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Tag: Denver

  • Motorcyclist injured in Denver rush hour hit-and-run on Interstate 70

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    Denver police are searching for the driver responsible for a Monday morning hit-and-run on Interstate 70 that injured a motorcyclist, according to the agency.

    An unknown driver hit the motorcyclist while changing lanes on westbound I-70 near Sheridan Boulevard at about 7:15 a.m. Monday, according to an alert from the Denver Police Department.

    Police said the suspect was driving a white or light-colored Jeep Cherokee with unknown license plates and fled the scene after the crash.

    Paramedics took the motorcyclist, who has not been publicly identified, to the hospital with serious injuries, police said.

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  • Former Blake Street Tavern building in LoDo purchased by Denver investment firm for $7.5M

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    The former Blake Street Tavern building in LoDo has a new owner.

    Denver-based Sidford Capital purchased the in-default loan for the 53,000-square-foot building at 2301 Blake St. in Denver, then took ownership through a deed-in-lieu of foreclosure last week, according to public records.

    The records indicate Sidford paid $7.5 million. The company took out a $6 million loan from MidFirst Bank.

    Sidford Principal Dan Grooters said the building is 66% leased to International Workplace Group (formerly Regus), which operates its Spaces coworking concept there. The remainder, formerly home to the Blake Street Tavern sports bar, which closed in 2023 after 20 years, is vacant.

    The 1.2-acre property also includes two parking lots.

    Sidford took ownership from Seattle-based Urban Renaissance Group, which purchased the property in July 2016 for $21.2 million, records show.

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    Thomas Gounley

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  • Denver developer sues city for blocking 400 apartments with ‘arbitrary’ rules

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    An empty lot at 3901 Elati Street in Fox Island, Dec. 24, 2025.

    Kyle Harris / Denverite

    The developer Fox Street Investments spent millions of dollars buying 3901 North Elati Street and designing a 20-story building with 400 apartments in Globeville. 

    A few years later, the dusty lot sits empty in that slice of Globeville known as Fox Island. The promise of housing has yet to be fulfilled. And the company is suing the city of Denver. 

    A complaint the company filed in U.S. District Court on Tuesday argues the city is preventing the developer from building much-needed housing on the three-quarters of an acre lot with “arbitrary” rules and mandates.

    “For decades, the City has failed to invest in sufficient public traffic infrastructure in the Globeville neighborhood, one of Denver’s most economically disadvantaged neighborhoods,” the complaint states. “Instead, the City adopted development rules within Fox Island … that attempt to completely and unlawfully shift this burden to the last-in-time developers trying to build housing in the neighborhood.”

    Denver Community Planning and Development and the City Attorney’s Office declined to answer Denverite’s questions about the complaint since it’s pending litigation.  

    The requirements for the developer to improve traffic infrastructure are beyond the scope of the project and address needs far beyond what the new development will create, the complaint argues. 

    “The Rules are unconstitutionally vague and provide unidentified City bureaucrats with apparently unlimited discretion to condition development of the Property on FSI’s agreement to construct public traffic infrastructure improvements that are not directly linked to any resulting impacts from the development of the Property and that are completely disproportionate to such impacts,” the complaint states. 

    The company estimates that without the rules, the land would be worth $20 million. As is, with current rules, it’s “essentially worthless.” 

    The city has long negotiated with developers to add amenities that will benefit the public good to their projects: affordable housing, landscaping and more. 

    But the developer argues the city has gone too far and is interfering with the city’s own goals of increasing housing stock. 

    The company is asking the court to declare the rules unlawful and for the city to financially compensate the company so it can build the project it has set out to complete.

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  • Denver weather: Record heat forecast in city on Christmas, snow returns to mountains

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    Denver is on track to see its hottest Christmas in history, according to the National Weather Service.

    Temperatures are forecast to peak at 70 degrees in Denver on Christmas, which would break the 69-degree record set in 2005, according to weather service records.

    Fire weather conditions have been elevated to near-critical and will threaten the foothills on Christmas, according to a hazardous weather outlook. Record and near-record holiday heat is also expected across the metro area and Eastern Plains, weather service forecasters said.

    As of Wednesday morning, other Christmas heat forecasts included:

    • 68 degrees in Boulder, which would tie the city’s record set in 2005;
    • 49 degrees in Breckenridge, which would break the city’s 47-degree record set in 1906;
    • 70 degrees in Brighton, which would break the 63-degree record set in 1980;
    • 67 degrees in Castle Rock, which would break the 66-degree record set in 1971;
    • 57 degrees in Estes Park, which would break the 54-degree record set in 1959;
    • 62 degrees in Evergreen, which would tie the record set in 1971;
    • 70 degrees in Lakewood, which would break the 63-degree record set in 1963;
    • 69 degrees in Limon, which would tie the record set in 1955;
    • And 50 degrees in Walden, which would break the 45-degree record set in 1994.

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    Lauren Penington

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  • How Scott Wedgewood’s goalie pad color helped preserve shutout as Avs surge into holiday break

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    Enough with green and red. Navy blue is the newest festive color this holiday season in Colorado.

    It might’ve even helped the Avalanche preserve its home winning streak.

    If goaltender Scott Wedgewood wasn’t dressed in dark pads to match his glove, the direction of his shutout bid Tuesday could’ve feasibly changed course. Instead, a dramatic and precarious second-period save held up to replay review, and the Avs went into their holiday break with a 1-0 win over the Utah Mammoth and a five-point cushion in the President’s Trophy race.

    “There’s only one thing you can win in the regular season, and it’s not your main goal,” Wedgewood said, “but with how hard this league is and how hard it is to win, if you can get yourself in the top seed, home ice, every advantage counts.”

    Wedgewood notched his second shutout of the year and his first with 30 or more saves (32). He faced several high-danger scoring chances from the short-handed Mammoth, none more nail-biting than a glove save with 4:45 remaining in the second period in which he was fighting against Clayton Keller’s breakaway and his own backward momentum.

    The Avs had the lead by then, courtesy of a Sam Girard backhander. Wedgewood was sliding into his net as he corralled Keller’s rebound attempt. “Where I caught it, I knew I was close and felt the post,” he said, “and it was just kind of my body weight sliding back. And I had to push my hand forward. It was a little unorthodox.”

    Ruled no goal on the ice, the play went to review — a mechanism still hindered by the NHL’s lack of puck-tracking technology that might discern more definitively whether one crossed the line. In this case, the burden of proof favored Colorado. The most decisive camera angle of the play was from above. Therein lied the problem: Looking down on it, everything blended in. The puck, the trapper, the goalie pads.

    If the glove is blue, you mustn’t disprove.

    “That color helps for sure. Because there’s a good chance that pick was in,” Avs coach Jared Bednar admitted. “But the thing is, you’ve gotta be able to see it in, right? And you need the overhead cam to do that. And it’s pretty hard to see it in if it’s in his glove, unless his whole glove crosses (the goal line) and goes in. So I was pretty confident that it wasn’t gonna count, just because you have to have definitive proof that it crossed the line, and I just think it’s very hard to get that — especially with the dark glove, dark puck.”

    Consider it a stroke of serendipity for a team — and a goalie — that has probably earned it. For the Avalanche (27-2-7), that was the theme of the NHL’s last night of action before the break. Dallas and Minnesota lost in overtime, allowing the Avs to distance themselves from both by another point in the loaded central division.

    They’re the only team to have reached 61 points before Christmas since the league instituted a holiday break in 1972-73. They’re the second-fastest team ever to 60, behind the 1929-30 Bruins. Their goal differential is 27 better than any other team. They’ve won six consecutive games and 13 straight at home. A three-day break is merited.

    “We’ve been able to stay healthy here, first half of the year,” team captain Gabe Landeskog said. “We’ve had some great individual performances, but it also feels like there are different guys stepping up every single night, and that’s what we need.”

    Wedgewood has been one to step up with remarkable consistency. If Christmas marks the unofficial halfway point of the season, then he culminated his first half with a fitting gem of a game, carrying his skaters on a rare night when the Avalanche offense didn’t look so high-powered. Utah kept the game tight in the neutral zone.

