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  • Metro Denver in the middle of its biggest apartment boom since the 1970s — but rent prices aren’t budging

    Metro Denver in the middle of its biggest apartment boom since the 1970s — but rent prices aren’t budging

    Metro Denver developers pushed out more than 5,000 new apartments in the third quarter, and rents barely moved despite that high volume, according to a quarterly update from the Apartment Association of Metro Denver.

    For the past several quarters, developers have added as many apartments in three months as they would average across an entire year before 2011.

    “I have been concerned about this for some time that we would flood the market with lots of apartments and vacancies would shoot up,” said Cary Bruteig, author of the quarterly report during a press call Wednesday.

    Rising vacancies would in turn force landlords to slash rents. So far, that hasn’t happened.

    Average rents in the region rose $8 last quarter to $1,911 and are up 1.2% over the past year, below the 1.4% rate of inflation measured in September.

    The overall vacancy rate fell 0.3% to 5.3% and moved lower in 18 out of 33 submarkets. Denver, which has seen a high concentration of new multifamily projects, had the highest county vacancy rate at 5.8%. The Central Business District had the highest submarket rate at 6.6%.

    Fueled by strong migration to the state, the 1970s was a boom era for apartment construction. But after an oil bust and then a real estate bust, things calmed down in the following decades. The region averaged about 5,000 new apartments a year until 2011, when the average kicked up to around 10,000 a year, Bruteig said.

    Over the past 12 months, developers have added 21,158 new apartments. That is double the pace seen last decade and equivalent to about 5% of all the existing apartments built in the past 100 years, Bruteig said.

    Even though fewer people are moving to metro Denver from other states this decade compared to last, Bruteig said, “We see no softening in terms of people moving into new apartments in the metro area.”

    Aldo Svaldi

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  • Tracking map: Here’s where Hurricane Milton is forecast to hit Florida

    Tracking map: Here’s where Hurricane Milton is forecast to hit Florida

    Hurricane Milton is expected to make landfall just after midnight Thursday near Sarasota on Florida’s Gulf coast as a large and dangerous storm, and it will retain hurricane strength for its entire track across the state to the east coast. But forecasters warned that devastating effects will spread well north and south of the exactly landfall location.

    After days of shifting forecast tracks, models have settled on a region within 40 miles north ofr south Sarasota. Tampa Bay, where a direct hit would bring catastrophic storm surge, is not out of the woods.

    As of Wednesday morning, Milton was still a Category 5 hurricane with wind speeds of 160 mph. Some weakening is expected in the next 12 hours as the storm hits wind sheer, but it will likely be too late to spare the region from a major landfall.

    The forecast cone of uncertainty stretches from Tarpon Springs in Pinellas County south to Port Charlotte in Charlotte County. Forecasters warned residents along nearly the entire Gulf coast to have their hurricane survival plans finished within hours or to evacuate if instructed by officials to do so. Wherever the storm hits, it will produce a nearly unsurvivable storm surge of over 10 feet.

    After landfall, the forecast shows Milton tracking parallel to Interstate 4 toward Orlando, and exiting the east coast somewhere between Port Orange and Port St. Lucie. A hurricane warning extends across the entire central part of the state from the west to east coasts.

    Regardless of where the storm hits directly, much of the central portion of Florida is at risk of flash flooding, destructive wind and possible tornadoes.

    Here’s the latest forecast track:

    David Schutz

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  • Colorado Supreme Court building to reopen after break-in, fire caused $35 million in damage

    Colorado Supreme Court building to reopen after break-in, fire caused $35 million in damage

    After nearly 10 months of extensive repairs and cleaning, the Colorado Supreme Court building will reopen its doors to the public on Tuesday.

    “The Ralph L. Carr Judicial Center is an important symbol in our legal community — it is the hub of activity for a number of agencies critical to our judicial system,” Chief Justice Monica M. Márquez said in a news release. “Its partial reopening marks a significant milestone in the recovery process from the devasting events that severely damaged the tower complex earlier this year.”

    The Ralph L. Carr Colorado Judicial Center, which houses the Colorado Supreme Court, in Denver on Tuesday, Jan. 2, 2024. (Photo by Hyoung Chang/The Denver Post)

    Brandon Olsen, 45, allegedly shot through a window and broke into the court building in the early morning of Jan. 2 while fleeing from a car crash at 13th Avenue and Lincoln Street, police said.

    The 45-year-old faces charges of arson, robbery and criminal mischief in connection with the incident, according to court records. He is accused of holding a security guard at gunpoint and starting a fire on the seventh floor of the building.

    The seventh-floor fire was extinguished by the building’s sprinklers, which ran for a couple of hours and caused significant water damage. In total, the break-in caused $35 million in damages and left four floors unusable, court officials said.

    Floors 3 through 7 are currently being rebuilt from scratch and are expected to reopen next summer, building officials said.

    During the building’s initial reopening next week, the public will have access to floors 1 and 2 of the office tower between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m., Monday through Friday.  Access to floors 8 through 12 will be available by appointment only.

    Lauren Penington

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  • RTD splits with police chief who had been on unspecified leave since July 1

    RTD splits with police chief who had been on unspecified leave since July 1

    The Regional Transportation District is without a police chief after Joel Fitzgerald Sr., on leave since July 1, officially split with the transit agency on Friday, RTD officials confirmed.

    It is not clear if Fitzgerald chose to leave his position with RTD’s internal police force or if he was fired.

    “As of Sept. 20, Dr. Joel Fitzgerald is no longer employed at the Regional Transportation District,” agency officials said in a statement Friday. “RTD thanks Dr. Fitzgerald for his service to the agency’s employees, customers, and stakeholders over the last two years.”

    Fitzgerald was hired in August of 2022 and put in charge of a growing police department tasked with combating issues including increasing violence and drug use in public transit spaces in recent years.

