de engaño, or network of deception.
After several days of camping on the street and relieving herself outside, Herrera began to itch uncontrollably with an infection. She worried: Would it imperil her baby?
She was seeing doctors and social workers at a Denver hospital where she planned to give birth because they served everyone, even those without insurance. They were alarmed their pregnant patient was now sleeping outside in the cold.
Days after she was forced to leave the Microtel, Denver paused its policy and allowed homeless immigrants to stay in its shelters through the winter. Denver officials say they visited encampments to urge homeless migrants to come back inside. But they didn’t venture outside the city limits to Aurora.
As Colorado’s third-largest city, Aurora, on Denver’s eastern edge, is a place where officials have turned down requests to help migrants. In February, the Aurora City Council passed a resolution telling other cities and nonprofits not to bring migrants into the community because it “does not currently have the financial capacity to fund new services related to this crisis.” Yet still they come, because of its lower cost of living and Spanish-speaking community.
In fact, former President Donald Trump last week called attention to the city, suggesting a Venezuelan gang had taken over an apartment complex. Authorities say that hasn’t happened.
The doctors treated Herrera’s yeast infection and urged her to sleep at the hospital. It wouldn’t cost anything, they assured her, just as her birth would be covered by emergency Medicaid, a program that extends the health care benefits for poor American families to unauthorized immigrants for labor and delivery.
Herrera refused.
“How,” she asked, “could I sleep in a warm place when my son is cold on the street?”
Another family, cast out into the night
It was March when David Jaimez, his pregnant wife and their two daughters were evicted from their Aurora apartment. Desperate for help, they dragged their possessions into Thursday evening Bible study at Jesus on Colfax, a church and food pantry inside an old motel. Its namesake and location, Colfax Avenue, has long been a destination for the drug-addicted, homeless veterans and new immigrants.
When the Jaimez family arrived, the prayers paused. The manager addressed the family in elementary Spanish, supplementing with Google Translate on her phone.
After arriving from Venezuela in August and staying in a Denver-sponsored hotel room, they’d moved into an apartment in Aurora. Housing is cheaper in that eastern suburb, but they never found enough work to pay their rent. “I owe $8,000,” Jaimez said, his eyes wide. “Supposedly there’s work here. I don’t believe it.”
Jaimez and his wife are eligible to apply for asylum or for “ Temporary Protected Status ” and, with that, work permits. But doing so would require an attorney or advisor, months of waiting and $500 in fees each.
At the prayer group, Jaimez’s daughters drank sodas and ate tangerines from one participant, a middle-aged woman and Aurora native. She stroked the ponytail of the family’s 8-year-old daughter as the young girl smiled.
When the leader couldn’t find anywhere for the family to stay, they headed out into the evening, pushing their year-old daughter in her stroller and lugging a suitcase behind them. After they left, the middle-aged woman leaned forward in her folding chair and said: “It’s kind of crazy that our city lets them in but does not help our veterans.” Nearby, a man nodded in agreement.
That night, Jaimez and his family found an encampment for migrants run by a Denver nonprofit called All Souls and moved into tent number 28. Volunteers and staff brought in water, meals and other resources. Weeks later, the family was on the move again: Camping without a permit is illegal in Denver, and the city closed down the encampment. All Souls re-established it in six different locations but closed it permanently in May.
At its peak, nearly 100 people were living in the encampment. About half had been evicted from apartments hastily arranged before their shelter time expired, said founder Candice Marley. Twenty-two residents were children and five women were pregnant, including Jaimez’s wife. Marley is trying to get a permit for another encampment, but the permit would only allow people over 18.
“Even though there are lots of kids living on the street, they don’t want them all together in a camp,” Marley said. “That’s not a good public image for them.”
A city’s efforts, not enough
Denver officials say they won’t tolerate children sleeping on the street. “Did you really walk from Venezuela to be homeless in the U.S.? I don’t think so,” said Jon Ewing, spokesman for Denver’s health and human services department. “We can do better than that.”
Initially, the city offered migrants with families six weeks in a hotel. But in May, on pace to spend $180 million this year helping newcomers, the city scaled back its offer to future migrants while deepening its investment in people already getting help.
Denver paid for longer shelter stays for 800 migrants already in hotels and offered them English classes and help applying for asylum and work permits. But any migrants arriving since May have received only three days in a hotel. After that, some have found transportation to other cities, scrounged for a place to sleep or wandered into nearby towns like Aurora.
Today, fewer migrants are coming to the Denver area, but Marley still receives dozens of outreaches per week from social service agencies looking to help homeless migrants. “It’s so frustrating that we can’t help them,” she said. “That leaves families camping on their own, unsupported, living in their cars. Kids can’t get into school. There’s no stability.”
After the encampment closed, Jaimez and his family moved into a hotel. He paid by holding a cardboard sign at an intersection and begging for money. Their daughter only attended school for one month last year, since they never felt confident that they were settled anywhere more than a few weeks. The family recently moved to a farm outside of the Denver area, where they’ve been told they can live in exchange for working.
On the front lines of begging
When Herrera started feeling labor pains in early December, she was sitting on the grass, resting after a long day asking strangers for money. She waited until she couldn’t bear the pain anymore and could feel the baby getting close. She called an ambulance.
The paramedics didn’t speak Spanish but called an interpreter. They told Herrera they had to take her to the closest hospital, instead of the one in Denver, since her contractions were so close together.
Her son was born healthy at 7 pounds, 8 ounces. She brought him to the tent the next day. A few days later the whole family, including the baby, had contracted chicken pox. “The baby was in a bad state,” said Emily Rodriguez, a close friend living with her family in a tent next to Herrera’s.
Herrera took him to the hospital, then returned to the tent before being offered a way out. An Aurora woman originally from Mexico invited the family to live with her — at first, for free. After a couple weeks, the family moved to a small room in the garage for $800 a month.
To earn rent and pay expenses, Herrera and Rodriguez have cleaned homes, painted houses and shoveled snow while their children waited in a car by themselves. Finding regular work and actually getting paid for it has been difficult. While their husbands can get semi-regular work in construction, the women’s most consistent income comes from something else: standing outside with their children and begging.
Herrera and her husband recently became eligible to apply for work permits and legal residency for Venezuelans who arrived in the United States last year. But it will cost $800 each for a lawyer to file the paperwork, along with hundreds of dollars in government fees. They don’t have the money.
One spring weekday, Herrera and Rodriguez stand by the shopping carts at the entrance to a Mexican grocery store. While their sons crawl along a chain of red shopping carts stacked together and baby Milan sleeps in his stroller, they try to make eye contact with shoppers.
Some ignore them. Others stuff bills in their hands. On a good day, each earns about $50.
It comes easier for Rodriguez, who’s naturally boisterous. “One day a man came up and gave me this iPhone. It’s new,” she says, waving the device in the air.
“Check out this body,” she says as she spins around, laughing and showing off her ample bottom. “I think he likes me.”
Herrera grimaces. She won’t flirt like her friend does. She picks up Milan and notices his diaper is soaked, then returns him to the stroller. She has run out of diapers.
Milan was sick, but Herrera has been afraid to take him to the doctor. Despite what the hospital had said when she was pregnant, she was never signed up for emergency Medicaid. She says she owes $18,000 for the ambulance ride and delivery of her baby. Now, she avoids going to the doctor or taking her children because she’s afraid her large debt will jeopardize her chances of staying in the U.S. “I’m afraid they’re going to deport me,” she says.
