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Tag: crime and public safety

  • False bomb threat prompts evacuations at Adams County courthouse, grocery store

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    A person of interest has been identified in a bomb threat against a courthouse in Adams County, according to police.

    The bomb threat in Brighton prompted evacuations at the Adams County Justice Center and a King Soopers grocery store on Wednesday, according to officials.

    The bomb threat against the justice center, 1100 Judicial Center Drive, was received at 8:15 a.m. Wednesday, according to a news release from the Brighton Police Department. Investigators determined the initial call came from the area of the King Soopers at 500 Bromley Lane in Brighton.

    The sheriff’s office evacuated the building. Brighton police responded to the grocery store. Although the store did not receive a threat, as initially reported, officers evacuated it as well out of caution.

    Police dogs responded to the courthouse and the King Soopers and did not find any threats, Brighton police spokesperson Kerrigan Blandin said.

    The identity of a person of interest is being withheld, pending the filing of charges.

    The courthouse was reopened to the public at noon, Blandin said, and the King Soopers reopened at 10:45 a.m.

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  • Woman found dead in remote Arapahoe County east of Denver

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    Arapahoe County investigators are searching for suspects after a woman was found shot to death in a remote area east of the Denver area last week, according to the sheriff’s office.

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  • Evergreen High School shooter used family heirloom gun; parents won’t be charged

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    The gun used by the 16-year-old boy who shot two students and then himself at Evergreen High School in September was a family heirloom, investigators with the Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office announced Wednesday.

    The Smith and Wesson .38 Special revolver that Desmond Holly used in the Sept. 10 attack originally belonged to one of Desmond’s grandparents, the sheriff’s office found, and was kept in a safe in the family’s home.

    Desmond’s parents will not be criminally charged in connection with the storage of the gun or their son’s access to it, the sheriff’s office concluded.

    Through an attorney, the boy’s parents told investigators on Jan. 23 that the revolver was “rarely seen or used and stored out of sight near the back of a large, locked gun safe,” and that their son “did not have access to the safe, except for brief moments when it was opened by his father,” according to a news release announcing the completion of the investigation.

    Douglas Richards, the attorney representing the Evergreen High shooter’s parents, told The Denver Post on Wednesday that he believes Desmond slipped the revolver out of the safe while he was with his father.

    “I believe what happened is Desmond and his father were cleaning some of the family firearms, and in a moment when his father was not looking, Desmond took a firearm from the back of the safe that was an heirloom and had not been used by the family, ever,” Richards said. “Because the firearm was never used and was not stored with other firearms in the safe, its disappearance was not noticed until after the tragedy.”

    The parents’ DNA was not found on the weapon, which was originally purchased in Florida in 1966.

    Richards called the decision not to charge the parents “correct.”

    The Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office acknowledged, in its announcement, “that this was not the outcome many in our community hoped for.”

    An email sent to Evergreen High families Wednesday, alerting them to the sheriff’s completed investigation, said victim advocates would be on campus Thursday alongside the school’s mental health and counseling teams.

    Sheriff’s officials noted in their news release that investigators were “unable to speak with” Desmond’s parents and implied the family was uncooperative during the probe into the revolver’s origins.

    But Richards said Desmond’s parents spoke with investigators at the hospital as their son was dying and answered written questions and follow-up questions from investigators. Richards said he also offered to sit down with investigators to explain how the gun was stored.

    “I have… explained from the outset that the firearm in this case was stolen without the knowledge of Desmond’s parents,” Richards said. “…We have cooperated at every single turn, and it was only earlier this (year) that on my own I decided to just send the DA’s office a letter explaining what occurred, which obviously satisfied them that what we had been saying all along was true — that this was a terrible tragedy that was not foreseeable by anyone in Desmond’s family.”

    Desmond died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound at the end of his attack on the high school.

    He roamed the halls for about nine minutes and shot in several areas before leaving the building. Desmond wounded a 14-year-old boy who was not publicly identified and 18-year-old Matthew Silverstone; both were seriously injured but survived. Video of the attack shows that Desmond physically grappled with Silverstone before shooting him.

