Crime

Immigrant living in Denver church ventures to, from Jefferson County court safely

GOLDEN, Colo. – An undocumented woman who has spent the past five months living in sanctuary at a Denver-area church made it through a court appearance in Jefferson County Wednesday without being picked up by federal immigration agents.

Ingrid Encalada Latorre made the court appearance to try and fight a plea deal she made after an arrest for using false documents while working at a nursing home in 2010. A prayer service was held at the courthouse ahead of the hearing.

She has been in sanctuary at the Mountain View Friends Meeting since late November, when she was again scheduled for deportation and removal. She first entered the U.S. in 2000 to live with her aunt, who is a U.S. citizen, and to pursue an education, according to her lawyer.

Latorre, a mother to two boys, aged 8 and 17 months, who are U.S. citizens, said in court that she left sanctuary at the church Wednesday to fight her plea deal and stay with her family. The native of Peru is trying to get the felony she pleaded guilty to reduced to a misdemeanor to help her immigration case.

She has already completed 4.5 years of probation, paid nearly $9,000 in back taxes and spent more than $30,000 fighting her deportation order, according to her lawyer.

“I am so relieved to have this first hearing behind me and to be back safely with my family,” she said after the court hearing. “I hope Immigration and Customs Enforcement will consider my stay of deportation request and allow me to return home with my two boys while I await further hearings.”

Latorre requested a deportation stay Nov. 24 with Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) but still hasn’t received one.

Her attorneys and supporters say she got bad legal advice when she was first arrested and advised to enter a plea deal.

“Ingrid only became aware of the impact of the poor legal advice she received when, in the spring of 2016, an immigration judge explained the decision to deny her cancellation of removal as being driven by the plea decision. She immediately sought a second legal opinion, but everything was happening too fast to immediately halt her deportation” stated Jennifer Piper of the American Friends Service Committee. “We encourage Immigration to review the recent stay submitted by Joseph Law Firm and consider allowing her to return home while the court determines whether to reopen her case or not.”

Latorre is one of several undocumented immigrants in the Denver area who have sought sanctuary at area churches, and her story is among several recently involving federal immigration agents’ crackdown on people living in the U.S. illegally.


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2 suspects arrested by FBI agents in Chicago in connection to Denver liquor store murder

DENVER – Two people suspected of being connected to an April 21 strip mall shooting in Denver that left one man dead were arrested by Federal Bureau of Investigation agents on April 26 in Chicago, and are in the process of being extradited back to Denver.

Shawntez Kinney, 22, died in the shooting, which happened outside of the Evans Discount Liquor store on West Evans Avenue just after 9 p.m. on April 21. He had a young child. Continue reading

Undocumented Aurora man detained at work released from ICE hold, will get to see daughter graduate

AURORA, Colo. – Arturo Hernandez-Garcia, the undocumented man who was detained at work last week by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents, was released from federal immigration custody late Tuesday and granted a reprieve to go to his daughter’s graduation, according to his lawyer.

Hernandez-Garcia was the first person in Colorado to seek sanctuary from deportation when he did so for nine months in 2014 and 2015 while he faced deportation. Continue reading

Investigators dig at new site in Pueblo for clues in Kelsie Schelling’s disappearance

PUEBLO, Colo. – Investigators continued their search for evidence related to the disappearance of Kelsie Schelling Monday in the Pueblo area, when they used several backhoes to dig in an area close to where Schelling’s ex-boyfriend used to live.

Monday’s search came less than two weeks after investigators with the Pueblo Police Department and Colorado Bureau of Investigation dug up the backyard of a Pueblo home where Schelling’s ex-boyfriend, Donthe Lucas, used to live with his grandmother.

Detectives said they recovered evidence in that search, but have not specified exactly what. Monday’s search appeared to focus on a low-lying cropping of trees in an area about a mile west of the home investigators searched two weeks ago.

A Pueblo police spokesperson told Denver7 crews started digging at 8 a.m. and will work throughout the day, and possibly into Tuesday.

The police spokesperson said close to 12 people were working at the site Monday, and that police had received permission to search the land from its owner and developer.

Police have so far on Monday not said if they have found anything new in their latest search, and did not say what led crews to that area Monday.