But some days, when she’s feeling overwhelmed, she wants to be deported — as long as she can take her children along. Like the day in May when the security guard at the Mexican grocery store chased off the women and told them they couldn’t beg there anymore. “He insulted us and called us awful names,” Rodriguez says.
The two women now hold cardboard signs along a busy street in Denver and then knock on the doors of private homes, never returning to the same address. They type up their request for clothes, food or money on their phones and translate it to English using Google. They hand their phones to whoever answers the door.
The American Dream, still out of reach
In the garage where Herrera and her family live, the walls are lined with stuffed animals people have given her and her son. Baby Milan, on the floor, pushes himself up to look around. Dylan sleeps in bed.
Herrera recently sent $500 to her sister to make the months-long trip from Venezuela to Aurora with Herrera’s 8-year-old daughter. “I’ll have my family back together,” she says. And she believes her sister will be able to watch her kids so Herrera can look for work.
“I don’t feel equipped to handle all of this on my own,” she says.
The problem is, Herrera hasn’t told her family back in Venezuela how she spends her time. “They think I’m fixing up homes and selling chocolate and flowers,” she says. “I’m living a lie.”
When her daughter calls in the middle of the day, she’s sure not to answer and only picks up after 6 p.m. “They think I’m doing so well, they expect me to send money,” she says. And Herrera has complied, sending $100 a week to help her sister pay rent and buy food for her daughter.
Finally, her sister and daughter are waiting across the border in Mexico. When we come to the U.S., her sister asks, could we fly to Denver? The tickets are $600.
She has to come clean. She doesn’t have the money. She lives day to day. The American Dream hasn’t happened for Ivanni Herrera — at least, not yet. Life is far more difficult than she has let on.
She texts back:
No.
___
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Aurora’s Edge at Lowry apartment complex. Sept. 4, 2024.
Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite
Last week, Aurora Mayor Mike Coffman urged the city to shut down the apartment buildings that have made national headlines over an alleged “Venezuelan gang takeover.”
“I strongly believe that the best course of action is to shut these [buildings] down and make sure that this never happens again,” he posted on Facebook.
He was responding to reports of activity by the Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua at several apartment buildings, which has become the focus of national media coverage.
He added that the Aurora City Attorney’s Office was preparing to, “request an emergency court order to clear the apartment buildings where Venezuelan gang activity has been occurring by declaring the properties a ‘Criminal Nuisance.’”
But those plans are not moving forward, for now.
Aurora is working with the property owners on other options, local officials said. A spokesperson for Coffman said that closing the buildings is no longer the mayor’s goal.
The proposed closures would have affected hundreds of people living in two buildings owned by CBZ Management: The Edge at Lowry and Whispering Pines Apartments.
Residents of Aurora’s Edge at Lowry apartment complex, and their supporters, hold signs during a press conference to “set the record straight” on an alleged “gang takeover” of the property. Sept. 4, 2024.Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite
The apparent change of plans comes as Coffman is reportedly negotiating with the landlords at CBZ Management. They’re working on a plan, according to a city spokesperson.
“Due to new communications with the property owners and their attorneys since [last] Friday, there are no immediate plans to go forward with such a request at this time,” wrote Aurora spokesperson Michael Brannen, in a statement this week. “But it remains one of the City’s legal options moving forward, if needed.”
What we know and what we don’t about these apartment complexes and Tren de Aragua
The city and the landlord have a strained relationship. Coffman has called the owners “slumlords,” while the landlords have accused the city of letting Tren de Aragua “take over” the buildings.
The city and the landlord have been in a multi-year battle with the city over zoning code and habitability issues — complaints residents have been making for years. That dispute led to the previous shutdown of Fitzsimons Place, forcing families out of nearly 100 units.
There’s another complicating factor: Coffman doesn’t have the power to unilaterally shut down apartments, according to Councilmember Crystal Murillo. She’s the representative of the district in western Aurora that is home to the apartment buildings.
Aurora Police officers march into the recently closed Fitzsimons Place apartments in Aurora to make sure people move out. Aug. 13, 2024.Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite
A shutdown would require support from Council and also work from the City Manager, she said.
Murillo is uncertain how her fellow council members would vote, but she opposes a shutdown. She told Denverite she’s concerned that the apartments are unlivable and that the landlord has abandoned the building — but if the building is closed, residents will have nowhere to go, and many could be left homeless.
“I am concerned that people are still at risk,” Murillo said. “We already know there’s a shortage of affordable units that are livable. And you know, I’m concerned that this false narrative is making that even harder.”
Inside an apartment at Aurora’s Edge at Lowry complex, where residents are protesting their landlords alleged negligence of the property. Sept. 4, 2024.Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite
Community activists rallied on Tuesday to decry the idea of shutting down the apartments, as well as to protest CBZ Management’s alleged poor upkeep of the buildings, as well as to push back on what they described as racist and biased media coverage of their community.
Several Venezuelan immigrants said they can’t find new apartments because landlords don’t want to rent to them — a problem that’s only grown worse with sometimes hyperbolic claims of a gang takeover in Aurora.
The City of Aurora is already embroiled in legal action against Zev Baumgarten, an owner of CBZ. The company has not responded to multiple Denverite requests for comment. Coffman also has not responded to requests for interviews about those negotiations or his desire to shutter the buildings.
Aurora previously shuttered a separate CBZ Management property, displacing hundreds of people
The closure of Fitzsimons Place, at 1568 Nome Street, forced 300 tenants out of 99 units.
The City of Aurora provided those tenants with a few weeks of rent and the possibility of downpayment assistance, but no city workers were on the ground to help tenants on the day of the shutdown. Only nonprofit workers were present.
Weeks after the shutdown, Nate Kassa, an organizer with the East Colfax Community Collective, said organizers are overwhelmed as they try to find new housing for so many people.
Emily Goodman, with the East Colfax Community Collaborative, helps Yubusay Fonseca find a place to go after she and her neighbors were forced to move out of the recently closed Fitzsimons Place apartments in Aurora. Aug. 13, 2024.Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite
Many families from the Nome Street apartments fell through the cracks, and he worries they may be living on the streets, he said. Murillo fears the same would happen to the residents of the other CBZ Management apartments the city has considered shuttering.
Murillo has heard from housing advocates that some landlords are reluctant to rent to people coming from the CBZ buildings, “because now they’re all being labeled incorrectly and falsely as gang members,” she said.
“And so really, the collateral damage are still the residents. They were the victims in the first place. They’re still the victims now. And they’re suffering the consequences and being caught in the crossfire of this political grandstanding that’s happening.”
In recent days, Aurora has been the subject of national media stories, viral online claims and political rhetoric, all centered on the allegation that a Venezuelan gang, Tren de Aragua, has taken control of certain apartment buildings in the city.
After reviewing media reports, visiting the affected apartment complexes, and speaking to residents, officials, and community members, Denverite sorted out what is true, what is contested and what is unknown. Here’s what we know and what we don’t.
A landlord has claimed the gang has “taken over” apartment buildings
The apartments in question are owned by CBZ Management, a company based in New York. Hundreds of recent immigrants, many of them Venezuelan, live at the buildings. Over the summer, the landlord claimed that Tren de Aragua had “taken over” the complexes, including by shaking down renters for money and kicking out the apartment’s managers.
Various reports have referred to gang presence at apartment buildings including The Aspen Grove, Whispering Pines and The Edge at Lowry. On Wednesday, CBS News published further details related to Whispering Pines. A law firm working for a lender for the complex says members of Tren de Aragua had “threatened to kill … members of Whispering Pines management,” and had demanded half of the building’s rent revenue, according to CBS.