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  • Colorado to pay $245,000 to Muslim man forced to shave beard in prison

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    Colorado will pay $245,000 to a Muslim man who was forced to shave his beard in prison in violation of his religious beliefs, court records show.

    Tajuddin Ashaheed brought the lawsuit against the Colorado Department of Corrections nearly a decade ago, after he was forced to shave his beard as he entered prison for a parole violation in July 2016.

    A correctional officer forced Ashaheed to shave during the intake process, even though Ashaheed told the officer he was a Muslim and that shaving his beard would violate a core tenet of his faith, according to the lawsuit.

    The officer told Ashaheed that if he did not shave his beard, he would be disciplined and placed in solitary confinement, according to the lawsuit. Ashaheed shaved when faced with that threat.

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  • Teen gets 7 years for starting fire that killed Lakewood mom, daughter

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    A 15-year-old will serve seven years in Colorado’s Division of Youth Services after pleading guilty to setting a Lakewood apartment complex on fire, killing Kathleen Payton and her 10-year-old daughter, Jazmine Payton-Aguayo.

    The teen and an accomplice, who were 12 and 14 at the time, started the fire in the early hours of Oct. 31, 2022, after they were asked to leave a friend’s apartment at the Tiffany Square Apartments complex, according to the First Judicial District Attorney’s Office.

    Kathleen Payton and her 10-year-old daughter, Jazmine Payton-Aguayo in an undated photo. Payton and Jazmine were killed on Oct. 31, 2022, after two juveniles set their Lakewood apartment complex on fire. (Courtesy of the First Judicial District Attorney’s Office)

    Flames spread rapidly from bushes outside the complex at 935 Sheridan Blvd. to the wooden walkway above. Payton, 31, and Jazmine were trapped inside their apartment and died from carbon monoxide poisoning and smoke inhalation, the DA’s office said.

    Ten people were also injured in the fire, and everyone who lived at the 32-unit complex was displaced.

    Both teens, whose names were not made public under Colorado law, pleaded guilty to two counts of first-degree murder, attempted murder and arson, all felonies. The first teen was sentenced to seven years in the Division of Youth Services after pleading guilty in October 2023.

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  • Two women attacked in Speer, Platt Park neighborhoods, Denver police say

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    Denver police are looking for a man or men suspected of attacking two women in the city’s Speer and Platt Park neighborhoods in January, officials said.

    The assaults happened in the 1300 block of South Grant Street at 5:30 p.m. Jan. 7 and the intersection of South Grant Street and East Ellsworth Avenue at 8:50 p.m. Jan. 27, the Denver Police Department said in a news release.

    “In the first incident, a Good Samaritan helped the female who was being attacked,” police officials said. “In the second incident, the victim fought back and screamed until the suspect fled.”

    It’s not clear if the suspects are the same person or what motivated the attacks, police said.

    In a statement, Police Chief Ron Thomas asked people to be extra vigilant, especially while running at night.

    “We understand that these incidents create fear in our communities, and we are utilizing every investigative means to find the person(s) who attacked these women,” Thomas said.

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  • Denver sheriff’s deputy is accused of punching two men in wheelchairs in separate incidents

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    A Denver sheriff’s deputy accused of punching a man in a wheelchair while on duty in 2019 — in a lawsuit the city has now settled — was also arrested on accusations he punched another man in a wheelchair in December.

    The Denver City Council approved the $325,000 settlement in the case over the 2019 incident involving Deputy Jason Gentempo, now 44, during a meeting Monday.

    Gentempo, who has been a sheriff’s deputy since 2005, is now on investigatory leave from the sheriff’s department following his arrest in the newer matter in December. Both of his cases also involved allegations that other law enforcement officers attempted to cover up or change the factual records of the events.

    During the incident in 2019, Gentempo was transporting inmate Serafin Finn from a Denver hospital to the jail when Finn spit at him. Gentempo then punched Finn, who was handcuffed and in a wheelchair, in the face, knocking over his wheelchair, a video of the incident shows.

    Gentempo was cleared of any wrongdoing in the incident, according to internal investigation documents.

    In December, the Denver Police Department arrested Gentempo and his wife, Sgt. Carla Gentempo, after they were accused of assaulting another man in a wheelchair while they were off duty. The couple learned that a 17-year-old they knew was at a Denver apartment where they believed there was a “sexual torture chamber,” according to affidavits filed in that case.