    But he was placed on leave for undisclosed reasons earlier this summer, RTD board members confirmed to The Denver Post without offering specifics.

    CBS Colorado was the first to report on the situation, highlighting an internal RTD memo that cited an outside investigation into “policy violations” committed by Fitzgerald.

    Colorado Public Radio was the first to cover Fitzgerald’s separation from the agency on Friday. That outlet previously reported that Fitzgerald had repeatedly driven an agency SUV at speeds over 100 mph and that he did not frequently visit RTD facilities in person, according to internal agency records.

     

    RTD plans to name an interim leader for its Transit Police and Emergency Management Department in the coming days, according to the agency’s statement Friday.

    Joe Rubino

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  • Broomfield shooting suspect, victim lived in same apartment, property managers say

    Broomfield shooting suspect, victim lived in same apartment, property managers say

    The suspect in Thursday’s fatal hostage situation and shootout at Broomfield’s Arista Flats apartment complex and the woman he held hostage lived in the same apartment, property managers said.

    In an email to residents, Arista Flats management said the hostage and gunman lived together, but the relationship between the two is still unknown.

    “As you likely know, there was a domestic violence incident in our community early in the morning of Sept. 12, 2024, that involved a male resident firing shots inside and outside of a unit and injuring a female resident who resided in the same unit,” management wrote in the email. “The incident ended after a short stand-off with law enforcement and the resident was taken into custody.”

    The hours-long standoff with police at the Arista Flats complex ended with the death of the woman hostage and police taking a seriously injured gunman into custody.

    Police did not specify who shot the woman, but said Thursday at least one Broomfield officer fired his weapon at the suspect.

    Police have not publically identified the gunman and the woman he’d held hostage, but Broomfield Police Department spokeswoman Rachel Haslett said criminal charges against the 34-year-old suspect “are forthcoming.”

    Residents who were evacuated from Arista Flats during Thursday’s hostage situation and investigation can return home Friday, police said.

    The number of residents evacuated from the apartment complex was not available Friday.

    Officers set up a ladder at the scene of a shooting and hostage situation at Broomfield apartment complex Arista Flats in Broomfield, Colorado on Thursday, Sept. 12, 2024. (Photo by Hyoung Chang/The Denver Post)

    The south stairwell in building 15 of Arista Flats — 11332 Central Court — remains closed for the investigation, police said. Residents can use any other entrance.

    This is a developing story and may be updated.

    Lauren Penington

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  • 1 dead, 1 injured in overnight shooting at Aurora apartment complex

    1 dead, 1 injured in overnight shooting at Aurora apartment complex

    One man was killed and another was seriously injured Friday during an early morning shooting according to Aurora police.

    Aurora police officers responded to reports of a shooting at the Abrigo apartment complex — located at 12170 East 30th Ave. — around 12:15 a.m. Friday, according to a news release from the department.

    When officers arrived at the apartment building — located near Peoria Street and down the road from Park Lane Elementary School — they found two men with gunshot wounds, the release stated.

    Paramedics transported both men to the hospital, where one later died from his injuries, police said. The other man remains hospitalized.

    Police originally suspected the two men had shot each other, but further investigation revealed that two unidentified suspects came into the apartment and fired multiple shots at both men, according to a 6:45 a.m. update.

    Lauren Penington

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  • Colorado weather: Hottest temps of the year Friday mean it’s beginning to feel a lot like summer

    Colorado weather: Hottest temps of the year Friday mean it’s beginning to feel a lot like summer

    Colorado is set to see the warmest weather of the year so far Friday as temperatures creep into the mid and upper 80s, according to the National Weather Service.

    Summer-like temperatures will be joined by sunny, mostly clear skies and a light afternoon breeze, according to NWS forecasters.

    Temperatures in Denver will peak around 87 degrees Friday afternoon before dipping back down to 53 degrees overnight, forecasters said.

    In northern Colorado, warm, dry and windy weather conditions will lead to increased fire danger, especially in Weld and Larimer counties, according to a NWS hazardous weather outlook.

    Periods of critical fire weather conditions are possible, but will largely be dependent on fuel conditions, the outlook stated.

    Fuel conditions refers to when excess plant material — including grasses, shrubs, trees, dead leaves and pine needles — significantly threaten the ignition or spread of wildfires, according to NWS.

    Rain is set to return to the metro area Saturday afternoon into Sunday morning and early next week, forecasters said Friday.

    Showers and thunderstorms could hit Denver between noon and midnight Saturday, and a cooler, unsettled weather pattern is expected to bring higher chances for rain Monday and Tuesday as a storm system tracks across the state, the hazardous weather outlook stated.

    Lauren Penington

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  • Tesla’s Autopilot drove car into tree, killing Colorado man in fiery crash, lawsuit alleges

    Tesla’s Autopilot drove car into tree, killing Colorado man in fiery crash, lawsuit alleges

    Hans Von Ohain and Nora Bass (Photo via lawsuit filed by MLG Attorneys at Law)

    Tesla’s advanced Autopilot driving system malfunctioned and caused one of the electric car maker’s Colorado employees to drive off the road and die in a fiery crash, a newly filed wrongful death lawsuit alleges.

    The widow of Hans Von Ohain says her husband was driving back from golfing in Evergreen with a friend on May 16, 2022, when the Autopilot system “unexpectedly caused the 2021 Tesla Model 3 to sharply veer to the right, leading it off the pavement” on Upper Bear Creek Road.

    The 33-year-old Von Ohain, who was intoxicated, fought to regain control of the vehicle, “but, to his surprise and horror,” the car drove off the road and into a tree, where it burst into flames, according to the 16-page complaint filed May 3 in Clear Creek County District Court.

    The Colorado State Patrol said in its 403-page crash report that the car’s condition after the crash made it impossible to access data to determine whether the self-driving feature was engaged at the time.

