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  • More than 300 Denver flights canceled as major winter storm hits US

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    More than 300 flights were canceled at Denver International Airport on Saturday and Sunday as airlines braced for a severe winter storm threatening a large swath of the country.

    There were 165 canceled flights and 121 flight delays at DIA as of 11:15 a.m. Saturday, according to the flight tracking website FlightAware. Airlines have already canceled 174 flights scheduled for Sunday.

    DIA flight delays and cancellations:

    • American Airlines: 13 canceled, 1 delayed Saturday; 14 canceled Sunday
    • Frontier Airlines: 8 canceled, 1 delayed Saturday; 14 canceled Sunday
    • SkyWest: 51 flights canceled, 46 delayed Saturday; 17 canceled Sunday
    • Southwest Airlines: 51 flights canceled, 23 delayed Saturday; 52 canceled Sunday
    • United Airlines: 39 canceled, 38 delayed Saturday; 63 canceled Sunday

    Airlines have canceled more than 11,000 weekend flights across the U.S. because of the storm, with roughly 40% of the population under a winter storm warning from New Mexico to New England, according to the Associated Press.

    Most of Colorado’s Front Range and Eastern Plains will see temperatures stay below freezing, if not below zero, through the weekend as an arctic airmass moves over the state.

    Colorado weather: Arctic cold, chance of snow at Denver Broncos playoff game

    Snow is also in the forecast, with the heaviest snowfall expected in the mountains, National Weather Service forecasters said.

    This is a developing story and will be updated.

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

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    Katie Langford

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  • Driver arrested in deadly Denver hit-and-run was going 100 mph on Kalamath, affidavit says

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    A Colorado man is facing a felony charge after police say he struck and killed a pedestrian in Denver’s Lincoln Park neighborhood, according to court records.

    Alejandro Sifuentes, 29, was arrested Jan. 7, five days after Denver police say he hit 19-year-old Angelo Simpson while Simpson was crossing North Kalamath Street near West 11th Avenue on the evening of Jan. 2.

    Sifuentes was initially arrested on suspicion of vehicular homicide and leaving the scene of an accident involving death, both felonies, according to an arrest affidavit.

    Court records on Thursday showed he is charged with one felony count of leaving the scene of an accident involving death.

    Witnesses told police a gray Honda SUV was speeding at 100 mph when it hit Simpson as he was crossing the street in a crosswalk, according to an affidavit.

    Investigators found the Honda with front-end and windshield damage parked in front of a Lakewood home, and tipsters later told police that Sifuentes talked about hitting someone while he was driving too fast to stop.

    Sifuentes also told people he went to a friend’s house, cleaned blood off the vehicle and put a cover over it, then got rid of his phone and bought a new one “so he could not be followed,” according to the affidavit.

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  • Littleton Public Schools to pay $3.85 million to families of kids abused on bus rides

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    Littleton Public Schools agreed Thursday to pay $3.85 million to the families of three children who are autistic and were abused by a school bus monitor.

    The school board voted unanimously to approve the settlement Thursday, slightly more than two weeks after former bus monitor Kiarra Jones pleaded guilty to abusing the three boys while they were riding the bus to and from The Joshua School, a private school in Englewood.

    Littleton Public Schools was contracted to bus the students, who are nonverbal and autistic, to and from school each day. Jones abused the boys on their bus rides for about six months, between September 2023 and March 2024, before authorities discovered surveillance video that showed the woman elbowing, stomping and punching the students.

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  • iPad explosion sparks evacuation at Douglas County elementary school

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    Students at a Douglas County elementary school were evacuated Thursday morning after an iPad exploded and set off a fire alarm, district officials said.

    The device exploded in a technology office at Mammoth Heights Elementary School at 9500 Stonegate Pkwy, Douglas County School District spokesperson Paula Hans said in an email.

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  • Colorado traffic deaths increased in 2025, reversing decline

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    Traffic deaths in Colorado increased in 2025, reversing a decline in recent years, with about one in three deaths related to impaired driving, according to state data released Thursday.

