ReportWire

Tag: Denver

  • Pushback against Flock cameras comes to Denver suburb — the latest Colorado city to enter debate

    [ad_1]

    There are just 16 Flock Safety cameras in Thornton.

    But those electronic eyes, mounted to poles at intersections throughout this city of nearly 150,000, brought out dozens of people to the Thornton Community Center for a discussion on how the controversial license plate-reading cameras are being used — and whether they should be used at all.

    Law enforcement agencies cite the automatic license-plate readers, or ALPRs, as a powerful tool that bolsters their ability to locate and stop suspects who may be on their way to committing their next assault or robbery.

    But Meg Moore, a six-year resident of the city who is helping spearhead opposition to Flock cameras, said she worries about how the rapidly spreading surveillance system is impacting residents’ privacy and Fourth Amendment protections against unreasonable searches and seizures. Thornton’s Flock camera data can be seen by more than 1,600 other law enforcement agencies across the country.

    “We want to make sure this is truly safe and effective,” she said in an interview.

    The debate over Atlanta-based Flock Safety’s cameras, which not only can record license plate numbers but can search for the specific characteristics of a vehicle linked to an alleged crime, has been picking up steam in recent years. The discussions have largely played out in metro Denver and Front Range cities in recent months, but this year they reached the state Capitol, where lawmakers are pitching a couple of bills to tighten up rules around surveillance.

    The number of police agencies contracting with the company now exceeds 6,000, according to the company. The critical “DeFlock” website uses crowdsourcing to tally the number of Flock cameras out there. At the latest count, the website lists nearly 74,000 Flock cameras operating nationwide.

    Metro Denver alone is home to hundreds of the cameras, according to DeFlock’s map.

    In Denver, Mayor Mike Johnston has been butting heads with the City Council over the issue. Johnston is so convinced of Flock’s value in combating crime that in October, he extended the contract with the company against the wishes of much of the council. Denver has 111 Flock cameras.

    In Longmont, elected leaders took a different approach. Its City Council voted in December to pause all sharing of Flock Safety data with other municipalities, declined an expansion of its contract with the company and began searching for an alternative.

    Louisville beat its Boulder County neighbor to the punch by several months, disabling its Flock cameras at the end of June and removing them by the start of October. City spokesman Derek Cosson said privacy concerns from residents largely drove the city’s decision.

    Steve Mathias, a Thornton resident for nearly a decade, would like to see Flock’s cameras gone from his city. Short of that, he said, reliable controls on how the streetside data is collected, stored and shared are paramount.

    “In our rush to make our community safe, we’re not getting the full picture of the risks we’re facing,” he said. “We’re making ourselves safe in some ways by making ourselves less safe in others.”

    The hot-button debate in Thornton played out at last month’s community meeting and continued at a City Council meeting last week, where the city’s Police Department gave a presentation on the Flock system.

    Cmdr. Chad Parker laid out several examples of Flock’s cameras being instrumental in apprehending bad actors — in cases ranging from homicide to sex assault to child exploitation to a $5,700 theft at a Nike store.

    As recently as Monday, Thornton police announced on X that investigators had tracked down a man suspected of hitting and killing a 14-year-old boy who was riding a small motorized bike over the weekend. The agency said a Flock camera in Thornton gave officers a “strong lead” in identifying the hit-and-run suspect within 24 hours.

    At the Feb. 3 council study session, police Chief Jim Baird described Flock’s camera system as “one of the best tools I’ve seen in 32 years of law enforcement.”

    But that doesn’t sway those in Thornton who are wary of the camera network.

    “I’m not a fan of building toward a surveillance state,” Mathias said.

    The hazards of a system like Flock, he said, lie not just in the pervasive data-collection methods the company uses but also in who eventually might get to see and use that data — be it a rogue law enforcement officer or a hacker who manages to break into Flock’s database.

    “A person who wants us to do us harm with this system will have as much capability as the police have to do good,” he said.

    A Flock Safety license plate recognition camera is seen on a street light post on Ken Pratt Boulevard near the intersection with U.S. 287 in Longmont on Dec. 10, 2025. (Matthew Jonas/Daily Camera)

    Crime-fighting tool or prone to misuse?

    In November, a Columbine Valley police officer was disciplined after he accused a Denver woman of theft based in large part on evidence from Flock cameras, according to reporting from Fox31. The officer mistakenly claimed the woman had stolen a $25 package in a nearby town and said he’d used Flock cameras to track her car.

    “It’s putting too much trust in the hands of people who don’t know what they’re doing,” DeFlock’s Will Freeman said of so many police agencies’ adoption of the technology.

    Last summer, 9News reported that the Loveland Police Department had shared access to its Flock camera system with U.S. Border Patrol. That came two months after the station reported that the department gave the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives access to its account, which ATF agents then used to conduct searches for Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

    Parker, the Thornton police commander, said any searches connected to immigration cases or to women from out of state who are seeking an abortion in Colorado — another scenario that’s been raised — “won’t ever touch our system.” State laws restrict cooperation with federal immigration authorities and with other states’ abortion-related investigations.

    “Any situation I feel uncomfortable about or that might be in conflict with our policies or with Colorado law, I will revoke their access — no problem,” he said.

