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Tag: baker

  • Third suspect arrested and charged in the 2017 stabbing death of hairdressing mogul

    Third suspect arrested and charged in the 2017 stabbing death of hairdressing mogul

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    Authorities say they have arrested the mystery man who allegedly teamed up with an accomplice to fatally stab famed hairstylist Fabio Sementilli seven years ago at a Woodland Hills mansion.

    Prosecutors allege Christopher Austin was the second man involved in the killing, along with the lover of Sementilli’s wife.

    Austin was recently arrested in connection with the killing and extradited from Washington state. On Oct. 18, after being sent back to Los Angeles, Austin pleaded not guilty to a charge of murder with the special allegations of the use of a deadly weapon, and pleaded not guilty Wednesday to an additional charge of conspiracy to commit murder.

    The 38-year-old Austin, prosecutors allege, conspired with Monica Sementilli, the hairstylist’s wife, and her lover Robert Louis Baker in January 2017 to kill her husband as part of a scheme to pocket his $1.6 million in life insurance. Austin’s alleged conspirators have been behind bars for more than five years, but until recently Austin’s identity and whereabouts had been unknown.

    Sementilli was the father of three and an executive at the hair-care giant Wella.

    Baker, 62, last year admitted that he killed the celebrity hairdresser on Jan. 23, 2017, leaving him in a pool of blood on a back patio in what was initially thought to be a home-invasion robbery gone wrong. Baker is serving a life sentence without the possibility of parole.

    Six months after the killing, Los Angeles police detectives arrested Baker and Monica Sementilli, revealing that they had been in a relationship for 18 months. Baker, a convicted sex offender, met her at LA Fitness, where he was a racquetball instructor.

    Baker, after admitting to the crime, has said that Monica Sementilli did not know about the murder plot. Prosecutors and LAPD investigators contend that extensive evidence shows she was tied to the killing.

    Monica Sementilli’s trial is pending, and she and Baker have been held in the Los Angeles County jail system for more than five years. She had pleaded not guilty, and her attorney, Leonard Levine, said that she was falsely accused and that Baker will testify to that.

    Her trial has been postponed a few times, and the arrest of Austin could change the dynamics. Prosecutors allege that Baker stabbed the hairstylist several times with a knife and that Austin stabbed the victim in the neck with a knife.

    Baker is alleged to have told Austin that the victim’s wife wanted to get her husband’s life insurance money. As part of the conspiracy alleged by prosecutors, Baker gave Austin money to buy a ticket to fly from Anchorage to Los Angeles and a roll of gold coins after the slaying, according to the complaint.

    Austin was arrested in Washington state and extradited to L.A. County, where he is being held on more than $2 million bail pending a Dec. 2 court appearance.

    Initially, when LAPD responded to the home and found Sementilli stabbed to death, investigators considered it to be the work of knock-knock burglars who plagued parts of San Fernando Valley.

    But though the home’s master bedroom was ransacked, the assailants never took the hair mogul’s valuable watch on his wrist, piquing the interest of detectives, said then-Robbery Homicide Division Capt. Billy Hayes. Security surveillance video showed two hooded men jogging up to the home before the slaying. Afterward, the men drove away in Sementilli’s Porsche and were recorded on another surveillance camera as they abandoned the vehicle five miles away.

    In an apparent attempt to cover up their actions, the two men took a video recording system hidden in the garage of Sementilli’s home that captured video from six cameras around the house, prosecutors said.

    Detectives closed in on Baker after discovering blood in the abandoned Porsche. His DNA had previously been captured after he was convicted of a lewd and lascivious conduct with a minor in 1993 and forced to register as a sex offender, Hayes said at the time.

    Prosecutors alleged Monica Sementilli told Baker how to remove the home’s video recording system. They presented evidence that she watched a live feed of the area shortly before the killing to ensure Baker had a clear path to her husband. Prosecutors alleged that she also let her 16-year-old daughter come home first and discover the crime scene.

    “Monica fully intended for Fabio to be murdered,” Los Angeles County Deputy Dist. Atty. Beth Silverman told a grand jury in 2017. “She wanted him out of the way because she wants to be with Robert Baker. She’s unhappy in her marriage, even though at the same time she’s acting like the loving, adoring wife.”

    Baker pleaded no contest in July 2023 to one count each of first-degree murder and conspiracy to commit murder. He also admitted the special circumstance allegations of murder for financial gain and murder while lying in wait.

    One of Monica Sementilli’s attorneys, Leonard Levine, told reporters after Baker’s plea that the defense was confident that his plea and his “truthful testimony will finally establish once and for all that Monica Sementilli had nothing to do with the planning or the murder of Fabio Sementilli, her husband. And we’re looking forward to the trial, which we believe will establish that fact.’’

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    Richard Winton

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  • L.A. Catholic church covered up molesting priests for decades. The price: $1.5 billion and so much pain

    L.A. Catholic church covered up molesting priests for decades. The price: $1.5 billion and so much pain

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    Clergy sex abuse scandals have rocked Catholic churches across the world, but few places have seen the financial toll of the Los Angeles Archdiocese.

    With a record $880-million settlement with victims announced this week, the Los Angeles Archdiocese has now paid out more than $1.5 billion.

    The bill reflects its rank as the largest archdiocese in the nation, with more than 4 million members, and a California law that gave accusers more time to file suit.

    But attorneys and others who have been involved in more than two decades of litigation say it also is an indication of the failures of church leaders to identify molesting priests and prevent them from committing more crimes.

