Author: Blair Miller
Denver officials ask ICE to ‘respect’ courts, schools
DENVER – Denver’s mayor, city council and legal representatives sent a letter Thursday to the local U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement field office requesting agents stay away from “sensitive locations,” including schools and courthouses, while performing their duties.
The letter asks ICE officials to stay in line with an October 2011 ICE memo called “Enforcement Actions at or Focused on Sensitive Locations” that agents “avoid unnecessarily alarming local communities” and to take caution and care when enforcing federal immigration law near the “sensitive locations.” Continue reading
ICE agents arrest 21 in four-day sweep in Colorado
DENVER – U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents arrested 21 people in Colorado and five in Wyoming in an enforcement raid on undocumented immigrants that took place March 31-April 3.
ICE says all 26 people arrested had prior criminal convictions, and that 23 of them had previously been convicted of possessing or selling illegal drugs, domestic violence, DUI, illegal entry, larceny or sex offenses.
The agency gave no names of those arrested.
The 21 arrested in Colorado were arrested in various cities:
- Arvada: 2
- Aurora: 11
- Commerce City: 3
- Denver: 1
- Frederick: 1
- Thornton: 2
- Yuma: 1
The five arrested in Wyoming were all taken into custody in Jackson.
ICE says that all the people were arrested were men between the ages of 18 and 56. Eighteen were Mexican nationals; four were Honduran; two were Salvadoran; one was from Costa Rica and one was from Indonesia.
The agency noted four specific cases of people who were arrested in the roundup who had previously been convicted of serious crimes or multiple DUIs.
ICE says all of them men arrested “were amenable to arrest and removal under the Immigration and Nationality Act” and that the agency “frequently encounter[s] other aliens illegally present in the United States” while conducting such operations.
“They are evaluated on a case-by-case basis, and, when appropriate, they are arrested by ICE officers,” the agency says.
The announcement came on the same day many of Denver city officials sent a letter to the ICE Denver field office asking ICE agents to avoid “sensitive locations” like courthouses and schools when conducting their operations.
The latest operation comes as ICE has started putting out weekly updates targeting cities across the country that it says are “uncooperative” with President Donald Trump’s new immigration orders, the first of which targeted several cities in Colorado, including Denver.
It is part of an effort to strip federal funding so-called “sanctuary cities” that don’t cooperate with ICE agents, though Boulder is the only Colorado city with an official proclamation on the books that it is a sanctuary city.
And Attorney General Jeff Sessions recently called out a case in Denver involving a spat between Denver Sheriff Department officials and ICE agents over the release of an undocumented immigrant in December who later allegedly killed a man.
And at least two Denver-area undocumented women have sought refuge at Denver churches to avoid deportation. Churches have also often been considered sensitive locations.
“Our ICE enforcement operations improve public safety by removing criminal aliens from our communities, and drunk drivers from our roads,” said Jeffrey Lynch, field office director for ERO Denver. “This was a focused four-day operation, but our routine operations occur daily.”
ICE says most of those arrested in the latest sweep now have either pending deportations or will be deported once their charges have run the course through local or federal court systems.
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New report shows drastic across-the-board increases in Colorado’s heroin use
DENVER – A new report released Thursday that studies heroin use in Colorado shows a huge spike in heroin seizures and hepatitis C transmissions among young users in the state.
The report, “Heroin in Colorado,” was compiled by a wide array of public health, drug enforcement and other officials and prepared by the Heroin Response Work Group. It’s the first of its kind in Colorado.
It is broken down into seizure and arrest data, overdose data, data on Naloxone use, disease transmission data, neonatal data, exposure calls and other treatment and user information.
The study covered the time period between 2011 and 2015, and saw jumps in most categories related to the illicit drug that has made a widespread comeback across the country that some have called an “epidemic.”
Among the key findings:
- A total of 70 percent of users surveyed in the Denver Metro Treatment Client Survey say prescription painkillers “played a role” in their decision to use heroin.