    Thornton deputy city attorney Adam Stephens said motorists’ Fourth Amendment rights are not being violated by the city’s Flock camera network. During last week’s meeting, he cited several recent court cases that, in essence, determined that there is no right to privacy while driving down a public roadway.

    In an interview, Stephens said Thornton was “in compliance with the law.”

    Flock spokesman Paris Lewbel wrote in an email that the company was “proud to partner with the Thornton Police Department to provide technology used to investigate and solve crimes and to help locate missing persons.”

    Lewbel provided links to two news stories about minor children who were abducted and then found with the help of Flock’s cameras in Thornton and elsewhere.

    At the council’s study session last week, Parker provided more examples of Flock’s role in fighting crime and finding missing people in Thornton. They included police nabbing a suspect who had hit and killed a pedestrian, locating a burglar who was suspected of robbing several dispensaries, and tracking down an 89-year-old man with dementia who had gotten into his car and gotten lost.

    “It allows us to find vehicles in a manner we weren’t able to previously,” Parker said of the camera network.

    Thornton installed its first 10 Flock cameras in 2022 and then added five more — plus a mobile unit — two years later. The initial deployment was in response to a spike in auto thefts in the city, which peaked at 1,205 in 2022 (amid an overall surge in Colorado). Thornton recorded 536 auto thefts last year.

    The city says Flock cameras have been involved in 200 cases that resulted in an arrest or a warrant application in Thornton over the last three years.

    Thornton police have access to nearly 2,200 other agencies’ Flock systems across the United States, while nearly 1,650 law enforcement agencies can access Thornton’s Flock data, according to data provided by the city.

    For Anaya Robinson, the public policy director for the American Civil Liberties Union of Colorado, the networked nature of Flock cameras across wide geographies is a big part of the problem. By linking one police agency’s Flock technology with that of thousands of other police departments, it “creates a surveillance environment that could violate the Fourth Amendment.”

    The sweeping nature of Flock’s surveillance is also worrisome, Robinson said.

    “You’re not just collecting the data of vehicles that ping (a police department’s) hot list (of suspicious vehicles), you’re collecting the data of every vehicle that is caught on a Flock camera,” he said.

    And because the technology is relatively inexpensive — Thornton pays $48,500 to Flock annually for its system — it’s an affordable crime-fighting tool for most communities. But that doesn’t mean it should be deployed, DeFlock’s Freeman said.

    Fight remains a largely local one

    State lawmakers are crafting bills this session to limit the reach of surveillance technologies like Flock’s.

    Senate Bill 70 would put limits on access to databases and the sharing of information. It would prohibit a government from accessing a database that reveals an individual’s or a vehicle’s historical location information, and it would prohibit sharing that information with third parties or with government agencies outside the controlling entity’s jurisdiction. Certain exceptions would apply.

    Senate Bill 71 would direct a “law enforcement agency to use surveillance technology only for lawful purposes directly related to public safety or for an active investigation.” It also would forbid the use of facial-recognition technology without a warrant and would place limits on the amount of time data can be retained.

    Both bills await their first committee hearings.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Douglas County woman billed Medicaid for patient who already died, federal officials allege

    [ad_1]

    Federal officials unveiled a slew of charges Tuesday against two Coloradans accused of ripping off a program that provides free rides to Medicaid patients, the first criminal charges filed in response to a sprawling fraud bonanza identified by state officials more than two years ago.

    The indictments allege that Ashley Marie Stevens and Wesam Yassin separately participated in the transportation program and fraudulently collected seven-figure payouts — more than $3.3 million for Yassin alone, according to a statement from the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Colorado. The two drivers, who ran separate companies, allegedly fabricated rides for appointments that didn’t exist. Stevens is accused of billing for rides for her husband while he was incarcerated, and Yassin allegedly billed $165,000 for driving a patient who was dead.

    Both Stevens, of Mesa County, and Yassin, of Douglas County, were charged with multiple counts of wire fraud, money laundering and health care fraud for their participation in the driving service.

    The program pays drivers to ferry Medicaid patients to and from doctor’s appointments, but it became a haven for fraud in 2022 and 2023, after state officials increased the service’s reimbursement rates. State officials told The Denver Post last month that an estimated $25 million was lost in the broader fraud.

    Yassin’s indictment was still sealed Tuesday evening. In a statement, federal officials alleged that Yassin billed Medicaid for hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of rides that never occurred between March 2022 and October 2023. She raked in $283,000 from rides for just one patient, most of which was paid to Yassin after the patient had already died.

    Yassin allegedly used the proceeds to buy a home and furnishings, along with luxury vehicles, jewelry and cosmetic surgery. She was released on bond earlier this week, according to court records.

    Stevens billed the state for more than $1 million between July 2022 and February 2023, according to the indictment. More than $400,000 came from rides she provided to herself or to her family members, for which there were “very few” actual medical appointments, federal authorities allege.

    The trips included rides for her husband, who was incarcerated during some of the time when Stevens claimed she was driving him to the doctor. Another $150,000 was billed for rides that either never took place or were for trips that didn’t involve Medicaid services.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • 1 dead after early morning I-70 crash in north Denver

    [ad_1]

    One person was killed in a crash on westbound Interstate 70 in north Denver early Tuesday morning, police said.