    Some of those priests, after undergoing treatment at residential centers, were shuffled to new parishes, frequently in immigrant neighborhoods where the abuse would continue.

    With the latest settlements, the number of people alleging abuse now stands at nearly 2,500.

    But the true number could be much higher, lawyers say.

    One reason for the size of L.A.’s payout is that the California Legislature in 2019 opted to give adults more time to file lawsuits over childhood sexual abuse, which prompted more survivors to come forward. This extended the amount of time available for litigation compared with other states, which were also roiled by abuse scandals.

    “The L.A. archdiocese is not an anomaly,” attorney Mike Reck said. “It’s larger and been subject to more litigation and so we have found out a lot more about how it operated. I am not sure the archdiocese is worse than other places. I think we just don’t know as much about other dioceses.”

    The abuse — and efforts to cover it up — dates back decades.

    It reaches into the highest levels of the church. Msgr. Benjamin Hawkes, the second-in-command to two cardinals and a well-known leader who was the inspiration for Robert De Niro‘s character in the movie “True Confessions,” was accused after his death of abuse.

    Troves of church documents that served as a road map for the cover-up placed extreme scrutiny on Cardinal Roger Mahony, whose handling of clergy abuse has been roundly criticized.

    Mahony, the archbishop of Los Angeles for more than two decades, was a youthful and high-profile leader who used his position atop the diocese in the 1980s and 1990s to champion social and economic justice, among other causes large and small. But his legacy was obliterated after it was revealed that he supervised the reassignment of numerous priests who admitted to or were accused of molesting young children.

    With the behavior left unchecked, the number of victims within the largest archdiocese in the United States grew exponentially.

    “The real fault lies at the feet of Roger Mahony,” said attorney John Manly, who for decades has represented victims of sexual abuse. “He could have come here in 1986 and made the change. Instead, he chose to conceal it from the public, the media and, more importantly, law enforcement.”

    The culture of secrecy and the practice of shifting accused priests between parishes rather than alerting law enforcement — a feature of the scandal that played out in dioceses across the country — was also a persistent issue in Los Angeles. Delayed enforcement against the accused priests allowed them to move between locations and abuse other children, victims’ advocates say.

    The list of abusers within the Archdiocese in Los Angeles includes more than 500 names, according to the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests.

    “There has been a continuous, uninterrupted flow of hundreds of perpetrators in the Archdiocese of Los Angeles,” said Patrick Wall, an advocate for survivors of sexual abuse and a former Benedictine monk.

    Mahony could not immediately be reached for comment.

    Mahony wrote in a letter in 2013 that he had made “mistakes” in handling sexual abuse, but added that he followed the procedures that were in place at dioceses across the country: to remove priests from active ministry if there was reasonable suspicion that abuse had occurred and refer them to a residential treatment center.

    He did not know at the time, he wrote, that “following these procedures was not effective, and that perpetrators were incapable of being treated in such a way that they could safely pursue priestly ministry.”

    “Nothing in my own background or education equipped me to deal with this grave problem,” he wrote.

    Los Angeles Archbishop Jose Gomez in 2013 temporarily relieved Mahony of all public duties over his mishandling of the sex abuse scandal, a move that was unprecedented at the time in the American Catholic Church.

    Mahony, now in his late 80s, lived for several years on the campus of a parish in the San Fernando Valley. After his retirement, he vowed to devote more time to immigration reform, a lifelong passion for him that stems from his experiences with migrant workers in the fields of the San Joaquin Valley during his years in the Fresno and Stockton diocese.

    The church’s own records, shielded by an army of lawyers for decades, revealed an orchestrated conspiracy to prevent authorities from learning of criminal behavior.

    In memos written in 1986 and 1987, Msgr. Thomas Curry, then the archdiocese’s advisor on sex abuse cases, proposed ways to prevent police from investigating priests who had admitted to church officials that they abused children. Curry suggested to Mahony that the diocese prevent the priests from seeing therapists who might alert authorities and that they give the priests out-of-state assignments to avoid a criminal investigation.

    Msgr. Peter Garcia admitted to church officials to preying on undocumented children in predominantly Spanish-speaking parishes. After he was discharged from a treatment center, Mahony told him to stay away from California to avoid legal repercussions, according to internal church files.

    “I believe that if Monsignor Garcia were to reappear here within the archdiocese we might very well have some type of legal action filed in both the criminal and civil sectors,” the archbishop wrote to the treatment center’s director in July 1986.

    Garcia left the priesthood in 1989 and was never prosecuted. He died in 2009.

    Another priest, Father Michael Baker — one of the church’s most prolific abusers — had been accused of molesting at least 40 boys during his decades in the priesthood. In 2007, Baker pleaded guilty in criminal court to abusing two boys. He was sentenced to 10 years in prison but was released in 2011 based on the time he’d served in county jail and good behavior.

    Two brothers alleged that Baker began abusing them at St. Hilary Catholic Church in Pico Rivera in 1984 when they were 5 and 7, according to court records. The boys’ family moved to Mexico in 1986, but Baker, over the next 13 years, flew them to Los Angeles, Palm Springs and Arizona, where the abuse allegedly continued until 1999, at least once in the priest’s rectory in Los Angeles County, court records show.

    Records show that Mahony knew about Baker’s sexual abuse of boys decades before it came to light publicly.

    In 1986, Baker first broached the topic in a note to the cardinal after Mahony appealed for priests to report inappropriate behavior, according to internal church records.

    “During the priest retreat … you provided us with an invitation to talk to you about the shadow that some of us might have,” Baker wrote. “I would like to take you up on the invitation.”