    Colorado Department of Transportation officials said that, while the increase is small, they see troubling trends and plan to refocus safety efforts around impaired driving and deaths involving pedestrians and bicyclists.

    A total of 701 people died on Colorado roads in 2025, an increase of 1.7% over the 689 fatalities reported in 2024, the data show. The number is still below the a record-setting 764 fatalities in 2022.

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  • Denver opens cold-weather shelter at former hotel amid squabble between mayor, council

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    One of the largest emergency shelters in Denver’s system is again offering refuge from the cold this weekend after Mayor Mike Johnston unilaterally opened the site Friday — despite the City Council rejecting a contract for it late last year.

    The Aspen, formerly a DoubleTree hotel in northeast Denver, has space for up to 250 people in its ballroom and will be open as freezing temperatures pummel the Mile High City for the next few days.

    Johnston’s decision came after the city’s four other emergency shelters reached capacity on Thursday, the first night of the cold snap. The temperatures, expected to fall to near-zero Friday night and early Saturday, have the potential to cause frostbite in less than 30 minutes without proper attire.

    “With life-threatening cold settling over the city and people at risk of suffering serious injury or death, Mayor Johnston informed Council this morning that we will be opening the ballrooms at 4040 Quebec (St.) for temporary emergency cold weather shelter,” spokesman Jon Ewing wrote in a statement Friday.

    The near-failure to open needed cold-weather shelter space is just the latest chapter in an growing list of disagreements between the mayor and council members in which both sides have pointed fingers at one another.

    Denver extends severe weather shelter activation — and adds space — as cold grips city

    During a meeting on Dec. 8, 11 of the council’s 13 members voted to reject a contract to use the Aspen’s large space as a cold-weather shelter. (A separate contract with another provider, Urban Alchemy, covers the Aspen’s day-to-day use as a noncongregate shelter in the city’s homelessness initiative.)

    Councilwoman Shontel Lewis, whose district includes the shelter, said at the time that the mayor had promised her in 2023 that the site wouldn’t be used for the purpose of cold-weather sheltering.

    “My district is already overrepresented with shelters, with eight of them,” Lewis said. “This is ridiculous.”

    Only Councilmen Kevin Flynn and Darrell Watson voted to approve the contract last month.

    Another council-approved contract with Bayaud Works allows the city to use the ballroom space for short-term emergencies, Ewing said, and that is how the mayor’s office was able to open it Friday.

    Lewis has repeatedly asked the mayor’s administration to spread out the locations of the city’s homelessness services since she joined the council in 2023. Now, she says the mayor’s office is manufacturing an emergency to sidestep her continued protestations.

    Johnston “has failed to run the city with a long-term strategy,” she said in an interview Friday.

    Lewis said there shouldn’t be a cold-weather shelter at the same place as noncongregate housing. Instead, she asked for the Aspen’s ballroom to be used as a navigation center offering resources to homeless people.

    But Johnston’s team said they were taken by surprise when the council rejected the contract just as the winter months were setting in and hadn’t had nearly enough time to find enough shelter space since then.

    “The real emergency is that it is 5 degrees outside and people are going to die if we don’t get them inside,” Ewing said.

    The Aspen made the most sense to use, he said, because it’s already set up with cots, showers and bathrooms. A site that’s well-known among the city’s homeless population, it also mostly serves people who are already in that area, he said.

    “We do not just have shelter sites lying around. There are only so many spaces, and there is a likelihood we would need to hold community meetings, go through a full council process and potentially even rezone,” Ewing said.

    He added that the city didn’t plan to use the Aspen for cold-weather shelter next year. A new site for emergencies hasn’t been chosen yet, in part because of the limited options.

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    Elliott Wenzler

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  • Nuggets’ Jonas Valanciunas returns from calf injury for 3-game road trip

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    WASHINGTON, D.C. — Nuggets center Jonas Valanciunas will return from a right calf strain and play in Denver’s game Thursday against the Wizards.