Lucas has long been a person of interest in Schelling’s February 2013 disappearance. Schelling, 21, was eight weeks pregnant when she disappeared, and Lucas was the father of the child.

Schelling 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.

Schelling’s mother, Laura Saxton, told Denver7 in an exclusive interview after the search two weeks ago that she was encouraged by the new leads and that evidence had been found.

Schelling’s family continues to offer a $50,000 reward for information leading investigators to their daughter or to the arrest and conviction or someone in her disappearance.

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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Child abuse, trespassing charges for 2 who caused Amber Alert in Denver Sunday

DENVER – The woman accused of kidnapping her biological daughter with another man Sunday, setting off an Amber Alert, faces child abuse and trespassing charges after the incident.

Meshelle Jasmine Branch, 21, is accused of breaking into and taking her 22-month-old daughter from the girl’s grandmother’s home on East 104th Avenue in Thornton around 9 a.m. Sunday morning.

The grandmother had an active protection order against Branch that prohibits her from being at the grandmother’s home or having contact with the child, which Branch is also charged with violating, in addition to the child abuse and first-degree criminal trespassing charges.

Branch, along with 28-year-old Robert Owens, allegedly took the toddler, who has a severe heart condition that requires close monitoring, though it’s still unclear why.

The Amber Alert was issued around 12:45 p.m. Sunday — nearly four hours after the kidnapping. Branch and Owens turned themselves in at the Lone Tree Police Department around 1:30, along with the child, who was cleared medically at a nearby hospital and returned to her grandmother.

Branch and Owens, both of Lakewood, remain in custody Monday. Thornton police say the investigation into the case remains ongoing.


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Sen. Bennet files legislation to help Arturo Hernandez-Garcia, Colorado man facing deportation

DENVER – U.S. Sen. Michael Bennet has filed a private bill aimed at keeping a Denver-area man picked up for deportation by federal immigration agents this week from being removed from the country.

Arturo Hernandez-Garcia, 44, was detained at work by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents earlier this week.

Bennet filed private legislation – usually aimed at specific people’s situations, often involving immigration cases – on Thursday to try and stop Hernandez-Garcia from being deported. He also reached out to ICE to request a time extension in deciding Hernandez-Garcia’s case.

“Arturo has been a valued member of our community for nearly two decades,” Bennet said in a statement. “As a business owner, he has contributed to our economy and has always worked hard to support his family. He should not be a priority for deportation.”

Hernandez-Garcia was among the first undocumented immigrants in the country to use a church as a place of sanctuary from federal agents when he spent 9 months at Denver’s First Unitarian Church in 2015.

He left the church after he was told he wasn’t a priority for deportation, despite ICE having given him final removal orders.

ICE spokesman Carl Rusnok told Denver7 earlier this week that Hernandez-Garcia would be held in ICE custody until he is removed.

Hernandez-Garcia first came to the U.S. through El Paso, Texas in January 2003 on a six-month work visa, according to ICE, but outstayed his visa. He was first targeted for deportation after his 2010 arrest on an assault charge for a fight at work – a charge that was later dropped.

In October 2012, a federal immigration judge granted a 60-day voluntary departure request, but those turned into final deportation orders in December 2012, when he failed to voluntarily remove himself from the U.S., according to ICE.

In 2014, an appeal of his deportation was dismissed, but the Board of Immigration Appeals extended his voluntary departure date through Aprill 2014. However, when he didn’t leave, a final order of removal became active again, according to ICE. He had applications for stays of removal denied in May 2014 and March 2015, according to ICE.

Hernandez-Garcia has a wife and two daughters – one of whom was born in the U.S., which generally kept him safe under the Obama administration’s directive that protected undocumented parents of citizen children.

The First Unitarian Church has also been a sanctuary haven for Jeanette Vizguerra, a Mexican national who took sanctuary at the church earlier this year when she was scheduled to be deported. Vizguerra was named as one of TIME Magazine’s 100 most influential people of the year last week, and is one of at least two women in the Denver area currently in sanctuary.

Bennet also issued a private bill seeking relief for Vizguerra in March. His calls for relief come amid an increased focus under the Donald Trump administration to deport anyone living in the country illegally – something Bennet has been loudly opposed to.