    At a spiritual retreat in December 1986, Baker made a full confession and was transferred to a treatment facility in New Mexico. The police were not notified, and no effort was made to contact the children who had been abused, according to church records.

    Baker returned to ministry in the Los Angeles Archdiocese in 1987, church records show. At the time, Mahony informed Baker that he was not permitted to be left alone with a child, but records show that Baker violated this directive on at least three occasions, all of which were observed by archdiocesan personnel.

    Baker remained in the ministry until 2000, when he was defrocked, church records show. In 2002, as the clergy abuse scandal came to light, The Times revealed that the archdiocese secretly paid $1.3 million to two of Baker’s victims two years before.

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    Richard Winton, Hannah Fry

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  • These competitors are bakin’ it to the streets in Rebel Bread’s second-annual Bake Fest

    These competitors are bakin’ it to the streets in Rebel Bread’s second-annual Bake Fest

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    Rebel Bread is back with its second-annual Bake Fest on Oct. 5. The Denver bakery, specializing in sourdough, pastries and other baked goods, will host 100 competitors and a brigade of public taste-testers to determine winners in various categories.

    “My background is in culinary anthropology and I’ve always loved the culture,storytelling and education around food,” said Zach Martinucci, Rebel Bread’s founder.

    This mindset is the throughline in Martinucci’s work. In addition to serving as a bakery with a pickup window and a wholesaler, Rebel Bread hosts classes and events – including Bake Fest – that build skills and community.

    Martinucci said he competed in his first baking competition in college, when he was just starting to play around with sourdough.  “It pushed me to get out of my comfort zone and share this thing that I’d only been baking in my own apartment,” he recalled. During that first competition on the UCLA campus, he discovered “the great community feeling that you don’t always get to experience as a home baker.” He also won the competition – though, he said, that’s not what mattered.

    Rebel Bread founder and CEO Zach Martinucci in his bakery in Baker. Sept. 24, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    Six years later, he was able to facilitate a similar experience for other professional and amateur bakers, with Rebel Bread’s Bake Fest. Join him for the second annual event this October.

    • Bake Fest takes place on Saturday, Oct. 5 from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. in the parking lot outside of Rebel Bread’s Production Lab, 675 S. Broadway
    • Bakers enter the competition for free, tasters pay $1.25 per sample
    • Registration for competitors ends at 11:59 p.m. on Sept. 29, or when the roster reaches 100, whichever happens first
    • Tasting tickets are available in advance, but can also be purchased day-of
    • This year’s categories include: brownies, whole grain savory, quick breads, sandwich cookies and gluten-free cakes

    Meet one of last year’s Bake Fest champions – and learn her secret recipe 

    Last year, 8-year-old Jade Speaks and her Auntie Kay won the pie category with their unique take on pumpkin pie.

    Kayla Day Krug, aka “Auntie Kay,” found the recipe on a Pinterest board 10 years ago. It’s been her Thanksgiving go-to ever since. The pie features a gingersnap cookie crust and a swirl of Nutella.

    A girl in oversized oven mitts reaches into an open oven, grabbing a pie as a woman and a dog in the background watch in suspense.
    Jade Speaks takes her pumpkin and nutella pie out of the oven as her aunt, Kayla Day Krug, watches. Sept. 25, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    Last year, when Jade and her mom moved to Colorado, Jade and Auntie Kay started baking together. Then, they learned about the 2023 Bake Fest and entered as co-bakers. 

    This year, Jade is competing solo – and she’s trying a new recipe. She’s making mini pancake kabobs (pancakes are technically quick breads – who knew!) and layering them with fruit and various sauces.

    Although there is no kids-specific category in this year’s competition, Jade isn’t worried. “I think it’s pretty cool,” she said of going head-to-head with adult competitors.

    She remembers last year’s win, including the proof that told her that victory was almost fully baked. “My clue was that one of the judges came for seconds. So that was like, ‘I think I’m probably going to win.’ And then I did,” she recalled with a grin.

    Jade said a good baker is someone who is “focused and having fun…and not stressed out.” “You got to keep your kitchen clean and you got to keep it organized,” she added, tidying up as she spoke. She also noted bakers should keep their hair up – though, luckily, she didn’t learn that lesson the hard way.

    When asked about her favorite part of the pie-making process, she paused to consider. “Probably it would be…eating it!”

    Here’s Jade’s award-winning pumpkin pie recipe.

    A brown and orange pie sits in a white dish on a counter; in the background, a little girl making a goofy face can be seen peering over the edge.
    Jade Speaks’ pumpkin and nutella pie, on the counter in her aunt’s Golden home. Sept. 25, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    Meet a new Bake Fest competitor

    Margaret Restivo, owner of Miss Margaret Maker’s Pumpkin Seed Brittle – a direct-to-consumer home brittle-making operation –  will be entering a pumpkin brittle loaf in the quick breads category. 

    A woman in a red blouse looks happy as she smiles behind a loaf of bread on a white plate in a crowded commercial kitchen space, filled with racks and sinks and metal.
    Margaret Restivo poses with a loaf she baked and brought in to Rebel Bread’s bakery in Baker. Sept. 24, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    The recipe, and her brittle business, are an ode to her grandmother – who was also a Margaret.

    “She’s in so much of what I do,” Restivo said, reminiscing about her childhood in southern Illinois, just outside East St. Louis.  “So much of what motivates me and my food and my flavors comes from those memories I have of eating Sunday supper with granny. Or when she would babysit us during the summers, there was always some baked good around, or coming out of the oven, or about to go in.”

