ReportWire

Tag: crime and public safety

  • Denver boy, 13, missing from West Colfax neighborhood

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    A 13-year-old boy is missing after he was last seen in Denver’s West Colfax neighborhood on Friday afternoon, according to the Colorado Bureau of Investigation.

    Elias Olivas was last seen near at 4:15 p.m. Friday near West 13th Avenue and Lowell Boulevard, state officials said in a Missing Indigenous Person Alert.

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    Katie Langford

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  • Brighton man charged with vehicular homicide in DUI crash on I-76 that killed his daughter

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    A Brighton man has been charged with vehicular homicide and child abuse resulting in death in a Commerce City crash that killed his daughter last week, according to a news release from the Adams County District Attorney’s Office.

    Aaron Aguirre-Garay, 40, was driving his truck on Interstate 76 on Feb. 12 when he crashed into a fence, injuring himself and killing his daughter, according to an arrest affidavit from the Commerce City Police Department.

    Aguirre-Garay was charged with child abuse causing death, vehicular homicide – reckless and vehicular homicide – DUI in the crash, according to the district attorney’s office release. The affidavit and the release do not specify how old the girl was.

    Multiple witnesses saw Aguirre-Garay driving on a dirt shoulder off the road before his truck veered toward a fence, possibly because of a popped tire, according to the report. One witness saw the white truck swerve several times before the crash. Another person who went over to the vehicle after the crash spoke to Aguirre-Garay and said he smelled like alcohol. Witnesses found the girl lying on the ground outside the truck.

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  • Parker police sergeant resigns while under investigation, but officials won’t say what he’s accused of

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    A Parker police sergeant resigned last week while under investigation, but department officials declined to specify what he’s accused of doing.

    Parker Police Department officials would not detail the allegations against former Sgt. Troy Brienzo, but described them in a news release Thursday as running “counter to this department’s mission and values and tarnish the very badge we wear.”

    Brienzo resigned Feb. 13 while on administrative leave for an “alleged incident” that department officials learned about Jan. 7.

    “To avoid the perception of a conflict, the matter was turned over to an outside law enforcement agency to conduct the investigation,” agency officials said in the release.

    In response to questions about the nature of the allegations and which agency is conducting the investigation, Parker police spokesperson Josh Hans said the department was “unable to share any additional information at this time.”

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    Katie Langford

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  • Owners of blighted Edge of Lowry apartments settle Aurora lawsuit, agree to sell

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    The owners of Aurora’s blighted Edge of Lowry apartment complex, where multiple violent criminal incidents connected to Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua catapulted the city into the national spotlight, will sell the properties and pay the city $300,000.

    In a Feb. 10 settlement agreement, Five Dallas Partners — an affiliate of CBZ Management — and Aurora city officials agreed to settle the civil lawsuit brought by the city to avoid “the uncertainty and expense of the lawsuit.”

    In exchange for paying the city $300,000 and selling the property, Aurora officials will cancel all liens or summons against Five Dallas Partners, according to the filing.

    The company will also hire private security to monitor the properties at 1218, 1238, 1248, 1258 and 1268 North Dallas St. until they are sold or “returned to a commercially viable habitable use” to limit police response to the buildings.

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  • Woman found dead on Commerce City sidewalk in suspected homicide

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    Commerce City police are investigating a suspected homicide after a woman was found dead on a sidewalk early Thursday morning, according to the department.

    The 23-year-old woman’s body was found at about 4:30 a.m. Thursday in the 6200 block of Glencoe Street, near U.S. 6, according to the Commerce City Police Department.

    The woman, who has not been publicly identified, had head trauma, police said. No suspects had been identified or arrested as of Thursday morning.

    The investigation is ongoing, and people are asked to avoid the area, police said.

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  • 1 person dies after flames consume northwest Aurora home

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    One person died overnight after flames consumed a house in northwest Aurora on Wednesday, according to the fire department.

    Aurora Fire Rescue responded to the house fire in the city’s Sable Altura Chambers neighborhood, near East 22nd Avenue and Altura Boulevard, at 2:04 p.m. Wednesday.

    The flames were under control by 2:19 p.m., according to a news release from the fire department.

    One victim, an unidentified adult, was rescued from the house and taken to the hospital with critical injuries, where the victim later died, Aurora Fire Rescue officials confirmed in a Thursday morning update. No other injuries were reported.