He called Hernandez-Garcia’s case “yet another example of this Administration’s misguided immigration policies that do not align with our national priorities and values.”

It’s unclear exactly what effect, if any, the private bill might have on Hernandez-Garcia’s case at this time.

Hernandez-Garcia and Vizguerra’s cases are among several high-profile immigration cases that are currently ongoing in the Denver area.

There is a march in front of the ICE detention facility in Aurora scheduled for Friday from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. to protest Hernandez-Garcia’s detainment.


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Denver police chief allays concern within undocumented community over deportation fears

DENVER – Denver’s mayor praised a federal judge’s decision Tuesday to block an executive order by President Donald Trump that would strip federal funding from so-called sanctuary cities – just around the same time that the city’s police chief tried to calm fears in Denver’s immigrant communities.

Denver Police Chief Robert White laid out the city’s plan on how its officers work with federal immigration officials under the Trump administration at a community meeting Tuesday that brought standing-room-only crowds. He started by noting that there have been an uptick in the number of immigration officers in the city, but told the crowd not to worry. Continue reading

Greeley man found dead in crash was shot beforehand, coroner says

GREELEY, Colo. – A man who was found dead after a crash Tuesday morning was shot before he crashed into a retaining wall in Greeley, the Weld County coroner confirmed Thursday.

Police had said from the beginning of the investigation that they were treating the death of Alberto Ruiz, 33, as a homicide after witnesses told officers the crash happened after they heard sounds similar to explosions and that they had seen a pickup truck speeding away from the scene.

Ruiz was an employee at Estes Valley Asphalt and was driving one of the company’s trucks when he was killed. Friends told Denver7 he had been working at a construction site in the area before the incident.

“It doesn’t seem real. Like one minute he’s working and the next minute he’s gone,” said Roy Varela, a good friend of the victim. “We were just with him on Easter. We had a BBQ at the park. Everything was fine. And then this — everything happened so fast.”

The Greeley Police Department says the pickup seen leaving the scene is a tan/gold 1998-2002 model Chevrolet S-10 ZR2 with black fender flares. It still has not been located or identified.

Anyone with more information about the case is asked to call Greeley police at 970-350-9600.


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Colorado police found 262 pounds of marijuana on side of road on 4/20

MANITOU SPRINGS, Colo. – Somebody dumped 262 pounds of marijuana on the side of a road in Manitou Springs on 4/20.

The Manitou Springs Police Department recovered the pot, which was stuffed into 11 55-gallon trash bags, along the side of the road near Crystal Hills Boulevard, according to KRDO.

Police had been tipped off to suspicious activity at a vacation rental home about 1.5 miles away earlier in the day, but upon investigating found nothing suspicious.

But before finding the marijuana, officers were tipped off again to two men seen driving a white van up to the rental home and leaving shortly afterward. Police valued the marijuana at $1.5 million.

KRDO reports that police believe the van and the marijuana are connected, though officers never found the van. They are asking anyone with information to call the El Paso County Dispatch Center at 719-390-5555.


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Gardner says Trump administration wants diplomacy, show of force in dealing with North Korea

WASHINGTON – Sen. Cory Gardner said the Trump administration’s stance on how to deal with the threat from North Korea is designed to “counter” what he called the Obama administration’s “strategic patience” that has brought tensions to where they are today.

Read the full transcript of the post-meeting interview at the bottom of this story.

His remarks, which echoed Vice President Mike Pence’s statements last week in which he blamed the Obama administration, came shortly after he left an hour-long briefing at the White House, which was attended by most U.S. senators and presented by President Trump, Defense Secretary Jim Mattis, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, National Intelligence Director Dan Goats and Gen. Joseph Dunford, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.

Gardner, a Colorado Republican who sits on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and chairs its East Asia, Pacific and International Cybersecurity subcommittee, has over the past several years become one of most-respected congressmen when it comes to North Korea.

That was evident Wednesday, when Sen. Marco Rubio said Gardner was the “go-to person” on North Korea, and Sen. Jeff Flake said that people “trust his instincts” on North Korea in interviews with Roll Call.

Since late last year, Gardner has called multiple times for the Trump administration to be forceful in enforcing policy and sanctions against North Korea for its ongoing nuclear proliferation and missile tests.