    She said her grandmother would wrangle her and her sisterr and teach them the ways of the kitchen. One of her fondest memories is of making French toast together.

    “In the mornings after my mom would drop us off, Grandma would lay out a blanket in the middle of the living room. She had these little wicker serving trays and would make breakfast,” Restivo recalled. “That’s my earliest food memory with Grandma, being able to dip the pieces of bread in the French toast custard before she put them in the pan and started frying them.” 

    Standing on that stepstool in Grandma’s kitchen, Restivo started her baking journey. Then, in her early twenties, she decided that cooking and baking would be her career.

    At that age, she said, “I started to take it seriously, started to put myself in fine dining kitchens and worked in a traditional restaurant setting until the pandemic hit.” At that point, she started her business, Miss Margaret Maker’s.

    A brown loaf of bread covered by crumbly bits sits on a white dish in a well-lit room.
    Margaret Restivo’s pumpkin seed and pumpkin brittle loaf, which she brought into Rebel Bread’s bakery in Baker. Sept. 24, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

     “When restaurants closed, Colorado has great cottage act laws in place, so I was able to make certain shelf-stable goods that I could sell direct-to-consumer out of my home kitchen,” she explained. “So I pivoted and just haven’t looked back.”

    When asked what makes a good baker, Restivo said, “I think resiliency is the big one.”

    She said, “There are so many variables, there are so many things that can go wrong. So the ability to just be willing to try again when it doesn’t go right the first time, or even when it comes out right,” is what leads to long-term success.

    How to enter the competition – and how to get tickets to taste the goodies

    Ready to wow the judges with your baked goods? Enter the competition here, free of charge. 

    This year’s categories include: brownies, whole grain savory, quick breads, sandwich cookies and gluten-free cakes. It’s a shift from last year’s competition where categories included bread, cake, pie, chocolate chip cookies, baker’s choice and a young baker’s competition for kids 12 and under.

    Registration ends Sunday, Sept. 29 at 11:59 p.m., or when the competition reaches maximum capacity. Sign up as soon as possible if you’d like to compete.

    If your skillset is more aligned with the eating side of the event, you can buy tasting tickets here. Each ticket is $1.25 and can be redeemed for one sample. Tasting tickets are available in advance, as well as day-of.

    But beware – while the fest will have thousands of tastes available, there’s no guarantee you’ll get to try everything. So show up early to take advantage of the full selection.

    Funds will benefit Culinary Hospitality Outreach and Wellness. The organization’s mission is to support mental and physical wellness for folks working in the hospitality industry.

    Rebel Bread Bake Fest begins at 10 a.m. on Saturday, Oct. 5 at 675 S. Broadway in the Denver Design District. Find a full schedule of events here. 

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  • Is South Broadway moving into Englewood?

    Is South Broadway moving into Englewood?

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    The employee-owners of the Fancy Tiger Crafts Co-op were hoping to stay in Denver when it became clear they needed to leave the space on South Broadway that housed their yarn, needles and classes for almost two decades.

    That didn’t happen — their rent in Baker doubled, so they needed to leave.

    But they did end up happy with where they landed.

    It turned out that their new block, further down Broadway in the heart of Englewood, was a refuge for other businesses fleeing high overhead.

    “When we found this space, we were like, ‘Well, it’s just outside of Denver. It’s downtown Englewood. It’s three or four miles south, whatever,’” recalled Marta Johnson, one of those co-owners. “We’re still on Broadway.”

    They’re not the only ones making the move.

    Mutiny Information Cafe recently announced they plan to relocate down the block from Fancy Tiger’s new location, thanks to rising rent. Treelotta Fabrics & Craft Supplies made a similar move a few years ago.

    Fellow Traveler, which opened in the area in 2022, was opened by a longtime bartender at Sputnik.

    Fancy Tiger Crafts Co-op co-owner Marta Johnson stands in the business’ new location in Englewood. Aug. 17, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    There’s a growing center of gravity in Englewood. Is it a bad omen for Denver’s piece of South Broadway?

    Back in 2020, we canvassed businesses on Fancy Tiger’s old block in Baker to see how everyone was doing during the COVID era. Complaints about landlords and high rent abounded.

    Erika Righter, owner of the Hope Tank gift shop, told us then that she worried all of these small businesses were in danger.

    Hope Tank was eventually forced from the neighborhood. So was the nearby Sol Tribe tattoo shop, albeit more recently, a few years after the murder of founder Alicia Cardenas destabilized the business. Barry’s on Broadway, a longtime watering hole next door, also closed due to tricky finances.

    Meanwhile, visible poverty has become a point of conflict in the corridor over the last few years.

    Johnson said she and her Fancy Tiger co-owners have no beef with their old landlord. They get it, Denver is more expensive than ever.

    And it’s helped that they found a budding business community in Englewood.

    “Yeah, being not in Denver isn’t a huge deal,” she said.

    Broadway runs through downtown Englewood. Aug. 17, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    But Denver City Council member Flor Alvidrez, who presides over the district, said these relocations are “concerning.” There’s a certain “character” that’s lost when a small business leaves, she told us, especially because she worries only well-financed tenants will be able to afford to replace them.

    “Businesses close and open. That’s a part of time. But what scares me is that the ability for someone that’s not wealthy to start a business is going down,” she said. “New businesses will come, but will they be snazzy investors or will they be a local person that’s just opening their dream?”

    Those super-local ventures may yet survive in Denver, but it might take some creative thinking.

    Joe Phillips is the ex-Sputnik bartender who opened Fellow Traveler in Englewood a few years ago.