    The Denver Police Department reported a two-vehicle crash with serious injuries near westbound I-70 and Havana Street on X at 4:07 a.m.

    One person was pronounced dead at the hospital as of 8:26 a.m., police officials said, and the crash is under investigation.

    This is a developing story and may be updated.

    Sign up to get crime news sent straight to your inbox each day.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • 2 children, driver seriously injured in Denver hit-and-run with Dodge Challenger

    [ad_1]

    Denver police are looking for a blue Dodge Challenger involved in a hit-and-run crash on Interstate 25 that seriously injured another driver and two children.

    The crash happened around 5:30 a.m. Jan. 20 , the Denver Police Department said in a crime alert.

    The Challenger was driving north on I-25 near Eighth Avenue when the driver changed lanes and hit a white sedan, causing the sedan to hit the center concrete wall.

    Two children and the driver of the sedan were seriously injured in the crash, Denver police said. The driver of the Challenger fled the scene and was last seen exiting onto Colfax Avenue.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • 8 indicted in metro Denver drug trafficking, weapons scheme

    [ad_1]

    Eight people from metro Denver were indicted on federal charges related to drug trafficking, weapons and money laundering, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Colorado said Thursday.

    The suspects — all current or former residents of Denver, Aurora, Commerce City and Wheat Ridge — are facing charges of conspiracy to distribute and possession with intent to distribute meth, fentanyl and cocaine, federal officials said in a news release.

    [ad_2]

    Katie Langford

    Source link

  • What we saw as we joined city workers counting the people sleeping outside

    [ad_1]

    Updated at 2:24 p.m. on Thursday, Feb. 5, 2025

    After the sun set on the last Monday in January, Lakewood housing manager Chris Conner and Westwoods Community Church Pastor Rick Schmitz met at the dilapidated White Swan Motel, a family homeless shelter off West Colfax Avenue. 

    They were on a mission: Count the people sleeping outside in Lakewood.

    It was part of a sweeping federal effort known as the Point in Time Count. Each year, nationwide, counties attempt to quantify how many people are living outside and in shelters.

    With questionnaires loaded on their phones and a map of parks and public strips where people often slept, the duo climbed into Conner’s gargantuan black truck, stuffed with winter supplies, soft drinks and snacks.

    The White Swan motel on West Colfax Avenue in Lakewood. Feb. 3, 2026.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    Conner warned Schmitz their shift, from 6 to 9 p.m., precedes when many people set up their camps. In the extreme cold, some would be sleeping in emergency shelters instead. They knew they would miss some people. 

    Still, stomping through the snow, they found men pushing shopping carts toward camping spots, others already hunkered down and some fighting the wind to put up their tents. 

    They counted the people and camps and convinced some to take a survey that would get at big questions: Why are you homeless? Why are you staying outside? How long have you been on the streets? 

    The count provides the most comprehensive one-night snapshot of homelessness in the U.S., employing thousands of people in counties across the country to count homelessness. 

    Yet it is imperfect at best. Denverite joined city workers in Lakewood and Denver to better understand how each community counts the people living outside and tries to interpret its findings. 

    The difficult work of surveying homelessness

    Most everybody Schmitz and Conner would talk with were men who had been on the streets for years – in one case since the Occupy movement in 2011. All had last lived indoors in Lakewood or another suburb. Most were living outside because they did not feel comfortable or safe in the shelters.

    But as they made their way through the snow, they encountered common challenges. At their first stop at Aviation Park, they approached a tent with a shopping cart out front. 

    “If it’s all right, I can leave you some supplies and Mountain Dew,” Conner said.

    “Yeah,” a small voice answered from inside the tent. 

    A blanket sits on the corner of West Colfax Avenue and Harlan Street in Lakewood. Feb. 3, 2026.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    “Can we ask you a few questions too?” Conner said. “You don’t have to if you don’t want to, but it helps us kind of learn more about how to be helpful.”

    No answer.

    “You might have heard me yesterday. I came and was asking folks if they wanted to get inside at a shelter,” he said. “Were you able to hold down OK last night? “

    “Yeah,” the man mumbled in a tone that was hard to believe.

    The weather had dipped into the single digits. Tents blew over. But the man had weathered it all, and was in no mood for questions — “not tonight.”

    Conner left the supplies and Mountain Dew outside the tent. Schmitz did his best guesswork to answer the questions he could. 

    A flawed but essential source of data

    It’s inherently hard to find people who have no fixed address. Some live in hiding, camped where they won’t be found.

    That’s one reason Jason Johnson used to dismiss the value of the point-in-time data, knowing that it “was a gross undercount, probably by half.” 

    But today he is the head of the Metro Denver Homelessness Initiative, the nonprofit that conducts the survey in Denver and manages federal housing dollars.

    The quality of the count varies county by county and volunteer by volunteer, he acknowledged. Some cities like Denver deploy paid city workers, while many others rely on volunteers. Nationally, different communities count at different times of day. 