    This was only the second time through 36 games that Colorado didn’t score multiple goals. Both have been 1-0 wins — Wedgewood’s only two shutouts so far.

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    Bennett Durando

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  • From gallery to garment, Colorado company shines light on local artists through T-shirt sales

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    DENVER — Social media feeds are roaring with prehistoric T-shirt designs from ArtFair Apparel, a Colorado company dedicated to elevating local artists and sharing their unique stories to audiences across the world.

    The business came to life in the summer of 2024, when Lydia Kramer and her partner set out on a mission to work with artists and use social media to bring their stories to life.

    “So, it’s kind of like the idea of when you go into a small town, you meet an artist in a small art gallery or something like that, and it’s a really cool experience, but if you’re somewhere else in the world, you might not have that opportunity,” Kramer explained.

    With her social media marketing expertise, Kramer saw an opportunity to elevate local artists, knowing that social platforms had the unique power to help people connect with creators on a personal level and feel inspired to wear their designs. On Instagram, ArtFair Apparel has more than 50,000 followers, and on TikTok has 41,000 followers.

    Maggy Wolanske

    “It’s giving people a chance to feel like they’re supporting someone’s story and mission by wearing the art, but also to give these artists more coverage that I think they deserve,” Kramer said. “Clearly, other people also think that as well, with how excited they get about learning, their stories. So with different artists, I’ll ask them about themselves, and they’ll share with the audience on social media, but they’re also experts in what they do.”

    Right now, ArtFair Apparel is currently with six different artists based in Colorado and Wyoming and gets their merchandise printed in Denver at Lab Seven. Every three weeks, there is a limited edition T-shirt drop, and the most popular designs turn into classics for sale online.

    “We’ve hit a couple million videos, which has been really cool,” said Kramer. “It’s really cool to see the sales come in after that, it’s very correlated to people seeing their stories, artist stories and then connecting with them and wanting to support them.”

    Among the featured designs is Gary Raham, a seasoned graphic artist who spent 27 years at a printing company and focuses his work on natural history and paleontology.

    Gary and his artwork.jpg

    Maggy Wolanske

    His prehistoric masterpieces are currently roaring to life at Laporte’s Sanderosa Art Gallery, where visitors can step back into the age of dinosaurs.

    “It’s kind of an ongoing passion. I never figured I could make a living doing art entirely,” Raham said. “So I went to school to study biology and then got a master’s degree in biology and ended up teaching in high school and middle school for a couple of years.”

    His talents extend beyond the gallery into northern Colorado, where he has created the entrance signs for the natural areas in Fort Collins. Over the decades, his work has welcomed visitors with Raham estimating he has completed an impressive 45 to 50 signs.

    Watch Gary Raham explain more about his collection of signs for Fort Collins’ natural areas in the video below.

    Gary Raham looks over his signs for Fort Collins’ natural areas

    Kramer first discovered Raham’s talents when she visited the Sanderosa Art Gallery. Now, his work is on a new type of medium as his designs are featured and sold through ArtFair Apparel.

    “I never knew that the T-shirt part of the business would be as good as it has been,” Raham said. “Of course, I’ve had my designs in books and publications and different things like that, but T-shirts — I wouldn’t have expected them.”

    Gary in front of kestrel Fields.jpg

    Maggy Wolanske

    There is a unique business model for ArtFair Apparel, where 10% of every single sale goes directly to the artist, and at the end of the year, the business donates 10% of the total company profits to a nonprofit that each artist chooses.

    “I’ve had some ‘This is too good to be true’ kind of responses, because the way that our model works is that we license the art from the artists at no cost to them, of course and then we basically just start taking videos with them and printing the shirts, and then they receive… profit from the sales,” Kramer said.

    Raham explained he chose the nonprofit associated with the Sanderosa Art Gallery, which is known as the Northern Colorado Artist Community, to donate proceeds to.

    watching the printer.jpg

    Maggy Wolanske

    Nancy Sander Irwin, founder of Northern Colorado Artist Community, expressed her appreciation for Raham and his efforts to support the arts.

    “Impossible to do it without people like Gary [Raham] willing to spend their time and give of what they have,” she said. “You couldn’t keep the doors open.”

    Having just over a year in business, ArtFair Apparel has built an impressive following while bringing artists like Raham’s talents far and wide.

    “I’ve always enjoyed combining my interest in science and art for education, but one of the nice things about Lydia’s business plan is that people get to see the artwork that never would otherwise, and so it reaches a much bigger audience. So, that’s a lot of fun,” Raham said.

    Denver7 | Your Voice: Get in touch with Maggy Wolanske

    Denver7’s Maggy Wolanske is a multimedia journalist who covers topics that have an impact across Colorado, but specializes in reporting on climate and environment, as well as stories impacting animals and wildlife. If you’d like to get in touch with Maggy, fill out the form below to send her an email.

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    Maggy Wolanske

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  • Nuggets start game on 19-0 run, hold off Utah Jazz in bounce-back win

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    The Nuggets might’ve been guilty of coasting Monday, but they could afford to coast.

    Scoring the first 19 points of the game and leading by 25 after the first quarter, Denver bounced back from its largest loss of the season with a 135-112 blowout win over the Jazz at Ball Arena.

    The Nuggets (21-7) haven’t lost consecutive games yet this year. They’re about to play 10 of their next 13 on the road, including a back-to-back Tuesday in Dallas.

    Jamal Murray led all scorers with 27 on Monday, but this was a comprehensive team win. Peyton Watson added 20 points on nine shots in his return from a trunk injury that sidelined him for the last two games. Cam Johnson made all six of his 3-pointers. Nikola Jokic had a triple-double five minutes into the third quarter, on his way to 14 points, 13 rebounds and 13 assists.

    Utah pushed the deficit inside of 20 points a couple of times, but Denver’s dominant start was more than enough to handle business against a division foe.

    Jokic started the onslaught with a pair of jump shots. Then Murray and Watson joined in. Watson reached double figures about five minutes into the game. It took Utah another three minutes after that to get to 10 as a team.

    Jamal Murray (27) of the Denver Nuggets makes a three pointer over Keyonte George (3) of the Utah Jazz during the second quarter at Ball Arena in Denver, Colorado on Monday, Dec. 22, 2025. (Photo by AAron Ontiveroz/The Denver Post)

    The Nuggets scored 15 fast-break points in the first quarter alone. They shot 9 of 14 from deep and assisted on 13 of their 15 total made shots. The Jazz put up nine more field goal attempts than Denver in the frame but still trailed 40-15 when the dust settled.

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    Bennett Durando

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  • 3 injured in overnight Denver crashes, police say

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    Two motorists and a pedestrian were injured in Sunday night crashes across Denver, police said.

    The Denver Police Department posted about the first crash involving a car and a pedestrian at S. Federal Boulevard and W. Florida Avenue, on the edge of the city’s Mar Lee and Ruby Hill neighborhoods, at 7:40 p.m. Sunday.

    Paramedics took the pedestrian to the hospital with serious injuries, police said. Additional information about the crash, including whether the pedestrian was in a crosswalk, was not immediately available Monday morning.

    The second crash involved three drivers near S. Forest Street and Leetsdale Drive in Denver’s Washington Virginia Vale neighborhood, about 9 miles east of the first crash, police said at 7:47 p.m. Sunday.

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  • Municipal courts can’t issue harsher punishment than state court for same offenses, Colorado Supreme Court rules

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    The Colorado Supreme Court ruled unanimously on Monday that cities cannot punish lawbreakers beyond what state courts would allow for the same offense, a decision that could set precedent for hundreds of municipal courts around the state.

    The justices ruled that when a municipal ordinance and a state statute prohibit identical conduct, the municipal penalties for such conduct “may not exceed the corresponding state penalties for that conduct.”

    By imposing more stringent penalties for the same crimes, these cities “materially impede the state’s interest in ensuring that maximum penalties for non-felony offenses are consistent and uniform across Colorado,” the opinion stated.

    In 2021, on the heels of nationwide protests for racial justice, Colorado lawmakers enacted sweeping state-level reforms that significantly lowered the potential penalties for misdemeanor and petty offenses in Colorado’s state courts. But those reforms didn’t impact municipal courts, which are not part of the state judicial system.