    But he’s not finished with his old employer. This week, he inked the final paperwork to buy Sputnik from his old bosses.

    He’s encouraged to see Englewood’s main street growing — it’s a good sign for Fellow Traveler. But he’s not sold on the idea that those good tidings have come at Denver’s expense. Broadway may be in flux, but it’s not finished.

    “I’ve been going to South Broadway for over 20 years, and I’ve seen the changes. When Punch Bowl [Social] opened up, we all thought it was the end of the world and we were like, ‘Well, South Broadway is over now, it’s just going to be the bros and the Chads and all that shit.’ But it survived and it found a new era,” he told us. “I’m doubling down on that side of Broadway.”

    Fellow Traveler owner Joe Phillips in his Englewood bar. Aug. 17, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    Alvidrez told us there is assistance available for local proprietors, mini-grants for micro-businesses and federal money issued by the state. At the city level, she said she’s working to make it easier for businesses to expand into parking lots, as they did during the pandemic, so they might squeeze more cash out of fixed open hours.

    But she admitted that City Council can’t control the whole economy. She said small local enterprises might need to share space on corridors like Broadway to afford the rent, or try to diversify their offerings.

    “A good example of that, I think, is Molecule Effect, where they are a bar at night, but they’re a coffee shop during the day. You can only make so much money on coffee,” she said. “We do have to evolve. And that does mean finding other parts to cut your costs.”

    Available property in Downtown Englewood. Aug. 21, 2022.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    Meanwhile, Englewood has mostly welcomed these economic refugees to their downtown.

    Nick Perry purchased Edward’s Tobacco Shop, a few doors down from Fancy Tiger’s new spot, and its building about four years ago. All of this new interest, he said, is a good sign.

    “You can definitely see that this neighborhood’s on the upswing. It kind of feels like maybe this could become the next Tennyson, or that kind of shopping district. If you go around the neighborhoods, you’ll see it’s being gentrified, a lot of scrapes, a lot of new builds,” he told us. “There’s a big push from the city, and there’s a downtown development committee, that are really starting to put a lot of resources into this area.”

    Nick Perry, owner of Edward’s Tobacco Shop, in his Englewood storefront. Aug. 21, 2022.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    While we didn’t get a hold of anyone with the city of Englewood for this story, everyone we spoke to in their downtown Broadway corridor said they were happy with the ways local government was supporting their ventures.

    Johnson said she’s met most of her new neighbors, many of whom were excited to connect. She’s hopeful they’ll gel into a support network as they get their footing. (Fancy Tiger is still relying on a crowdfunding campaign to cover their moving costs.)

    Phillips said he’s looking forward to Mutiny moving in next door. Their exit from Baker will probably impact Sputnik’s business, but it will be a boon for Fellow Traveler.

    He views all of these moves, he added, as more of an “expansion” of Broadway rather than a death knell. But Englewood, he added, will need affordable housing, and a lot of it, to really reach economic viability.

    “I’m excited about the changes going on here. My one fear is, even if every storefront in downtown Englewood was the coolest place, it’s not going to change the availability of housing in this area,” he said. “The density in this area is not built to handle a real vibrant downtown community.”

    Inside Fellow Traveler in Englewood. Aug. 17, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    Wes Champion, who’s owned retail shops here long enough to remember when the old Cinderella City Mall made this one of the busiest business areas in the metro, said that additional housing development is probably inevitable. He just suspects it will have to wait until the Federal Reserve lowers interest rates.

    “This is going to all turn into small retail stores with housing,” Champion said. “It’s just a matter of time.”

    Wes Champion stands in his Anderson’s Vacuum and Colorado Shaver combination shaving, vaccuum and yard store in Downtown Englewood. Aug. 21, 2022.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    Real estate in Englewood, in turn, may heat up like it did in Denver. But Perry said he’s not worried about all this new demand making it more expensive to exist there.

    “We’re years and years away from it becoming like what they’re escaping in Denver,” he told us. “We’re a long ways from that.”

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    Kevin Beaty

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  • Mutiny Information Cafe is leaving South Broadway in Baker for Englewood

    Mutiny Information Cafe is leaving South Broadway in Baker for Englewood

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    Mutiny Information Cafe on South Broadway. Feb. 16, 2022.

    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    Mutiny Information Cafe is leaving its longtime location on South Broadway for Englewood, the store announced Wednesday.

    The underground book, record, comic and coffee shop has served the Baker and Speer neighborhoods since 2013 — or really, since 2005, when it was known as Mutiny Now! under different ownership.

    The reason for the move is a familiar tale.

    “Our current building is for sale and we are priced out of staying,” the shop said in its announcement.

    Mutiny’s last day in its current location is Sept. 22.

    Although owners don’t know what their new rent would be under new ownership, they said they’re cutting their losses and looking forward to a fresh start.

    For Mutiny, development on surrounding blocks spells gentrification, and they want no part of it.

    “The way we run our business is not profit-orientated as much as a business, I suppose, should be,” said Jim Norris, one of two Mutiny co-owners. “So there would just be no way that we could keep up with the rent down there and do what we want to do, which is build community and not rip people off for things – and try to keep things affordable and fun and free for kids.” 

    He added that he’s excited for a fresh start. At the new location on 3483 S. Broadway, Mutiny will “focus on comics, coffee and community.” But “the store will be a lot cleaner and nicer,” Norris added, with more comics, less clutter, and a finished basement for hosting shows and events.