Tren de Aragua does have a local presence
Police officials in Denver and Aurora say Tren de Aragua has a small local presence. They’ve linked gang members to some crimes, including an alleged attempted murder at Fitzsimons Place and the robbery of a Denver jewelry store. A video also shows heavily armed men in one of the apartment buildings, The Edge at Lowry, though it is unclear if they were Tren de Aragua members or what they were doing.
But local officials have denied the takeover claims
City officials deny that the gang has taken control of any part of either Denver or Aurora, including the apartment buildings. However, Aurora police acknowledged on Wednesday that they had received complaints of rent theft at three CBZ Management communities; they have not made any arrests in those cases.
Denver Mayor Mike Johnston claimed that among thousands of new immigrants to the area, around 15 are involved in criminal activity. Aurora police say they have identified 10 members of the gang, six of whom were in custody on Wednesday. The Denver mayor said that Tren de Aragua has much less of a presence locally than the Crips and Bloods, two American gangs.
The landlord was already in trouble with the city
Long before the arrival of Venezuelan immigrants, CBZ Management’s buildings were the target of city enforcement actions. Residents have complained of pest infestations, broken utilities, and structural damage, much of which Denverite documented at a recent visit.
The city recently shut down one of the buildings, Fitzsimons Place on Nome Street, over habitability issues, forcing out hundreds of residents. That building had also been the site of a Tren de Aragua-linked shooting over the summer, which led to an attempted murder charge against a member.
These issues have contributed to a hostile relationship between the landlord and the city, with Mayor Mike Coffman calling the owners “slumlords.”
Some residents have denied the allegations of gang control
At a press conference on Tuesday, dozens of residents said that the landlord’s claims of shakedowns and gang control were false. They said that the video of the armed men in one apartment building was a “one-time” event. And they also said that they were more concerned about their landlord and the mismanagement of the building.
But complaints from residents about criminal activity have also surfaced. Cindy Romero said she captured the video of the armed men at The Edge at Lowry. She told CBS News that she saw people with automatic weapons and witnessed shootouts, with the police offering little help.
Tren de Aragua has been a growing concern nationwide
Tren de Aragua, translated Aragua Train, is a gang that was formed by prisoner Héctor “El Niño” Guerrero more than a decade ago in the Tocorón prison in the Venezuelan state of Aragua. Federal officials say the group has grown out of South America and into the U.S. over the last six years.
The Biden administration imposed sanctions on the gang in July for “a variety of criminal activities including human smuggling and trafficking, gender-based violence, money laundering, and illicit drug trafficking.” The U.S. and Colombia are offering $12 million for the capture of its leaders. Some media reports have said the gang has about 5,000 members worldwide.
Politicians have amplified and in some cases exaggerated claims
The Colorado Republican Party claimed that “gangs have taken over Aurora.” Former President Donald Trump said on a podcast that “very tough young thugs” with “big guns” were “taking over big areas” of Aurora. Aurora Mayor Mike Coffman, a Republican, has denied many of those claims, saying Tren de Aragua instead has a limited presence.
The social media uproar may be endangering residents
Residents of the apartments say they’ve been the subject of death threats and racist rhetoric from outsiders. Denverite reviewed some of the messages. Some of those messages appear to be coming from would-be vigilantes who are responding to claims of a gang takeover.
Police say they’re responding
Aurora Police have been investigating the claims of gang activity, and they are joining state agencies in a task force to respond to the gang’s presence. A spokesperson for the Denver Police Department told Denverite that its officers are working with Denver apartment managers, residents and others to ensure they stay safe.
What we don’t know
The extent of Tren de Aragua’s influence
While some members of the gang have been implicated in crimes in the Denver metro, the overall influence of Tren de Aragua in Aurora remains hard to quantify. Officials have not confirmed the scale of the gang’s operations.
The extent to which the property owner’s allegations are true
Aurora police confirmed that they’ve heard resident complaints about rent theft. But with no arrests being made, the details of the alleged crimes and potential perpetrators remain unclear. Denverite has not yet heard eyewitness testimony about the rent theft and extortion claims. Though it is clear the gang has a presence in some CBZ buildings, the extent of its operations and impact remains contested among both residents and officials.
A handful of run-down Aurora apartment buildings and a Venezuelan gang have become a focal point of the United States immigration debate.
But several city and law enforcement officials say the gang’s presence and influence in the city is smaller than what national news outlets and some politicians have claimed.
The apartments’ landlord recently said that members of the gang Tren de Aragua took possession of the buildings, shook down residents for rent money and chased out the property managers — but those are allegations that many residents and some city officials deny.
In recent weeks, rumors surrounding the gang have gone viral on social media. News outlets have published sensational headlines after a video of armed men at an apartment in Aurora was widely shared.
In response, some have called for mass deportations and violence against new immigrants in the Denver metro. Elected officials and political candidates have even accused the leaders of Aurora and Denver of a coverup, and blamed Denver’s immigration policies for what’s happening.
Meanwhile, many residents of the apartment buildings in question are receiving death threats and fear for their safety, not from the Venezuelan gang but from would-be vigilantes who are threatening the residents with violence.
A stew of hot takes, hyperbole, conflicting statements from officials, anonymous sourcing, racist speech, and political campaigning have defined the conversation.
It’s hard to know who to trust, what’s real and what isn’t.
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
Denverite reviewed the news stories and the claims made by the landlord, officials, politicians, activists and the police. We spent time at one apartment building, speaking with residents; observed the City of Aurora displacing residents of another building; and reviewed federal and local government statements.
We learned the apartment buildings have been in terrible shape for years and still are. Many residents say they are not scared of gangs. They fear the owners of the complex. And local police departments say Tren de Aragua does not have an outsized role in metro area crimes, despite claims the gang has taken over the Denver area.
Still, the gang’s members have allegedly been involved in one high-profile robbery and an attempted homicide in the metro.
We could not substantiate whether they shook renters down for money and chased out property managers.
Let’s start with what we know.
There are a handful of apartment buildings in Aurora owned by CBZ Management, a company based in Brooklyn, New York. For years, residents of several of those buildings have complained about rats, mice and insects, concerns over crime and poor treatment by management.
All that predates the arrival of tens of thousands of Venezuelan immigrants in the Denver area.
For the past two years, Aurora has been working to get the property owners into compliance with the law, said Jessica Prosser, Aurora’s director of housing and community services, at a press conference in August.
Many newly arrived Venezuelans and other Spanish-speaking immigrants were placed into those apartments by nonprofits. Those homes, as uninhabitable as many of the units may be, are among the few that are affordable to newly arriving immigrant families.
“We have received numerous complaints and allegations about stolen rent from residents at all three CBZ complexes,” Aurora Police spokesperson Joe Moylan wrote Denverite in an email. “But to date we have not established probable cause to make any arrests on those claims.”
We know there have been recent assaults and shootings at and near some of the properties. Aurora Police arrested a man on suspicion of attempted homicide and say he is connected to Tren de Aragua.
We know there is a video of men with guns entering one of the apartments at The Edge at Lowry. Aurora Police have not confirmed the identity of those men.
At that same apartment complex, Denverite reporters saw multiple mice and bedbugs; mold growing in a bathtub; a stove that hasn’t worked for two months; a sink that won’t drain; and a broken fan.