    But the passenger in the car, Erik Rossiter, who suffered injuries in the crash, told investigators that Von Ohain was using the autonomous drive feature on the trip home, according to the CSP’s final report.

    “It was uncomfortable,” he told troopers. “The car would swerve off toward the side of the road periodically and bring itself back.”

    The vehicle was traveling 41 mph at the time of the crash, just above the 40 mph speed limit, according to the CSP report.

    Von Ohain also used the self-driving feature on the way to the golf course, Rossiter said — a trip he called “a bit nerve-wracking.”

    An autopsy report showed the driver’s blood-alcohol level at three times the legal limit. His widow, Nora Bass, told the Washington Post in February that she had been unable to find an attorney to take the case due to his intoxication.

    “Regardless of how drunk Hans was, (Tesla CEO Elon) Musk has claimed that this car can drive itself and is essentially better than a human,” Bass told the newspaper. “We were sold a false sense of security.”

    Efforts by The Denver Post to reach Bass or her attorney were unsuccessful.

    If Von Ohain was, in fact, using the Full Self-Driving feature, it would make his death the first known fatality involving Tesla’s most advanced driver-assistance technology, the Washington Post reported.

    Bass and her attorneys allege Tesla knowingly released the self-driving system in vehicles when it was just a prototype and unready for consumers.

    Tesla did not respond to messages from The Post seeking comment. Von Ohain worked for the Texas-based carmaker as a recruiter.

    Federal regulators have logged more than 900 crashes in Teslas since they began requiring automakers to report accidents in 2021 involving driver-assistance systems, the Washington Post found. At least 40 resulted in serious or fatal injuries.

    Sam Tabachnik

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  • Where are Denver’s worst parking lots? Here are the city’s biggest offenders — and a few in the suburbs, too.

    Where are Denver’s worst parking lots? Here are the city’s biggest offenders — and a few in the suburbs, too.

    Too few parking spaces, lengthy queues for open spots, cramped designs that can’t handle crowds — Denver-area drivers brace themselves for headaches when they try to navigate the most stress-inducing parking lots in the city and beyond.

    The Denver Post went searching for the worst parking lots in metro Denver, with help from more than 100 people who weighed in with their opinions in an informal survey on social media platforms X and Facebook. Within Denver’s city limits, older central neighborhoods like Capitol Hill — where space is at a premium — host parking lots that received an onslaught of criticism.

    But that doesn’t mean suburban communities are immune to precarious parking set-ups.

    Poor parking lot experiences can affect drivers’ loyalty to a business, one expert says. Consumers are constantly forming judgments about brands, so “parking is one of the critical elements for brands to get right,” said Brent Coker, a marketing lecturer at the University of Melbourne.

    “Everything that happens to a consumer informs their attitude, which defines their future behavior,” including purchase decisions made minutes later, the Australian said. “If the carpark sucks, then yeah — that’s gonna give someone a negative attitude.”

    Here are the parking lots that stand out the most in Denver:

    1. Trader Joe’s urban locations

    Grocery store chain Trader Joe’s has two Denver locations in older neighborhoods, with small lots that challenge drivers in Capitol Hill on Logan Street and in Hale on Colorado Boulevard.

    “It’s no secret that Trader Joe’s parking lots are a nightmare,” said customer Rob Toftness, 42. “You add in their tight quarters with drivers’ inability to behave like adults, and you have a difficult recipe.”

    On a rainy Monday afternoon, shoppers weren’t deterred from completing their errands at the Capitol Hill store. They stepped in front of cars waiting for openings in the lot. Drivers tried to squeeze into narrow spots, parking haphazardly before darting into the store themselves.

    Four cars were queued in the left lane on Logan Street, turn signals blinking as they waited to enter.

    However, for cyclists and pedestrians, the store is a breeze to navigate. Toftness, a Five Points resident, opts to ride his bike along the 7th Avenue bikeway, then locks it at the bike rack while he shops.

    In an episode of the company’s podcast, Inside Trader Joe’s, co-host Matt Sloan said, “We don’t open stores with the world’s most ridiculous parking lot on purpose.” The size of a Trader Joe’s lot is based on the store’s square footage, with the chain’s locations often smaller than the average grocery store, especially when they’re squeezed into older neighborhoods.

    “Stores of a more recent vintage — more recently open stores — have larger parking lots when we can get them,” Sloan added.

    Trader Joe’s spokesperson Nakia Rohde declined to respond further.

    A shopper exits a King Soopers grocery store on Wednesday, Feb. 14, 2024, in Capitol Hill in Denver. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski)

    2. King Soopers in Capitol Hill

    The King Soopers grocery store on East Ninth Avenue leaves local customers lamenting the amount of time it can take to secure a parking spot in the main lot.

    Those who choose to park in the overflow lot are also inconvenienced, as the anti-theft wheel locks on shopping carts engage at the edges of the main lot, forcing patrons to carry their groceries across a busy street. Nine cars idled in the parking lot on a Monday afternoon, as drivers tried to park or back out of spots.

    Kara King, 33, said she’s never secured a parking spot on her first go-round.

    “You constantly have to circle the lot, waiting for one to open up,” the Speer neighborhood resident said. “Otherwise, your option is to park on the street and haul your groceries to your car.”

    King Soopers spokesperson Jessica Trowbridge didn’t respond to requests for comment.

    3. Whole Foods Market in Cherry Creek

    At the Whole Foods Market on East First Avenue in Cherry Creek, customers’ criticisms are largely directed at its lot design.

    “Whole Foods in Cherry Creek is awful,” said customer Krista Chism, 48. “All the spaces are designed for compact cars.”

    She called the lanes “too narrow,” which heightens the risk of hitting another vehicle parked behind her car while reversing. When she visits, “I seriously weigh the cost of paying to park against the possible cost of someone hitting my car,” the Park Hill resident said.