- 61 percent of those surveyed in the Denver survey said they had overdosed on heroin before. Of those people, the median number of overdoses they had experienced was three.
- Heroin-related deaths in Colorado doubled from 2011 to 2015, from 79 deaths to 160 deaths.
- Age-adjusted heroin overdose deaths increased by 93 percent over the same time period, and hospitalization rates jumped 41 percent.
- Heroin-related emergency room visits doubled from 4.45 per 100,00 people in 2011 to 9.28 per 100,000 in 2014.
- Colorado law enforcement agencies have seen a massive spike in heroin seizures. In 2011, there were 20, but there were 427 seizures in 2015 – a 2,035 percent increase. The amount of heroin seized jumped 1,562 percent from 2011 -2015, from 16.1 pounds to 268.7 pounds.
- The number of heroin-related arrests jumped from 743 in 2011 to 4,575 in 2015 – an increase of 515 percent.
- Reported new hepatitis C cases jumped from 379 cases in 2011 to 729 in 2015. The report attributed many of the new infections to needle-sharing among users.
- The yearly average price for a gram of heroin in Denver has dropped significantly, which the report attributes to a greater supply. It was $255.20 per gram in 2012, jumped to $308 per gram in 2013, but has since plummeted to just $123.12 per gram in 2015.
- At the same time, heroin purity levels in Denver dropped from 31.9 percent in 2012 to just 17.1 percent in 2015.
- Age-adjusted overdose rates for heroin, opioids in general, and all drugs are higher in Colorado than the U.S. averages.
- Pueblo County has the highest age-adjusted death rate due to heroin, and southern Colorado has higher rates than the rest of the state.
Some of the data was also released in January in the Substance Abuse Trend and Response Task Force’s 11th-annual report.
“Too many Colorado families have been hurt by the heroin epidemic,” said Lt. Gov. and Chief Operating Officer Donna Lynne. “This first-ever report provides the sobering statistics and serves as our call to action to do all we can to help our citizens avoid its use and provide support to those on the front lines of battling its misuse.”
“People are dying from opioid overdoses at an alarming rate across the country and here in Colorado,” said Colorado Attorney General Cynthia Coffman. “Every one of the people we lose to an overdose is somebody’s loved one and their addiction and subsequent death not only impacts them and their families, it affects our community as a whole. Colorado must be proactive in tackling this heroin crisis, and this report provides us with comprehensive data that can help us to focus our state’s resources where they are most needed. My office will continue to work collaboratively with stakeholders to combat this growing issue.”
To read the full report, click here.
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Republicans invoke ‘nuclear option’ in Gorsuch nomination; he’ll need just 51 votes now
DENVER – As he said in recent days he would do, Colorado Sen. Michael Bennet on Thursday ordered the motion to end debate on the nomination of Judge Neil Gorsuch to the Supreme Court.
Bennet said Monday he would not support a Democratic filibuster of the Colorado judge’s nomination, and he voted for cloture Thursday morning after 42 of his Democratic colleagues had already voted against it. Continue reading
Colorado Sen. Michael Bennet will vote ‘no’ on Neil Gorsuch SCOTUS confirmation
WASHINGTON – Colorado Sen. Michael Bennet will vote “no” on Judge Neil Gorsuch’s confirmation to the U.S. Supreme Court, he said Thursday after Senate Republicans invoked the “nuclear option” to require only a simple majority vote for the Colorado judge’s confirmation.
“Judge Gorsuch is a very conservative judge and not one that I would have chosen. For the reasons I have said, I had concerns about his approach to the law,” Bennet, a Democrat, said in a statement. “Those concerns grow even more significant as we confront the reality that President Trump may have several more opportunities to transform the court with a partisan majority.” Continue reading
As showdown over confirmation vote looms, Neil Gorsuch accused of plagiarism
DENVER – As tension mounts over the possibility of a filibuster and drastic changes to Senate rules over the confirmation vote of Judge Neil Gorsuch, the Colorado appeals court judge faces new plagiarism accusations.