    Valanciunas, 33, missed 11 games. Starting center Nikola Jokic remains out with a left knee injury, but he traveled with the team for the start of its three-game road trip and went through a pregame shooting routine in Washington with a sleeve over his left leg.

    While the Nuggets wait for Jokic to return, Valanciunas will play limited minutes.

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    Bennett Durando

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  • Mother of 2-year-old killed in Denver arrested on suspicion of child abuse

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    The mother of a toddler who died early Sunday morning in Denver was arrested in connection to the death alongside her boyfriend, police said.

    Melissa Wayne, 38, was arrested Tuesday night and booked into the Denver Downtown Detention Center on suspicion of child abuse resulting in death, according to the Denver Police Department and jail records.

    As of Wednesday afternoon, Wayne was being held on a $200,000 cash-only bail, according to court records.

    Wayne’s boyfriend, 38-year-old Nicolas John Stout, was arrested Sunday on suspicion of first-degree murder and child abuse resulting in death.

    The arrests stem from the death of Wayne’s daughter, 2-year-old Valkyrie Erickson, police said. The toddler was found unresponsive early Sunday morning in the 100 block of Vrain Street and pronounced dead at the hospital, according to Stout’s arrest affidavit.

    Man accused of killing Denver 2-year-old frequently heard yelling at, hitting child

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  • Aurora councilman Rob Andrews’ breath alcohol test was 3 times legal limit after DUI arrest, police say

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    A newly elected Aurora city councilman arrested on suspicion of drunken driving had a breath alcohol level more than three times the legal limit for driving under the influence in Colorado, police records show.

    Rob Andrews, 41, was pulled over by Aurora police officers at 9:31 p.m. Saturday after he was seen making an improper left turn, almost hitting a curb, making a U-turn and weaving across lanes of traffic near South Chambers Road and South Chambers Circle, according to an arrest report.

    Andrews told police he was trying to find his son’s car to jump-start it, and officers noticed he smelled of alcohol and had pinkish, watery eyes, police wrote in the report.

    When officers asked for his driver’s license, Andrews first gave them his City Council ID before handing over his license. He also mentioned to police that his vehicle belonged to a nonprofit, officers wrote in the report.

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  • 2 dogs dead after pair of coyote attacks in Lafayette backyards

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    Two small dogs were killed in separate attacks when coyotes jumped Lafayette fences into backyards that faced open space in less than one week.

    An adult Pomeranian was killed in northwest Lafayette around 7 a.m. Saturday when a coyote attacked it in a backyard that faces open space in the 2800 block of Shoshone Trail, according to Lafayette Police Department Sgt. Jeremy Molander. Another dog, an adult cocker spaniel, was killed in northeast Lafayette around 10 a.m. Tuesday in a similar backyard in the 1200 block of Hawk Ridge Road, Molander said.

    Both dogs were outside unattended when the coyotes attacked, Molander said in an email.

    “Although it is fairly rare, pets can sometimes look like prey to wildlife,” the Lafayette Police Department wrote in a social media post.

    Police notified the Colorado Department of Parks and Wildlife of both attacks, Molander said.

    Kara Van Hoose, a spokesperson for the wildlife agency, said it is important for residents in the Lafayette, Erie and Broomfield areas, particularly those who live near open space, to know they are living in “coyote country.”

    Three dogs were killed by coyotes in Broomfield in the fall.

    Van Hoose recommended pet owners keep an eye on their dogs and make noise when opening doors to let pets outside, particularly around dawn and dusk when coyotes are most active.

    “Keeping an eye on your pets is a huge, huge deal and part of being a responsible pet owner,” she said.

    The parks and wildlife department has additional recommendations for people to stay safe and protect pets in the presence of coyotes, according to the department’s website.

    • Secure garbage, pet food, birdfeeders and compost piles

    • For residents with coyotes near their homes, consider radios, motion-activated lighting, strobe lights, sirens or odor deterrents.

    • Keep pets up to date on vaccines.

    • Keep cats indoors and always supervise pets when they’re outdoors.