    Jason Gentempo told investigators that he believed the man in the wheelchair met the teen in a chatroom and took the teen to his home, where he showed them “sexual bondage items” and put some of the items on the teen with their consent, an affidavit says.

    When the Gentempos drove to pick up the teen, the man in a wheelchair, who is paraplegic, met them in front of his apartment building. The Gentempos then beat the man in an attack that was captured on surveillance footage, the documents say. They were arrested on suspicion of third-degree assault.

    The man in the wheelchair, whose identity was redacted in court records, told The Denver Post in December that he didn’t do anything sexual with the teenager and refuted the deputies’ characterization of a “sexual torture chamber.”

    A Denver police officer is accused of trying to cover up that assault. Officer Henry Soni, 26, was the responding officer who reviewed surveillance video of the attack and gave the man in the wheelchair a case number, according to an affidavit. He then failed to file a report or enter the surveillance video as evidence in the case.

    In official records, Soni wrote that the man in the wheelchair “does not want to file a report at this time.” The officer’s body-worn camera footage of his response to the man’s home was automatically logged into the police evidence storage system as being connected to an assault call, but Soni manually changed the footage the next day to be classified as “All Other/Non-event,” according to an affidavit.

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  • Man accused of DUI with 3 kids in trunk, Westminster police say

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    Westminster police found three children in the trunk of a car after pulling over the driver and arresting him on suspicion of drunken driving, officials said Tuesday.

    The Jan. 23 incident was captured in a video from a Westminster Police Department officer’s body-worn camera, the agency said on social media.

    Police pulled over the 41-year-old driver after seeing him driving recklessly near City Center Drive and 93rd Avenue at 5:15 p.m.

    The video shows the man telling an officer he was “acting like an idiot” before he was pulled over but denying drinking any alcohol.

    When the officer asks if he’s sure because the vehicle smells like alcohol, the man tells the officer it’s his nicotine pouches.

    The man initially agreed to do voluntary roadside maneuvers but then refused, which is when police arrested him.

    After he was handcuffed, the man told officers his children were in the trunk, Westminster police said.

    The video shows one officer opening the trunk to find the children lying inside. As that officer helps the kids out of the trunk, the second officer leads the man away and asks, “You didn’t think that it would’ve been a good idea to say something before?”

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  • Police: Bystander rammed car into Bay Area jewelry store to block armed robbers

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    A man who rammed a vehicle into the front of a Petaluma jewelry store Saturday afternoon, Jan. 31, was attempting to thwart a robbery, according to police.

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    Madison Smalstig

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  • Gary man skips rape trial

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    A Gary man skipped the start of his rape trial.

    After sitting through jury selection and an extensive evidence hearing on Monday, Damian “Rico” Donaldson declined to leave his jail cell Tuesday.

    Donaldson, 38, is charged with 15 felonies, including rape, burglary and strangulation. He also faces a half-dozen misdemeanors.

    Among several allegations, court records state he sexually assaulted a woman, broke her windshield, and poured marinara sauce in her gas tank in October.

    He has pleaded not guilty.

    The case is further complicated since the victim indicated by November that she would stop cooperating with police and prosecutors. She ignored a subpoena served last month, ordering her to testify.

    Deputy Prosecutor Infinity Westberg — who leads the Lake County Prosecutor’s Office’s special victims unit — said in opening arguments that Donaldson launched a campaign to pressure her to do so, which included calling her from jail — or having others reach her — and threatened to call child protective services.

    Both Westberg and now-former Gary Detective Olivia Vasquez told the woman they would do the trial without her.

    Westberg told jurors they had a tumultuous “on-and-off” relationship with children, according to court documents.

    There was a stack of evidence implicating Donaldson, including multiple 911 calls dating back to a different incident in April, bodycam footage, “limited” information from his cell phone, and the woman’s hospital exam.

    Hours after the Oct. 28 assault, one preteen child recorded Donaldson on a cell phone threatening to kill the woman and damaging her windshield and headlights, Westberg said.