    A car sits on a sidewalk in a park, surrounded by leafless trees and playground equipment. Its lights glow in the morning darkness.
    Denver Park Ranger Corey Beaton drives into Sunken Gardens Park before dawn, looking for people sleeping outside as he participates in the city’s annual Point in Time Count of homelessness. Jan. 27, 2026.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    “It used to be that hordes of volunteers would go out and if they saw someone under a blanket or on a park bench, maybe steamed up windows in a car, they would count that individual and move along,” Johnson said. 

    But the strategy has improved nationally more recently, he said. 

    Now, volunteers ask questions of the people they encounter and learn about how homelessness works in various communities. The information is more useful than ever, as he sees it, adding up to a portrait of the many forms of homelessness.

    The PIT also uses information collected by shelters, transitional housing, day centers and outreach workers. 

    “We pull a lot of information to get a richer head count and a more accurate head count than any community could ever do just by that visual count,” Johnson said.

    MDHI plans to present the local numbers in April and the federal tally will likely come later.

    A phone is mounted to a dashboard inside a car. Out of focus, in the background through the window, a neon cross glows in the morning dark.
    Denver Park Ranger Corey Beaton’s phone is mounted in his cruiser to show a map where he’ll been look for people sleeping outside, part of the city’s annual Point in Time Count of homelessness. Jan. 27, 2026.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    The PIT can be politically charged.

    In 2023, there were 1,423 people counted as unsheltered in Denver. In 2025, there were 785 people counted outside — a 45 percent reduction. Mayor Mike Johnston described it as a national record and proof that his All In Mile High homelessness strategy was working.

    At his State of the City address, Johnston claimed “record reductions in homelessness,” based on the PIT’s count of unsheltered people, even as sheltered homelessness grew

    The PIT’s variability also raises questions about how much of the reduction in unsheltered homelessness can be attributed to the mayor or any other factor. 

    MDHI itself cautions not to extrapolate trends over time from PIT data. 

    “The PIT is only a snapshot of homelessness on a single night in January with numerous variables that could result in an undercount,” Jenn Myers, a spokesperson for MDHI, wrote Denverite.

    Housekeys Action Network Denver, a homelessness advocacy group, argues that Johnston’s claim of a reduction is overblown, arguing that cold weather in 2025 artificially reduced unsheltered homelessness by pushing people inside. 

    “The Mayor’s office has been touting a ‘45 percent reduction in unsheltered homelessness,’ but it is clear this is false,” Housekeys Action Network Denver wrote in a statement.

    The mayor’s office says they made a fair comparison, correctly pointing out that temperatures were actually lower in 2023 than in 2025, likely driving a similar or larger percentage of people into cold-weather shelters. The city did not track how many people stayed in the emergency cold-weather shelters during the 2023 PIT.

    The mayor’s office stands by the quality of the data, saying it followed HUD standards that dictate how people in emergency shelters are counted. Critics say the PIT numbers should include a footnote explaining that the numbers could be affected by cold temperatures.

    In Denver, some signs of a change this year:

    Despite doubts about the data, some of the people conducting the survey in the city of Denver said they saw fewer people outside.

    Denver Park Ranger Corey Beaton set out well before sunrise for his sixth point-in-time count. In years past, he’d expect to find a lot of tents and people sleeping rough during this exercise. This morning, though, he had different expectations.

    “Gone are the days of encampments that would circle an entire city block. I think those were a temporary situation while the city built the framework that is now being shown to have success, be it transitional housing or permanent housing or more shelters. So yeah, things have gotten a lot better,” he said.

    A man drives a car, looking right at the camera through the rearview mirror mounted above his dashboard. The city is dark beyond his windows.
    Denver Park Ranger Corey Beaton cruises by Benedict Fountain Park, uptown, as he looks for people sleeping outside, part of the city’s annual Point in Time Count of homelessness. Jan. 27, 2026.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    Beaton cruised by the Eddie Maestas Community Garden, across Park Avenue from the Denver Rescue Mission, where one person was lying under a blanket. Uptown’s Benedict Fountain Park was empty, as was Skyline Park.

    He counted one person each at the Quality Hill pocket park in Capitol Hill, Governor’s Park and the westside’s Sunken Gardens. There was no one to count at Sonny Lawson or La Alma/Lincoln Parks, which Denver officials temporarily closed in recent years to address concerns about safety and visible poverty.

    All in all, there were far fewer people outside than Beaton had encountered in the past, and he attributed that to Denver’s efforts to bring people inside and connect them with services and housing.

    “It’s pretty quiet today,” he said as he drove. But the final data won’t be available for months — and it will leave plenty of questions unanswered.

    What does homelessness look like in your community, or your life? Share your questions and observations.

    Tent can be seen next to a sidewalk, seen out of a car's windshield. The sky above it is dark.
    Denver Park Ranger Corey Beaton drives through a greenway near Mile High Stadium, taking note of a tent on the trail as he counts people sleeping outside for city’s annual Point in Time Count of homelessness. Jan. 27, 2026.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    Editor’s note: This article was updated to add additional comment from MDHI and context and comment from the mayor’s office on advocates’ claims that cold weather led to a lower count of unsheltered homelessness in 2025. The count in 2023 was also conducted in cold weather. Emergency shelters were open during both years’ counts.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

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

    [ad_1]

    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.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

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

    [ad_1]

    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.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Nuggets sit out Spencer Jones, play without a power forward in loss to Pistons

    [ad_1]

    DETROIT — Both teams playing in the Motor City on Tuesday were maneuvering their rosters as the trade deadline loomed — one of them more quietly than the other.