    As a result, the potential jail sentences for minor crimes in city courts now often far outpace the state’s limits, The Denver Post reported last year. The newspaper found defendants across 10 of Colorado’s largest cities served, on average, five times more jail time in municipal court — though the difference was just a matter of days.

    Officers have wide leeway to choose which box to check on their summons forms, The Post found. Police departments said they didn’t have specific policies outlining how arresting officers are supposed to decide between arresting someone on municipal or state charges.

    Chief Justice Monica M. Márquez delivered the opinion, and was joined by Justices Brian D. Boatright, William W. Hood III, Richard L. Gabriel, Carlos A. Samour Jr. and Maria E. Berkenkotter. Justice Melissa Hart, who announced her retirement last week after being on leave since October, did not participate.

    The ruling centered on two cases involving low-level prosecutions in Westminster and Aurora municipal courts in which the alleged offenders faced significantly more jail time after being charged in city court than they would have if charged in state court.

    In 2022, Aleah Camp was charged with stealing less than $300 worth of goods from a Westminster store. The officer, by checking a single box on a criminal summons, sent the case to municipal court — where Camp faced a potential jail sentence 36 times longer and a fine almost nine times higher — 364 days and $2,650 vs. 10 days and $300 — than what would be allowed under state law.

    In the other case, Danielle Simons was charged in 2023 with motor vehicle trespass in Aurora Municipal Court. As a result of the officer’s decision to pursue municipal rather than state charges, Simons similarly faced up to 364 days in jail and a $2,650 fine. If she had been charged with the same offense in state court, the maximum penalty would have been 120 days in jail and a $750 fine.

    Simons’ and Camp’s attorneys argued the significant sentencing discrepancies in their cases violated their clients’ rights of equal protection under the Colorado Constitution.

    The Supreme Court did not address the equal protection argument, instead ruling that the city ordinances are preempted by state law. The cities argued that, under home-rule provisions, they are allowed to create their own sentencing policies.

    But the justices wrote that the court has consistently held that the regulation of non-felony criminal offenses is a matter of mixed local and statewide concern.

    Municipalities can still punish offenders beyond the state’s sentencing caps when there is no identical state offense, the court ruled. However, when cities regulate conduct for which there exists an identical state offense, they cannot exceed the state’s cap.

    Ashley Cordero, Simons’ attorney, said her client “feels relieved” with Monday’s ruling.

    Rebecca Wallace, policy director at the Colorado Freedom Fund, an organization that helps people pay bail, called the decision a “victory for impoverished Coloradans.”

    “We have long said that it defies logic, fairness and the law that municipal courts can send people to jail for poverty offenses with 30 times longer sentences than they could get in state court,” she said. “Today, the Colorado Supreme Court unanimously agreed.”

    Aurora’s city attorney, Pete Schulte, fired back in a statement Monday, saying the Supreme Court’s decision “begs the question of whether Colorado municipalities should continue to prosecute criminal offenses in their municipal courts when they become de facto extensions of state and county courts at a cost to municipal taxpayers without reimbursement.”

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  • Violence, 16-hour days and no support: Why staff say they’re fleeing Colorado’s juvenile detention centers

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    Carissa Wallace started working at the Lookout Mountain Youth Services Center in Golden two years ago because she felt strongly about helping rehabilitate young people convicted of crimes.

    She loved the teens and loved the work.

    But staffing shortages began to take a toll. Management routinely mandated employees pull 16-hour shifts multiple days a week because they were so short-staffed. Fewer workers meant there was nobody to respond to crises or adequately monitor the young people in their care, she said. Safety concerns mounted.

    Wallace said she came home every day and cried. She went to the doctor for medication to help deal with all the anxiety the job brought.

    “After two years, I was mentally broken from that place,” she said in an interview. “When I had to think about my safety every second of the day, I could no longer make a difference. I could no longer help the kids.”

    Colorado’s youth detention centers are facing a staffing crisis, leading to serious safety concerns for employees and youth and low worker morale, current and former staffers told The Denver Post. The Division of Youth Services, which oversees the state’s 12 detention and commitment facilities, employs more than 1,000 employees, according to state data. Nearly 500 additional jobs remain vacant.

    Some facilities, such as the Mount View Youth Services Center in Lakewood, reported a 57% staff vacancy rate, according to June figures compiled by the state. At the Spring Creek Youth Services Center in Colorado Springs, nearly 10% of its staff at one point in November were out due to injuries sustained on the job.

    Current and former staff say leadership deserves a large chunk of the blame. Employees say they don’t feel management supports them or listens to their concerns. Higher-ups aren’t on the floor dealing with riots, they say, or leading programs. When situations do get out of control, staff say the brass simply looks for someone to blame.

    “The administration says they care,” said Kim Espinoza, a former Lookout Mountain staffer, “but their actions say otherwise.”

    Alex Stojsavljevic, the Division of Youth Services’ new director, acknowledged in an interview that working in youth detention is difficult. Retaining staff is a big priority with ample opportunities for improvement, he said. The division plans to be intentional about the people it hires into these roles, making sure that candidates know what they’re signing up for.

    He hopes to sell a vision that one can make youth corrections a long, fulfilling career.

    “Change is afoot in our department,” said Stojsavljevic, who took the mantle in October. “Just because we’ve done something for 20 or 30 years doesn’t mean we have to continue to do it that way.”

    Critical staffing levels

    Staffing shortages at Colorado prisons and youth centers have remained a persistent problem in recent years, though vacancy rates at the DYS facilities far outpace those at the state’s adult prisons.

    A lack of adequate employees means adult inmates can’t access essential services like medical, dental and mental health care, according to a 2024 report from the Colorado Criminal Justice Reform Coalition. Education, employment and treatment programs lag.

    “Simply put, because of the staff shortage, the (Department of Corrections) is not able to fulfill its organizational mission, responsibilities and constitutional mandates,” the report’s authors wrote.

    Studies point to a litany of physical and mental health issues facing corrections workers.

    Custody staff have a post-traumatic stress disorder rate of 34%, 10 times higher than the national average, according to One Voice United, a national organization of corrections officers. The average life expectancy for a corrections worker is 60, compared to 75 for the general population. Divorce and substance abuse rates are higher than in any other public safety profession, the organization noted, while suicide rates are double that of police officers.

    The Colorado Department of Corrections has a 12.6% overall department vacancy rate, according to state figures. Correctional officer vacancies sit at 11%, while clinical and medical staff openings are nearly 20%.

    Meanwhile, nearly one in three DYS positions is vacant.

    The most common open positions are for the lowest level correctional workers, called youth services specialists. The Betty. K. Marler Youth Services Center in Lakewood currently has 23 vacant positions for this classification of employee out of 63 total slots. The facility is also short 10 teachers. Platte Valley Youth Services Center in Greeley has 21 open positions for the lowest-tier youth services specialist role out of 71 total jobs.

    The same candidates who might work at DYS are also being recruited by adult corrections, public safety departments and behavioral health employers, Stojsavljevic said, leading to fierce competition for these applicants.

    Current and former DYS workers say the staffing issues serve as a vicious cycle: The fewer employees there are, the more mandated overtime and extra shifts that the current staff are forced to take on. Those people, then, quickly burn out from the long hours and dangerous working conditions, they say.

    Wallace, the former Lookout Mountain worker, said almost every day for the past year, leadership mandated staff stay late or work double shifts. This routinely meant working 16-hour days.

    “It got to the point where people weren’t answering their phones,” she said. “People were calling out sick because they were overworked and exhausted.”

    Wallace estimated that 80% of the time, the facility operated at critical staffing levels or below. State law requires juvenile detention facilities to have one staff member for every eight teens, but workers say that wasn’t always the case.

    Many days, staffers said, there weren’t enough employees to respond to emergencies. In some cases, that meant the young men themselves assisted staff in breaking up fights with their peers.

    One night, some of the teens set off the fire alarm at Lookout Mountain, which unlocked the doors and allowed the young people to run around campus, climb on buildings and break windows, workers said. Without enough staff to rein in the chaos, employees wanted to call 911.

    But they said they were told they would be fired if they did. Leadership, they learned, didn’t want it covered by the press.

