Author: Blair Miller

Fight over Thompson Divide oil and gas leases heats up with Pitkin Co. lawsuit

PITKIN COUNTY, Colo. – A fight over oil and gas leases in the Thompson Divide area continues to heat up, as Pitkin County and an environmental nonprofit filed suit Wednesday to be sure that a November decision by the feds to cancel 25 leases in the area is upheld under the Trump administration.

The lawsuit, filed in U.S. District Court of Colorado by the Pitkin Board of County Commissioners and Carbondale nonprofit Wilderness Workshop, claims that the Bureau of Land Management and U.S. Department of the Interior broke their own rules when they extended oil and gas leases for Houston-based SG Interests in the years following 2013. Continue reading

Review underway after CU-Denver student posed as medical student at Denver Health

DENVER – Denver Health Medical Center has suspended all badge access for students and learners after a CU-Denver student got unauthorized access at the hospital by posing as a medical student.

The student, Vanessa Loznik, was banned from the Denver Health campus, and the hospital says it is working to pursue legal action against her. Continue reading

Raids target multi-million dollar meth, cocaine ring tied to Mexico operating out of Aurora market

AURORA, Colo. – Police and federal drug enforcement agents raided a market and several houses in the Denver metro area Thursday morning in connection to a multi-million dollar cocaine and methamphetamine ring connected to Mexico.

The U.S. Department of Justice says nine arrests were made by Aurora police and federal agents Thursday, and another person was in custody ahead of the raids. But 17 people total have been indicted in the trafficking ring. The indictment carries 45 total counts and includes two house forfeiture complaints. Continue reading

3 Denver deputies, including captain, suspended without pay over jail inmate’s death

DENVER – Two Denver sheriff’s deputies and a department captain will serve unpaid suspensions of between 10 and 16 days in May for policy violations that led to the death of a Denver jail inmate in November 2015.

The Denver Department of Safety on Wednesday released its disciplinary review of the deputies’ actions in the death of Michael Marshall, a jail inmate who was pulled off life support and died several days after the confrontation with the deputies, who staff the city/county jail. Continue reading

Kelsie Schelling’s mother encouraged by renewed Pueblo search for daughter; emotions still raw

DENVER – Kelsie Schelling’s mother says she was encouraged when investigators dug up the backyard of a home last week to search for new clues in her daughter’s disappearance, but says the search “didn’t yield the results” the family was hoping for.

Schelling’s mother, Laura Saxton, gave her first sit-down interview to Denver7 about the renewed effort by law enforcement to bring closure to the case.

Schelling, pregnant, heads to Pueblo but never returns

Schelling, 21, was eight weeks pregnant when she vanished on Feb. 4, 2013. She had her first doctor’s visit and had seen a sonogram of her baby earlier that day.

After the trip to the doctor and a shift at work, the Denver woman drove two hours south to Pueblo to meet up with Lucas, and has never been seen since.

Lucas was found to have parked her car at an area Walmart the day after she disappeared, and an unidentified man picked it up and eventually dropped it off again at the St. Mary-Corwin Medical Center. Police recovered the vehicle Feb. 7.

Schelling was never seen in surveillance video at either location.

Investigators discovered through text messages that Schelling and Lucas had talked to one another once she had reached Pueblo, but the messages stopped shortly after she got there.

Last week, investigators with the Pueblo Police Department and Colorado Bureau of Investigation served a search warrant at a home in Pueblo that used to belong to Donthe Lucas’s grandmother – a home Lucas often stayed at.

Schelling’s mother talks new leads, emotions with Denver7

“This was a pretty big step on their part…a pretty big excavation they did,” Saxton told Denver7.

She and others have long thought Lucas, who was Schelling’s boyfriend and the father of her unborn child, had something to do with Schelling’s disappearance. He was once charged with the fraudulent use of her credit card after she disappeared, but the charges were dropped.

Last Friday, the investigators announced they had found new evidence during their dig, but did not specify what it was – only saying it wasn’t Schelling’s body.

Saxton says Pueblo police notified her ahead of the search, and asked that she and other family members be in Pueblo during the search in case anything turned up.

“We went into it with really high hopes,” Saxton said, though she added that she believes they should have looked at the home sooner.