    Photos posted by the fire department showed a charred home with flames licking the inside, and smoke wafting through the air around firefighters.

    Five people living in the single-story building were displaced, fire officials said in the release.

    The victim will be identified by the Adams County Coroner’s Office.

    Information about the cause of the fire was not yet available on Thursday.

    This is a developing story and may be updated.

    Aurora firefighters respond to a fatal house fire near East 22nd Avenue and Altura Boulevard on Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026. (Photo provided by Aurora Fire Rescue)

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  • Colorado medical device company admits to fraud scheme, agrees to pay DOJ millions in penalties

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    A Colorado medical device company admitted to orchestrating an elaborate health care fraud scheme that resulted in the overbilling of patients and insurers by hundreds of millions of dollars.

    Zynex Inc., an Englewood-based firm that manufactures and sells medical devices used for pain management and rehabilitation, entered into an agreement Tuesday with the U.S. Department of Justice to avoid prosecution.

    The company, as part of the deal, agreed to pay between $5 million and $12.5 million in penalties — the final tally will depend on its earnings and profit during the settlement period — and will forfeit millions of dollars in unpaid claims.

    Zynex admitted to participating in a conspiracy to commit health care fraud, securities fraud, mail fraud and other violations, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Rhode Island announced in a news release.

    The agreement comes a month after a federal grand jury indicted two former top Zynex executives who allegedly spearheaded the years-long scheme.

    Zynex, in its deal with the government, also admitted to collecting more than $873 million for its products, including more than $600 million for supplies, “the vast majority of which were the result of fraud,” investigators said.

    Have you used Zynex for medical devices? We want to talk to you.

    The company acknowledged that it shipped and billed for medically unnecessary supplies in excess quantities and misled investors who were unaware of the fraudulent billing practices.

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  • Have you used Zynex for medical devices? We want to talk to you.

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    Two former executives at a Colorado-based medical device company last month were charged in connection with orchestrating an alleged health care fraud scheme that federal prosecutors say raked in more than $800 million.

    Zynex, based in Englewood, shipped patients excessive volumes of devices each month, using these fraudulent billings to artificially inflate the company’s financial reporting and its stock price, the government alleged.

    The Denver Post wants to hear from those who have received Zynex supplies and devices.

    Reporter Sam Tabachnik is working on a story about the alleged scheme and wants to hear about the experiences of patients who dealt with this company. Let us know below.

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  • 1 resident killed in north Littleton apartment fire

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    One person was killed in a fire at a north Littleton apartment complex late Tuesday night, South Metro Fire Rescue officials said.

    South Metro crews responded to 911 calls about smoke at a multi-family complex at 5531 S. Delaware St. at 11:26 p.m., spokesperson Brian Willie said.

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  • Missing Arvada girl may be on Colorado’s Western Slope

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    A 13-year-old Arvada girl missing since Sunday morning may be in the Gunnison area, according to the Colorado Bureau of Investigation.

    Marely Laureano Flores was last seen at 6:45 a.m. in the 6700 block of West 51st Avenue on Sunday, CBI officials said in a Missing Indigenous Person Alert.

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  • 4 killed in 30-vehicle crash on I-25 during wind-blown ‘brown out’ in southern Colorado

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    Four people were killed and 29 injured in a Tuesday morning crash on Interstate 25 in southern Colorado involving more than 30 vehicles, according to the Colorado State Patrol.

    Heavy winds blew dirt across I-25 south of Pueblo around 10 a.m., causing “brown out” conditions along the interstate, state patrol officials said.

    “Visibility was next to nothing,” Maj. Brian Lyons of the Colorado State Patrol said.

    As of 4 p.m., northbound I-25 remained closed between exit 91 for Stem Beach and Colorado 45 in Pueblo, near milemarker 94, according to state transportation officials. The interstate’s southbound lanes were cleared and reopened around 2:30 p.m..

    The northbound lanes will remain closed “for an extended period of time” as the crash cleanup and investigation continue, state patrol officials said in an afternoon update.

    Colorado State Patrol troopers responded to the pile-up crash on northbound I-25 involving commercial trucks and passenger cars about two miles south of Pueblo at 10:02 a.m. Tuesday, according to the state patrol. When troopers arrived, they also found a secondary crash in the southbound lanes.