    This Whole Foods location has long been notorious, with Westword referring to it in 2011 as “singularly the worst parking lot in the city.”

    The Whole Foods media team didn’t respond to a request for comment.

    4. Denver Botanic Gardens

    Visiting the Denver Botanic Gardens often comes with parking difficulties on busy weekends, despite a dedicated parking garage. The gardens are most heavily trafficked by guests during events, including Blossoms of Light, Glow at the Gardens, the Spring Plant Sale and the Summer Concert Series, said Erin Bird, associate director of communications. Popular times for visitors also include warm, sunny weekends and Scientific and Cultural Facilities District free days.

    Bird said representatives understood visitors’ parking frustrations and urged guests to take extra time to secure parking in either the garage or the surrounding neighborhood.

    “The Gardens’ multi-level parking structure was designed to maximize the limited space we have due to our location that borders city parks in an established residential neighborhood,” she said. “Timed entry has eased some of the parking strain.”

    Denver's flagship REI store on the ...
    Denver’s flagship REI store on the South Platte River, pictured on Sept. 11, 2012, has a front surface lot (shown), an underground garage and auxiliary lots. (Photo by John Leyba/The Denver Post)

    5. REI Co-op’s flagship store

    The REI Co-Op Denver flagship store on Platte Street near downtown is the source of consistent parking gripes, including tight spaces, incidents of bike theft and the price to pay to park for lengthy shopping trips (after a 90-minute grace period).

    Patrons say the outdoor co-op attracts the most crowds during the weekend, but that doesn’t mean its ground-level parking areas don’t fill up at times during the week, too. On a recent Wednesday evening, the metered street parking was also mostly occupied as a few customers dashed across the busy street to the former Denver Tramway Powerhouse building that now houses the retail chain.

    The REI store earns 4.5 out of 5 stars on Google reviews, but at least 20 one-star reviews mention parking troubles. The designs of one surface parking lot and the underground garage are noted as cramped. One reviewer wrote: “The store itself really is great. But PLEASE fix the parking.”

    The REI media team didn’t respond to a request for comment.

    What about the suburbs?

    Outside of Denver, plenty of parking lots throughout the metro area give shoppers and visitors grief, too. Here are some notable ones:

    Costco: The warehouse club chain’s locations in Lone Tree, on Park Meadows Center Drive, and in Arvada, on Wadsworth Boulevard, draw particular complaints about parking lots that rattle the nerves. Costco stores face guff elsewhere, too: On Reddit, a thread asking the question “What’s your Costco’s parking lot situation?” has garnered hundreds of responses. Objections include waiting for spots during busy shopping hours and aggression in parking lots, such as honking, cursing and even car accidents. The Costco media team didn’t respond to a request for comment.

    Construction workers pour concrete in the upper parking lot at Red Rocks Park and Amphitheatre on Feb. 6, 2024, in Morrison. (Photo by Helen H. Richardson/The Denver Post)
    Construction workers pour concrete in the upper parking lot at Red Rocks Park and Amphitheatre on Feb. 6, 2024, in Morrison. (Photo by Helen H. Richardson/The Denver Post)

    Megan Ulu-Lani Boyanton

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  • Cleo Parker Robinson continues to redefine what “legacy” means

    Cleo Parker Robinson continues to redefine what “legacy” means

    A short time after Cleo Parker Robinson was awarded the National Medal of Arts in 2021 — along with the four other founders of the International Association of Blacks in Dance — she did a little dance in the White House. No surprise, really: Even at 75, the Denver-based choreographer and cultural doyen is so often in motion.

    One afternoon last week, Robinson was sitting a few rows up in the theater at the historic Shorter AME Church in Five Points — the home of her titular dance company — watching the Cleo II dancers rehearse “Roll Me Through the Rushes.” She didn’t fidget but she did lean in several times, making appreciative sounds, emitting thoughtful hmms, articulating beats to herself and very occasionally offering suggestions to the dancers.

    “Rushes” is one of three pieces that Robinson choreographed for her momentous Spiritual Suite, created early in the life of the dance company and dance academy, now in their 54th year. “Rushes,” “Mary Don’t You Weep and “To My Father’s House” are set to be performed at the upcoming Mother’s Day concert. Also on the program: associate artistic director Winifred Harris’ “When Wet Came to Paper,” which celebrates even as it mourns the life of early ensemble member Charles Fraser (“the engineer who became a dancer,” Robinson likes to boast); and David Roussève’s “One Nation Under a Groove,” a response to the racially motivated bombing of the 16th Street Baptist Church in Birmingham, Ala., that killed four girls in 1963.

    The weekend’s program is called “Legacy: Opening the Way.” And the timing could not be more apt, as Robinson continues to champion the works of Black choreographers and dancers, honor the history of dance in the African Diaspora, and build on the culture of the city where she grew up. And, in the neighborhood that forged her love of the arts, no less: Five Points.

    On May 15, Robinson will break ground on the Cleo Parker Robinson Center for Healing Arts. Set to open in September 2025, the 25,000-square-foot building will be adjacent to the historic stone church that sits at the corner of Park Avenue West and 19th Street. Imagined by Fentress Architects (designers of Denver’s snowy-peaked airport terminal and, more recently, the Denver Arts Museum’s welcome center), the new building includes a theater, reception area, rehearsal space, offices and classrooms.

    Where the past and future meet: The Cleo Parker Center for the Healing Arts and Shorter AME Church. (Provided by Fentress Architects)

    Passersby will see the high-glass atrium of Studio A. And, in a gesture that reaches for the visually eloquent and historically beguiling, the solar panels on the building’s east side wall will contain the labanotation of parts of “Mary Don’t You Weep,” a piece Robinson created in response to the deaths of Martin Luther King Jr. and her younger brother. Labanotation is a method of marking dance movements on paper. It resembles a musical score, but its patterns may also evoke the graphic richness of kente cloth.