    • If a dog must be kept outside, keep it in a fully enclosed kennel.

    • Keep pets on a short leash and never let them play or interact with wildlife.

    • Pick up small dogs when coyotes are present.

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  • Colorado soldiers convicted of poaching deer on Fort Carson, state land

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    Two soldiers at Fort Carson were convicted of poaching mule deer on the military and state land, Colorado Parks and Wildlife officials said.

    State wildlife officials started investigating in November 2024 after a hunter reported finding a buck that appeared to be poached on the base, the agency said in a news release Tuesday.

    When a CPW officer arrived in the area, they found a partially processed buck that had been abandoned with “select cuts of meat removed and the antlers cut off,” state officials said.

    The officer found a doe 100 yards away that was also partially processed and abandoned, and both locations showed signs of illegal poaching, CPW leaders said in a news release.

    The investigating wildlife officer found evidence to identify a vehicle connected to the case and later found related pictures on social media of Army Sgt. Jacob Curtis Keyser and Staff Sgt. Juan Salcedo.

    Investigators also executed search warrants that uncovered evidence of poaching and trespassing in Keyser’s vehicle and on his phone.

    A third soldier, whom state officials did not name, was fined $900 for disposing of Keyser’s poached venison right before Keyser was interviewed by a state wildlife investigator.

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    Katie Langford

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  • Woman arrested in stabbing in Union Station bus terminal, Denver police say

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    The woman accused of stabbing another in Denver’s Union Station bus terminal late Sunday night was “looking for someone who was not paying attention,” according to court documents.

    Denver police officers responded to the stabbing at Gate B14 inside the bus terminal at 1700 Wewatta St. just before 10 p.m. Sunday, according to an arrest affidavit.

    Witnesses told officers that the suspect, 37-year-old Nakila Green, was pacing around the station before she sat down next to a random woman on a bench and stabbed her, police wrote in the arrest affidavit.

    Green allegedly stabbed the woman several times in the leg and chest. The victim screamed for help, and Regional Transportation District officers rushed over to hold Green at gunpoint and subdue her, according to the affidavit.

    The victim, who is expected to survive, told investigators that Green didn’t say anything to her during the incident and that she had never met her before, police said in the affidavit.

    Green spat on police officers while being arrested, and continuously spat inside a patrol car while in custody, according to the document.

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  • Former Lakewood High School security officer convicted of child sex assault

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    A Jefferson County jury convicted a former Lakewood High School security officer on Friday of child sex assault, according to court records.

    Rubel Martinez, 68, was arrested in August 2024 and charged with sexual assault on a child by one in a position of trust in a pattern of abuse. The Jefferson County convicted him on that charge Friday after three hours of deliberation following a four-day jury trial, according to anews release from the First Judicial District Attorney’s Office.

    Martinez repeatedly sexually assaulted a student from 2014 to 2016 during and after school hours, and both on and off school grounds, according to the release. The victim was a junior and senior at Lakewood High School when the assaults happened.

    The victim came forward to the police about the assaults in August 2024.

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  • Shelter-in-place near DU lifted; Denver sent alert to ‘broader area than intended’

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    Police lifted a shelter-in-place order near the University of Denver early Sunday morning after taking a person who had been barricaded into custody, officials said.

    The Denver Police Department posted on X just before 1:30 a.m. that an individual was in custody, but offered no other details.

    That message came five-and-a-half hours after residents across Denver reported receiving wireless emergency alerts on their cellphones about an “active threat” in the area of 2495 S. Vine St. City officials acknowledged more than 40 minutes later that the message had been mistakenly sent “to a broader area than intended.”

    The alert was issued around 8 p.m. for an “active barricaded subject off-campus” at the South Vine Street address, which is south of DU, the school’s campus safety department said on X. There was no active threat to DU, campus safety officials added.

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  • Nuggets clobbered by young Hornets on back-to-back, David Adelman gets riled at substitution gamesmanship

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    The Nuggets’ short-handed winning streak is over, but the sting was dull.