    “Our jobs, our lives were threatened because they didn’t want media coverage,” Espinoza said.

    Stojsavljevic said the department is “acutely aware” of the mandated work problem, though he admitted that in 24-hour facilities, staff will occasionally be told to work certain shifts.

    The division has implemented a volunteer sign-up list, where staff can earn additional incentives for working these extra shifts.

    Since he’s been in the job, the state’s juvenile facilities have never dropped below minimum staffing standards, Stojsavljevic said.

    Routine violence in DYS facilities

    Staff say violence is an almost daily occurrence inside DYS facilities, which contributes to poor staff retention.

    The division, since Jan. 1, recorded 35 fights and 94 assaults at the Lookout Mountain complex, The Post reported in September. Since March 1, police officers have responded 77 times to the Golden campus for a variety of calls, including assaults on youth and staff, sexual assault, riots, criminal mischief and contraband, Golden Police Department records show.

    Twenty of these cases concerned assaults on staff by youth in their care.

    Multiple employees suffered concussions after being punched repeatedly in the head, the reports detailed. Others were spit on, bitten, placed in headlocks and verbally threatened with violence.

    Chaz Chapman, a former Lookout Mountain worker, previously told The Post that he reported three or four assaults to police during his tenure, adding, “I was expecting to get jumped every day.”

    “We were basically never able to handle situations physically, and the kids knew that; they were stronger than 90% of their staff,” Chapman told The Post in September. “The ones who stood in their way would get assaulted, such as myself.”

    Staff said leadership still expected them to show up to work, even while injured.

    Espinoza said she injured her knee during a restraint, requiring crutches. DYS continued to put her on the schedule, she said. So the staffer hobbled around the large Golden campus through the snow and ice.

    One supervisor had his head cracked open at work this year, Espinoza said. He went to the hospital and returned to Lookout. Wallace said she’s been to the doctor 20 times since she started the job due to injuries sustained at work. She said she still has long-lasting shoulder pain.

    “If they’re gonna keep hiring women who can’t restrain teenage boys, people are going to get hurt,” she said. “That was an everyday thing.”

    In November, 28 DYS employees were out of work on injury leave, according to data provided by the state. Spring Creek Youth Services Center in Colorado Springs had nine workers injured out of 91 total staff. The state did not divulge how these people were hurt.

    Stojsavljevic said safety is the division’s No. 1 focus area. If staff are injured on the job, he said, it’s important that they’re supported.

    “Staff have to be both physically healthy and emotionally healthy to do this work,” the director said.

    Division policies allow injured employees to take leave if they need it. Depending on the level of injury, some staff can return to work without having youth contact, Stojsavljevic said.

    ‘That place takes your soul’

    But workers interviewed by The Post overwhelmingly blamed management for the division’s poor staffing levels.

    As staff worked 16-hour days and were mandated to come in on their days off, they said administrators wouldn’t pitch in.

    “A lot of people felt it’s unfair,” Wallace said. “The people making a good amount of money weren’t truly being leaders. They were forcing us to pick up the slack, but they didn’t want to deal with youth. They wanted to sit at a desk, collect their check, and go home for the day.”

    New recruits were thrown into the deep end with barely any training or support, employees said. Those new staffers quickly saw the grueling hours and how tired their coworkers were all the time. Many left within weeks of starting the gig.

    “I could see their souls were literally gone,” Wallace said. “That place takes your soul.”

    After safety, Stojsavljevic said the department is prioritizing quality and innovation. Leadership wants to make sure that programs and policies are actually getting better results.

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  • Denver will fund land for a women’s soccer stadium on the old Gates Rubber Factory lot

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    The future home of Denver’s National Womens Soccer League stadium, between Santa Fe Drive and Broadway in Baker’s southern reaches. April 24, 2025.

    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    A turbulent debate over a proposed professional women’s soccer stadium has largely come to a close at Denver City Council. 

    Members voted Monday night to approve five items that will allow the owners of the Denver Summit FC to build a future 14,500-seat stadium at the site of the old Gates Rubber Factory, at South Broadway and I-25. 

    “This is a monumental day for South Broadway, for women’s soccer and for women’s sports, and for Denver as a whole,” said Mayor Mike Johnston, in a statement. 

    The city will release $50 million for the purchase and improvement of the land for the Denver Summit FC’s future private stadium and another $20 million for improvements to the neighborhood. 

    Earlier this month, the city broke down how the $50 million would be spent. A bulk of the funding — $35 million — will be used to purchase the land itself, which will be lent to the team. Should the team ever leave the site, the city will be able to retain ownership of the land. 

    Some council members raised concerns about that arrangement. 

    “We’re letting them build this private stadium on land that will be owned by a public entity, which means they will not have to pay property taxes ever on that land,” said Councilmember Sarah Parady.  

    The city was able to carve out $70 million for the project by moving several projects out from the capital improvement fund. Those projects will be funded by interest dollars collected from a 2017 bond package.

    Another $15 million in funding would be allocated to improvements like excavation and utilities.

    The city projected that onsite work will exceed initial estimates, but the team’s ownership will be responsible for any cent more than the $50 million the city has dedicated.

    City officials also said they hope to pay for a new pedestrian bridge to serve the stadium with money from state and federal grants and other sources.

    The funding and other related items passed on a 10-3 vote, with council members Stacie Gilmore, Shontel Lewis and Parady opposing them. 

    The team recently committed to a community benefit agreement with surrounding neighborhoods. 

    Last week, the team signed a legally binding document with several neighborhoods that surround the team’s planned new stadium.

    A major part of the agreement is the creation of a community investment fund, which will take money from the team and direct it toward local needs, like scholarships, equipment donations, help with housing stability and more.

    The initial investment in the fund from the team will be $400,000. Annually, the team will contribute $300,000.

    The team also committed to an art fund, partnerships with schools and community groups, and leasing space to local businesses. 

    Several community leaders told the city council that the neighborhoods unanimously supported the project and the benefits they would receive. 

    Denver’s family homelessness crisis entered the soccer stadium debate.

    For weeks, unhoused families, largely Venezuelan immigrants, have been coming to city council meetings begging council members for help. 

    On Monday, they spoke again, alongside advocates from the Housekeys Action Network Denver, who blasted the council for spending tens of millions on a new stadium when families were living in cars and tents. 

    Multiple council members addressed the criticism. 

    Parady declined to support the new stadium, arguing the money would be better used from both an economic and humanitarian perspective in building affordable housing. 

    An aerial view of the stadium rendering.
    A rendering of the planned National Women’s Soccer League Stadium in Denver’s Baker neighborhood.
    Courtesy of Populous and Denver NWSL

    Councilmember Kevin Flynn pointed out that the city has spent hundreds of millions addressing homelessness. Perhaps it’s time to reassess how that money is being used, he said. 

    “Maybe we’re spending it in the wrong way, if children are still on the street,” he said. 

    Councilmember Flor Alvidrez, who has shepherded the stadium project, raised her voice at the unhoused families, telling them every member of the city council cares about their struggle. She described conversations in her own family about their fears if federal immigration police come tomorrow. 

    “We are not your enemy,” she said.

    Alvidrez described her council district as welcoming and talked about some of the shelters inside it.

    “This idea that we want to just hand out money to billionaires and not care about people experiencing homelessness is insane,” she told the families. “It’s absolutely insane.”

    What’s next? 

    The Summit FC will play its inaugural season at a stadium in Centennial while construction on the Denver site is underway. 

    The goal is for the team to begin playing in Denver in 2028. 

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  • State complaint says Loveland rep used campaign funds on personal expenses

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    The Colorado Secretary of State’s Office filed a formal complaint Friday against Colorado House Rep. Ron Weinberg for alleged campaign finance violations following an investigation that began when Weinberg’s House colleague Brandi Bradley reported suspected violations to the state in August.

    Ron Weinberg (Photo courtesy of Ron Weinberg)

    Bradley’s complaint alleges that the District 51 representative spent campaign funds on personal expenses, ranging from haircuts and restaurant bills to donations to an Israeli rugby team, between the years of 2023 and 2025. In November, the Colorado Secretary of State’s Office announced that it would investigate Weinberg’s spending, and last week it filed a complaint of its own, which will be heard by a hearing officer by Jan. 20.