    Biggie the Mutiny Information Cafe cat patrols the comic book shelves. South Broadway, Feb. 16, 2022.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    “We’ll be pushing the same vibe,” Norris emphasized. “(It’ll just be) a little smaller, much cleaner spot with air conditioning, a truly handicap-accessible bathroom, drinking fountains, all these things that we’ve been missing.”

    But, in Mutiny fashion, a squeaky-clean space isn’t quite on brand.

    “I guess up to us to put some dank in it,” Norris chuckled.

    There are ghosts on the block, and that’s another reason Mutiny owners are ready for a change.

    Before Mutiny was Mutiny (Information Cafe or otherwise), it was Ichabod’s Books and Mrs. Crane’s Coffee.   

    Norris said Ichabod’s “has got its own crazy story with the FBI and stolen books and all kinds of crazy stuff.”

    But the building’s illicit history isn’t what haunts him. It’s the absence of Alicia Cardenas, a beloved tattoo artist and the founder of Sol Tribe Tattoo & Piercing, which was — until recently — located half a block north of Mutiny.

    In 2021, Cardenas was killed at her shop by a white supremacist. Then, this July, Sol Tribe announced it would close its doors for good

    “[Cardenas] was the patron saint of the whole block,” Norris said. “When Alicia was killed, it took Matt [Megyesi, Mutiny’s other co-owner] and I’s breath away — and right after that, Matt had his heart attack.”

    A memorial to Alicia Cardenas on the entrace to Hope Tank on South Broadway in Denver. Jan. 8, 2022.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    Norris said things have felt like a fight ever since.

    “[Cardenas] was such a big spirit — and the way we ran business is that we would never do anything that would make Alicia mad,” Norris said. “If I had a question about the way to treat people or things to do, I would always run those by Alicia.”

    He also says that drug use in the area has ramped up in recent years.

    “Fentanyl wasn’t there when we started” in 2013, Norris said. “(But) fentanyl’s there now and it’s a horrible, horrible, horrible drug.”

    Jim Norris is looking forward to a bright future in a new city.

    Norris said Mutiny’s new location reminds him of the neighborhood he moved into 18 years ago.

    “There’s lots of cool, small, locally-owned businesses,” Norris said. “Englewood is like what Denver used to be. They’re open to small businesses. They come to you and offer you grants and things like that.”

    A photo of Matt “MegaC” Megyesi by David Sands sits near the entrance to Mutiny Information Cafe on South Broadway. Feb. 16, 2022.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    “We’re stoked,” he added. “And I think most people will be too – being able to park and not have to deal with Baker problems.”

    Until Mutiny’s last day, shop owners promise lots of live music and entertainment, and encourage patrons to, “come in, play some pinball, get a photobooth pic, and get a souvenir t-shirt or something.”

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  • Helicopter with 6 on board crashes near Baker in San Bernardino County; CEO of Nigerian bank killed

    Helicopter with 6 on board crashes near Baker in San Bernardino County; CEO of Nigerian bank killed

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    BAKER, Calif. (KABC) — The CEO of one of Nigeria’s largest banks was killed on Friday when a helicopter he was riding in crashed near Baker in San Bernardino County.

    Herbert Wigwe, CEO of Access Bank, was among six people on board when the helicopter crashed shortly after 10 p.m. His death was confirmed by Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, director general of the World Trade Organization and formerly Nigeria’s finance minister, in a post on X, formerly known as Twitter.

    The San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department said the helicopter crashed east of Interstate 15 near Halloran Springs Road, which is near the California-Nevada border and about an 80-mile drive from Las Vegas.

    The Federal Aviation Administration confirmed the helicopter – a Eurocopter EC 120 – had six people aboard. The FAA and the National Transportation Safety Board will investigate. The NTSB said investigators would arrive on Saturday and begin gathering information.

    The sheriff’s department said they had not found any survivors, but declined to elaborate.

    The helicopter took off from Palm Springs Airport around 8:45 p.m. and was en route to Boulder City, Nevada. Boulder City is about 26 miles southeast of Las Vegas, where the Kansas City Chiefs and the San Francisco 49ers are set to play in Super Bowl LVIII on Sunday.

    Halloran Springs Road crosses over the 15 Freeway in an area known to travelers for an abandoned gas station with a sign declaring “Lo Gas” and “Eat.” It’s located in a remote area of the Mojave Desert, with an elevation of nearly 3,000 feet. Logs from the California Highway Patrol show there was rain and snow in the area at about the time of the crash.

    The crash comes just three days after a U.S. Marine Corps helicopter crashed in the mountains outside San Diego on Tuesday during historic downpours. Five Marines were killed.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    Copyright © 2024 KABC Television, LLC. All rights reserved.

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  • Americans Reveal How They Would Like To Die In The Climate Apocalypse

    Americans Reveal How They Would Like To Die In The Climate Apocalypse

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    With the significant increase in deadly hurricanes, wildfires, droughts, heat waves, and floods, The Onion asked Americans how they would like to die in the climate apocalypse, and this is what they said.

    Alice Buchanan, Pet Store Owner

    Alice Buchanan, Pet Store Owner

    Image for article titled Americans Reveal How They Would Like To Die In The Climate Apocalypse

    “Accidentally decapitated by FEMA helicopter blade.”

    Patrick Burnham, Snorkeling Instructor

    Patrick Burnham, Snorkeling Instructor

    Image for article titled Americans Reveal How They Would Like To Die In The Climate Apocalypse

    “Climate change isn’t real. I’m going to die by my toddler shooting me with a gun just like everyone else.”