    Down by 18 in the first quarter and 30 by the end of the third, Denver threw in the towel by keeping everyone’s minutes to a minimum in a 110-87 loss to the Hornets on Sunday at Ball Arena. The Nuggets (29-14) fell to 7-4 without the injured Nikola Jokic going into their first meeting of the season with the Lakers on Tuesday.

    “It’s flushed. There’s not much we could do about it,” Jamal Murray said. “Just felt like we were undersized. Undermanned. The whole game. … Take the rest and refocus for a really good L.A. team.”

    Charlotte’s rout snapped a four-game win streak for Denver, which was missing four of its usual starters after deciding to sit Aaron Gordon for the second night of a back-to-back. He was out alongside Jokic, Christian Braun, Cam Johnson and backup center Jonas Valanciunas. In their 10th full game without a traditional center and with no help on the way via the 10-day market, the Nuggets were outscored 62-32 in the paint.

    Murray scored 16 points in 25 minutes. Peyton Watson added 11 points and three blocks in 28 minutes. The burgeoning star forward was battered and bruised throughout the night, playing through brief injury scares to a knee and an elbow.

    Denver shot 40.5% from the field and 21% from the 3-point line against a young Charlotte squad that has ranked second in the NBA in offensive efficiency over the last 15 games. Still, the Hornets were on a back-to-back of their own after playing at Golden State.

    They were led by 23 points from Brandon Miller and 14 from Kon Knueppel, who’s challenging his former Duke teammate Cooper Flagg for Rookie of the Year honors.

    “Unbelievable. And (he) plays like he’s 28,” Nuggets coach David Adelman said. “Offensively, just takes his time. He’s just quick enough to get where he wants to get. And he’s super crafty in the paint. He looks like someone that, like I said, has been around for a long time. … Him and Flagg on the same team last year, to me, is just insane thinking about it.”

    The Nuggets felt their lack of size on both legs of the back-to-back. They lost the rebounding battle 61-36 to Charlotte, one day after getting crushed 27-4 by Washington on second-chance points.

    Adelman tried to navigate his lack of a center by matching minutes, but Hornets coach Charles Lee countered by disguising his substitutions. Back and forth the young coaches went, highlighted by the game’s only bit of drama at the start of the second quarter.

    Lee made a last-second swap between Ryan Kalkbrenner and Moussa Diabate that Adelman wanted to answer by putting DaRon Holmes II on the floor instead of Zeke Nnaji, but the officials didn’t allow Adelman to make his corresponding change because, as he described it, “I didn’t get him on the ice in time.”

    Adelman proceeded to use a timeout five seconds into the quarter so that he could yell at referee Josh Tiven, who allowed him to say his piece without issuing a technical foul. Adelman ended up subbing out Nnaji after a 12-second stint of playing time.

    Then in a sequence that summed up the Nuggets’ night, Holmes quickly got into foul trouble and had to be removed anyway.

    “That’s something that they’ve gotta think about in the league,” Adelman said. “That should be a delay of game on both of us. I’m trying to match somebody up with somebody else. They literally were hockey subbing back and forth. So I did. And then they decided to put the ball inbounds while I was still hockey subbing. … And Charles and I, we’re not trying to screw with the game. It’s just, I was trying to get a matchup. He was trying to get a matchup.

    “At some point, they have to tell us both, ‘You’re getting a delay,’ or they’ve gotta tell us to put five people on the court. So I was ultra-confused, and I had to use a timeout to get my point across, which is not good in a game you’re trailing.”

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    Bennett Durando

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  • How Broncos’ Marvin Mims Jr. roasting Pat Surtain II in practice led to go-ahead TD vs. Bills

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    Before the Broncos even knew they’d be playing Buffalo in the AFC divisional round, Sean Payton decided to pull a play off the shelf and put it into Denver’s postseason plans.

    During the team’s OTA-style practices on Jan. 9 and 10, Payton emphasized good-on-good work.

    The No. 1 offense worked against the No. 1 defense. No contact, of course, but Payton and his staff put as much as possible into making the situations competitive.