    Defense lawyer Roseann Ivanovich told jurors to pay attention to “details” and “bias” witnesses may have, and what the “timeline” of events was.

    Gary Police responded at 8:18 a.m. Oct. 28 after the reported rape. They found her damaged vehicle and a broken pasta sauce jar outside.

    The woman said Donaldson showed up around 1 a.m. at her back door uninvited.

    He claimed the Indiana Department of Child Services would take her children if police were called. She allowed him to wait for a ride, but soon doubted why he was there.

    The kids woke up during their argument. After they went back to sleep, he grabbed the woman’s face, trying to get her to perform a sex act. When she resisted, he choked and raped her instead.

    “(If) you don’t do it, I’ll kill you,” he said.

    The woman had a previous protection order filed in Cook County.

    Donaldson was later charged with a stalking case on Nov. 12 after pressuring the woman against testifying.

    In the April 17-19 incident, the woman said he punched and choked her in front of the children, smashed her vehicle windows with a pick axe, smashed in the front door and various windows with it, knocked holes in her walls, then swung the pick axe at her.

    mcolias@post-trib.com

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    Meredith Colias-Pete

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  • Former Jeffco school social worker pleads guilty to child sex assault

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    A former Jefferson County Public Schools social worker took a deal and pleaded guilty Monday to sexually assaulting a child, court records show.

    Chloe Rose Castro, 29, pleaded guilty to one count of sexual assault on a child by one in a position of trust, a felony, according to Jefferson County court records. The plea deal dropped a second child sex assault charge and one count of internet luring of a child from her case, court records show.

    Castro faces an open-ended, or “indeterminate,” sentence that will last from a minimum of four years to a maximum of life in prison when she is sentenced on April 2, according to a news release from the First Judicial District Attorney’s Office.

    The woman was arrested in November 2024 after the victim’s parents found “evidence of a sexual relationship” and reported Castro to the Arvada Police Department, prosecutors said in the release.

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    Lauren Penington

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  • Power restored to thousands in Denver area after Sunday outages

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    UPDATE: Widespread power outages caused by failed Xcel Energy transformer

    More than 185,000 customers were left in the dark on Sunday as widespread power outages hit the Denver area, according to energy utility officials.

    During the peak of Sunday’s outages, roughly 44,000 Core Electric Cooperative customers and 145,000 Xcel Energy customers were without power, according to the two utilities.

    The widespread power outages also caused disruptions at Denver International Airport and law enforcement agencies across the southeast metro area.

    As of 5:15 p.m. Sunday, all but a handful of Core Electric‘s power outages had been resolved, according to the utility’s outage map. Just 30 minutes earlier, reported outages included:

    • 23,416 customers in Arapahoe County,
    • 20,242 customers in Douglas County,
    • 692 customers in Elbert County,
    • And 1 customer in Adams County.

    The cause of the outages remained under investigation Sunday evening, Core Electric spokesperson Amber King said.

    Xcel Energy spokesperson Michelle Aguayo confirmed in an email to The Denver Post that “a large outage” also impacted as many as 145,000 of that utility’s customers in the southeast metro area.

    As of 5:47 p.m. Sunday, power had been restored to all Xcel Energy customers, Aguayo said.

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  • Two Denver suburbs eye new oversight of their police departments

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    Two Front Range cities are eyeing more oversight for their police departments.

    Lakewood’s City Council voted last week to “work toward the establishment” of an independent civilian oversight board for the city’s police department. And in Aurora, the city set aside about $330,000 this year to fund an Office of Police Accountability — even as city officials say they are still considering how oversight should be structured.

    The creation of an independent oversight board in Lakewood would put the city into the company of just a handful of Front Range cities with such boards, including Denver and Boulder. The push for more oversight came to a head in Lakewood after the death of Jax Gratton, a 34-year-old transgender woman who disappeared in April and was found dead in June.

    Lakewood police faced criticism for their handling of the case, including for announcing Gratton’s death by using her deadname and, later, for a lack of transparency about the investigation. Gratton’s case spurred the move toward an oversight committee, but the push is also rooted in wider issues around trust between police and community, Lakewood Councilwoman Isabel Cruz said.