    Luisa Arellano, Therapist

    Luisa Arellano, Therapist

    Image for article titled Americans Reveal How They Would Like To Die In The Climate Apocalypse

    “Mount Everest falls on me.”

    Cayden Savage, Band Teacher

    Cayden Savage, Band Teacher

    Image for article titled Americans Reveal How They Would Like To Die In The Climate Apocalypse

    “I’d like to live long enough that I can drown in an ocean that’s reached the middle of Nebraska.”

    Tyler Cunningham, Musician

    Tyler Cunningham, Musician

    Image for article titled Americans Reveal How They Would Like To Die In The Climate Apocalypse

    “Probably my private jet crashing due to how much smoke is in the air.”

    Jill Snyder, Homemaker

    Image for article titled Americans Reveal How They Would Like To Die In The Climate Apocalypse

    “A self-inflicted gunshot to the head after seeing what those floods did to my begonias.”

    Katherine Hee, Nurse

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    “Oh jeez, exposure, dehydration, famine, they’re all so fun. Do I have to pick just one?”

    Clancy White, Doctor

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    “Personally, I know I can only be vanquished if the powers of water, fire, ice, lightning, earth, and wind all combine together to stop my evil plan.”

    Leila Abdou, Journalist

    Image for article titled Americans Reveal How They Would Like To Die In The Climate Apocalypse

    “Can I drown in lava? Is that an option?”

    Edwin Greene, Cashier

    Image for article titled Americans Reveal How They Would Like To Die In The Climate Apocalypse

    “Prank involving our last remaining food sources gone wrong.”

    Tim McCullough, Claims Adjuster

    Tim McCullough, Claims Adjuster

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    Joe Sobolewski, Electrician

    Joe Sobolewski, Electrician

    Image for article titled Americans Reveal How They Would Like To Die In The Climate Apocalypse

    “Successfully escaping the wildfires and then choking on a big bite of hamburger.”

    Anson Stevens, CEO

    Image for article titled Americans Reveal How They Would Like To Die In The Climate Apocalypse

    “Be killed in the uprising of my private military force in my post-apocalyptic bunker after they realize the concept of money is null and void and I’m hoarding resources.”

    Angela Zager, Home Health Aide

    Angela Zager, Home Health Aide

    Image for article titled Americans Reveal How They Would Like To Die In The Climate Apocalypse

    “Heat stroke in March.”

    Arthur King, Lawyer

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    “I don’t have to wait for the future—I’m actually dying in a wildfire right now!”

    Tyler Delgado, Dog Walker

    Tyler Delgado, Dog Walker

    Image for article titled Americans Reveal How They Would Like To Die In The Climate Apocalypse

    “I’m not greedy. I’ll take any death I can get.”

    Debra Smith, Artist

    Image for article titled Americans Reveal How They Would Like To Die In The Climate Apocalypse

    “Going outside to fetch the newspaper without sunscreen.”

    Patsy Lyons, Radiation Therapist

    Patsy Lyons, Radiation Therapist

    Image for article titled Americans Reveal How They Would Like To Die In The Climate Apocalypse

    “Screaming ‘This is all the fault of trans weightlifters’ while getting carried away in a mudslide.”

    Byron Jacobson, Mechanic

    Image for article titled Americans Reveal How They Would Like To Die In The Climate Apocalypse

    “I will be the one killing, not dying.”

    Dave Roundy, Mechanical Engineer

    Dave Roundy, Mechanical Engineer

    Image for article titled Americans Reveal How They Would Like To Die In The Climate Apocalypse

    “Falling down the stairs and breaking my neck on my very first night in the bunker.”

    Alicia Montero, Project Manager

    Alicia Montero, Project Manager

    Image for article titled Americans Reveal How They Would Like To Die In The Climate Apocalypse

    “I look up at the sky and say, ‘Snow? It’s snowing in September?’ and then a big chunk of hail flies straight down my throat and I asphyxiate.”

    Mosquito XR-127905, Bug

    Image for article titled Americans Reveal How They Would Like To Die In The Climate Apocalypse

    “Oh, don’t worry. My kind aren’t going away.”

    Jesse Curry, Historian

    Image for article titled Americans Reveal How They Would Like To Die In The Climate Apocalypse

    “Well, you know, they say you die twice. Once, when you actually die from drowning in a flood, and the second time, when someone says your name for the last time because all of them also drowned in a flood.”

    Weston George, Drummer

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    “Oh, I don’t know yet, but some kind of domestic terrorism, I bet!”

    Donna Novak, Baker

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    “In a wildfire peacefully surrounded by loved ones.”

    Marcus Howard, Comptroller

    Marcus Howard, Comptroller

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    “I would like to die in a space shuttle explosion while trying to escape a dying Earth, please.”

    Elaine Harding, Wedding Planner

    Elaine Harding, Wedding Planner

    Image for article titled Americans Reveal How They Would Like To Die In The Climate Apocalypse

    “It’s gotta be one of the more painful pollution-driven cancers.”

    You’ve Made It This Far…

    You’ve Made It This Far…

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  • Disney World Employees React To Attacks From Ron DeSantis

    Disney World Employees React To Attacks From Ron DeSantis

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    After months of repeated attacks from Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida, The Onion asked Disney World employees how they felt about it, and this is what they said.

    Matt Short, Ride Operator

    Matt Short, Ride Operator

    Image for article titled Disney World Employees React To Attacks From Ron DeSantis

    “I’ve heard ‘It’s A Small World’ 74,849 times, so I can handle pretty much anything.”