Juan Carlos Alvarado Jimenes holds up mice he just pulled out of an apartment at Aurora’s Edge at Lowry apartment complex, during a press conference shaming their landlord and to “set the record straight” on an alleged “gang takeover” of the property. Sept. 4, 2024.Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite
We also know the entire city of Aurora has not been taken over by the gang, as the Colorado Republican Party claimed in a fundraising email. Police have been at The Edge at Lowry speaking with residents, and the Aurora police chief says that no gang is running the apartment complex. Residents said the same at a Tuesday press conference at the building.
Mayors in both Denver and Aurora say Tren de Aragua has a small presence in the region and law enforcement is monitoring it carefully, making arrests when appropriate — and that they will continue to do so.
“We think this is a vanishingly small number of people,” said Denver Mayor Mike Johnston. “And we feel very confident (that the) situation’s under control, and we are ahead of the curve on being able to prevent more violence from happening.”
We also know that both cities have long histories with violent crime and criminal organizations that date back decades before the arrival of more than 40,000 new immigrants.
Beyond that, the truth gets murky.
What is Tren de Aragua?
Tren de Aragua, translated Aragua Train, is a gang that was formed by prisoner Héctor “El Niño” Guerrero more than a decade ago in the Tocorón prison in the Venezuelan state of Aragua.
The group took over the prison, installing “a professional baseball field, swimming pools, children’s play equipment — even a small zoo, with monkeys and flamingos,” the Washington Post reported.
When the Venezuelan government took the prison back from the gang in September 2023, Guerrero was not there, but prisoners’ family members, including children, had apparently been left behind.
“Over the past six years, Tren de Aragua leader Niño Guerrero has expanded the group’s criminal network throughout South America and recently extended north into Central America and the United States,” the State Department wrote in a July statement.
For years, the international police organization INTERPOL and governments throughout the Americas have pushed to arrest people tied to Tren de Aragua.
In July 2024, the Biden-Harris administration and Treasury Department declared sanctions on the gang for a variety of criminal activities including “human smuggling and trafficking, gender-based violence, money laundering, and illicit drug trafficking.”
That same month, the United States joined Colombia in offering a $5 million reward for the capture of Guerrero and $7 million more for the capture of other leaders.
Multiple news outlets have reported that the gang has roughly 5,000 members worldwide, though Denverite has not been able to independently confirm that.
What is Tren de Aragua’s presence in Colorado?
Tren de Aragua has a presence in Denver and Aurora, according to city spokespeople.
In June, the family-owned jewelry store Joyeria El Ruby, in Denver’s West Highland neighborhood, was robbed at gunpoint. Police said eight people were involved. Four suspects, Oswaldo Lozada-Solis, 23; Jesus Daniel Lara Del Toro, 20; Jean Franco Torres-Roman, 21; and Edwuimar Nazareth Colina-Romero, 18, were later arrested in El Paso, Texas, in connection to the Colorado crime. They are suspected of being members of the gang.
More recently, Aurora Police also arrested Jhonardy Jose Pacheco-Chirino, who goes by the nickname “Galleta,” translated “cookie,” in connection to a July 28 shooting at the Fitzsimons Place apartments. The New York Post described him as a “shot-caller” in the gang. But a spokesperson for Aurora said the city’s police department was not aware of his actual status in the gang.
“We are able to confirm Pacheco-Chirino, 22 … is a documented member of Tren de Aragua (TdA),” said Aurora city spokesperson Ryan Luby. “The department is not aware of his status within the gang. He is currently in the custody of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.”
The Aurora Police Department recently joined the Colorado State Patrol and the Colorado Bureau of Investigation to form a regional group focused on Tren de Aragua.
“This task force will assist agencies throughout the region with their ongoing investigations with the goal of enhancing communications, sharing intelligence and maximizing investigative resources,” Matthew Longshore, a public information officer for Aurora Police, wrote in a statement.
While the Colorado GOP and an army of TikTokers have claimed Tren de Aragua has taken over Aurora, Aurora Mayor Mike Coffman has said that’s not true.
“The problems associated with Venezuelan gang activity has been isolated to properties that are all under the same out-of-state ownership whose problems with code violations and criminal activity preceded the migrant crisis,” he wrote on social media.
Mike Coffman on Nov. 14, 2019. The Aurora mayor says the claims that Tren de Aragua has taken over the city are untrue.
Meanwhile, a spokesperson for the Denver Police Department told Denverite that its officers are working with Denver apartment managers, residents and others to ensure they stay safe. The department is unaware of any apartments taken over by gangs, the spokesperson said.
“DPD is also committed to holding all criminals accountable, regardless of their immigration status,” the department spokesperson wrote. “To assist in these efforts, the community is encouraged to report suspicious activity by calling or texting 911 for emergencies or contacting Crime Stoppers anonymously. The Denver Police Department does not ask witnesses or victims of crime about immigration status, removing a potential barrier to reporting. Interpretation services are also available for people calling to report crimes.”
What about Tren de Aragua and those Aurora apartments?
CBZ Management, which runs several apartment buildings in Aurora, claims that Tren de Aragua has taken control of its properties, kicked out CBZ Management staff, and forced residents to pay gang members rent — allegations widely reported by the New York Post, Fox News and other outlets.
The owners of CBZ Management are facing legal actions from the City of Aurora that started before the landlord made claims about the alleged Tren de Aragua takeover.
CBZ management declined to speak on the record about the claims and the state of the apartment buildings.
Girls sit in the shade as their parents participate in a press conference at Aurora’s Edge at Lowry apartment complex to “set the record straight” on an alleged “gang takeover” of the property. Sept. 4, 2024.Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite
Mayor Coffman described the owners as out-of-state “slumlords” in early August. And years of online reviews describe the company’s apartments as unclean, poorly maintained and hotbeds of crime.
“A GANG HAS TAKEN OVER entire apartment complexes in Aurora,” she wrote on social media.
“The national news outlets are doing a great job of their reporting on the Tren de Aragua gang that is in the Denver Metro area,” she added. “I will continue to speak out until our border is closed and this gang is addressed! I hope the local media will now step up and help with the truth.”
News outlets across the United States and even in Venezuela broadcast a video of armed men entering an apartment at one of the complexes. Journalists and politicians claim the video proves members of Tren de Aragua control The Edge at Lowry apartment complex.
CBS News’ Tori Mason interviewed a former resident of The Edge at Lowry who said she recorded the video. Cindy Romero reported seeing an increase in crime over the past year and a half at the complex. She told the station she saw people with automatic weapons and witnessed shootouts, saying the police did little to help her.
“The police would call me and say they weren’t coming unless it was a severe crime,” Romero told Mason. “When I called the police to report a shooting, one officer asked if I had considered moving. If I could have afforded to leave, I would have.”
But some residents of the building, at a press conference on Tuesday, said the men in the video were not residents. It was a one-time event, they said. And while they were concerned about the crime, the video did not demonstrate anything about Tren de Aragua or other gangs controlling the building, they argued.
What do Aurora officials say about the apartment buildings and Venezuelan gangs?
Coffman has denied that the apartments have been “taken over” by Tren de Aragua. But he has also said there is “Venezuelan gang activity” on site.
Aurora’s Interim Police Chief Heather Morris said officers have spent weeks at an apartment community at 12th and Dallas. Officers walked the grounds, trying to better understand what was actually happening, she said.
“We’ve been talking to residents here and learning from them about what’s been going on,” she said. “And there’s definitely a different picture. I’m not saying that there’s not gang members that … live in this community. But what we’re learning out here is that gang members have not taken over this complex.”