She says a neighbor of the home authorities were searching let her and other family members stay there during the daytime of the two-day search.

Saxton told Denver7 that the investigations team walked her through the dig, which brought her “comfort” in seeing how hard crews were working.

“As far as items that were found, I don’t know what those were. I don’t know that they’ll tell us what those were,” she said. “But hopefully those items will be something that will help move the investigation along.”

But ultimately, investigators did not find exactly what Saxton was looking for – her daughter.

“Unfortunately, it didn’t yield the results that we were hoping for,” Saxton said. “We were hoping we would get to bring Kelsie home, so it’s been really hard in the aftermath dealing with that.”

Lucas’s grandmother no longer lives at the home investigators searched last week, and Saxton says that despite the new developments in the case, she thinks some people who might know about her daughter’s disappearance might still be afraid to talk to police about what they know.

“I still believe that somebody knows something and they’re just afraid to come forward. But I just feel like there’s a lot of fear there for people,” Saxton said. “I just keep hoping that someone will have a heart and do the right thing.”

But she says she is encouraged the Pueblo Police Department – with new investigators on the case – is taking a new look at Schelling’s disappearance with help from CBI. She had previously been critical of the way the police department handled the case initially, and has herself campaigned extensively for help finding her daughter.

“I think we’re at the very least showing that we’re not going to give up, and we might get knocked down many, many times over, but we’re always going to get back up and keep fighting for Kelsie and the baby,” Saxton said.

Still, after being missing for four years, Saxton admits that the likelihood of her daughter being found alive wane more and more each day.

“I can’t really imagine the rest of my life without her, but that’s something I’m having to come to terms with,” Saxton said. “So I hope, at the very least, we get to bring her and the baby home and give them a proper burial.”

Schelling’s family has long offered a reward for information leading investigators to their daughter or to an arrest and conviction of someone in her disappearance – upping the reward to $100,000 in February and organizing a Colorado Missing Persons Day event at the state Capitol on Feb. 3.

The reward still stands at $50,000.

Pueblo police say the investigation into the case remains ongoing and that they are looking for tips related to the case. To submit anonymous tips in the case, contact Pueblo Crime Stoppers at 542-STOP or go to their website. You can also contact the Colorado Bureau of Investigation at 303-239-4300.


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Suit claims Elbert County, commissioners spied on employee’s computer, made false claims

ELBERT COUNTY, Colo. – Elbert County and its county commissioners face a federal lawsuit alleging they spied on the county’s director of community development and planning’s every move over a several months last year.

Kyle Fenner filed the suit against the county and its board of commissioners in early March in U.S. District Court of Colorado. In it, she claims that the county commissioners made themselves her supervisor after they spent several months monitoring everything she did on her work computer.

The suit alleges that the board of county commissioners voted to become Fenner’s supervisor in December 2015, but that the county had actually been monitoring her computer since September 2015, allegedly “collecting over 50,000 screen shots” from her work computer.

It’s unclear in the suit exactly why the county started monitoring her computer in the first place, but in April 2016, Elbert County Attorney Wade Gateley hired Mountain States Employers Council, Inc. (MSEC) to conduct a “workplace investigation” on Fenner’s internet usage during work hours on her county computer, whether she used the computer for personal or commercial gain, or if she “made ‘demeaning’, ‘defaming’ and ‘disparaging’ comments about county employees or elected officials from February 1, through April 11, 2016,” according to the suit.

“The IT investigation was basically a surveillance tool that they had started running on my machine, and for about 70 calendar days, they snapped a picture of my desktop under every two seconds,” Fenner told Denver7.

It says that the investigation into her computer usage was discussed at a public work session on April 11 last year, at which Gateley said that Fenner was “under investigation” for “possible criminal activity.”

A week later, Fenner’s name was also publicly discussed as being involved in a “criminal investigation,” according to the suit. And on May 10, County Commissioner Robert Rowland emailed a listserv saying that Fenner was the subject of an investigation and asked the recipients to attend a public meeting about the investigation.

According to the lawsuit, Rowland then in June told public citizens to use open records law to look up her case with the district attorney’s office, whom he had sent the collection of records from Fenner’s computer.

“I felt so violated knowing that Commissioner Rowland was going to have a digital copy of 50,000 screenshots of me that I created,” Fenner said.