    During one of those practices, receiver Marvin Mims Jr. ran a double-move against reigning defensive player of the year Pat Surtain II and, as Payton tells it, roasted him.

    Parker Gabriel’s 7 Thoughts after Broncos’ wild OT win vs. Bills, including why Sean Payton trusts Jarrett Stidham

    “We just hadn’t called that play in a while and it looked so good in our joint practice, I was like, ‘Man, that’s got to go to the call sheet,’” Payton said Sunday morning after the Broncos beat Buffalo, 33-30 in overtime, to advance to the AFC Championship Game.

    Part of the Broncos’ normal team meeting the night before a game is to go through what Payton calls the touchdown reel. It’s a compilation of the plays he thinks players have a chance to score on the next day.

    Payton had a message for Mims.

    “When we did our video the night before and I put the practice clip up, I said, ‘You’re beating the No. 1 corner in the world,’” Payton recalled. “‘I don’t care who they put over there in the game tomorrow. We’re running this play.’”

    The moment arrived in the final 61 seconds of regulation.

    Mims motioned from the right slot to outside on the left.

    He closed the gap to Buffalo corner Dane Jackson, stuttered and took off up the field. Jackson did a fairly good job sticking with him, but Mims pulled away by just enough and left space to allow Nix to put the ball to his outside along the sideline.

    The 26-yard touchdown put the Broncos momentarily in front with 55 seconds to go.

    “There’s a few times I’ll say to the (coaches) in the booth, ‘guys, we can’t finish this game with me not having called that play,’” Payton said. “That was one of those plays. We cannot finish this game with me not having called that play.”

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    Parker Gabriel

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  • Gov. Jared Polis stops releasing prisoners who’ve spent decades behind bars for youthful crime

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    Gov. Jared Polis unilaterally stalled a specialized prison program aimed at rehabilitating and releasing people who have served decades behind bars for crimes they committed as juveniles and young adults, The Denver Post found.

    Polis has not approved any of the program’s graduates for early release since 2023 — an about-face from the prior three years, during which the governor approved releases for all 17 such prisoners, according to records kept by the Colorado Department of Corrections.

    The governor’s inaction has created a backlog of 11 prisoners who have completed the three-year program and have gone before the Colorado State Parole Board but are nevertheless still incarcerated, waiting for Polis to sign off on their freedom.

    “The uncertainty of the situation is one of the scariest things I have ever gone through, because it pertains to the emotion of hope,” said prisoner Rory Atkins, 55, who was sentenced to life in prison with the possibility of parole for a murder he committed in 1988, when he was 18. “Many of us with long sentences in prison kind of accept that hope is painful. You learn to be fearful of having high hopes.”

    Colorado lawmakers created the Juveniles and Young Adults Convicted as Adults Program, or JYACAP, in 2016 after the U.S. Supreme Court found that children are constitutionally different from adults and should not be automatically sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole. Lawmakers that year also changed Colorado law to prohibit such punishment.

    Initially limited to juveniles, the program was expanded in 2021 to include prisoners who committed a crime when they were 20 or younger and who have served at least 20 years of their sentence. The prisoners must also meet a variety of other conditions to enter the three-year program, which focuses on building life skills and preparing for life outside of prison.

    After prisoners finish the program, the governor — after receiving a recommendation from the parole board — must give the final approval for them to be released on early parole.

    “For whatever reason, there was this dollop of mercy that was required (in the law),” said Ann Roan, a retired attorney who represented a program participant. “And for years it has worked well. … So to have the brakes put on it so suddenly, with no explanation whatsoever, has really upended everyone’s justified expectations.”

    Shelby Wieman, a spokeswoman for Polis, said in a statement that the prisoners’ applications are still under review, that the governor “takes these decisions very seriously” and that the serious nature of prisoners’ crimes requires “careful deliberation.”