    The complaint included exhibits of expenses in its report, the earliest being an $84.31 charge at McGraff’s American Grill in Loveland on July 13, 2023, and the most recent being a $96.26 charge at the University Club in Denver on Sept. 18, 2025.

    “Although some of these expenditures, in isolation, may be reasonably related to supporting Weinberg’s election, the sheer volume of questionable expenditures is a sharp departure from other candidates and committees,” the Secretary of State’s Office wrote in its complaint Friday.

    Expenditures included several payments at Monarch Casino Resort Spa in Blackhawk, which Weinberg said was spent during a stay during a Republican Caucus meeting; a nearly $2,000 donation to the Maccabi Tel Aviv Football Club, a donation that Weinberg said was an advertising expenditure that included his campaign logo appearing on the team’s jerseys; and a donation to Mountain View High School in Loveland that the school said it had no record of receiving. Weinberg, in an interview Monday, said that the donation had been for advertising purposes as well as to support a sports team at a local high school, and that he suspected the school’s administrators were mistaken.

    He also reported over 100 bar and restaurant bills since 2023, enough that they were included in an exhibit separate from the rest of the expenditures in the complaint.

    The thousands of dollars in bar and restaurant expenses, including $3,566.19 at McGraff’s American Grill in Loveland, were likely not all campaign related, the complaint said.

    “On information and belief, not all of those expenditures were made for campaign purposes,” it read.

    Weinberg said that he hosts many campaign events at McGraff’s, a local establishment near his home in Loveland.

    “It’s not personal,” he said. “If it were personal it would be a $25 charge.”

    The smallest expense at McGraff’s was $25.56, and most of his expenses at the restaurant ranged between $60 and $100.

    Weinberg said that he was confused by the complaint, saying that all expenditures were made through a registered agent, Marge Klein, adding that it was suspicious that the expenditures, which had been publicly available for years prior to Bradley’s complaint, had come so soon after Weinberg made a play for a leadership position in the Colorado House earlier this year.

    “It’s odd that I run for Republican leadership, and all this stuff that’s been out for years suddenly surfaces,” he said. “It seems suspicious. It’s not a coincidence. These charges that they’re talking about have been in the public eye for three years. It’s not like they found a hidden box of receipts under my bed.”

    Candidates for public office file periodic campaign finance reports detailing incoming and outgoing funds, and the expenditures mentioned in the complaint have been publicly available on the Secretary of State’s website since shortly after they were made.

    Weinberg said he was looking forward to a hearing where he could defend the expenditures.

    The Secretary of State’s Office contracts with an outside attorney for such hearings, and that hearing will be scheduled by Jan. 20. After the hearing officer renders a decision, either party can appeal, at which point the Colorado Attorney General’s Office would represent the Secretary of State.

    The complaint did not specify a penalty if Weinberg is found to have violated campaign finance laws but did reference a Colorado State statute that included potential fines, return of the misspent funds, and certain clarifications from the candidate.

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    Will Costello

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  • Homelessness deaths dropped a second time, but few are celebrating

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    Kimberly Miller has worked with people on Denver’s streets for years, so she was ready for a somber evening when she arrived at the City and County Building Sunday night. It was the winter solstice — the longest night of the year — when the Colorado Coalition for the Homeless (CCH) held its 36th-annual vigil for people who died this year without stable housing.

    She did not expect that it would feel so personal. Before the program began, she spied the name of someone she knew written on one of the 276 luminaries glowing on the stone steps. It was a woman she’d once helped, then lost touch with. She was crushed to find out like this that the woman had died.

    “Oh my God. Trena. Trena’s gone,” she remembered thinking. “These are our people. These are our neighbors. And it makes my heart so heavy.”

    Each solstice, service providers read the names of people who died in homelessness over the last year.

    The Coalition’s list for 2025’s remembrance was shorter than the last, marking a second decline since the nonprofit recorded a record 311 deaths in 2023. It’s a positive sign for a city that has struggled to address visible poverty for decades. Still, many are worried that momentum might run out next year.

    A luminary for Trena Rossman sits on the steps of Denver’s City and County Building during the Colorado Coalition for the Homeless’ 36th-annual vigil for people who died in housing insecurity. Dec. 21, 2025.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite
    Pastor Libbie Reinking, of Wheat Ridge’s Holy Cross Lutheran Church, kneels before a luminary made for man she knew, during the Colorado Coalition for the Homeless’ 36th-annual vigil for people who died in homelessness. Dec. 21, 2025.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    The trend was a silver lining around a somber event.

    As each name was read Sunday night, the crowd responded together: “We will remember.”

    Cathy Alderman, spokesperson and policy lead for CCH, said the event has always been about providing last rites to people who didn’t get them.

    “Many of these people won’t otherwise have a ceremony in their honor, and so we do it together as a community,” she said.

    Data Source: Colorado Coalition for the Homeless

    Alderman said CCH generates its numbers each year with help from Denver’s Office of the Medical Examiner, which cross references names with a database of services for homelessness. Then, CCH canvasses other service providers to find cases that didn’t make the medical examiner’s list. CCH’s numbers are always higher than the city’s official count.

    Though this second drop in recorded deaths was good news, numbers are still well above pre-COVID levels.

    But Alderman said Mayor Mike Johnston’s work to address visible poverty, namely opening hotels as shelters, likely played into the reversal.

    “The non-congregate shelter sites have brought more people inside, and that is a good thing. And I do think that that has contributed to fewer deaths outside,” she said. “But what I think that also screams to us is that we can’t now stop providing those spaces, or roll back the ability to provide those spaces, by not providing the funding and the support to the providers.”

    The city has been touting successes this year, but many are uneasy about the future.

    Early this year, Mayor Johnston took credit for numbers that claimed an unprecedented drop in unsheltered homelessness, even though housing insecurity grew overall. His administration celebrated the completion of new affordable apartments. They said nobody died “as a result of cold weather exposure” last winter, which spokesperson Jon Ewing said was the first time that’s been recorded in Denver.

    Then again, Alderman said on Sunday: “Look at all the names here.”

    Cold weather was likely a contributing factor to the deaths remembered here, she said, even if it wasn’t listed as the official cause. And though the city has made strides in a positive direction, economic pressures are sure to complicate things next year.

    People gather at Denver’s City and County Building for the Colorado Coalition for the Homeless’ 36th-annual vigil for people who died in homelessness. Dec. 21, 2025.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite
    People gather at Denver’s City and County Building for the Colorado Coalition for the Homeless’ 36th-annual vigil for people who died in homelessness. Dec. 21, 2025.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    She worries proposed Medicaid cuts could force more people into homelessness. Federal threats to slash spending on “housing-first” services means cities could have fewer resources to work with. Denver has already begun to rely more heavily on short-term, locally-funded housing vouchers instead of permanent funding provided by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. Denver’s own budget crisis has eroded programs meant to keep people housed.

    “We’re also very concerned about the state budget, because there are going to be significant gaps,” Alderman added.

    Jessica Ehinger, CEO of the Colorado Village Collaborative, whose tiny home villages inspired Johnston’s plans, said her organization is preparing for less capacity next year. One of her villages will close next spring because of cuts in Denver’s budget. Her concerns about the future have tempered her perspective on any positive progress.

    “It is absolutely very frustrating. I think that’s the message that we’ve really been trying to relay to the city, to funders, that I don’t think we’re at a point to make a victory lap,” she said before the vigil began on Sunday. “I would love to imagine that we’re going to put ourselves out of business the next few years, but again, with everything that’s happening, especially at a federal level, it’s really hard to imagine that happening.”

    Meanwhile, Johnston’s critics are growing louder.

    Kimberly Miller met Trena, the woman whose name was read into the dusk on Sunday, two years ago in a blizzard. Trena and her partner, Ray, were struggling to find somewhere warm to sleep when Miller and other volunteers arrived with a van.

    Miller said police showed up next and arrested Ray.

    “They have him in the cop car, and he’s her caregiver. She’s in a wheelchair. Meanwhile it’s a snowstorm and I have her in my car,” she remembered. “What am I going to do?”