    Lauren Braunston, Ride Operator

    Lauren Braunston, Ride Operator

    Image for article titled Disney World Employees React To Attacks From Ron DeSantis

    “Luckily, I don’t have to worry about it anymore because I’m getting laid off.”

    Becky MacGregor, Cinderella

    Becky MacGregor, Cinderella

    Image for article titled Disney World Employees React To Attacks From Ron DeSantis

    “No! Don’t show my face out of character! They’ll kill me!”

    Bob Iger, CEO

    Image for article titled Disney World Employees React To Attacks From Ron DeSantis

    “Without it, I wouldn’t have gotten my job back and gotten to do the thing I love the most: firing people! So I can’t thank him enough!”

    Trevor Ballin, Parking Attendant

    Trevor Ballin, Parking Attendant

    Image for article titled Disney World Employees React To Attacks From Ron DeSantis

    “The Mouse has raised a glistening kingdom from the swamp and commands an empire on which the sun never sets. What can an upjumped tax collector say to the legions of the Mouse? We hear but a breeze.”

    Renee Harrison, Tower of Terror Bellhop

    Renee Harrison, Tower of Terror Bellhop

    Image for article titled Disney World Employees React To Attacks From Ron DeSantis

    “He’s a fool to forget who really chooses the next president.”

    Harrison Cutler, Custodian

    Harrison Cutler, Custodian

    Image for article titled Disney World Employees React To Attacks From Ron DeSantis

    “If only he knew cis kids and trans kids all puke funnel cake the same.”

    Samantha Bodine, Ariel

    Image for article titled Disney World Employees React To Attacks From Ron DeSantis

    “This is already the most miserable, joyless place on earth, so I don’t see how he could possibly make it any worse.”

    Melanie Hothan, Concession Worker

    Melanie Hothan, Concession Worker

    Image for article titled Disney World Employees React To Attacks From Ron DeSantis

    “I’m actually nervous about provoking a guy who might run for president but is probably gonna peter out embarrassingly.”

    Chuck Freeman, Mickey Mouse

    Chuck Freeman, Mickey Mouse

    Image for article titled Disney World Employees React To Attacks From Ron DeSantis

    “Come for me, DeSantis. I will drink your blood and bathe in your children’s fear.”

    Silas Bennett, Goofy

    Image for article titled Disney World Employees React To Attacks From Ron DeSantis

    “Governor DeSantis’ actions are an obvious overreach of executive power and a clear sign that the GOP has abandoned its principles of small government and noninterference in business, HYUCK, HYUCK!”

    Kayla Fayder, Disney College Program

    Kayla Fayder, Disney College Program

    Image for article titled Disney World Employees React To Attacks From Ron DeSantis

    “Someone seems bitter they didn’t get into the Disney College Program.”

    Ethan O’Sullivan, Baker

    Ethan O’Sullivan, Baker

    Image for article titled Disney World Employees React To Attacks From Ron DeSantis

    “Feuding with the happiest place on earth is an embarrassingly unimaginative means of establishing yourself as a villain.”

    Rascal, Dolphin

    Image for article titled Disney World Employees React To Attacks From Ron DeSantis

    “Eee-eee-eeeeeee-ee.”

    Candice Palermo, Audio Technician

    Candice Palermo, Audio Technician

    Image for article titled Disney World Employees React To Attacks From Ron DeSantis

    “Surely, there’s a powerless minority group he can persecute instead.”

    Fernanda Burns, Ride Technician

    Fernanda Burns, Ride Technician

    Image for article titled Disney World Employees React To Attacks From Ron DeSantis

    “I don’t see how he can call us woke with our rich history of antisemitism.”

    Francis Lesseder, Remy

    Image for article titled Disney World Employees React To Attacks From Ron DeSantis

    “I invite Ron to meet me in the sewers so we can settle this like men.”

    You’ve Made It This Far…

    You’ve Made It This Far…

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  • The Greatest Baker Competition Announces Winner and Makes Another Donation to No Kid Hungry

    The Greatest Baker Competition Announces Winner and Makes Another Donation to No Kid Hungry

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    Press Release



    updated: Aug 4, 2021

    The 2021 Greatest Baker Spring competition has found its champion: 13-year-old Malia Jusczyk. This amazing young lady is currently battling cancer but doesn’t let that stop her from baking her heart out. She is one tough cookie who picked up baking as a hobby during quarantine and has been unstoppable ever since. During the competition, she started her own business called Malia’s Sweet Treats so she can share her love for baking with the world.

    Along with taking home the title of Greatest Baker, Malia will be featured in Bake from Scratch Magazine and receive a $20,000 cash prize that she will use to grow her business and donate to pediatric cancer research. 

    “I really appreciate all of my supporters more than I can say,” said Malia. “I hope seeing me win inspires other people to never give up — no matter the adversity they are facing. I can’t wait to be cancer-free, baking, and following my dreams.”

    The Greatest Baker is an online, public voting competition. This Spring, celebrity bakers Alice Fevronia and Sophie Faldo guided the participants through the journey with cooking tips and tricks, along with inspiration and encouragement. The competition was sponsored by Stuffed Puffs®, My Silpat®, Twinkle Baker Decor®, and Bob’s Red Mill®.

    Additionally, the competition fuels philanthropic efforts that benefit No Kid Hungry. First launched in 2010, No Kid Hungry works with schools, local nonprofits, and elected leaders across the country to help launch and improve programs that give all kids the healthy food they need to thrive. 

    Those interested in learning more about the Greatest Baker and this year’s winner can navigate directly to www.greatestbaker.com

    Source: The Greatest Baker

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