    Together, the two crashes involved more than 30 vehicles, including six semitrailers, and four people were confirmed dead, state patrol officials said.

    The fatalities and injuries all occurred in the large crash in the northbound lanes, state patrol officials said. The crash in the southbound lanes only resulted in damage to vehicles.

    Paramedics took 29 people injured in the crash to hospitals, state patrol officials said. The extent of their injuries is unknown. Another 10 uninjured people remained on scene after the crash.

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  • Coerced Colorado prison labor amounts to involuntary servitude, judge rules

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    Colorado Department of Corrections officials forced inmates to work prison jobs through coercion that ultimately amounted to involuntary servitude, a Denver judge ruled Friday.

    The state’s prisons unconstitutionally coerced labor by levying severe punishments — including solitary confinement — against prisoners who refused to work, Denver District Court Judge Sarah Wallace found in the 61-page ruling.

    “By creating a framework where failure to work triggers a sequence of restrictions that culminate in a more restrictive ‘custody level’ and physical isolation, CDOC has established a system of compulsion that overrides the voluntariness of the (prisoners’) labor,” Wallace wrote.

    The ruling comes out of a 2022 lawsuit in which state prisoners claimed the Department of Corrections’ approach to prison labor amounted to involuntary servitude or slavery, which Colorado voters outlawed in 2018 via Amendment A.

    The lawsuit, which went to trial in October, was brought by Towards Justice, a nonprofit law firm headed by David Seligman, a candidate in the 2026 race for Colorado attorney general.

    Prisoners in Colorado are expected to work prison jobs, which include food preparation, janitorial services and other positions within their facilities. They are paid well below minimum wage for the work.  They can choose not to work, but doing so is a disciplinary infraction for which prisoners are punished, according to court filings.

    State attorneys argued during the October trial that prisoners’ labor was voluntary, and that punishments for failing to work, while “uncomfortable,” did not rise to the level of coercion legally required to constitute involuntary servitude.

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  • East Bay man faces combined murder trial in Solano County

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    Attorneys continued presentation of evidence to a judge in Solano County Superior Court Friday, part of arguments over whether a Martinez man charged in connection with two murders, committed months apart, in 2022 can be tried on both allegations at once, or whether the two shooting deaths should be tried separately.

    The hearing on the allegations against Richard Raymond Klein, 54, and the motion to sever the two murder charges will resume on Wednesday at 8:30 a.m. in the Fairfield courtroom of Judge John B. Ellis.

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    Robin Miller

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  • Denver sports bar accused of prostitution may lose its liquor, cabaret license

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    Denver officials have started proceedings to take away a southwest Denver sports bar’s liquor and dance cabaret licenses after employees were found working as prostitutes in the bar, according to court records.

    Women working at Mecca Sports Bar, 2915 W. Mississippi Ave., in Denver’s Athmar Park neighborhood, routinely offered customers in and outside of the bar sex for money, including undercover police officers, according to a show-cause order from the city.

    The Denver Police Department’s vice and narcotics unit received information from the Colorado Department of Revenue’s Liquor and Tobacco Enforcement Division “about prostitution, unlawful liquor activity, and illicit narcotics sales occurring at the bar,” the order stated.

    An order to show cause is a court-ordered directive for a party to appear and explain why a specific, requested action — in this case, the revocation of the Denver bar’s liquor and cabaret licenses — should not be approved.

    Mecca Sports Bar did not respond Thursday to requests for comment.

    Colorado Department of Revenue officials told Denver police that an anonymous complaint had been made about young girls working at the bar offering men “off-premise bottle service,” according to the order. The girls would leave with the customers, be dropped back off at the bar later in the night and be paid for the night by the bar manager.

    The vice unit launched an undercover operation at Mecca Sports Bar, formerly known as Club Dubai, in August 2025, city officials wrote in the show-cause order.

    An undercover officer contacted a young woman who walked out of the bar and approached the officer’s vehicle, the order stated. She told him it would cost $300 for “culear” — a common Spanish slang term for “sex,” according to the document.

    The officer agreed and the woman got into the car, officials said in the document. When the officer told her it was a sting operation, the woman admitted that she and the other employees would go outside to “engage in prostitution.” She also said they would frequently purchase liquor inside the bar and resell it to customers at a higher price.