Politico reports that a near-300-word passage from Gorsuch’s 2006 book, “The Future of Assisted Suicide and Euthanasia,” is nearly identical to a passage from a 1984 Indiana Law Journal article.
It also reports that Gorsuch “borrowed from the ideas, quotes and structures of scholarly and legal works without citing them” in other parts of his book and in a 2000 academic article he wrote.
The report says that Gorsuch did not attribute the passages to the Indiana Law Journal’s author,
Abigail Lawlis Kuzma, but instead sourced the same publications and cases as she used in her paper.
Kuzma, who is now an Indiana deputy attorney general, issued a statement through Gorsuch’s handlers saying she did “not see any issue here, even though the language is similar.”
But at least two academic and legal experts told Politico that the similarities in the publications constitute plagiarism. But the White House pushed back staunchly against those claims Tuesday.
“This false attack has been strongly refuted by highly-regarded academic experts, including those who reviewed, professionally examined, and edited Judge Gorsuch’s scholarly writings, and even the author of the main piece cited in the false attack,” White House spokesman Steven Cheung told the publication. “There is only one explanation for this baseless, last-second smear of Judge Gorsuch: those desperate to justify the unprecedented filibuster of a well-qualified and mainstream nominee to the Supreme Court.”
But how much effect the claims truly have on the vote to confirm Gorsuch is yet unknown.
Forty-four Democrats have already said they will either filibuster the vote and/or vote against Gorsuch’s confirmation.
Three Democrats have said they will vote for Gorsuch, and Colorado Democrat Michael Bennet has said he opposes a filibuster of the vote, as well as the “nuclear option” Republicans could use in the event of a sustained Democratic filibuster.
But still Wednesday, Bennet was not saying how he would vote.
Supreme Court nominees need to garner 60 Senate votes to be confirmed. With all 52 Republicans on board to support Gorsuch and the three Democrats, that brings them to 55 votes.
Democrats are expected to filibuster, to which Republicans could respond by invoking the so-called “nuclear option” that would change Senate rules so Supreme Court nominees would only need a simple majority of 51 votes to be confirmed.
Democrats last used the nuclear option in 2013 in order to confirm several Obama-era executive branch nominations that had been stalled by Republicans.
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell says he supports the use of the nuclear option, but Sen. John McCain, R-Arizona, called the idea “stupid,” saying it would set a bad precedent for future proceedings in the Senate because it could set a slippery slope for the option to be invoked for legislation as well.
But Democrats have pushed back over Republican complaints over the impending filibuster, saying that they set the stage for the showdown when many Republican senators failed to even hold hearings or meetings with President Obama’s nominee, Judge Merrick Garland.
“I cannot believe he can stand here on the floor of the United States Senate and with a straight face say that Democrats are launching the first partisan filibuster of a Supreme Court nominee,” Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., said after McConnell spoke. “What the majority leader did to Merrick Garland by denying him even a hearing and a vote is even worse than a filibuster.”
An Oregon senator spoke all night in opposition to Gorsuch Tuesday night into Wednesday morning.
Gorsuch, 49, has drawn praise from conservatives for many of his decisions made both on the 10th Circuit Court of Appeals and before. They are pleased with his states-first stance and past writings that the court and law systems were too complex.
But that anti-federalist approach also extends into cases in which Gorsuch’s decisions might raise eyebrows for conservatives.
He has said he has concerns about government searches and seizures, including in the case of a teenage student from Albuquerque, New Mexico who was arrested for burping in a classroom, in which Gorsuch said there was a difference “between childish pranks and more seriously disruptive behaviors.”
But Democrats say they are displeased with decisions they say favor industry and corporations over workers, and others they say showed him favoring religious freedom as a constitutional right upheld by other court cases.