Meanwhile, Coffman posted to Facebook that the City Attorney’s Office was planning more dramatic action at the apartment buildings in response to gang activity.
The city office is “preparing court documents to request an emergency court order to clear the apartment buildings where Venezuelan gang activity has been occurring by declaring the properties a ‘Criminal Nuisance,’” he wrote.
“This will require a municipal judge to issue the order with the goal of getting these properties back under the control of the property owners,” Coffman continued.
The City of Aurora has already shut down one CBZ Management apartment, Fitzsimons Place on Nome Street, leaving more than 300 individuals to face homelessness, stay in city-funded motel rooms, or find other apartments.
Aurora Police officers march into the recently closed Fitzsimons Place apartments in Aurora to make sure people move out. Aug. 13, 2024.Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite
During that mass displacement, more than a dozen residents told Denverite that crime and gang activity were not major concerns at Fitzsimons Place. Denverite spent 16 hours at the community and did not see armed men or criminal activity.
Walk through Aurora, and it’s clear: The gang has not taken over the city, even as some gang members have committed a handful of crimes. Blocks away from The Edge at Lowry, neighbors shop in local stores, mow their lawns, ride their e-bikes and carry on life as usual.
The victims of Tren de Aragua’s shootings and human trafficking crimes are largely Venezuelan immigrants themselves.
Coffman, Johnston and Morris have all encouraged victims of the gang to contact police and have reminded them that they are safe in doing so regardless of what documents they do or don’t have.
“There has been a lot of misleading information shared about what is happening in our city,” city spokesperson Luby said. “Aurora is a safe community. Media have conflated and considerably exaggerated incidents that are isolated to a handful of problem properties alone.”
Mayor Mike Johnston told 9NEWS’ Kyle Clark that the presence is much less significant than that of American street gangs like the Bloods or the Crips. Both gangs have been tied to acts of violence in both cities for decades and continue to have a strong presence in the metro.
What are other state and local leaders saying about Venezuelan gangs?
Gov. Jared Polis has offered state support to Aurora.
“Colorado is a zero tolerance state for illegal activity, taking over buildings has no place in Colorado, and I am confident that the city of Aurora shares this basic value and will enforce the law if it is being violated there,” he wrote in a statement. “I urge them to do so quickly and in a thorough manner.
“Over the last month, I have been in regular contact with the City of Aurora and the Aurora Police Department and have offered any and all state assistance to support their efforts if requested,” he continued. “The state has been ready for weeks to back up any operation by the Aurora Police Department needed to make Aurora safer.”
In response, the American Friends Service Committee, a Quaker organization that has advocated for immigrants for decades, rebuked the governor for his statement:
“We are disappointed to see you participate in disinformation and stereotyping,” the organization wrote the governor on Facebook. “In Colorado we value accurate and complete investigations and being provided facts. This post provides neither and doesn’t provide a starting point for real conversations about the tensions we see in community.”
In the meantime, the situation has been a statewide and national focus for Republicans.
“Colorado is under violent attack,” claimed the Colorado GOP, in a recent newsletter.
Legacy media, according to the statement, “is working harder to cover up the illegal immigrant crisis than it is to bring the truth to Colorado families. Venezuelan gangs have taken over Aurora; residents are living in fear as lawlessness and violence rock entire apartment buildings and communities.”
The Colorado GOP also accused law enforcement of letting Tren de Aragua run rampant, and it shared a tweet from a person proposing the National Guard be called in.
The party claimed Councilmember Jurinsky and conservatives have inspired liberals and conservatives alike to speak out “against what they call a very scary situation, where they are powerless against violent illegals at their doorsteps.”
Finally, the state GOP used the situation in Aurora to push people to vote Republican and to go far beyond just combating Tren de Aragua. The party encouraged its base to push for the removal of all undocumented immigrants from Colorado.
“Encourage your city and county to become a non-sanctuary locality,” the party wrote. “If you see illegal migrants in your town, attend your city council meetings and tell your elected officials you want this to stop.”
Even former President Donald Trump amplified the message on the Lex Fridman podcast.
“You see in Aurora, Colorado, a group of very tough young thugs from Venezuela taking over big areas, including buildings,” he said. “They’re taking over buildings. They have their big rifles, but they’re taking over buildings. We’re not going to let this happen. We’re not going to let them destroy our country.”
Aurora officials and residents have, again, denied that the buildings were taken over.
“We have verified and documented 10 TdA members in Aurora,” Aurora Police spokesperson Moylan wrote. “Six remain in custody.”
Johnston says roughly 15 or 20 of the more than 40,000 new immigrants who arrived are committing crimes in Denver. The police are monitoring them with both covert and overt operations. And there is not a public safety crisis associated with the gang, Johnston says.
“We are very confident that this is not a crisis facing the City and County of Denver,” he said. “We are monitoring it closely like we monitor any public safety issue in the city. We do not have any situation where we have gangs that have overtaken apartment buildings or neighborhoods or anything else in Denver.”
In fact, the only crime Johnston said he’s aware of associated with Tren de Aragua was the heist at the jewelry store.
Denver Mayor Mike Johnston on Monday, July 22, 2024. The Mayor says there is not a public safety crisis associated with the Tren de Aragua gang,Rebecca Slezak/Special to Denverite
“We continue to see that the overwhelming majority of newcomers who arrived are working two to three jobs and do everything they can to take care of themselves and their family,” Johnston said. “And they came here to try to pursue the American dream. And so they are great additions to the community.”
As Johnston sees it, the national media blitz over the Aurora apartments is just one more example of a story blowing up in the context of the national presidential election.
“In a time with a pretty high profile, pretty confrontational presidential election, there are a lot of folks that would like to make national stories and national crisis out of things that just aren’t,” Johnston said. “This is not a national crisis and not a local crisis. It’s an issue we’ll be mindful of and careful of, but we do not see any pervasive threat to the safety of Denverites.”
What do community organizers and residents on the ground say?
Nate Kassa, an organizer with the East Colfax Community Collective, told Denverite he and his coworkers have spoken to dozens of residents at all of the CBZ apartments making headlines. Those residents denied the claim that the building had been taken over by Tren de Aragua or other gangs.
At a Tuesday press conference, dozens of people who lived there also shared the same message.
Residents of Aurora’s Edge at Lowry apartment complex, and their supporters, hold signs during a press conference to “set the record straight” on an alleged “gang takeover” of the property. Sept. 4, 2024.Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite
The media coverage and racist rhetoric have put residents in danger, Kassa said.
Denverite reviewed texts sent to renters that referred to the tenants as “animals.”
Multiple residents, Kassa said, have received death threats from strangers.
“I hope you know the Colorado veterans are building a militia with more fire power than you guys could ever imagine,” texted one stranger to a resident.
Denverite toured Moises Didenot’s apartment at The Edge at Lowry, where he lives with his wife and his sixth-grade daughter.
Moises Didenot gives a tour of his apartment at Aurora’s Edge at Lowry complex, which he said has been long neglected by his landlord, after a press conference to “set the record straight” on an alleged “gang takeover” of the property. Sept. 4, 2024.Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite
His stove hasn’t worked for two months, he said. His sink does not drain. Mold is growing in his bathtub. And gangs of mice, cockroaches and bedbugs infest his apartment.
He says the media has spread lies about who actually lives at The Edge at Lowry.