    “Although this specific incident really brought this to the fore, and the demands of community activists really pushed us, it is rooted in a lot of different conversations,” she said.

    City Council members overwhelmingly voted Jan. 26 to create a 12-month committee to work toward the creation of a permanent oversight board. The temporary committee will have access to police records, completed internal affairs investigations and body-worn camera footage, and will be able to review complaints submitted to the police department.

    At the end of the 12-month period, the committee will report to the City Council about how a permanent police oversight committee would be staffed and structured, among other recommendations.

    Council members will then have the power to move forward with the permanent board or end the oversight effort.

    Lakewood Police Department spokesman John Romero declined to comment on the push for oversight. About three dozen police officers packed last week’s council meeting, where Lakewood police Agent Quinn Pratt-Cordova, an executive board member of the Fraternal Order of Police Lodge 21, spoke against independent oversight.

    An oversight board would be redundant, he said, and could damage officers’ trust in the city. Such oversight might “deter top talent,” from the police department, Pratt-Cordova said.

    “Civilian oversight boards are rare and often follow severe systemic issues like those in other cities, issues that the majority of you don’t agree exist in the local police department,” Pratt-Cordova told council members. “The unnecessary creation of an oversight board attempts to apply an unwarranted national narrative to Lakewood PD.”

    Lakewood Mayor Wendi Strom said she hopes any permanent effort will be aimed at improving police-community relations in ways that go beyond traditional independent oversight.

    “The oversight word, I think, it is a big sticking point and one that — especially for folks within the public safety realm — has a very specific meaning,” she said in an interview. “So what we end up with, it is hard to tell. But for me, and I think City Council has been pretty clear on this in multiple conversations over the last month, the end goal is ultimately to help our community members feel more comfortable reaching out when there is a need.”

    In Denver, city officials created a citizen oversight board in 2004 after a Denver police officer shot and killed Paul Childs, a developmentally disabled 15-year-old boy. Boulder’s citizen oversight panel — which recently saw its reach curtailed — followed a 2019 incident in which an officer pulled a gun on a Black student who was picking up trash outside his home.

    In Aurora, the police department entered into a consent decree — court-ordered reforms overseen by an independent monitor — after the 2019 killing of Elijah McClain, a 23-year-old Black man who died after Aurora police officers violently restrained him and paramedics injected him with a too-large dose of a powerful sedative.

    McClain’s death was part of a pattern of racial bias and excessive force within the Aurora Police Department, state officials later found.

    Aurora City Manager Jason Batchelor hopes the city’s two-person Office of Police Accountability will serve as an independent monitor for the police department when police exit the consent decree and are no longer under the supervision of the court-ordered monitor. The creation of such a position is a requirement of the consent decree.

    The new office would report to the city manager, Batchelor said, but would be created with built-in protections aimed at ensuring its independence, including putting into city ordinance the office’s right to have free and unfettered access to information and budgetary safeguards to ensure it could not be defunded by the city manager. The protections would mirror Aurora’s approach to its internal auditor, which operates independently and would work in tandem with the new office, Batchelor said.

    “I don’t get to tell the internal auditor, ‘That might make me look bad, don’t publish that,’” Batchelor said. “That can’t happen.”

    The Office of Police Accountability, which Batchelor hopes to be ready to hire for in a few months, would have “contemporaneous oversight” of any city investigation, he said. The office would not oversee police discipline and would not conduct its own investigations into police misconduct. Instead, the employees would be able to flag problems or concerns about such investigations to Batchelor, the City Council or to the public.

    Aurora Councilwoman Amy Wiles, who has helped to organize community meetings to discuss police oversight as recently as this week, said residents need a neutral place to report police misconduct.

    “Right now, if you want to report something — you had a poor interaction with a police officer or you feel something wasn’t right — to call and report that is a bit invasive. You have to call the police department,” she said. “…So we are hoping this provides that level of security to community to say, ‘Hey if something went wrong, here is this neutral person you can reach out to.’”

    The Office of Police Accountability could receive complaints of police misconduct directly from the public, Batchelor said, and then would “partner with the (police) department to make sure that any complaints are fully investigated.”