    Inspired by the Black Arts Movement of the 1960s and ’70s, Robinson’s lineage runs deep. She studied and danced with iconic choreographer Katherine Dunham. CPRD owns the rights to more than 30 of the works of choreographer Donald McKayle, the singular sensation who directed and choreographed the Tony Award-winning musicals “Raisin” and “Sophisticated Ladies.” Some of the dancers and choreographers who are forging or have forged their own paths, having come through Cleo Parker Robinson Dance, include: Gary Abbott, co-founder of Chicago’s Deeply Rooted Dance Theater; choreographer Nejla Y. Yatkin; much-celebrated choreographer Leni Wylliams (who was killed in 1996); and, locally, Terrell Davis, founder of Davis Contemporary Dance and Jacob Mora of Moraporvida Dance.

    Robinson doesn’t much dwell on tales of her own artistic process — at least not in ways that emphasize the nuts and bolts of her craft. Instead, she’s more likely to sing the praises of collaboration and of her collaborators, among them Denver Symphony maverick Marin Alsop, Gordon Parks, Maya Angelou and Julie Belafonte (wife of Harry Belafonte and a dancer in Katherine Dunham’s company).

    Lisa Kennedy

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  • Colorado lawmakers’ latest police oversight bill would protect whistleblowers from retaliation

    Colorado lawmakers’ latest police oversight bill would protect whistleblowers from retaliation

    Former Edgewater police officer McKinzie Rees hopes to serve and protect again, but first she must get her name removed from a so-called “bad cops list” maintained by the Colorado Attorney General’s Office. It landed there, she said, as retaliation after she reported sexual assaults by a supervising sergeant.

    That sergeant went on to work for another police department until this year, when he pleaded guilty to unlawful sexual contact and misconduct and was sentenced, more than four years after the assaults and retaliation against Rees.

    She testified to the state’s House Judiciary Committee this week that, even after her attacker was exposed, her complaint about still being listed as a problem police officer “is falling on deaf ears every time.”

    Rees’ testimony, echoed by other frontline police officers from Colorado Springs and Denver about retaliation they faced after reporting misconduct, is driving state lawmakers’ latest effort at police oversight. Fresh legislation would require investigations of all alleged misconduct and increase protection for whistleblowers.

    But the bill, titled “Law Enforcement Misconduct,” faces resistance from police chiefs, sheriffs, district attorneys and the Fraternal Order of Police who contend it would complicate police work and lead to unnecessary prosecutions.

    While state leaders “are committed to addressing police misconduct,” the requirement that all allegations must be investigated could create “a caustic culture” within police agencies, said Colorado Department of Public Safety executive director Stan Hilkey in testimony to lawmakers during a hearing Tuesday.

    “This bill is harmful to the mission of public safety,” Hilkey said, raising concerns it would lead to police “watching each other … instead of going out and responding to and preventing crime.”

    The legislation, House Bill 1460, won approval on a 6-5 vote in the House Judiciary Committee. It would require investigations of all alleged misconduct by police, correctional officers and others who enforce the law in Colorado. Officers who report misconduct would gain the ability to file lawsuits if complaints aren’t investigated or they face retaliation.

    Key elements under discussion include a provision bolstering the attorney general’s power to add and remove names from the Police Officer Standards and Training database, which bars future employment, and to compel police agencies to provide information for managing that list.

    Other provisions would require longer retention of police records and prohibit government agencies from charging fees for making unedited police body-worn camera videos available for public scrutiny.

    Investigating all alleged misconduct is projected to cost millions of dollars as state agencies face increased workloads, requiring more employees in some agencies, and increased litigation and liability expenses.

    Lawmakers sponsoring the bill have agreed to remove a provision that would have established a new misdemeanor crime for officers who fail to report misconduct by their peers.

    But the increased protection for whistleblowers is essential, said Rep. Leslie Herod, a Denver Democrat, in an interview.

    “People need those protections now. This would ensure good officers can be good officers and bad officers who cover up for bad officers no longer can be on the force,” said Herod, who introduced the legislation on April 17.

    Most police officers “do great work,” sponsor says

    The bill would build on police accountability laws passed following the 2020 Minneapolis police murder of George Floyd, which sparked street protests, Herod said.

    “We still have more work to do. There’s no one-shot bill that will fix police accountability in the state,” she said.

    “The majority of police officers in Colorado do great work. We need to make sure we have protections in place when that doesn’t happen. This is just as important as any other issue we are debating in Colorado.”

    The late-in-the-session legislation would affect the 246 police agencies and 12,000 sworn officers around Colorado. It began when Rees and other police whistleblowers who had faced retaliation approached lawmakers.

    For Rees, 30, who now supports herself by pet-sitting, the feeling of still being punished — and prevented from continuing a career she worked toward since childhood — “is horrible,” said in an interview.

    “There should always be checks and balances,” she said. “It is exhausting trying to figure this out. You just get this runaround. There’s no way out.”

    Rees told lawmakers that she reported two sexual assaults in 2019 by the sergeant to colleagues, seeking protection under internal agency protocols and as a whistleblower under existing state laws.

    “Instead, I got served the ultimate sentence of no protection,” she said.

    This year, after his dismissal from the Black Hawk Police Department, former Edgewater police Sgt. Nathan Geerdes, who was indicted by a grand jury in 2022 on four counts of unlawful sexual contact and one count of witness retaliation, pleaded guilty to unlawful sexual contact, first-degree official misconduct and forgery as part of a plea deal. He was sentenced in Jefferson County District Court to four years of probation.