    Hundreds of quilts line Bannock Street in front of Denver’s City and County Building, organized by the Homeless Remembrance Blanket Project. Dec. 21, 2025.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite
    Hundreds of quilts line Bannock Street in front of Denver’s City and County Building, organized by the Homeless Remembrance Blanket Project. Dec. 21, 2025.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    Police intervention has long been a controversial part of Denver’s response to homelessness, and Mayor Johnston has signaled he will lean more on law enforcement in the future.

    Miller is a volunteer with Mutual Aid Monday, which feeds people outside of city hall each week. As the city works to prevent tent encampments from appearing, she said advocates like her have seen people scatter instead to darker corners of the city. People are hiding, she said, and she worries that will cause more outdoor deaths.

    “They’re dispersed and driven more into the margins and the shadows. And then with that comes a full on hardcore enforcement of the camping ban, so that people can not even be on the sidewalk with a blanket or a tarp, let alone a tent,” she said. “I feel like it’s almost back to square one, where we were with Mayor Hancock in some ways.”

    So there was some irony when Colorado Coalition for the Homeless CEO Britta Fisher invited anyone who needed warmth to grab a free blanket on Sunday night. CCH partnered with the Homeless Remembrance Blanket Project this year, who laid out over 600 hand-made quilts on Bannock Street as a symbol of the country’s ongoing housing crisis.

    “They’re just going to get taken away,” someone in the crowd said.

    When Fisher thanked the city for its partnership in helping to address homelessness, there were audible groans and boos from the crowd.

    A sign left at the foot of Denver’s City and County Building, during the Colorado Coalition for the Homeless’ 36th-annual vigil for people who died in homelessness, reads, “They didn’t die — they were failed.” Dec. 21, 2025.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    Someone dropped protest signs in front of the luminaries. One read, “They didn’t die — they were failed.”

    Still, when it came time to read the names, everyone in the crowd joined in to repeat “we will remember” together. As the city reckons with existential pressures and internal division, Miller said it’s as important as ever to center the humanity embedded in these debates.

    “Behind every name is a life and a story,” she said. “It makes me more determined than ever to fight for justice for people that are forced to be on the streets.”

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  • Pedestrian dies in Denver crash on I-25 near Alameda, police say

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    A pedestrian died Friday night in a Denver crash on Interstate 25, police said.

    The Denver Police Department first posted about the crash on southbound I-25 near West Alameda Avenue at 9:56 p.m. Friday. The pedestrian, who has not been publicly identified, died at the scene of the crash, police said in a 10 a.m. Saturday update.

    As of Saturday morning, the cause of the crash remained under investigation. Additional information on the crash, including whether the driver remained on scene, was not available Sunday.

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  • Struggling Magic, Warriors try to build on recent victories

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    (Photo credit: John Hefti-Imagn Images)

    Each having stalled a recent slump with a nail-biting victory in its last game, the Orlando Magic and Golden State Warriors seek a winning streak at the other’s expense when they meet Monday night in San Francisco.

    The contest is a rematch of a 121-113 Magic home win Nov. 18 in which superior depth allowed Orlando to overcome a combined 67 points by Golden State’s Stephen Curry and Jimmy Butler III.

    Even with Jalen Suggs (bruised hip), Franz Wagner (sprained left ankle) and Moe Wagner (recovering from torn ACL) out of action, the Magic showed off their depth in a 128-127 overtime win at Utah on Saturday. Desmond Bane led six players in double figures with 32 points.

    Meanwhile, the Warriors leaned heavily on the Curry-Butler dynamic to pull out a 119-116 home win over the Phoenix Suns on Saturday, with Curry going for 28 points and Butler 25.

    Suggs, who has missed the first two games of Orlando’s four-city Western swing, might return to face the Warriors. While backcourt mate Bane would love to see that happen, he realizes Orlando has enough quantity in its roster to overcome even key absences.

    ‘Our standards travel,’ Bane assured reporters at the start of the trip in Denver, where the Magic fell 126-115 on Thursday. ‘It doesn’t matter who is playing, who is in the rotation. We have a clear identity and a clear recipe for what it takes to win games. We have to put it out there on the floor regardless of who is playing.’

    The Magic featured a different look in Utah than they had two days earlier in Denver. Jett Howard chipped in with 12 points off the bench against the Nuggets, then watched as fellow reserve Noah Penda put up a 13-point, 12-rebound double-double in Utah.

    The triumph Saturday was just Orlando’s third in its last seven games. The Magic haven’t had a winning streak since a three-gamer bridging November and December.

    The Warriors can relate. Their win over the Suns snapped a three-game skid. Golden State has won consecutive games — a modest two-game run — just once since reeling off three straight victories in the middle of November.

    The most pleasing aspect of Saturday’s win was that it ended not only a losing streak but also a string of close setbacks. They were beaten by a total of 13 points in the three defeats, and entered the Phoenix game with a 5-10 record in ‘clutch’ games, which are defined as contests with no more than a five-point difference in the score at some point of the final five minutes.

    Curry saved 11 of his 28 points for the final five minutes against the Suns in a close game that was sitting at 117-116 for Golden State before Curry’s clinching layup with 5.7 seconds left.

    Butler believes the Warriors, who have lost nine of 14, aren’t far from turning things around.

    ‘Continue to play basketball the right way, I’m a firm believer in that,’ Butler assured the media after Saturday’s win. ‘We play hard, we play for one another, and we’re gonna be just fine. It’s not as bad as it looks — couple possessions here and there, couple turnovers here and there — but that’s just the game. That’s been our season thus far.’

    –Field Level Media

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  • How many coverage breakdowns have Broncos had recently? ‘Too many,’ Sean Payton says.

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    The first sign of trouble came with a not-so-heated discussion, before the floodgates truly opened. A simple 9-yard out from Jaguars quarterback Trevor Lawrence hit to Brian Thomas Jr. to further set up an end-of-half field goal, and he fell out of bounds, easy. Too easy. Broncos cornerback Pat Surtain II came over to discuss with safety P.J. Locke. Surtain’s hands splayed out. Something was amiss.

    The second sign of trouble came with a punch to the mouth, with Denver already on the ropes. Jaguars wideout Parker Washington took another quick out in the third quarter, made Riley Moss miss, made Talanoa Hufanga miss, and strolled 63 yards down Mile High Lane. A touchdown later, and defensive end John Franklin-Myers trudged past a sideline of slouched shoulders, tugging off his helmet and going to chuck it. He thought better of it.

    The third sign of trouble came with the finishing blow. Moss had Washington contained on a third-down grab in the fourth quarter, until he didn’t.  Washington spun away again for a 24-yard gain. Moss lingered on his knees for a beat. Then took his palm and smacked the ground in front of him.

    Keeler: Broncos Country, don’t blame NFL referees for loss to Jaguars. Blame tackling.

    How many passing-game breakdowns have there been in recent weeks, for these Broncos?

    “Too many,” head coach Sean Payton said, postgame.

    Defensive players largely shrugged this off, after the Broncos’ three-month win streak was snapped Sunday night in a 34-20 loss to the Jaguars. Because what else is them for there to do? Denver’s still a 12-win team, as linebacker Alex Singleton pointed out postgame

    “I’m not going to sit here and let you guys (expletive) on our parade,” Singleton chuckled. He grinned. His eyes didn’t really grin. “We have two games to go to be the number-one seed in the AFC.”

    There’s no mistaking it, though: these Broncos have issues on the back-end to fix across those next two games and beyond, to play as deep as they’d like to. Lawrence picked defensive coordinator’s Vance Joseph scheme apart for four quarters, often sniffing out third-down blitzes and smoothly depositing the ball to his playmakers in a 23-of-36, 279-yard, three-touchdown performance. Payton said postgame that such a porous defensive performance “better be” an anomaly, and there’s plenty of reason to believe so.

    Broncos’ 11-game winning streak snapped by Jaguars, AFC playoff race tightens

    Look deeper, though, and Sunday was not as much an anomaly as an eruption of bubbling issues. In the last four weeks, quarterbacks have combined for an 89.7 rating against Denver’s defense. The Commanders’ Marcus Mariota freewheeled his way on some zone-read concepts against the Broncos a few weeks back. The Packers’ Jordan Love dinked and dunked with abandon in the first half in Week 15. Lawrence blew the top off on Sunday.