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  • Three people charged in connection with fatal Thornton home invasion, shooting

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    Three people were charged in connection with a fatal home invasion shooting that happened last month in Thornton, the Thornton Police Department announced Monday on social media.

    Thornton Police arrested three suspects on Jan. 14 after a burglary in the 9600 block of Huron Street resulted in a shooting that killed one person, according to Thornton police.

    The case was presented to the 17th Judicial District Attorney’s Office, which filed the following charges:

    Vincent Rios was charged with possession with intent to manufacture or distribute a controlled substance. Leo Bonavich was charged with first-degree burglary and a crime of violence. Richard Hernandez was charged with first-degree burglary, vehicular eluding and a crime of violence.

    Police responded to the situation after a 911 call came in about gunshots in the 9600 block of Huron Street around 4:30 a.m.

    The caller described a “suspect vehicle. Police saw the vehicle leaving the area and started chasing it. Police stopped the vehicle by hitting it near West 56th Avenue and Federal Boulevard, just off of Interstate 76

    Four people were inside the vehicle, including one man who had been fatally shot. The remaining three suspects were arrested, including one who tried to flee the scene on foot.

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  • Colorado Springs officer, suspect injured in shooting, police say

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    An officer and a suspect were injured Monday afternoon in a Colorado Springs shooting involving police, according to the department.

    The Colorado Springs Police Department first posted about the shooting in the 2600 block of East Bijou Street in East Colorado Springs at 2:48 p.m. Monday.

    Around 1:30 p.m. Monday, CSPD Tactical Enforcement Unit and the Colorado Parole Fugitive Apprehension Unit were in the area of East Bijou Street and Balfour Avenue conducting a “fugitive apprehension operation,” CSPD said. After the operation, CSPD officers contacted a suspicious man in the same area, CSPD said. The man ran away, took out a handgun and a shot a CSPD officer, police said. Two CSPD officers then returned fire, shooting the suspect.

    The suspect and the officer were taken to a local hospital. The officer sustained “serious but non-life-threatening” gunshot wound, police said. The suspect is in critical condition.

    The identity of the injured officer and the suspect are not being released at this time, CSPD said. The El Paso County Sheriff’s office is assuming responsibility for the investigation.

    This is the second Colorado Springs police shooting in three days.

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  • Skier injured, airlifted to hospital from Eldora Mountain in Boulder County

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    A skier sustained a head injury at Eldora Mountain Resort and was taken to the hospital by helicopter on Monday afternoon.

    About 1:08 p.m., the Boulder County Communications center received a report that a skier had a head injury, according to Carrie Haverfield, a Boulder County Sheriff’s Office spokesperson. The skier, a 24-year-old man, was seen sliding down one of the runs and was believed to have a head injury, Haverfield said.

    No one saw the man hit his head, and there was no visible trauma to the man or his helmet, she said.

    The man was taken to the hospital by a Med Evac helicopter.

    Eldora’s ski patrol, the Nederland Fire Protection District, American Medical Response and the sheriff’s office responded to the call.

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  • Ice resurfacing driver dies after collision on northern Colorado rink

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    An ice resurfacing machine driver died last week in northern Colorado after colliding with an overhead door at a Fort Collins ice rink, city officials said.

    The fatal collision happened shortly after noon on Tuesday at the Edora Pool Ice Center (EPIC), according to a news release from the city of Fort Collins.

    Ice resurfacing machines are often referred to as Zambonis, but the details of the exact machine being driven at the time of the crash remained unknown Sunday.

    City officials said the driver was injured when the resurfacing machine backed into a partially open overhead door at the rink. Paramedics took the driver to the hospital, where the driver later died, according to the release.

    No other staff or EPIC visitors were injured, Fort Collins officials said.

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  • Colorado snowplow driver on administrative leave after fatal I-70 crash

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    The snowplow driver who lost control last week on Interstate 70 and swerved into oncoming traffic has been placed on administrative leave amid the fatal crash investigation, state officials said.

    State patrol officials hope to complete the crash investigation within four weeks, but “many factors play into that timeframe,” Colorado State Patrol spokesperson Ivan Alvarado said Monday.