    Edgewater police officer Ed McCallin also testified, describing the retaliation he faced after he became aware “that a senior officer had sexually assaulted a junior officer” — referring to Rees — and then “weaponized” the state’s database against her.

    “I was asked to cover that up by my police chief,” he said. “I was threatened with internal investigations twice” and “had to meet with a city council member to save my job for doing the right thing.”

    When he went to the Fraternal Order of Police for guidance in the case, McCallin said, a contract attorney advised him “to look the other way.”

    “We just need more time,” sheriff says

    Colorado law enforcement group leaders and police advocates said their main concern was that they weren’t consulted by sponsors of this legislation.

    “We just need more time to dive into this,” Arapahoe County Sheriff Tyler Brown, representing the County Sheriffs of Colorado, told lawmakers.

    Herod acknowledged “miscalculation” in not consulting with law enforcement brass in advance.

    She and co-sponsor Rep. Jennifer Bacon, a Denver Democrat serving as vice chair of the House Judiciary Committee, said they lined up meetings this week to hash out language and amendments before the bill advances.

    Rep. Mike Weissman, who chairs the committee, agreed that support from law enforcement leaders would be crucial but added that he understood the “guardedness” of the bill sponsors, “given how these issues can go in this building.”

    District attorneys from Jefferson and El Paso counties objected to the proposed requirement that every misconduct claim must be investigated, saying it would create conflicts in carrying out their professional duties.

    Several lawmakers raised concerns about language in the bill, such as “unlawful behavior.” Rep. Matt Soper, a Delta Republican, said a police officer who was sexually assaulted and chose not to report the crime “could become caught up in the system” for failing to report misconduct. Or police who might have to make an illegal U-turn while chasing a suspect, hypothetically, would have to be investigated, he said.

    But the lawmakers broadly supported the efforts aimed at making sure the Attorney General’s Office manages the database of police transgressors properly.

    The committee’s bill supporters said the compelling testimony from the Edgewater officers and other whistleblowers persuaded them that there’s an undeniable problem to address.

    Bruce Finley

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  • Reintroduced gray wolf found dead in Larimer County

    Reintroduced gray wolf found dead in Larimer County

    One of 10 gray wolves reintroduced to Colorado in December was found dead in Larimer County, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service confirmed.

    Federal officials found out about the wolf on Thursday, agency spokesperson Joe Szuszwalak said in an email Tuesday night.

    Initial evidence shows the wolf likely died of natural causes, Szuszwalak said. U.S. Fish and Wildlife officials will investigate the death under the Endangered Species Act, and the wolf’s carcass was sent off for a necropsy to determine cause of death.

    Szuszwalak did not answer questions regarding whether the wolf was found on public or private land or who found the wolf. A spokesperson for Colorado Parks and Wildlife did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

    The already-contentious gray wolf reintroduction sparked further concerns among Colorado ranchers this month after wolves killed six cattle in Grand and Jackson counties.

    The 12 wolves tracked by state wildlife officials — 10 released in December as part of the voter-mandated reintroduction effort and two that migrated from Wyoming — established a broad range across Colorado’s mountains, roaming from near the Wyoming border to south of Avon and from Meeker to Granby.

    This is a developing story and may be updated.

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    Katie Langford, Elise Schmelzer

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  • Casino mogul Steve Wynn and his billionaire neighbor in Florida pay $108 million for mansion on Aspen Mountain

    Casino mogul Steve Wynn and his billionaire neighbor in Florida pay $108 million for mansion on Aspen Mountain

    Only a handful of states can claim a single-family home sale topping $100 million. Colorado has joined that rarified group with the record $108 million closing on Monday of 419 Willoughby Way on Aspen’s Red Mountain.

    “It is great for the market. It is a testament to how special a community Aspen is on a global scale,” said listing agent Riley Warwick, who is with the Saslove & Warwick Team at Douglas Elliman Real Estate.

    The founder of the Bellagio and Wynn resort casinos, Steve Wynn, teamed up with Thomas Peterffy, a pioneer in computerized and discount stock trading, to purchase the home for close to the $110 million the Wall Street Journal reported earlier this month.

    Patrick Dovigi, founder and CEO of Green for Life Environmental and a former professional hockey player in Canada, was the seller. Dovigi, who has invested in several Aspen properties, purchased the home in 2021 for $72.5 million from Lewis Sanders, former chairman and CEO of Sanford C. Bernstein.

    “Only a few markets have reached that kind of sale,” said Julie Morrah, president of Aspen Title & Escrow, which handled the title and escrow work on the purchase.

    The U.S. saw its first $100 million home sale two decades ago. Since then, about two dozen sales, not counting Monday’s purchase, have crossed that mark, according to the Wall Street Journal.

    Most $100 million-plus home sales have happened in Manhattan; Miami and Palm Beach, Fla.; Los Angeles and Malibu, Calif.; and Hawaii. Aspen now joins that list.

    Monday’s sale busted a short-lived record for Colorado set last Thursday of $77 million paid for Owl Creek Ranch, also in Aspen.

    So how did Dovigi reap a 50% return in just three years? He and his wife, an interior designer, remodeled the property, originally built in 2009.

    The house sits in a prime location at the base of Red Mountain overlooking Aspen. At 22,405 square feet, the house has 11 bedrooms and 17 bathrooms, a guest house, a large garage, and a heated outdoor pool.

    Pitkin County has capped future home construction at a maximum of 9,250 square feet, Warwick said. Unless the rules change, Aspen won’t ever see a new home built at that size, so scarcity also helped push the price higher.

    Unlike a traditional closing where sellers, buyers and their agents sit across from each other at a table and hand over keys once the wire clears, the deal was done remotely and through attorneys, which is typical for the highest-end homes.

    “You have a lot of attorneys involved doing a lot of the heavy lifting,” Morrah said, noting that a deal of that size had extra tight security.