    The Pistons were hosting, just a few hours after they sent Jaden Ivey to Chicago in a three-team deal that brought back Kevin Huerter, ex-Nugget Dario Saric and a pick swap. The Nuggets had not completed any trades, but they did have a business decision to make. Spencer Jones embarked on their three-game road trip this week with one game of eligibility remaining on his two-way contract and a back-to-back against two of the East’s best awaiting Denver.

    With Christian Braun returning from an ankle injury and supplying David Adelman with another body to work with in Detroit, the Nuggets elected to rest Jones on Tuesday and delay his last game 24 hours until New York, sources said. Jones told The Denver Post last week that the Nuggets’ front office has told him he might have to sit out games even if he ends up joining the 15-man roster on a standard contract this month.

    Without him, the Nuggets clawed back from a 20-point deficit to get within two late in the fourth quarter, but the Pistons held on for a 124-121 win at Little Caesar’s Arena. A fortuitous shooter’s bounce for Tobias Harris with 1:46 left stretched Detroit’s lead to 115-110 as Denver struggled to land the comeback’s final punch. Moments later, Peyton Watson was a millisecond late to block a Cade Cunningham layup off the backboard, a play that would’ve given Denver a chance to tie while down three.

    “The challenge for us right now is with all the things that are happening — people coming back, the minute restrictions — we have to avoid paying attention to that, and we just have to play,” Adelman said. “And deal with it as we go. We’re going to have some clunky moments. The rotation is different. We tried different things tonight. Just trying to fit people into the minutes that can play.”

    “It’s a little bit different for us right now,” Nikola Jokic said, “but I think it’s part of the (league).”

    The healthy scratch of Jones was essentially a money-saving tactic for Nuggets ownership. Players on two-way deals can be active for up to 50 NBA games in a regular season. Jones may be on the verge of a promotion that would dispense with that limit if the Nuggets can balance their books with a trade by Thursday afternoon. But their primary goal, to get under the luxury tax, is evident in that they’ve gone through half of the season with an open roster spot. Nothing in a rulebook would’ve prevented them from converting Jones’ contract on Tuesday (or earlier) if they wanted him available for Detroit.

    Instead, they were operating without a power forward. Aaron Gordon is also sidelined as he recovers from a hamstring strain. Adelman rolled out Braun, Peyton Watson and Jalen Pickett in the starting unit alongside his two stars, foreshadowing a night of finagling. He tried everything from four-guard lineups to a jumbo package.

    “I am feeling it out, man. Like, I’m feeling it out every game,” Adelman said. “We walk through stuff in a hotel room, and I pre-suppose lineups and put them out there in their sandals. And then we go play. Then you have to react during the game. And that’s part of the NBA, so there’s no excuses there, either. It’s just, I was trying to find a group that had some rhythm. We found a couple, but the end of the first half just killed us.”

    The Pistons (37-12) swept the season series and got under Denver’s skin in the process. Their frontcourt played its usual chippy style, and Nuggets center Jonas Valanciunas caused a brief skirmish in the first quarter by putting Isaiah Stewart in a headlock under the basket. Newly minted Pistons All-Star Jalen Duren exchanged shoves with Valanciunas. Both received technical fouls. Valanciunas also picked up a flagrant for the play on Stewart.

    By halftime, both head coaches and Pistons guard Duncan Robinson had been handed technicals as well. Jamal Murray and Stewart jawed back and forth a couple of times. Cade Cunningham got into foul trouble in the third frame but also earned 11 free throws himself — a stat that agitated Adelman after the game in contrast to Jokic’s three. In search of a bigger power forward, the first-year head coach started playing Jokic at the four in a double-big lineup with Valanciunas to match Detroit’s size and physicality.

    Both centers started the fourth quarter after Denver had trimmed a 20-point deficit back to 13. Julian Strawther chipped in as the rally intensified, lending support on the glass and pushing the pace.

    “He was playing aggressive and trying to force the issue a little bit,” Murray. “It was good to see him just get a flow.”

    The Nuggets couldn’t buy a bucket early. They missed their first seven 3s while falling behind by double digits and shot 31.8% from the field in the first half. But they were able to linger despite a “weird energy” that Adelman wasn’t pleased with, until a disastrous two-minute stretch to end the half. Three consecutive turnovers — two by Jokic — fueled a 10-0 Pistons run that pushed the lead to 69-50. Detroit scored 26 fast break points on the night, a “ridiculous” number, Adelman said.

    “They’re handsy,” said Jokic, who was visibly frustrated by non-calls throughout the night. “They have some really good personnel. … I think the second half was much better for us.

    “We had, I’m gonna say, like a good half of basketball.”

    [ad_2]

    Bennett Durando

    Source link

  • Two Denver suburbs eye new oversight of their police departments

    [ad_1]

    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.”