    They’ve all exploited the same nagging issues that haunted Joseph’s unit down the stretch of 2024 — as teams have targeted Bronco linebackers and safeties in advantageous matchups for a solid month. Here’s a quick roundup of tight-end performances against Denver’s defense in the last five weeks:

    — Chiefs’ Travis Kelce in Week 11: 9 catches, 91 yards, touchdown.

    — Commanders’ Zach Ertz in Week 13: 10 catches, 106 yards.

    — Raiders’ Brock Bowers in Week 14: 4 catches, 46 yards, touchdown.

    — Packers’ Luke Musgrave in Week 15: 4 catches, 52 yards.

    Another matchup-problem gadget weapon reared his head Sunday, as the Jaguars’ Brenton Strange went for five catches for 39 yards. He ran away from Broncos linebacker Dre Greenlaw for a 23-yard gain midway through the second quarter. A few plays later, he boxed out Locke — with a bit of an obvious push-off — for a short touchdown.

    “They scheme up plays pretty nicely,” Locke said, asked about problems containing tight ends and running backs in the passing game. “That’s it.

    “I don’t think it’s problems. I don’t think it’s problems. That’s stuff we just gotta handle.”

    Jacksonville head coach Liam Coen, though, repeatedly and obviously aimed at Bronco holes in coverage Sunday with a variety of targets. Greenlaw has been a step slow on a couple routes in recent weeks. Locke was effective against the run in his first start of the season at safety, but was picked on on a late-first-half field-goal drive by Jacksonville. Communication errors abounded, too, as Jacksonville went eight-of-15 on third downs.

    Renck: Broncos find out hard way that reaching their goals will not be easy. Can they handle prosperity?

    On a short week before travelling to Kansas City for a Christmas Day game, the defense will gather to watch film Monday, Singleton said. They have overcome some early-season missed handoffs in match coverage before. And Singleton, for one, wants his unit to feel it, as he said.

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    Luca Evans

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  • Jeanette Vizguerra, detained immigrant activist, likely to be released in coming days

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    Immigrant activist Jeanette Vizguerra is on the precipice of being released from an immigration detention facility after an immigration judge ruled Sunday that she can post bail.

    Denver immigration judge Brea Burgie set Vizguerra’s bail at $5,000, but she included no other restrictions, like an ankle monitor. Her family intends to immediately post the bond, her legal team said in a statement. She likely won’t be released for at least 24 to 48 hours, said Jenn Piper, the program co-director for the American Friends Service Committee of Denver. Still, Burgie’s ruling means Vizguerra, a mother of four children, will be home by Christmas.

    The order comes two days after Vizguerra’s legal team argued that the activist, who was born in Mexico and has spent most of the last 28 years in the United States, posed no flight risk and was not a danger to the community. She has been detained in the Aurora detention center since March, when she was arrested by Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents at her work.

    Vizguerra’s legal team said Sunday that Burgie found that Vizguerra “does not pose a danger to the community,” nor did she pose a flight risk, given her “strong family and community ties” and her previous compliance with court proceedings.

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    Seth Klamann

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  • Nuggets’ Bruce Brown, Rockets’ Kevin Durant are former teammates. Now they have beef.

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    Bruce Brown and Kevin Durant probably won’t be sending each other Christmas cards.

    They played together in Brooklyn for two years. They competed against each other in a playoff series in 2023, when the Nuggets eliminated the Suns in six games. Their relationship as former teammates has “been cool,” according to Brown. Until Dec. 20, 2025.

    “I think it’s been cut slow now, after tonight,” Brown said Saturday. “Some words were said that’s a little disrespectful. I can’t wait to see him next time.”

    After verbally sparring throughout a chippy NBA game — the Nuggets lost 115-101 to Durant’s Houston Rockets — they continued to throw jabs in their postgame interviews.

    Brown told reporters that on separate occasions, Durant said something to him and to another Nuggets player that crossed a line.

    “As a man,” Brown said, “there’s certain things you don’t say to another man.”

    Durant agrees.

    “I definitely wanted to cross the line tonight,” the two-time NBA Finals MVP said, smiling. “That’s basketball. That’s in between the lines. Ain’t no respect. Ain’t no love. Nothing. People don’t show love to me. They cross the line a lot with their physicality. It’s just part of the game. Some people can talk and play. Some people can’t. I had to learn how to talk and play as a player. So I think Bruce is probably learning the same thing.”

    Denver Nuggets guard/forward Bruce Brown (11) and Houston Rockets forward Kevin Durant (7) get chippy during the second half on Saturday, Dec. 20, 2025, at Ball Arena in Denver. (Photo by Timothy Hurst/The Denver Post)

    With 2:40 to go in the third quarter of a tight game between Western Conference title contenders, Brown grabbed an offensive rebound and made a floater. It cut Houston’s lead to 69-62 and prompted a timeout from Rockets coach Ime Udoka.

    Brown immediately located Durant, who wasn’t involved in the play, and stared him down.

    Both players declined to share the specifics of what Durant had said that offended Brown, but the Nuggets wing claimed Durant’s offensive comments had been ongoing “before and after” that moment.

    “He said it before to someone else, and then he said it to me,” Brown said.

    “Nothing that should be told to the media,” Durant added. “He knows. He understood. I understood. We know what that is. We don’t need to tell you about it.”

    The Rockets pulled away for a 16-point lead by the end of the third quarter. Durant amassed 31 points, six rebounds and five assists in the win, shooting the 3-pointer at a 5-for-6 clip. Brown compiled 12 points and 12 rebounds off the bench for Denver.

    “We’re coming in here and playing a championship organization with arguably, in my opinion, one of the top 10 players, five players that I’ve ever seen play basketball, you know?” Durant said, referring to Nuggets center Nikola Jokic. “That’s how much respect I’ve got for these dudes, that I want to get up and bring that energy. Bring that fight. It might go across the line. But that’s basketball sometimes. So Bruce will be all right.”

    Durant continued to relish his role as the antagonist throughout the fourth quarter at Ball Arena. He and Tim Hardaway Jr. picked up matching technical fouls after Durant buried a three over the Nuggets guard. A few minutes later, Durant taunted Nuggets coach David Adelman when Adelman was ejected for arguing with the referees.

    Then with about six minutes remaining, the eighth-leading scorer in NBA history made another 3-pointer, this time over Jamal Murray. It gave Houston a 98-81 lead. Durant pointed an imaginary gun in the direction of Murray and the crowd then danced down the court.

    Houston Rockets forward Kevin Durant (7) celebrates a three-pointer during a 115-101 win over the Denver Nuggets during the second half on Saturday, Dec. 20, 2025, at Ball Arena in Denver. (Photo by Timothy Hurst/The Denver Post)
    Houston Rockets forward Kevin Durant (7) celebrates a three-pointer during a 115-101 win over the Denver Nuggets during the second half on Saturday, Dec. 20, 2025, at Ball Arena in Denver. (Photo by Timothy Hurst/The Denver Post)

    “Somebody in the crowd was talking crazy to me right before that,” he said. “So everybody enjoyed it. People in the stands enjoyed the game. Bruce and Tim Hardaway probably didn’t enjoy it. But I enjoy when we go back and forth. That’s basketball, you know what I’m saying? A lot of people say that’s missing from the game. When I do it, it’s a problem. But it was a fun game. Glad we got the win. I’m not celebrating like it’s the championship, but we lost two in a row (before Saturday). We wanted to win tonight.”

    Adelman said he had no issue with how Durant made fun of him after the ejection. Jokic also weighed in on the chirping.

    “They can do whatever,” he said. “I think some people like to do that. Some people don’t care. I think some people get their energy from that. So I’m OK. I don’t care.”

    Durant has long held deep admiration for Jokic, but he also bickered with Nuggets fans on social media for being too devoted to him during the 2024 Paris Olympics. People from Denver who were rooting for Jokic’s Serbian national team to beat Team USA in the semifinals of the basketball competition, Durant asserted, were “lame.” No basketball player in history has won as many Olympic gold medals as Durant, who has four.