    Aldo Svaldi

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  • Less than two years after taking over Evergreen’s El Rancho restaurant, Frank Bonanno is out

    Less than two years after taking over Evergreen’s El Rancho restaurant, Frank Bonanno is out

    Denver restaurateur Frank Bonanno stepped in to take over operations at Evergreen’s famed El Rancho when it reopened after a very contentious and public ownership battle in 2022.

    Now, Bonanno is out.

    “Bonanno Concepts will no longer operate El Rancho Colorado as our vision and values differ from the rest of the current investor group,” the company, which owns Luca, Mizuna, Osteria Marco and other restaurants, told The Denver Post. “We wish them the best in their new approach and look forward to refocusing our attention on our Denver-based restaurants.”

    In 2022, El Rancho closed amid the ownership battle, and the Colorado Department of Revenue seized the property for failure to pay more than $90,000 in taxes. Commercial real estate developers Jack and Sherry Buchanan of Northstar Ventures and Travis McAfoos of Piedra Peak Properties partnered to purchase the famous destination in 2022 and enlisted Bonanno Concepts to help reopen and operate the restaurant and brewery.

    Bonanno served “comfort food and celebratory Western fare” alongside the restaurant’s homemade beer. He also added his controversial but mandatory 22% Creating Happy People fee, which can be found at all of Bonanno’s concepts, to all customer checks.

    It’s unclear who will be taking over operations. El Rancho did not respond to a request for comment prior to publication.

    “…El Rancho ended its relationship with Denver-based Bonanno Concepts, which includes the termination of their CHP fee (mandatory tipping),” the restaurant posted on Facebook this week. “You’ll continue to see familiar faces – Sam, Cap, Maggie, Jimmy and others – along with our largely local staff who are excited to welcome you back, introduce our new chef, and show off our new menu (coming soon) featuring locally- and regionally-sourced, fresh foods. We’ll offer lighter menu options for the warm days ahead in addition to the Western faves you know and love.”

    El Rancho, located at 29260 US-40, originally opened in 1948 as a cafe and trading post, and because of its prominent location on U.S. 40, it became a popular gift shop and post office. In the 1970s, once Interstate 70 was built, the cabin-inspired building functioned as a lodge and conference center. To this day, it maintains its own exit from the highway.

    “…El Rancho is excited to honor our heritage and celebrate being part of the community for over 75 YEARS (76, to be exact),” the Facebook post continued. “It’s been a bumpy ride, no doubt – brings to mind the bumpy wagon and stagecoach rides that early pioneers took to get to this neck of the woods in the first place! We live in the mountains. We can handle a few bumps…”

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    Lily O'Neill

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  • Denver International Airport adds new nonstop destination — the longest direct flight from DIA

    Denver International Airport adds new nonstop destination — the longest direct flight from DIA

    A new nonstop Turkish Airlines flight from Denver International Airport will carry travelers 6,152 miles between Denver and Istanbul — the longest flight from DIA.

    The recruitment of Turkish Airlines brings the number of airlines at DIA to 26. Flight searches on Google on Thursday morning showed round-trip flights available starting June 11 for around $1,329 roundtrip.

    Denver Mayor Mike Johnston and DIA chief executive Phil Washington planned to announce the flight Thursday morning. The new service is expected to bring a $54 million annual economic impact in Colorado and support the creation of about 350 new jobs around the state. The flight will take about 13 hours, longer than the 12-hour direct flight between Denver and Tokyo.

    DIA officials in recent years have prioritized “expanding our global connections” as part of their strategic plan for serving 100 million passengers a year by 2027 and more than 120 million by 2045, the airport’s 50th anniversary. A primary goal is to “expand the air networks to the continent of Africa and other disconnected destinations.”

    A 21-person delegation of airport, city government, and business officials from Denver visited Ethiopia in February 2023 on a trade mission to build relationships. They offered economic incentives as part of their efforts to persuade Ethiopian Airlines and, eventually, Egypt Air to commit to starting service to Denver with several flights a week. Another delegation visited Turkey in October 2022 to explore possibilities for starting a Turkish Airlines flight between Denver and Istanbul.

    The new flight announced Thursday “does not diminish in any way our desire” to line up a flight to other cities, said Denver Metro Chamber of Commerce president J.J. Ament, who joined both delegations.

    “A flight to Istanbul opens up India, and it also opens up Africa for us,” Ament said.

    “The imperative is that we continue to increase Denver’s global reach and the reach of Colorado and the Rocky Mountain West with DIA as the gateway airport,” he said. “Being able to reach new parts of the world, growing parts of the world, is what is going to keep Colorado globally relevant.”

    DIA is the largest airport in the United States by size, covering 53 square miles of land. It also ranks among the busiest airports in the world. A record 77 million passengers went through DIA in 2023, up from 69 million in 2019.

    The airport offers flights to 217 destinations, predominantly domestic. But international air travel, including air cargo operations, has grown steadily and in 2023 brought more than 4 million travelers, up 21% since 2022.

    Earlier this year, airport officials announced new nonstop flights from DIA on Aer Lingus to Dublin, Ireland, starting on May 17. Other cities that DIA travelers can reach nonstop include London, Paris, Zurich, Reykjavik, Iceland, Munich, Frankfurt, Tokyo, and a dozen cities in Mexico and Central America.

    Bruce Finley

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  • Kate, Princess of Wales, says she has cancer and is undergoing chemotherapy

    Kate, Princess of Wales, says she has cancer and is undergoing chemotherapy

    By BRIAN MELLEY and JILL LAWLESS (Associated Press)

    LONDON (AP) — Kate, the Princess of Wales, has cancer and is undergoing chemotherapy, she said Friday in a stunning announcement that follows weeks of speculation about her health and whereabouts.

    Her condition was disclosed in a video message recorded Wednesday and broadcast Friday, coming after relentless speculation on social media ever since she was hospitalized in January for unspecified abdominal surgery.