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • PHOTOS: Immigration protests in Denver as part of nationwide protests in opposition of the Trump administration’s policies.

    [ad_1]

[ad_2]

Timothy Hurst

Source link

  • Latino trailblazer Manuel Martinez mourned in Denver

    [ad_1]

    He served under Mayor Federico Peña in two different roles and was one of the first Latinos to graduate from Colorado College

    Manuel Martinez memorial illustration

    Courtesy/Colorado Hispanic Chamber of Commerce

    Manuel L. Martinez, a trailblazing Latino leader in Denver’s government, died earlier this month.

    Martinez was the first Latino manager of safety for the city Denver, as well as the first Latino director of the licensing department. He died Jan. 7 at age 74.

    Martinez moved to Colorado from Utah when he was a child. He became one of the first Latinos to graduate from Colorado College in 1974, where he studied history. While in undergrad, he took a leave of absence to work with César Chávez and the United Farm Workers on their campaign for labor rights for agricultural workers. He got his law degree from UCLA in 1978.

    Martinez worked as a public defender and later served as manager of safety for the city and county of Denver, overseeing the Denver Police Department, as well as the fire and sheriff departments.

    He was also the director of the Department of Excise and Licenses, now known as the Department of Licensing and Consumer Protection. He was appointed to both roles by Mayor Federico Peña.

    After his time in city government, he became a partner at the law firm Holme Roberts & Owen and eventually Bryan Cave Leighton Paisner. He continued to focus on licensing, as well as gaming and land laws.

    Martinez was honored with a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Colorado Hispanic Bar Association in 2013.

    He was a board member of the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fun, served on the National Board of Directors for the Volunteers of America, was a trustee of The Denver Foundation and was a trustee of the Children’s Hospital Foundation.

    Martinez was the chairman of the Denver chapter of the Colorado Hispanic Chamber of Commerce in the ‘90s, a board member of the Denver Chamber of Commerce and senior vice president for the Colorado Bar Association.

    He is survived by his wife, Pat Cortez, his children, Leticia Martinez, Manuel E. Martinez, Jovan Muniz, and Devin Muniz — as well as seven grandchildren, one great-grandchild, his brother, Christopher Martinez, and his sisters, Christine Resendez and Marietta Ziobron.

    His family held two memorial services on Thursday and requested donations to the Denver Art Museum in lieu of flowers. A press release did not disclose a cause of death but said that he died peacefully.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Man dies in custody at Denver’s Downtown Detention Center

    [ad_1]

    A man died after he was found unresponsive in a housing unit at the Downtown Detention Center early Tuesday morning, the Denver Sheriff Department said in a news release.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Nuggets’ David Adelman reacts to Minneapolis unrest, shooting of Alex Pretti: ‘Let’s not shoot each other’

    [ad_1]

    David Adelman couldn’t make sense of what he was watching, but he could make out the neighborhood. Minneapolis was his first NBA home. He knew the city well. Just not in this ravaged state.

    “That’s a great community of people,” the first-year head coach of the Nuggets said. “I lived there for five years. And it was just so weird to see exactly where it was in the city, because I knew exactly where it was. And from the drone shot, it looked like a war zone. And that’s the country we live in.”

    Before the Nuggets hosted the Pistons on Tuesday night, Adelman took a moment to reflect on the unrest in Minneapolis and the death of Alex Pretti, a 37-year-old nurse who was fatally shot by federal agents last Saturday.

    “Just as a human being, that’s really hard to watch,” he said. “I’d say beyond that, if you want to look at this in layers, how do you explain it to your kids? It’s tough. My kids are of an age where they know what’s going on. Watching that video and trying to explain it to them makes you realize that I don’t know what the hell is going on either.”

    The NBA postponed last Saturday’s game between the Timberwolves and Warriors “to prioritize the safety and security of the Minneapolis community” after the shooting of Pretti, according to a statement from the league.

    The game was made up on Sunday, with anti-ICE chants echoing through Target Center at the end of a pregame moment of silence for Pretti. The day before Pretti’s death, mass protests had been held in Minneapolis speaking out against the federal government’s deployment of ICE to enforce Donald Trump’s immigration policy. Renee Good was shot and killed on Jan. 7 in Minneapolis amid the crackdown.

    “For the second time in less than three weeks, we’ve lost another beloved member of our community in the most unimaginable way,” Timberwolves coach Chris Finch said through tears on Sunday. “As an organization, we are heartbroken for what we are having to witness and endure and watch. We just want to extend our thoughts, prayers and concern for Mr. Pretti, family, all the loved ones and everyone involved in such an unconscionable situation in a community that we really love, full of people who are, by nature, peaceful and prideful. We just stand in support of our great community here.”

    [ad_2]

    Bennett Durando

    Source link

  • Man dies in custody at Denver’s Downtown Detention Center

    [ad_1]

    DENVER — A man who was in custody at Denver’s Downtown Detention Center died early Tuesday morning, the Denver sheriff’s department announced.

    The man was discovered unresponsive in a housing unit around 3:30 a.m. A medical team performed life-saving efforts, but he was pronounced deceased shortly after, the statement said. Cause of death and identifying information about the man, including name and age, have not been released.