The showdown between Democrats and Republicans is expected to start Thursday, and a final vote on Gorsuch is expected Friday.
Information from The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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Bill banning ‘free speech zones’ at Colorado public colleges signed by governor
DENVER – Colorado’s public colleges will no longer have designated “free speech zones” after Gov. John Hickenlooper signed a bill Tuesday that extends First Amendment rights to everywhere on campus.
The bipartisan Senate Bill 62 passed through both legislative houses with near-unanimous support.
The bill’s sponsor, Sen. Tim Neville, R-Littleton, says the passage of the bill means Colorado puts “the highest premium on strengthening our constitutionally-guaranteed rights.”
Set to take effect Aug. 9, the bill prohibits the state’s public colleges from restricting First Amendment rights to any certain part of campus. So-called “free speech zones” have drawn fire nationwide in recent years, as some say they restrict the number of varying viewpoints available to students on college campuses.
“I think more free speech is really the best indicator of everybody being heard and everybody actually being able to focus on the issues that are important to them,” Neville told Denver7 late last month.
Under the new law, students will be allowed to peacefully assemble, protest, picket and circulate petitions and other written materials anywhere on campus so long as they don’t restrict anyone’s access to education.
It says that public colleges would only be able to restrict “the time, place, and manner” of the free expression if four bars are met:
- The restrictions must be “reasonable;”
- They must be “justified without reference to the content of the speech;”
- The restrictions must be “narrowly tailored to serve a significant governmental interest;”
- The institution must “leave open ample alternative channels for communication of the information or message.”
“Once we limit free speech to a zone, we indicate to our students that free speech does not exist anywhere beyond that zone,” Neville said. “That is not the message we want to send to future generations about our core values.
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Longmont driver who killed 8-year-old on bike sentenced to 150 days in jail
BOULDER COUNTY, Colo. – A Longmont man who pleaded guilty to careless driving and false ID possession in the death of an 8-year-old girl who killed when she was hit while riding her bike was sentenced Tuesday to 150 days in jail.
Kyle Couch, 21, will serve two years of probation after he completes his jail sentence, which a judge also Tuesday denied to defer until Couch finished this semester at college.
He was originally charged with vehicular homicide, DUI and a slew of other charges for allegedly running over and killing the young girl, Peyton Knowlton, as she rode her bike across a crosswalk with her stepfather last May. Couch stayed at the scene after the crash.
But prosecutors dropped most of his charges in March in exchange for the guilty plea on the lesser charges.
Investigators had originally said that Couch was high on marijuana at the time of the crash, something his defense attorney disputed and prosecutors decided they were unable to prove, according to the Boulder Daily Camera.
Catherine Olguin, a spokesperson for the Boulder County District Attorney’s Office, said the judge also added a restorative justice participation program to Couch’s sentence, which could allow Couch to communicate with Knowlton’s family and apologize should the family choose to participate.
He apologized to the family during Tuesday’s hearing.
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Report: States with medical marijuana have lower opioid-related hospitalization rates
DENVER – A study published earlier this month in the Journal of Drug and Alcohol Dependence says states with legalized medical marijuana programs have seen fewer opioid-induced hospitalizations per capita than states with no program.
The study was authored by Yuyan Shi, an assistant professor at the University of California-San Diego, and looked at hospitalization records for marijuana and opioids in 27 states across the country from 1997 to 2014. Continue reading
Bennet, Gardner threaten arrest of fellow senators in event of absence during government shutdown
WASHINGTON – Colorado’s senators are threatening to have their fellow senators arrested in the event they are absent during a possible government shutdown that looms at the end of the month.
If Congress does not approve a new spending bill by late April, which is possible because of some measures Republicans have included in the bill that have angered Democrats, the government would again shut down – as it did in 2013 over a spat over Obamacare and in 1995 and 1996 under the Clinton administration over the budget deficit. Continue reading