    “The governor’s office has also previously expressed discomfort with the governor’s role in the process, and proposed legislative changes to this program in the past, which the legislature declined to address,” Wieman said, apparently referring to a failed 2024 bill that would have cut the governor out of the process and shifted full authority for early releases to the parole board.

    “We look forward to continuing to explore potential improvements with legislators and stakeholders,” Wieman said.

    She did not answer questions about what changed from the program’s first few years, when Polis routinely approved graduates’ releases.

    ‘Like we are being just dropped’

    The governor’s inaction comes as he considers whether to commute the sentence for Tina Peters, the Mesa County clerk serving a nine-year prison sentence for crimes related to unauthorized access to state voting machines, and as he did not issue end-of-year pardons and sentence commutations for the first time in his tenure.

    The state’s prisons are also nearly at capacity and are projected to run out of beds in the coming months.

    “We feel like we are being just dropped,” said Rose Martinez, who is waiting for the release of her cousin, Daniel Reyes, 56. He is serving a life sentence with the possibility of parole for a 1987 homicide he committed during a robbery when he was 18.

    Martinez has, over the last decade, watched her cousin yearn for release as his 2027 parole eligibility date has drawn closer.

    “I’ll never forget the day he told me, ‘I can’t wait until I can be outside of these walls and I can actually lean up against a tree,’” she said. “That was probably five years ago.”

    Reyes has been waiting for the governor’s sign-off since April, he said. Atkins’ wait began in July, when the parole board recommended his release, he said. Others in the program, like Raymond Gone, who killed a Denver police officer in 1995 when he was 16, have been waiting on the governor for more than a year, he said.

    “What would I say to the critics who say the crime I was convicted of was so serious that I should finish my entire sentence? Honestly, I would agree with them, if all I knew was that I was convicted of such a horrible crime,” said Gone, now 47. “…I know I am responsible, I am the cause, for an unfathomable amount of trauma in so many people’s lives. There isn’t any amount of time I could spend in this place to make up for what I did.

    “But the opportunity I have been given through JYACAP was only made available to me because of a Supreme Court ruling… someone way above me decided that my life was worth saving and should be given a second chance.”

    Since 2017, 112 prisoners have applied to participate in the JYACAP program; 44 were accepted, according to the Department of Corrections. Prisoners were denied for poor behavior in prison, the nature of the crimes they committed, and for not meeting the program’s basic eligibility requirements.

    Last year, 40-year-old Raul Gomez-Garcia, who killed a Denver police officer in 2005 when he was 19, was denied entry to the program after his application stirred outrage within the slain officer’s family and the police department.

    None of the 17 people released after completing the program have had their parole revoked, said Alondra Gonzalez, a spokeswoman for the Department of Corrections. One participant had “subsequent involvement with the criminal justice system,” she said, but it did not prompt parole revocation. She did not answer follow-up questions about that participant.

    “Nobody reoffends, because they’ve grown up,” said Roan, who previously represented Gone. “…Every one of us at some point has been 16, and a lot of us who have children have watched what it is to be 16 from that perspective, and I don’t think anyone would say that is who you are for the rest of your life.”

    ‘A program that he signed into law’

    Phillip “Mike” Montoya went into the JYACAP program after he’d spent 26 years behind bars. He was convicted of murder and sentenced to life in prison after he participated in a 1993 gang shooting as a 16-year-old, although he did not actually fire the fatal shot.

    He found the program to be too basic at times, with tedious instruction on very basic tasks like how to brush your teeth or how to use a spatula. The curriculum wasn’t tailored to each individual, he noted.

    “If you go inside the prison at 16 years old and maybe you never done anything in your life prior, like cook for yourself, do your own laundry, go to a grocery store and buy your own food, then maybe you are going to need a lot more assistance,” he said. “But for someone like me, I pretty much had to raise myself. I had to raise my brother and sisters. So going into prison, even though I went in at such a young age, I had a lot of knowledge of the world.”

    Still, he is quick to praise the program’s pathway to release and the second chance it gives people who have been imprisoned since they were teenagers. Montoya has been working as a barber since he got out in August 2023, about three years before his parole eligibility date. He ultimately served 30 years and two days.