But the special counsel investigation into Fenner’s computer usage had wrapped up on May 12, according to the suit, and found that she had indeed made a “demeaning, disparaging, or insulting” comment via a private email service on her work computer.

But the special counsel also stated that though she should be reprimanded for the comment and reminded of county computer rules, that the comments Fenner made weren’t made “pursuant to [Fenner’s] official duties; did not affect in a substantial way [Fenner’s] ability to efficiently provide services as an employee; and could arguably address a matter of public concern.”

According to the suit, the special counsel also exonerated Fenner of any other alleged violations, and recommended that the board and county correct the record to show Fenner was never close to facing criminal charges.

Fenner is seeking compensatory, statutory and punitive damages for humiliation, anger, anxiety, emotion distress, frustration and embarrassment, according to the suit.

Rowland is no longer a county commissioner. He declined to seek re-election last November. Denver7 stopped by his house Wednesday for comment, but was told to get off his property.

Current commissioner Danny Wilcox told Denver7 the situation surrounding the suit was “frustrating” but said he could not comment further on specifics of the case.

Denver7 requested details on expenditures related to the investigation into Fenner’s computer usage on April 6. An Elbert County records custodian told Denver7 Wednesday the documents were in the mail.


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Two Mountain View police officers indicted over alleged defrauding of CDOT grants

JEFFERSON COUNTY, Colo. – Two Mountain View police officers have been indicted over allegations they falsified field reports and time cards in order to get paid thousands of extra dollars in grant money from the state.

Leonard Portugal, 47, and Ricardo Hernandez, 43, face a combined 35 counts in the indictment, including attempting to influence a public servant, forgery, embezzlement of public property and theft.

The indictment alleges that the two officers utilized Mountain View’s ability to receive grants from CDOT for traffic enforcement in the small home rule municipality near Lakeside and Wheat Ridge to pocket the money by making false timecard reports.

Since Mountain View is so small, it receives three grants via CDOT in order to pay overtime to officers for doing patrol work in the town.

Portugal was in charge of applying for the grants, organizing officers to work the extra shifts and reporting the required stats back to CDOT.

The First Judicial District Attorney’s Office says each officer in the department was required to tally his or her grant-funded overtime and report it to the police chief, who would pass the sheets on to Portugal to compile. But it says that the documentation sometimes bypassed the chief and went straight to Portugal.

The indictments claim that between January 2015 and June 2016, Portugal was paid out $24,935 in grant-funded overtime money that he didn’t earn. He allegedly submitted at least 31 false field activity reports and time sheets.

Hernandez allegedly falsified his overtime hours and was paid out $2,735 he wasn’t afforded.

Both men turned themselves in to the Jefferson County jail on Wednesday and had their bonds set at $10,000.


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Investigators retrieve marijuana plants from Coal Creek Canyon home where 3 were killed

BOULDER COUNTY, Colo. – Investigators on Wednesday removed several marijuana plants from the home in Coal Creek Canyon where three people were found murdered over the weekend.

Boulder County officials said they could not release the information on how many plants were retrieved from the home or if they came from a legal grow operation, but had said at the onset of the investigation that it had to call in hazmat teams to clear the house because there was evidence of drug activity near the victims’ bodies.

The three were identified earlier this week as 54-year-old Wallace White and 56-year-old Kelly Sloat-White, both of Golden, and 39-year-old Emory Fraker, of Broomfield.

The crime scene was discovered early Saturday when a friend of the White family called deputies to perform a welfare check, and saw two bodies inside the home.

And while investigators have said they can’t release many details amid the ongoing investigation, they told Denver7 Wednesday they are still interviewing witnesses and analyzing evidence found at the scene.

They also told Denver7 that there were no calls for service to the home, which sits in the 800 block of Divide View Drive, over the past three years that the county’s records go back.

Authorities have yet to release any information about any potential suspects or a motive in the case. It’s unclear if federal drug authorities are involved at this time.


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Bill awaiting governor’s signature would allow Colo. counties to levy special sales tax on pot

DENVER – A bill now awaiting Gov. John Hickenlooper’s signature would allow Colorado counties to impose and collect on a special marijuana sales tax – an ode to an ongoing spat between Adams County and three cities within the county over a tax there.