    Kate asked for “time, space and privacy” while she is treated for an unspecified type of cancer, which was discovered after her surgery.

    “I am well,” she said. “I am getting stronger every day by focusing on the things that will help me heal.”

    Kate, 42, hadn’t been seen publicly since Christmas until video surfaced this week of her with her husband, Prince William, heir to the throne, walking from a farm shop near their Windsor home.

    Kensington Palace had given little detail about Kate’s condition beyond saying it wasn’t cancer-related, the surgery was successful and recuperation would keep the princess away from public duties until April. Kate said it had been thought that her condition was non-cancerous until tests revealed the diagnosis.

    “This of course came as a huge shock, and William and I have been doing everything we can to process and manage this privately for the sake of our young family,” she said.

    The news is another jolt for the royal family since the announcement last month that King Charles III was being treated for an unspecified type of cancer that was discovered while undergoing a procedure for a benign enlarged prostate.

    British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak said in a statement that Kate “has shown tremendous bravery.” He added: “In recent weeks she has been subjected to intense scrutiny and has been unfairly treated by certain sections of the media around the world and on social media.”

    Keir Starmer, leader of the main opposition Labour Party, also sent his best wishes to the princess at this “distressing time.”

    Charles, 75, has withdrawn from public duties while he has cancer treatment, though he’s appeared frequently in photos carrying on meetings with government officials and dignitaries and was even seen going to church.

    Kate, on the other hand, had been out of view, leading to weeks of speculation and gossip. Attempts to put rumors to bed by releasing a photo of her on Mother’s Day in the U.K. surrounded by her three smiling children backfired when The Associated Press and other news agencies retracted the image because it had been manipulated.

    Kate issued a statement the next day acknowledging she liked to “experiment with editing” and apologizing for “any confusion” the photo had caused. But that did little to quell the speculation.

    Even the footage published by The Sun and TMZ that appeared to show Kate and William shopping sparked a new flurry of rumor-mongering, with some armchair sleuths refusing to believe the video showed Kate at all.

    Earlier this week, a British privacy watchdog said it was investigating a report that staff at the private London hospital where she was treated tried to snoop on her medical records while she was a patient for abdominal surgery.

    The former Kate Middleton, who married William in a fairy-tale wedding in 2011, has boosted the popularity and appeal of the British monarchy worldwide more than any royal since Princess Diana.

    The princess is the oldest of three children brought up in a well-to-do neighborhood in Berkshire, west of London. The Middletons have no aristocratic background, and the British press often referred to Kate as a “commoner” marrying into royalty.

    Kate attended the private girls’ school Marlborough College and then University of St. Andrews in Scotland, where she met William around 2001. Friends and housemates at first, their relationship came to be in the public eye when they were pictured together on a skiing holiday in Switzerland in 2004.

    Kate graduated in 2005 with a degree in art history and a budding relationship with the prince.

    The Associated Press

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  • Colorado Division of Motor Vehicles services impacted by nationwide outage

    Colorado Division of Motor Vehicles services impacted by nationwide outage

    A nationwide outage is interfering with Colorado Division of Motor Vehicles services today, including most driver’s license and online services.

    The outage stems from the American Association of Motor Vehicle Administrators, the agency announced in a news release Thursday morning.

    Services that are still up and running include driver’s license knowledge tests, endorsement tests, commercial driver’s license instruction permit tests, scheduling hearings and requesting motor vehicle records.

    Katie Langford

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  • One arrest in fatal hit-and-run that killed accomplished Lakewood parafencer

    One arrest in fatal hit-and-run that killed accomplished Lakewood parafencer

    A 40-year-old Commerce City man was arrested in connection with a fatal hit-and-run crash that killed an accomplished wheelchair fencer on Friday, according to the Lakewood Police Department.

    Lakewood police arrested Jimmy Lee Chavez at a home in Commerce City on Tuesday, the department said in a news release.

    Chavez was out on bail after being arrested on suspicion of vehicular eluding in Adams County, according to court records. He posted a $2,500 bail in the case in October.

    Chavez previously pleaded guilty in separate cases to charges of driving under restraint, driving without a license, obstructing a peace officer, weapons possession and possession of contraband in a detention facility, according to court records.

    Katie Langford

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  • Rockies, federal officials planning active shooter and bombing simulation at Coors Field

    Rockies, federal officials planning active shooter and bombing simulation at Coors Field

    Officials from the Colorado Rockies and a federal cybersecurity agency are planning a “full-scale” active shooter and bombing simulation at Coors Field to practice responding to an attack during a regular season baseball game.

    The May 22 event will bring together stadium and team officials, local first responders and state and federal agencies “to perform response actions that would be taken during an attack at Coors Field,” organizers wrote in an email sent to a Colorado Division of Homeland Security and Emergency Management mailing list on Friday.

    Organizers are looking for volunteer actors to participate in the simulation, which will take place when the Rockies are scheduled to play in Oakland, according to the email.

    “The scenario involves a simulated explosion followed by an active shooter during a regular season weekend Colorado Rockies game at Coors Field,” organizers with the federal Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency wrote on an intake form for volunteer actors.

    Two 60-minute scenarios will be held during the 6-hour training and will include being “exposed to loud noises, including simulated gunshot and explosive sounds,” organizers wrote.

    Volunteers are required to be 18 years or older and must answer if they are willing to have simulated injuries painted on or applied, including fake bruises, scratches, burns, gunshot wounds and blood, according to the intake form.

    Getting fake injuries applied, which is known as moulage, is not mandatory for participation.

    The Colorado Division of Homeland Security and Emergency Management referred questions about the event to the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency. Representatives for the agency and Colorado Rockies could not be immediately reached for comment Tuesday.

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    Katie Langford

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