    He’s tried to advocate for the program’s other participants, he said, seeking out meetings with officials and stakeholders.

    “The response has always been the same, that (Polis) doesn’t want to deal with it for political reasons,” he said. “…We’re talking about a program that he signed into law that he doesn’t believe in now.”

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  • Road closures lifted through downtown Denver as protest winds down

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    Updated 4 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 17: Hundreds of demonstrators marching through downtown Denver on Saturday afternoon caused rolling road closures, police officials said.

    Streets around the state Capitol were intermittently closed because of the demonstration, the Denver Police Department said at 1:20 p.m.

    All road closures were lifted as of 3:15 p.m.

    Protesters gathered on the steps and lawn of the state Capitol at noon on Saturday to demonstrate against actions by President Donald Trump’s administration, including the recent surge in immigration enforcement in Minneapolis and the fatal shooting of Renée Good[cq comment=”cq” ] by a federal immigration officer.

    Original story: Denver police and Regional Transportation District officials on Friday were bracing for potentially disruptive demonstrations downtown on Saturday before and during the Denver Broncos’ football playoff game and other high-traffic events.

    The Denver Police Department “respects people’s right to demonstrate” and will monitor planned demonstrations, agency officials said in an emailed statement. “DPD’s approach to demonstrations is to allow people to march or gather peacefully, and to conduct traffic control to help ensure safety. It’s those assaultive, destructive, and/or highly dangerous behaviors that prompt police intervention.”

    RTD officials issued an alert Friday morning, warning demonstrations may disrupt the public transportation they’re suggesting Broncos fans use to get to the game, saying they are “taking steps to prepare.”

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  • Former Jeffco high school psychologist convicted of sexual assault on a child

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    Former Jeffco high school psychologist James Michael Chevrier was convicted Monday of five charges, including sexual assault on a child, according to the Colorado First Judicial District Attorney’s Office.

    He was acquitted on two other charges.

    Chevrier, 39, was found guilty of sexual assault on a child by one in a position of trust, unlawful possession of a controlled substance, possession with intent to distribute a controlled substance involving ketamine ,contributing to the delinquency of a minor involving alcohol and contributing to the delinquency of a minor involving marijuana.

    He was found not guilty of soliciting for child prostitution and attempted sexual assault on a child by one in a position of trust.

    The jury began deliberating late Jan. 9 after a five-day trial. Deliberations resumed on Monday morning, and the jury reached a verdict after noon.

    Chevrier had been out on bond and living out of state while the case was pending. He was remanded into custody following the verdict.

    He is scheduled to be sentenced at 8:30 a.m. April 2.

    Chevrier was tried for crimes police said happened while he was employed as a staff psychologist at Green Mountain High School and Bear Creek High School. The charges involved three students, as well as separate drug-related offenses.

    The Lakewood Police Department arrested Chevrier last year in May after the school district received a Safe2Tell report that a Green Mountain school psychologist had sexually assaulted a female student.

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  • Man arrested after hit-and-run crash that killed woman crossing road near bus stop in Aurora

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    Aurora Police traffic investigators announced they have arrested a suspect after a woman was killed early Friday while trying to cross the road near a bus stop in a hit-and-run crash that forced the closure of Havana Street.

    Police arrested Marcos Ortega-Lopez, 31, on suspicion of leaving the scene of a fatal crash, a felony, according to an agency posting on social media Friday afternoon.

    But police haven’t located the vehicle involved — a 2007 blue Toyota Corolla (license plate CYXB39) with front-end damage — and appealed to the public for help via Aurora911, 303-627-3100 or @CrimeStoppersCO (720-913-STOP).

    The crash occurred at about 5:15 a.m. near the intersection of Havana and East 4th Way. The woman was pronounced dead at the scene, Aurora Police Department spokesman Matt Longshore said.

    “She was crossing the street, over Havana. It was a hit and run,” he said.

    The police at first weren’t certain about the vehicle involved because of conflicting reports.

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