    “Per protocol, with any death in custody, the Denver Police Department will conduct an investigation,” the sheriff department’s statement said. “To ensure the investigation is not compromised, we are limited in what information can be shared at this time.”

    There were eight deaths in custody in 2025 between the Downtown Detention Center and the Denver County Jail, according to a sheriff’s department spokesperson. There are currently 964 people in custody at the Downtown Detention Center and 611 people in custody at the Denver County Jail, according to a sheriff’s department report.

    Related story:

    Local

    Family of inmate who died in JeffCo jail believes his death was preventable

    Coloradans making a difference | Denver7 featured videos


    Denver7 is committed to making a difference in our community by standing up for what’s right, listening, lending a helping hand and following through on promises. See that work in action, in the videos above.

    [ad_2]

    Kaylee Harter

    Source link

  • University of Denver creates professorship in Holocaust and antisemitism studies

    [ad_1]

    The University of Denver is aiming to become a global hub for scholarship on the Holocaust, abuses of power, racism, hatred and antisemitism, with a goal of spurring other universities to do the same.

    DU leaders said they’ll announce the school’s first endowed professorship in Holocaust and antisemitism studies at a gathering in the state Capitol with Gov. Jared Polis on Tuesday, which is International Holocaust Remembrance Day.

    The professorship represents “a permanent commitment not only to remembrance but to making Denver a global hub for thoughtful Holocaust education and applied scholarship that helps future generations foster social change,” DU Provost Elizabeth Loboa said in a statement.

    Polis and survivors of the Holocaust — Colorado residents Osi Sladek and Barbara Steinmetz — will commemorate the anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz, a Nazi death camp.

    At the noon event, Sladek is expected to read from his memoir, which recounts his escape from persecution into the Tatra mountains along Slovakia’s border with Poland. He later served in the Israeli Army and became a folk singer in California before settling in Denver. The Denver Young Artists Orchestra and DeVotchKa’sTom Hagerman will perform music by Sladek’s father using his violin.

    Steinmetz fled Europe on a boat that carried her to the Dominican Republic, where she found refuge. She’ll share a “Letter to the Future.”

    DU officials over the past two years have been working on this project, said Adam Rovner, an English professor who directs DU’s Center for Judaic Studies, within the College of the Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences.

    “We just think it is simply important that we remain vigilant in our society to guard against abuses of power and racism, hatred, and antisemitism,” Rovner said. “We think this position is much-needed at DU and in higher education.”

    One purpose of studying manifestations of antisemitism in the 20th century “is so that people can consider the contemporary manifestations of antisemitism, and decide based on scholarly rigor whether there are threats to Jewish people and other groups,” Rovner said.

    [ad_2]

    Bruce Finley

    Source link

  • RTD agrees to share camera feeds with Aurora police

    [ad_1]

    AURORA, Colo. — The Aurora City Council on Monday night approved an agreement between the Regional Transportation District (RTD) and Aurora police, which will allow APD access to RTD’s camera feeds in the city.

    Those cameras are placed on RTD property, including dozens of bus and rail stations.

    “We’ve never had to clear any hurdles with them providing that footage to us,” Aurora Sgt. Matthew Longshore told Denver7. “This is just one of those elements now that we actually have footage readily available to our investigators or our officers, in that real time… We would be able to view it live. We’d be able to go back 12, 24 hours to kind of view what happened previously.”

    Longshore called the agreement an expansion of the agencies’ already strong partnership.”

    “This is about public safety,” he said. “The more eyes we have in the community, the better.”

    Denver7

    A passenger moves across an RTD light rail platform.

    This is the latest example of Aurora police promoting technology as a potential solution to fight crime. In the fall, the department gained approval to use artificial intelligence facial recognition technology.

    But that move and others, including the use of drones and automated license plate cameras known as Flock cameras, have sparked privacy and transparency concerns in Aurora and around the Denver metro.

    PREVIOUS COVERAGE:

    A public commenter from the Denver Aurora Community Action Committee spoke out against the AI facial technology and increased surveillance in general during Monday’s Aurora City Council meeting.

    “You cannot impose surveillance technology on a community that does not trust you, and that distrust is earned,” she said. “How can we possibly trust APD with this tool when there is a non-zero chance they will share our faces and data with agencies like ICE?”

    “You ask us to trust a pipeline of surveillance that leads directly to deportation and death.”

    APD says the cameras are only meant to respond to 911 calls or to address broader crime trends.

    “If you know, we have an increase in crime, or if there’s something suspicious happening in the area,” Longshore said. “There’s typically an audit log that’s available on all of our cameras, so we can see who’s viewing it and when. There are certain things in place to be able to make sure that officers are doing things specifically for certain reasons.

    Denver7 reached out to RTD for comment on the agreement and is waiting to hear back.

    RTD agrees to share camera feeds with Aurora Police

    ryan image bar.jpg

    Denver7 | Your Voice: Get in touch with Ryan Fish

    Denver7’s Ryan Fish covers stories that have an impact in all of Colorado’s communities, but specializes in covering artificial intelligence, technology, aviation and space. If you’d like to get in touch with Ryan, fill out the form below to send him an email.