    “A lot of people may disagree with me right now, but I feel like (Jokic and I) have a similar mentality with how we approach the work, just the game itself,” he said Saturday, smirking as if he recognized the comparison might irritate Nuggets fans. “And I can sense that from afar. So I always have respect for him. … But when we’re playing against each other, once again, we might cross the line.

    “So if that offends you, that’s on you. Next game, I’m sure Bruce will be better from that. But I crossed the line tonight.”

    When they were Brooklyn Nets teammates in 2022, Durant got annoyed at an unfiltered comment Brown made to the media about the Boston Celtics, saying that Brown’s blunt criticism gave Boston bulletin board material in a playoff series between the two teams. Brooklyn got swept.

    Durant has since been traded twice, going to Phoenix and now Houston. Brown, who won an NBA championship in Denver, reunited with the Nuggets last offseason after two years away.

    The Nuggets prevailed in overtime when they hosted Houston last Monday in another emotionally charged game, adding to the tension surrounding the Saturday rematch. Udoka was fined $25,000 by the NBA for his postgame comments about the refs after Monday’s contest, while Adelman also felt the whistle had disadvantaged his team. Jokic and backup big man Jonas Valanciunas both fouled out in the eventual win, leaving Adelman without a center at the end of overtime.

    Denver still leads the season series 2-1 after the loss on Saturday. One more regular-season meeting remains on the schedule, but it’s not until March 11, 2026.

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    Bennett Durando

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  • Immigration judge weighs release of activist Jeanette Vizguerra after ICE sought to block media’s court access

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    An immigration judge will decide in the coming days whether to temporarily release an immigrant rights activist after a Friday bail hearing that was delayed when authorities tried to block media access to the courtroom.

    Attorneys representing Jeanette Vizguerra told the judge, Brea Burgie, that government lawyers had provided no evidence that Vizguerra posed a flight risk or a danger to the community.

    Vizguerra, a nationally renowned activist, has been in the Aurora detention center since her March arrest, and her attorneys reiterated their allegations Friday that U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials intentionally targeted Vizguerra because of her public profile and advocacy. They asked Burgie to release Vizguerra, who was born in Mexico and does not have proper legal status, on bail while the rest of her immigration case proceeds.

    “Detention is not justified,” said Laura Lichter, one of Vizguerra’s lawyers.

    Shana Martin, an attorney for the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, argued that Vizguerra should continue to be detained indefinitely because, Martin said, she was both dangerous and a flight risk. Martin pointed to Vizguerra’s criminal conviction for using a fake Social Security card so she could work, as well as to traffic violations, as evidence that she “shows a lack of respect for authority.”

    One of Vizguerra’s daughters recently joined the Air Force, and Vizguerra applied for a form of legal status based on her daughter’s military service. Martin said that application has been denied — something Lichter said was news to Vizguerra and her lawyers.

    Lichter said after the hearing that she’d never seen that type of application denied in a case like Vizguerra’s. She told Burgie that the denial was “fantastic evidence” of the government’s bias against her client.

    CIting the extreme complexity of the case, Burgie said she would issue a written decision on whether to grant bail to Vizguerra at a later date. The Denver judge appeared remotely in the Aurora detention center’s hearing room.

    As Vizguerra waited in a hallway outside the courtroom, she blew a kiss to family members and waved to supporters.

    The hearing came two days after a U.S. District Court judge ordered federal officials to provide Vizguerra with a bail hearing before Christmas.

    Proceedings were delayed Friday morning after personnel at the detention center, which is privately run by the Geo Group, told reporters and supporters that they couldn’t enter the courtroom. It’s typically open to observers, family members of detainees and journalists who provide photo ID and go through a security checkpoint.

    Earlier Friday morning, a Denver Post reporter was waiting for an escort to the courtroom when a Geo Group lieutenant approached and asked what courtroom he was visiting. When the reporter said he was there to watch the Vizguerra hearing, the lieutenant told him the courtroom was full and escorted him back to the lobby.

    Juan Baltazar, the facility’s warden, later told reporters that they wouldn’t be allowed into the courtroom “partially” because of space constraints, as well as because of unspecified “safety and security” concerns.

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    Seth Klamann

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  • Enrollment drop of 1,200 students may lead to what Denver superintendent calls ‘operational shifts’

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    Denver Public Schools is predicting its enrollment will decrease by an additional 6,000 students by 2029.

    This story was originally published by Chalkbeat. Sign up for their newsletters at ckbe.at/newsletters

    By Melanie Asmar, Chalkbeat

    Enrollment in Denver Public Schools dropped by about 1,200 students this year as the arrival of new immigrant students slowed, district officials told the school board Thursday night.

    For the first time in three years, more immigrant students left the city’s schools than entered this summer and fall, district data shows. That outmigration is a sharp reversal and compounds the longstanding problems of falling birth rates and gentrification that have caused DPS enrollment to decline from a high point in 2019.

    The district is predicting its enrollment will continue to decrease by an additional 8%, or more than 6,000 students, by 2029. The pattern sets the stage for some difficult decisions in the years ahead.

    “This trend means more school closures will be needed,” a board presentation bluntly states.

    But Superintendent Alex Marrero told the board Thursday that he does not plan to activate the policy for closing underenrolled schools, called Executive Limitation 18, this year.

    “However, I believe that we would be negligent if we do nothing, considering the stark realities,” he said, referring to the enrollment drops.

    Marrero said he may enact what he called “operational shifts” if some schools are facing difficult enrollment situations. That could look like cutting a grade level from a school if, for instance, only a single kindergartener or ninth grader is enrolled, he said.

    School closures are controversial and often spark fierce pushback from the community. DPS has closed or partially closed 13 district-run schools for low enrollment in the past few years. Fifteen charter schools have closed in recent years for the same reason.

    Earlier this year, the school board enacted a four-year moratorium on enrollment-based school closures. But the moratorium includes a caveat that allows the board to consider closures “if there is a substantial shift in student enrollment, funding levels, or an unexpected emergency.”

    Board member Kimberlee Sia asked whether this year’s enrollment loss meets that bar. DPS was expecting to lose 500 students but lost 1,200 instead, a 700-student difference, officials said.

    “To me, that’s a pretty significant number and particularly if we continue on that trend,” Sia said.

    Board member DJ Torres requested that the superintendent define the terms in the caveat before recommending closures or cutting grade levels from schools. Marrero said he would “respectfully ask the board to consider defining [the terms] itself.”

    “It’s very difficult to define that tipping point,” Marrero said. “But I would welcome that because then it takes the guessing game out for us.”

    With the moratorium in place, district officials said they are looking at addressing declining enrollment through another policy the board passed earlier this year. Called Executive Limitation 19, it requires the district to adjust school boundaries every five years.

    Any boundary changes would likely go into effect in the 2027-28 school year, Marrero said, though the district hopes to start internal planning and hold community meetings before then. What those boundary adjustments would look like is unclear.

    But district officials said any boundary changes could also help balance class sizes, a priority of the Denver teachers union that was frequently mentioned during this fall’s school board election. While much of the push has focused on addressing overcrowded classrooms, Marrero said the district more often sees classrooms on the other end of the spectrum.

    Andrew Huber, the district’s executive director of enrollment and campus planning, told the board that 109 elementary school classrooms, or 8%, have 30 or more students this year. About 21% of elementary classrooms, or 303, have 19 students or fewer. Those numbers are for district-run schools only.

    Marrero also recently enacted a policy that allows schools to be closed for persistently low student test scores. That policy, called the School Transformation Process, went into effect this year, but the soonest schools could be closed for low scores would be spring 2027.

    While that policy is separate from the district’s efforts to address declining enrollment, Marrero said “it is interwoven in what could happen in the landscape of Denver Public Schools.”

    Correction, Dec. 18: Chalkbeat has been updated this story to reflect that 303 elementary classrooms in district-run schools, not 345, have 19 or fewer students this year. The previous number, which was provided at the board meeting, was inclusive of charter schools.

    Melanie Asmar is the bureau chief for Chalkbeat Colorado. Contact Melanie at [email protected].

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