    Further undercover operations in September and November of 2025 revealed that more women at the bar were engaging in prostitution and overcharging customers for profit, according to the document.

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  • A Colorado court sends poor people to jail without access to lawyers, advocates say. It doesn’t record the proceedings.

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    Jennifer Jones was sitting in Montrose Municipal Court in early January when she noticed something that didn’t seem right.

    She witnessed a man in his 60s with multiple trespassing and camping charges receive a 10-day jail sentence. This individual, though, did not have an attorney — a right afforded under the Constitution to anyone facing jail time.

    If Jones, a volunteer court-watcher, hadn’t been observing proceedings that day, nobody outside of the people involved with the case would have known what happened.

    That’s because Montrose Municipal Court is not a “court of record” — meaning it keeps no written, audio or visual recording of court proceedings. The public, civil rights organizations and members of the media cannot watch court hearings virtually, or access video after the fact, and cannot request any transcripts or audio of the day’s docket.

    It’s not clear how many municipal courts in Colorado are not courts of record. But court watchers say they believe Montrose to be the only court in the state that sentences people to jail and isn’t a court of record.

    It’s examples like these that spurred Colorado lawmakers this month to introduce a bill that would bar municipal courts that are not courts of record from sending people to jail. House Bill 26-1134, titled “Fairness and Transparency in Municipal Court,” also clarifies that municipal court defendants have a right to counsel and that in-custody proceedings must be livestreamed for the public to view.

    The legislation marks a second stab at codifying protections for municipal defendants after Gov. Jared Polis vetoed a similar bill last year. The governor, though, took issue with the part of the bill that sought to address sentencing disparities between municipal and state courts. A Colorado Supreme Court ruling settled that issue in December, leading bill sponsors this year to focus on the transparency elements from last year’s legislation.

    “Justice dies in the dark,” said Rebecca Wallace, policy director for the Colorado Freedom Fund, an organization that helps people pay bail. “Montrose Municipal Court needs a light on it — this bill provides some of that light.”

    If municipal courts have the same power to put people in jail as state courts, they must provide the same due process protections, said Rep. Javier Mabrey, a Denver Democrat and one of the bill’s sponsors.

    Access to counsel is already a right for municipal defendants facing jail time — but that doesn’t mean it always happens.

    In October 2024, The Denver Post reported that poor and unhoused individuals in custody in Grand Junction Municipal Court were frequently appearing in court without attorneys. This came to light because the Colorado Freedom Fund obtained hours of recordings of court proceedings. If Grand Junction hadn’t been a court of record, that would not have been possible.

    Alida Soileau, a defense attorney who practices in Montrose, said she’s never heard the municipal court say that someone’s case qualifies for court-appointed counsel. She said she’s witnessed one occasion in which a defendant facing jail did not have an attorney.

    “It’s the wild west,” she said in an interview.

    Without recordings or transcripts, Wallace said it’s impossible for watchdog organizations like hers — or members of the media — to confirm such accounts and investigate further.

    Chris Dowsey, Montrose’s city attorney, said the municipal court directs people to a written advisement on the right to an attorney when a case involves a possible jail sentence, and follows that up with an oral advisement.

    “For each case, the judge confirms that the defendant has received one of those advisements of rights,” he said in a statement. “If they have not received such an advisement, the judge would give another oral advisement to that individual.”

    Montrose city officials say they’re working on becoming a court of record.

    Municipal Judge Thomas LeClaire told the City Council during a January meeting that he recommended the court make the change. Councilmembers supported the idea, saying the pending state legislation made it a good time to get ahead of the curve. Officials estimated it could happen as soon as this spring.

    Montrose Municipal Court needs only minimal investment to make itself a court of record, including some staff time and equipment modifications, Dowsey said in a statement.

    As to why the city waited so long to make this happen?

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  • Brush fire sparks along I-70 in Colorado from house engulfed in flames

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    A Silver Plume house fire that sparked Sunday afternoon quickly spread to the nearby brush along Interstate 70, according to Clear Creek County officials.

    No one was injured in the house fire, but the home was engulfed in flames, Clear Creek County officials said in a 3:40 p.m. statement on social media. Drivers were able to see the flames from I-70 and called 911.

    Less than 20 minutes later, the flames had spread to the nearby wilderness and more units were called in to respond to the growing brush fire on the north side of the highway, county officials said.