“They’re trying to put us all in one group, put us all in one bag,” said Didenot, flanked by dozens of residents frustrated by the media’s coverage of the apartments and the accusations that Tren de Aragua controls them. “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.”
Since they moved in, Didenot’s family has been on the verge of eviction.
“Every month they’re really going to tell me that they’re going to cancel my contract and kick me out when I don’t pay,” he said. “But when I ask them to fix the piping that’s blocked, the toilets that don’t flush, the kitchen that’s falling apart — very quickly, they disappear.”
Moises Didenot holds up documents that show he’s been paying his rent at Aurora’s Edge at Lowry apartment complex, despite that his landlord has rarely worked to fix his place, during a press conference to “set the record straight” on an alleged “gang takeover” of the property. Sept. 4, 2024.Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite
Jeraldine Mazo, a Colombian resident of The Edge at Lowry, said the national media’s claims that Venezuelan gangs have taken over the building have her worried. As she sees it, they’re fueled by racism against Venezuelans.
She said she’s been unable to find work because companies believe she’s from Venezuela.
“We are not causing problems,” Mazo said. “All we want is … a place for us to live, a place for our kids to live with our families.”
Members of Housekeys Action Network Denver, a nonprofit that fights for housing security, have been at all of the apartments in question for weeks and say they have never feared any of the residents.
“Never once were we in fear for our lives, never once were we threatened, never once did we witness any sort of gang activities or even weapons — just vulnerable victims of an oppressive slumlord who would gladly reap millions from their payments and still defile their name,” the group wrote in a statement.
Jennifer Piper, of the American Friends Service Committee, has been working on immigration issues in the metro for more than two decades.
“This election cycle has turned what should have just been a humanitarian issue into a crisis of stereotyping and xenophobia, really, for both parties,” she said. “It’s very concerning. I feel like we haven’t seen this level of terrible rhetoric, rhetoric from the federal government, since I started doing this work.”
The real story, as she sees it, is that apartments in Aurora are allowed to deteriorate and people are forced to live in undignified places.
“All this stuff about Tren de Aragua is a great distraction from the systemic problems that exist around housing in the city of Aurora,” she said.
What’s next?
Mayor Coffman is pushing the City of Aurora to shut down all the apartments under CBZ Management associated with Venezuelan gang activities.
If that happens, countless families and individuals will face homelessness, Kassa said.
However, a spokesperson for the City of Aurora said on Tuesday that closing the buildings is not immediately on the table.
Meanwhile, the Aurora Police and the larger task force organized around the issue are continuing to research Tren de Aragua.
Tenants, Housekeys Action Network Denver, and the East Colfax Community Collective are asking CBZ Management to fulfill its responsibility to residents and ensure they have basic living standards or relocate tenants to other habitable units.
The group also wants Aurora to back off of Coffman’s plan to shut down the remaining apartments and instead enforce the zoning code against the management company.
This story has been updated to include the perspective of Cindy Romero, a former resident of The Edge at Lowry. We have also added new information from the Aurora Police Department about the number of members of Tren de Aragua that officers have identified and complaints from residents who say their rent was stolen.
AURORA, Colo. — It’s been nearly a month since the City of Aurora closed an “unfit” apartment complex, citing “substantial, longstanding unresolved code violations and other poor conditions at the property.”
Denver7 followed up with now-former residents on Wednesday. They said a majority of people are still in hotels as they continue the search for permanent housing.
“The situation of us getting displaced has really jeopardized a lot of people,” a former tenant, who preferred not to share his name, said in Spanish. “The majority of us are in hotels. We are still waiting to see what happens with us.”
The former tenant said there are at least 10 other families still living at the same hotel where he is staying.
Aurora
Aurora mayor addresses Venezuelan gang activity claims in one-on-one interview
Yorkiss Ramos, another former tenant, said she’s one of the lucky few who has secured an apartment.
“There are more people in shelter than those who have gotten apartments,” Ramos said, in Spanish. “Here, I feel comfortable. I’m good here.”
City officials told Denver7 they covered the cost of hotels for some tenants through the end of August. Those folks were also connected with external social service agencies that will work with them to secure new housing.
A spokesperson said former tenants who were interested and qualified could also apply for deposit assistance through the city’s Flexible Housing Fund.
The apartment complex has been subject to national attention following claims that the Venezuelan gang, Tren de Aragua, had “taken over” the building. Former tenants said the allegations have made the search for new housing more difficult.
“With everything going on, the false news, they are closing the doors at some complexes,” said the former tenant who is still living at a hotel.
CBZ Management faces several charges stemming from the outstanding code violations. An Aurora judge delayed the trial until February 2025.
Denver7 reached out to CBZ for a statement but we have not heard back.
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Lumumba Sayers, 46, is charged with first-degree murder and two counts of felony menacing in the Saturday shooting death of Malcolm Watson near Paradice Island Pool at Pioneer Park.
He appeared in Adams County District Court on Thursday, where a judge increased his bail from $1 million to $5 million.
According to an arrest affidavit and witness statements made in court Thursday, Watson was carrying party supplies for his son’s birthday at the pool at 5951 Monaco St. when Sayers walked up to him and shot him multiple times, including once in the head.
After shooting Watson, Sayers went to talk with a man and a woman in a black Cadillac Escalade parked nearby before returning to Watson’s body, taking his keys and trying to place a handgun under his body, according to the affidavit.
Commerce City police officers arrived on scene to find Sayers crouching over Watson before he started to walk toward the Escalade, according to the affidavit.
Officers arrested him after witnesses began yelling that he was the shooter. Watson was pronounced dead at the scene.
Witnesses told detectives they believed the shooting was retaliation or revenge for the death of Sayers’ son, 23-year-old Lumumba Sayers Jr., who was killed almost a year ago in a shooting involving one of Watson’s friends, according to the affidavit.
In response to an inquiry about Braxton’s case, the Denver District Attorney’s Office stated “no such records exist,” which is the only response prosecutors can provide under Colorado law when a case has been sealed.
Braxton is on trial in federal court in Denver this week for a weapons charge related to the August 2023 shooting, according to court records.
He was indicted by a grand jury in January on one count of possession of ammunition by a prohibited person, court records show.
The trial is scheduled to wrap up this week, court officials said Thursday.
The center, which described the elder Sayers as a founder in social media posts, is “a safe place where youth and adults are provided with basic needs, educational and career support, health resources, recreational and outreach services to assist with creating jobs and a building a sustainable life,” according to a description on its Facebook page.
Defense attorneys argued Sayers was an “exceptional” man and defended his character and position in the community during Thursday’s hearing, while prosecutors argued he was a danger to the community and Watson’s family as well as a flight risk.
Adams County District Court Judge Jeffrey Ruff ordered a $5 million cash-only bail, calling it the “only bond acceptable” in the case.
Sayers’ next court date was not available Thursday.
1568 Nome St. has been condemned by the City of Aurora.
Kyle Harris/Denverite
The City of Aurora is shuttering an apartment building with more than 90 units at 1568 Nome St. The reason? Years of unsafe conditions that property owner CBZ Management has failed to address, according to the city.
All residents of 1568 Nome St. had six days to pack their bags and be gone. Aurora Police could arrest anyone still there after 7 a.m. on Tuesday.
So on Monday afternoon, residents, many of them immigrants, scrambled.
Some threw away their belongings where trash had piled up outside the property. Others hoped to rent storage units or borrow space in friends’ and strangers’ garages. Some just stood against a wall looking at everything they owned and wondered what was next.