    [ad_2]

    Ryan Fish

    Source link

  • Keeler: Broncos should spend Russell Wilson money on getting Bo Nix receivers without butterfingers

    [ad_1]

    Say this for Sean Payton: He sure liked to spread the drops around.

    The Broncos were the only NFL team to place three players among the league’s top 15 in dropped passes during the regular season, per Pro-Football-Reference.com — wide receiver Courtland Sutton (eight), tight end Evan Engram (eight) and running back RJ Harvey (seven).

    No wonder a 15-4 record feels like such a Boverachievement, in retrospect.

    It’s going to be a beast to repeat if Payton and GM George Paton don’t add an experienced, proven wideout for Bo Nix in 2026. Or a big-time tight end. Better yet, both.

    What the heck. Russell Wilson is off the books, right? Paton is rolling into the offseason with diamond encrusted Walmart gift card in his wallet. Go nuts.

    “I think the position that this team, the position that we’re in, (we) have a win-now mentality,” Engram said Monday at Dove Valley as the Broncos cleaned out their lockers following a 10-7 loss to New England in the AFC Championship. “And there are some things that we can work with to even make our roster even better.

    “So, yeah — I have the utmost faith in the guys upstairs, all the decision-makers, the coach. They’ve done a great job since they’ve been here. They’ve built (a) championship team. Being able to add to that already, we’re in a great spot. We’ll be in a good spot for a while.”

    Yeah, but you’ve got to strike now. Nix is on a rookie contract through 2027. That time is going to fly by. Like the Nuggets with Jokic and Murray and the Avs with MacKinnon and Makar, this is the window. Right here. We going for this? Or not?

    “Obviously, we need some key players to come in and do what they need to do by getting points on the scoreboard,” veteran left tackle Garett Bolles noted Monday. “(We’ve) got a phenomenal defense. We have everything we need. We just need a couple more playmakers, and sky’s the limit for this team.”

    Almost everything. Nix can sling it with Sam Darnold all stinking day. What do the Super-Bowl-bound Seahawks have that the Broncos don’t? A bell cow tailback (Kenneth Walker) who has averaged 15 games per season over his career. And a No. 1 wideout (Jaxson Smith-Njigba) who’s putting up seven catches and 86 receiving yards per game this postseason.

    [ad_2]

    Sean Keeler

    Source link

  • Denver Zoo tapirs died of ‘accidental misdosing’ of copper supplements, zoo’s investigation finds

    [ad_1]

    The recent deaths of two Malayan tapirs at the Denver Zoo were caused by an “accidental misdosing” of copper supplements, the zoo announced Friday.

    Copper is “essential to the overall health of the species,” and the pair of tapirs had been receiving supplements after low levels were identified, the announcement said. A review by the zoo’s animal care and animal health teams determined that the wrong dosage ultimately led to the animals’ deaths.

    “We immediately took corrective actions, including a comprehensive review of dietary supplements with the potential to cause harm, and we expect additional process improvements as our broader internal review continues,” the zoo’s announcement said.

    Denver Zoo Conservation Alliance spokesperson Jake Kubié said the zoo could not comment on individual employees or personnel matters.

    “Our focus is on supporting our team, learning from this incident, and ensuring our systems are as strong and resilient as possible,” he wrote in an email.

    Local

    Denver Zoo investigating after death of two Malayan tapirs

    The zoo announced last week that it had launched the internal investigation after the two tapirs, ages 16 and 18, died “in a relatively short period of time.”

    The incident was isolated to the pair of tapirs, JonHi and Rinny, and no other animals are at risk, the announcement said.

    “We are heartbroken by the loss of these beloved animals and take the findings of our investigation very seriously,” the announcement said. “Animal wellbeing is our highest priority, and this is an incredibly difficult outcome. We are using this as an opportunity to review and strengthen internal protocols to reduce the possibility of incidents like this occurring in the future.”

    Malayan tapirs are an endangered species and can live up to 30 years, according to the zoo’s website.

    Malayan tapirs, sometimes called Oreo tapirs for their coloring, can weigh up to 700 pounds and are found from Myanmar and south Thailand to Malaysia and Sumatra, according to the zoo’s website. They are typically solitary animals aside from mating pairs.

    Coloradans making a difference | Denver7 featured videos


    Denver7 is committed to making a difference in our community by standing up for what’s right, listening, lending a helping hand and following through on promises. See that work in action, in the videos above.

    [ad_2]

    Kaylee Harter

    Source link

  • Alaska native 15-year-old boy reported missing in Denver

    [ad_1]

    A 15-year-old boy who went missing in Denver on Thursday is described by police as an Alaska Native who was last seen wearing a baggy black and white checkered outfit.

    Michael Davis was last seen at 11 a.m. Thursday in the 1000 block of Cherokee Street in Denver, according to a Colorado Bureau of Investigation missing persons bulletin posted on X Friday morning.

    He is described by the bureau as being 5-foot, 10-inches tall, weighing 140 pounds and having brown eyes and brown hair.

    Anyone with information about Michael’s whereabouts can call the Denver Police Department at 720-913-2000.

    Get more Colorado news by signing up for our daily Your Morning Dozen email newsletter.

    [ad_2]

    Source link