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    Lauren Penington

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  • Judge blocks Trump administration from moving former death row inmates to Colorado’s ‘Supermax’ prison

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    WASHINGTON — A federal judge has temporarily blocked the Trump administration from transferring 20 inmates with commuted death sentences to the nation’s highest security federal prison, warning that officials cannot employ a “sham” process for deciding where to incarcerate the prisoners for the rest of their lives.

    U.S. District Judge Timothy Kelly ruled late Wednesday that the government cannot send the former death row inmates to the “Supermax” federal prison in Florence, Colorado, because it likely would violate their Fifth Amendment rights to due process.

    Kelly cited evidence that officials from the Republican administration “made it clear” to the federal Bureau of Prisons that the inmates had to be sent to ADX Florence — “administrative maximum” — to punish them because Democratic President Joe Biden had commuted their death sentences.

    “At least for now, they will remain serving life sentences for their heinous crimes where they are currently imprisoned,” wrote Kelly, who was nominated to the bench by President Donald Trump.

    In December 2024, less than a month before Trump returned to the White House, Biden commuted the sentences of 37 of the 40 people on federal death row, converting their punishments to life imprisonment.

    On his first day back in office, Trump issued an executive order directing Attorney General Pam Bondi to house the 37 inmates “in conditions consistent with the monstrosity of their crimes and the threats they pose.”

    Twenty of the 37 inmates are plaintiffs in the lawsuit before Kelly, who issued a preliminary injunction blocking their transfers to Florence while the lawsuit proceeds. All were incarcerated in Terre Haute, Indiana, when Biden commuted their death sentences.

    Government lawyers argued that the bureau has broad authority to decide what facilities the inmates should be redesignated for after their commutations.

    “BOP’s designation decisions are within its exclusive purview and are intended to preserve the safety of inmates, employees, and surrounding communities,” they wrote.

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  • 4 killed after plane crashes in Colorado mountains near Steamboat Springs

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    Four people, including three from the same family, were killed when a plane crashed in the northern Colorado mountains near Steamboat Springs early Friday, law enforcement officials said.

    An Epic Aircraft E1000 headed to Steamboat Springs crashed in a remote area on the south side of Emerald Mountain just after midnight Friday, Routt County Sheriff Doug Scherar and the National Transportation Safety Board confirmed.

    County officials are working to notify next of kin before releasing the names of those who died, but believe three of the people who died belonged to the same family, Routt County Coroner Mitch Locke said.

    In a statement, Scherar said the plane crashed as it was approaching the Bob Adams Airport in Steamboat Springs from the south. The crash site is near the top of Emerald Mountain in a remote area.

    The area near the crash site is marked with yellow tape, and access is restricted. Scherar asked the public to respect the closure.

    The circumstances around the crash are unknown and an NTSB investigator is headed to the scene and expected to arrive shortly, federal officials said Friday evening. The investigator will document the scene and examine the aircraft, which will then be moved to a secure facility to be evaluated further.

    Federal flight data shows the turboprop plane was owned by ALS Aviation LLC in Franklin, Tenn., and was purchased in 2024, while the company was formed on Dec. 7, 2021.

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  • Evergreen shooter shot up equipment, was a patient at primary care office, sheriff’s office says

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    A 62-year-old man who opened fire inside a primary care doctor’s office in Evergreen on Thursday night before taking his own life was previously a patient at the facility, the Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office said Friday.

    Investigators identified Lance Black, an Evergreen resident, as the person who fired a shotgun 19 times inside the CommonSpirit Primary Care office at 32214 Ellingwood Trail.

    Deputies began responding to calls about gunshots in the medical office at 4:23 p.m. Thursday and arrived on scene at 4:28 p.m., where they found broken windows, the sheriff’s office said in a news release Friday afternoon.

    Deputies entered the building and found Black, armed with a shotgun, the sheriff’s office said. They tried to de-escalate the situation, but Black fatally shot himself.

    Investigators found that Black shot at doors, walls, computers and other equipment during the shooting. No one was injured and no other businesses were damaged, other than a single round that entered a vacant office.

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  • One killed in shooting on West Maple Avenue in Denver

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    One person was killed and another was injured in a shooting in Denver’s Valverde neighborhood early Saturday, police said.

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