Where would they stay after they left 1568 Nome St.? Most people Denverite spoke to had no plan, but they’re trying to figure it out.
The City of Aurora says it’s doing what it must to keep residents safe.
“City management is obligated under the Aurora City Charter to enforce the city code and look out for the safety and welfare of all residents,” said Ryan Luby, a spokesperson for the City of Aurora. “1568 Nome St. is no longer suitable for human habitation. The building owners and managers made the decision to effectively abandon their paying tenants, and this is the unfortunate consequence. The risks of residents remaining in the building and being subjected to its rapidly deteriorating conditions are far too dire.”
Aurora officials say they are working with community organizations to provide “tangible solutions for the building’s residents.”
Aurora has found 85 rooms in 10 hotels and motels in the city where people can move, said Jessica Prosser, Aurora’s director of housing and community services. Eligible residents would be offered housing vouchers.
Prosser said the landlord typically pays for such relocation costs. In this case, the company is refusing, so the city is footing the bill — for now. Aurora plans to recover the costs from CBZ management at a later date.
A CBZ investor declined to speak on the record using his name with Denverite, so we declined to use his comments.
Volunteers say that if Aurora wants them to effectively shelter and house the residents of 1568 Nome St., they need more time.
Advocates are working hard to help residents in a crisis that some say has ‘blatant’ optics.
On Monday afternoon, a handful of caseworkers and volunteers — some bilingual and some not — gathered outside the complex to help connect panicked residents with social service organizations, motel rooms and more permanent housing.
Some were individuals lending a helping hand. Others came from nonprofits and activist groups, including the East Colfax Community Collective and Housekeys Action Network Denver.
V Reeves, an advocate with the HAND, was one of the people fielding multiple questions from families.
They have been a constant presence at homeless encampment closures and have seen firsthand how cities in the Denver Metro have handled both the homelessness and new immigrant crises.
“This has been especially heartbreaking and tragic to see,” Reeves said. “They’re not caring about optics, or even attempting to look like they care or attempting to act like they’re not racist. I feel like it’s very blatant this time. I think it’s a very clear sign that tenant rights don’t matter if you’re brown or if you’re from another country and if you’re a migrant here.”
For many, there’s simply not enough time to figure out their next move.
Organizers and residents told Aurora officials they are uncertain they can help pull off the move by Tuesday morning.
Initially, organizers asked the city to keep the apartment building open for two additional months to give the residents time to make a plan.
Then, organizers dropped their demands to the full 15 days allowed for by the city’s charter.
“We highly welcome and encourage the coordination from the City of Aurora, but for people to access the resources that they’ve made available, we, the tenants and the community, are asking for a nine-day extension,” said Nate Kassa, an organizer with the East Colfax Community Collective at a Monday morning protest at the Aurora Municipal Center.
Andrea Fuenmayor, a mother of two, said she still has no place to go after she leaves.
“The only support I need is a little more time,” she said.
This photo provided by the Commerce City Police Department shows the scene of a fatal shooting on Friday, Aug. 9, 2024, in Commerce City, Colo.
Commerce City Police Department via AP
Four men were fatally shot and a woman was hospitalized with gunshot wounds during a spate of weekend violence in the Denver suburb of Commerce City. A person of interest in one of the cases was later found dead of a self-inflicted gunshot, police said Sunday.
Also in the Denver area over the weekend, a person was fatally shot and three others were injured during two separate altercations Sunday in the city of Aurora.
In Denver itself one person was killed and six people injured in a string of weekend shootings and stabbings, police said.
Commerce City Police Department spokesperson Joanna Small described it as “an incredibly violent weekend” for the fast-expanding community of about 70,000 people, which is located just northeast of Denver near the city’s airport.
“We average maybe 5 or 6 homicides a year,” she said. “We’re now talking about four homicides and a person in critical condition in 39 hours … The fact that the crimes are not related is even more baffling, really.”
Potential motives in the shootings were not released.
The first happened Friday night in the parking lot of a Commerce City 7-Eleven convenience store. A man and a woman were shot, and the man later died. The woman remained hospitalized in critical condition as of Sunday morning, Small said.
Officers later tried to contact a man who had been driving a truck involved in the shooting, but he fled and was found dead as a result of suicide on Sunday morning.
On Saturday evening, a man was fatally shot in the parking lot of a public park with a pool in Commerce City. A person was taken into custody but Small declined to give further details.
Later that night, officers responded to shots fired during a gunfight that was detected by Commerce City’s gunshot monitoring system. The officers encountered a stolen vehicle with three people that fled and later crashed, according to the authorities. A male passenger with a gunshot wound was found dead inside the vehicle.
A second passenger and the driver were injured in the crash and taken into custody. Officers returning to the scene of the gunfight found a male who had been shot dead in the yard of a residence, Small said.
The victims and others in that case were believed to be juveniles, she said.
There was no known connection between the shootings at the convenience store, the park and in the residential neighborhood, Small said. She declined to give further details, citing pending investigations.
The fatal Aurora shooting happened at about 2 a.m. in a nightclub parking lot, police said. Details about the deceased were not immediately released. A second victim, a 34-year-old man, was shot multiple times but got to the hospital on his own and was expected to survive, police said. No arrests had been made.
At about the same time, there was a shooting at an Aurora housing complex that left a man hospitalized with life-threatening injuries, police said. A second man who was stabbed in that incident was expected to survive, police said.
Four adults were shot near the intersection of East Colfax Avenue and Jamaica Street on Thursday afternoon.
Police say three people are in the hospital and one victim is dead. Police have made no arrests or named a suspect. Eastbound traffic was temporarily stopped on Colfax.
UPDATE: There are four victims, all adults, that were shot. Three were taken to the hospital, one died on scene.
There is a very large police presence in the area. One eastbound lane of Colfax is now open.
No suspects have been identified or arrested. We are working to gather…
For skywatchers and wannabe Aurora (Northern lights) chasers, space weather conditions are currently predicted to be favorable Monday night.
Monday, July 29, 2024’s sun imaged with a telescope and solar filter. (WTOP/Greg Redfern)
Monday, July 29, 2024’s sun imaged with a telescope and solar filter. (WTOP/Greg Redfern)
Here we go again.
For skywatchers and wannabe Northern Lights chasers, space weather conditions are currently predicted by National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s (NOAA) Space Weather Prediction Center (SWPC) to be favorable Monday night.
The current predicted line of visibility on the northern horizon is in the lower part of Pennsylvania. That is close enough to make it worth the D.C. area taking a look. I expect this forecast will change as the day goes on, since space weather conditions are still developing. SWPC will issue updates as they are warranted.
Geomagnetic storm watches are out Monday to Wednesday due to a number of coronal mass ejections (CMEs) — large expulsions of plasma and magnetic field from the sun’s corona in the outermost part of the sun’s atmosphere, according to NOAA.
Solar activity was elevated through the weekend and various events, including solar flares and filament eruptions associated with CMEs, NOAA SWPC said. Some CMEs could arrive Tuesday and into Wednesday. NOAA said the ones that arrived Monday could result in G1 or minor storm levels, but most of the activity will liley take place on Tuesday, when CMEs from Saturday and Sunday arrive.
“This could lead to G2-G3 levels as indicated by the WSA-Enlil model,” NOAA SWPC said, with more continuing into Wednesday.
This geomagnetic storm and associated aurora event are not predicted to reach the historic levels, such as the last one on May 10. It’s far more likely that we could experience an event like in March, which involved a similar G3 (strong) geomagnetic storm. NOAA Space Weather Scale descriptions can be found online.