    The driver of a van carrying a youth hockey team headed to Denver for the Western Girls Hockey League weekend died in the Thursday morning crash on I-70 near Herman Gulch, and eight people in the van were injured, according to state patrol officials.

    The Clear Creek County Coroner’s Office identified the driver killed in the crash as 38-year-old Manuel Alejandro Lorenzana Villegas from Chatsworth, California. His cause of death remained under investigation on Monday, Chief Deputy Coroner Nichol Nelson said.

    Lorenzana Villegas was the father of one of the players on the youth hockey team, the Santa Clarita Lady Flyers, according to reporting from Denver7.

    A snowplow on westbound I-70 lost control in the snow shortly before 9 a.m. Thursday, crashing through the median and hitting a Toyota Tacoma in the eastbound lanes, state patrol officials said. The impact sent the Tacoma back across the median, where it hit a westbound BMW.

    State investigators said the snow plow then hit the Ford Transit van carrying the girls’ hockey team from California, sending the van down an embankment. The agency previously identified the vehicle as a Mercedes-Benz Sprinter van.

    Three adults and four juveniles in the van were taken to Denver Health by ambulance, hospital officials said in a statement.

    A fifth juvenile passenger was airlifted to a separate trauma center with critical injuries, according to the state patrol. No other injuries were reported.

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  • One man dead after domestic disturbance in Brighton on Sunday

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    The Brighton Police Department is investigating a fatal domestic disturbance that happened on Sunday night.

    The incident happened in the area of Beldock Street and Chavez Street, according to Brighton Police Department.

    Police responded to a disturbance in which a 48-year-old man fired a gun inside a home, BPD said. The suspect barricaded himself inside the home, police said, while police tried to communicate with him.

    Commerce City-Brighton SWAT team and crisis negotiators tried to communicate with the suspect, police said, but the man fired “several shots” at police. BPD said the officers did not return fire. No officers were injured during the incident, BPD said.

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    Elizabeth Hernandez

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  • Massive portion of roof burned away during two-alarm fire in Lowell

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    LOWELL — The multi-family home at 12 Osgood St. sat open to the elements on Saturday afternoon, its shattered windows offering a clear view up through the space where the roof had burned away several hours earlier.

    What turned out to be a two-alarm fire at the two-story structure was first reported at about 5:15 a.m. Saturday, when arriving crews found flames overtaking the attic.

    Lowell Deputy Fire Chief Joe Roth said nine residents were displaced, though the building’s owner was able to provide another home for them to stay in.

    “There was significant damage to the top floor, with the roof half burnt off,” Roth said. “Significant water and smoke damage throughout the whole building.”

    “Uninhabitable at this time,” he added.

    He stopped short of saying the structure would be a total loss, but added “there’s a lot of reconstruction there.”

    Firefighters remained on scene for hours extinguishing hot spots, working in temperatures that dipped below zero overnight.

    Roth said the extreme cold created some problems for crews.

    “Ice, slips and falls,” he said, describing the challenges.

    A supply line going into the engine truck in front of the building froze during overhaul operations, forcing crews to replace it. Some hand lines also froze.

    Roth said the last of the crews left the scene at about 10:30 a.m.

    The cause of the fire remains under investigation.

    In the afternoon, the damage was evident at the home, with singed debris — including a pair of mattresses — lying on the ice-coated ground outside the structure. Icicles created by the water used to battle the flames hung off the home’s siding and from the branches of nearby trees.

    The top of the structure’s brick chimney lay severed in a snowbank next to the building.

    A woman who lives across the narrow street pointed out the sheet of ice completely covering her daughter’s car from the firefighting water, along with black embers still scattered across it.

    A sign posted on the boarded-up front door of 12 Osgood St. stated, “Danger,” followed by “this structure is deemed unsafe for human occupation,” and “it is unlawful for any person to enter or occupy.”

    Saturday morning’s blaze came less than two days after another two-alarm fire caused significant damage to a single-family home at 20 Otis St. That fire was also fought in sub-freezing temperatures, though the conditions were not as severe.

    No injuries were reported in that fire, which also remains under investigation.

    Follow Aaron Curtis on X @aselahcurtis, or on Bluesky @aaronscurtis.bsky.social.

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    Aaron Curtis

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