The House on Monday concurred with changes made by the Senate to House Bill 1203, which has undergone several changes since it was first heard in the House Local Government Committee in early March.

The bill sent to the governor’s desk would allow counties to levy the special sales tax in unincorporated parts of the county without voter approval, but an agreement between cities within the county on how pot would be taxed and what the money would go to would have to be signed off on.

If a local municipality gets voter approval to levy its own special sales tax, it would invalidate the county’s tax levy unless the municipality came to the aforementioned intergovernmental agreement.

Under the bill, said intergovernmental agreements would also allow the parties to decide what percentage of the special sales tax would go to the county, and how much would go to each municipality undersigned on the agreement.

Finally, under the bill, if voters approve the special sales tax, the county or municipality would be able to put the tax money toward the county or municipality’s general fund, or to any other special fund created by said county or municipality.

The bill comes in response to a yearslong battle between Adams County and the cities of Northglenn, Aurora and Commerce City, which sued the county over a 3 percent special sales tax in 2015 that the three cities argued hadn’t been approved by voters.

The Adams County District Court ruled in September 2015 that the tax would be allowed, but that decision was reversed by the Colorado Court of Appeals in December. It could now be taken up by the Colorado Supreme Court.

The special sales tax funds go to the Adams County Scholarship Fund and is matched by the Colorado Opportunity Scholarship Program. Both aim to give four-year scholarships to students who are part of free or reduced lunch programs.

Some sellers in the county argue that having a higher tax rate puts them at a competitive disadvantage.


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Aurora mother of 4 scheduled for deportation had been caught twice before, ICE says

DENVER – A new report shows immigration arrests rose by 32.6 percent in the first few weeks of the Trump administration as another Denver-area woman living in the country illegally faces deportation herself.

Last Friday, Denver7 reported that Maria de Jesus Jimenez-Sanchez, a mother of four living in Aurora, saw her request for a stay of deportation denied and was scheduled to be deported.

U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement spokesman Carl Rusnok told Denver7 late Friday that Jimenez-Sanchez, whose real name is Karen Araujo-Jimenez, had indeed been denied her latest request for stay.

Rusnok said that Jimenez-Sanchez first entered the U.S. illegally in October 1999. ICE says that she was immediately confronted by federal agents and voluntarily returned to Mexico the same day.

She was then caught posing as another person while trying to enter the U.S. in Douglas, Arizona in May 2001, according to Rusnok, and was again deported immediately.

Jimenez-Sanchez’s lawyer, Jennifer Kain-Rios, said that her client had lived in Aurora since 1999.

ICE confirmed that Jimenez-Sanchez was taken into ICE custody again in December 2012. That lines up with the timeline Kain-Rios gave, in which she said Jimenez-Sanchez was pulled over and cited for driving without a license.

She spent six months in ICE custody. In May 2013, according to ICE, an immigration judge upheld a previous removal order for her and ordered her to be deported by the Department of Homeland Security.

But she had been granted a one-year stay of deportation a month earlier. The stays were extended for another year in May 2014, March 2015 and March 2016, Rusnok said, but her latest stay request was denied March 14 of this year.

She was picked up in Centennial Wednesday when she showed up for her routine immigration check-in despite knowing her stay had been denied, her lawyer says.

Her case is the third high-profile case involving women scheduled to be deported out of the Denver area. Jeanette Vizguerra and Ingrid LaTorre are both in sanctuary at Denver-area churches to stave off their deportations.

The cases come amid an increased effort by immigration officials under the Trump administration to deport people living in the country illegally no matter if they’ve been convicted of a violent crime or not.

In a story published by The Washington Post Sunday, the Post found that ICE arrested 21,362 undocumented immigrants from January through mid-March, compared to 16,104 during the same time period in 2016 – an increase of 32.6 percent.

The Post also found that the number of people arrested with no criminal records doubled, though almost three quarters of those arrested did have criminal records (an increase of 15 percent year-over-year).

And Rusnok noted Friday that anyone in violation of immigration laws is subject to arrest and possible deportation. He also noted that from FY 2012-16, between 41 and 45 percent of undocumented immigrants removed from the U.S. had no prior criminal convictions.


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