The best bet is to monitor WTOP Weather for sky conditions, and the NOAA, plus other space-related social media sites, including EarthSky.org,space.com and space weather physicist Tamitha Skov’s X for updates. It will be worth taking a look to the north from a dark sky site with a clear horizon. You might be able to detect some color in the sky if aurora are present but they would likely be low on the northern horizon. Wide field binoculars will help your search.
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 that your eyes did not.
The D.C. area had several aurora events visible in 2023, including in March and November. And the area is on a roll for 2024, with more coming in all probability.
I check spaceweather.com every day just as I do my local weather. The site 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.
Monday’s posting explains what happened on the sun the past few days to cause the current space weather. My image of Monday’s sun shows a lot of sunspots.
With terrestrial weather being such a factor in the daily lives here in the D.C. region, and frankly the rest of the world, space weather has a direct effect, and can produce a variety of events, including Monday’s geomagnetic storm and the aurora.
Space weather, like terrestrial weather, is caused by Earth’s interaction with the sun. While giving warmth and energy every day, what many people may not know is that it undergoes an 11-year solar cycle that can affect space weather throughout the solar system.
The sun is a 4.5-billion-year-old star that humans have been monitoring since the time of Galileo. Currently, humans have a fleet of spacecraft that monitor the sun and space weather 24 hours, 7 days a week, 365 days a year.
The sun is currently in Solar Cycle 25 and is at Solar Maximum. At Solar Maximum, the sun produces more sunspots and solar events, which produce space weather events like Monday’s level G3 geomagnetic storm. In fact, solar researches believe the sun is already starting Solar Cycle 26.
The sun had an episode of disturbed behavior centuries ago. On Sept. 1, 1859, the sun experienced a solar storm episode that was observed by solar astronomer Richard Carrington and ended up bearing his name: “The Carrington Event.” This was a watershed event in solar astronomy and the sun’s effects on the Earth, unlike anything that’s happened since.
You listen to WTOP for “traffic and weather together on the 8s.” Maybe now you will want to include a check on space weather, too, as part of your daily weather routine.
Follow Greg Redfern on Facebook, X and his daily blog to keep up with the latest news in astronomy and space exploration.
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A Denver Fire truck crosses Federal Boulevard on July 4th, 2024.
Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite
Most metro residents were probably not at work on Independence day.
They may have been with family instead, or skipping town, or staring up at the sky, enjoying or absolutely hating the fireworks that blanketed Denver for a few days.
We wanted to know how this year’s damage compared to recent memory, so both Denver and Aurora’s fire departments shared records to help us find out.
The 2024 July 4th holiday was record breakingly bad for fires.
During the week spanning Monday, July 1, to Sunday, July 7, both Denver and Aurora’s departments recorded more fires than in any other week in the records they provided.
Denver’s data goes back to 2017. Aurora’s goes back to 2021.
Aurora’s numbers showed the most jarring uptick that week, quadrupling the average 23 fires per week to 108.
Each column represents numbers of fires in one seven-day week, starting on Mondays.Data Source: Aurora Fire Department
While Aurora Fire spokesperson Dawn Small said 2020 was also pretty rough, she could not provide information prior to 2021. The department switched data systems that year, which means older numbers are not comparable to 2024.
Denver’s record week reached 232 fires, not quite as dramatic as Aurora’s. The city usually sees more around July 4th, and sometimes at the end of the year, but 2024 still represents an eight-year high.
Each column represents numbers of fires in one seven-day week, starting on Mondays.Data Source: Denver Fire Department
July 4th tends to be the worst for holiday fires, but officials say fireworks aren’t the entire problem.
While there tend to be more fires on a holiday when the skies are filled with explosions, investigators don’t always find evidence they were caused by those explosions.
Of 47 incidents that Aurora’s department saw on the Fourth of July this year, Small said they only six were suspected of being caused by fireworks.
“The numbers this year would not exclusively have been due to a potentially higher usage of fireworks. It could have been due to a variety of possible factors including anomalies,” she wrote us.
Most of these are small grass or trash fires that get less scrutiny than more serious events, which can take months to be investigated.
Denver Fire spokesperson JD Chism told us his department clears about 66 percent of cases.
While it’s likely some fireworks-related burns never get labeled as such, he said you should give credence to common sense: Just look at when these spikes are happening.
Both Chism and Small said they’re not aware of any incidents of fireworks setting a blaze that killed someone. Investigations into injury or property damage can lead to criminal charges.
A firework goes off over Mar Lee on July 4th, 2024.Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite
Climate change, of course, is making things more dangerous.
On Thursday, the U.S. Drought Monitor released a new map, which pegged the metro mostly in “moderate drought.”
Russ Schumacher, Colorado’s state climatologist, said things have gotten drier since their last update.
“The Front Range has been very dry since the beginning of May,” he wrote us. “I think we’re pretty fortunate that we haven’t seen any real big fires yet, given how hot and dry it’s been. March and April were quite wet along the Front Range, so we may still be benefiting from that.”
“Obviously weather and climate don’t cause fires to start, but they can set the stage for fires to grow,” Schumacher added. “As always, it’s important for people to take care with fire and fireworks.”
A pile of garbage, including a lot of spent fireworks, in the parking lot of Force Elementary School in Mar Lee. July 7, 2024.
Aurora has a standing fire ban that, once a year, they consider suspending for a few weeks, to let people to enjoy their Fourth of July fun. Small said they decide based on three metrics related to how much foliage could burn and the U.S. Drought Monitor’s maps.
This year, the foliage numbers were in good shape, and the map didn’t look so bad back in June. Aurora suspended their ban this year.
A 60-year-old Aurora man was arrested on suspicion of sexual exploitation of a child following a police sting, according to Fort Collins police.
Roger Leon Estergaard was arrested on suspicion of internet sexual exploitation of a child, internet luring of a child and attempted sexual assault of a child, all felonies, Fort Collins police said in a news release Thursday.
Investigators claim Estergaard was identified through “inappropriate engagement with an underaged online persona” and that he traveled to Fort Collins believing he was meeting a juvenile girl for sex.
He was arrested Thursday after arriving at a predetermined meeting place, according to Fort Collins police.
Philip Morris International has selected Aurora for a new manufacturing plant to make its popular ZYN nicotine pouches, a product marketed to people wanting to stop smoking or chewing tobacco.
PMI plans to invest $600 million in a new facility on empty land at 48th Avenue and Harvest Road. When it is up and running, the plant will employ 500 workers making an average annual wage of $90,000, according to the company.
“These 500 jobs are good jobs,” said Stacey Kennedy, CEO of PMI’s U.S. operations based in Stamford, Conn., at a news conference held Tuesday morning at the Colorado Freedom Memorial in Aurora.
AURORA, Colo. — Police in Aurora are looking for the driver of a vehicle in connection with a hit-and-run crash that killed a pedestrian Saturday morning.
It happened around 9:39 a.m. at the intersection of E. Hampden Avenue and S. Uravan Way.
Police said the driver of a vehicle, which appears to be a mid-90s Pontiac Grand AM, struck and killed a man on foot. The driver then took off eastbound on E. Hampden Avenue.
The identity of the victim has not been released.
The suspect vehicle has no front plate and should have passenger-side damage, including a missing passenger-side view mirror, according to Aurora police.
Anyone with information on the vehicle’s whereabouts or suspect is being asked to call 911.
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