“I think it’s clear that North Korea continues to rise in its level of threat,” Gardner told Denver7 Wednesday. “We know that the conditions on the Korean Peninsula are at their most unstable point since the armistice, and that fact is they’re developing a nuclear weapon and they’re trying every day to hit the homeland of the United States with.”

Though Trump only attended the meeting for about five minutes, Gardner says the other national security heads in attendance said that the new administration was working to pressure North Korea to dismantle its nuclear program by utilizing sanctions and pressuring allies like Japan and South Korea to push China to help out with North Korean relations.

But though a State Department statement said the U.S. “seeks stability and the peaceful denuclearization of the Korean peninsula” and that it remains “open to negotiations towards that goal,” which is similar to the Obama administration’s stance, Gardner, like his fellow Republicans, blamed the tension on Obama.

“The doctrine of strategic patience that has been followed the last eight years allowed North Korea to develop a robust nuclear infrastructure, and unfortunately, it kind of led with a condition that if you act bad for long enough, you get what you want,” Gardner said.

But he said the new administration’s policies would be more effective.

“That’s exactly what the new doctrine is designed to counter, and that’s to place maximum pressure on the North Korean regime and maximum pressure on those like China, nations like China, who really, truly do have the economic and the security leverage to denuclearize North Korea,” Gardner said.

He said he was hopeful that warship movements toward the Korean peninsula, and the deployment of the THAAD missile defense system would be effective shows of force, but that working with other Asian allies in diplomatic efforts would prove most worthwhile.

“I believe that the administration is building a relationship with Japan and south Korea, strengthening that relationship between the three nations, which is absolutely critical to pressure China to engage more with North Korea,” Gardner said.

But he also said the new administration should look at secondary sanctions against China and North Korea if they are violating current agreements.

“I think the administration ought to look at additional secondary sanctions on Chinese entities, or individuals who are violating our sanctions, to make sure they are held accountable if they’re helping North Korea gain resources or dollars for the proliferation of their nuclear program,” Gardner told Denver7.

He said he thought there was “a lot of newfound interest in North Korea” from his fellow senators.

North Korea’s mission to the U.N. on Wednesday said the nation’s government would react to a “total” war with the U.S. with nuclear war, adding that the isolated nation would “surely win a victory in the death-defying struggle against the U.S. imperialists” and that North Korea “can never be frightened” by the Trump administration.

And though all signs pointed to efforts by the U.S. to engage in diplomatic negotiations, the State Department said it “remain[s] prepared to defend ourselves and our allies.”

The full transcript of the interview can be read below:

(Denver7’s Blair Miller): You just got out of a meeting at the White House with President Trump and some other folks talking about North Korea. What can you tell me about what you learned?

Sen. Cory Gardner: I think it’s clear that North Korea continues to rise in its level of threat. We know that the conditions on the Korean Peninsula are at their most unstable point since the armistice, and that fact is they’re developing a nuclear weapon and they’re trying every day to hit the homeland of the United States with.

Sen. Gardner: And so the hearing focused on the actions the United States has taken, the actions the U.S. will move forward with.

Sen. Gardner: But more importantly, I think, are the discussions that we continue to have is centered around the policy of strategic patience that led us to this point. The doctrine of strategic patience that has been followed the last eight years allowed North Korea to develop a robust nuclear infrastructure, and unfortunately, it kind of led with a condition that if you act bad for long enough, you get what you want.

Sen. Gardner: And so that’s exactly what the new doctrine is designed to counter, and that’s to place maximum pressure on the North Korean regime and maximum pressure on those like China, nations like China, who really, truly do have the economic and the security leverage to denuclearize North Korea.

Miller: I know you’ve done a lot of work, especially over the past several months, on stuff involving North Korean sanctions. Do you see what the administration has going forward in line with what your efforts have been?

Sen. Gardner: Well we have called for a show of force. I believe the administration is carrying that out with the U.S.S. Vincent as well as the deployment of THAD, the missile defense system on the Korean Peninsula. It’s important to protect our allies. We have a treaty obligation to protect South Korea and Japan, and I believe that the administration is building a relationship with Japan and South Korea, strengthening that relationship between the three nations, which is absolutely critical to pressure China to engage more with North Korea.

Sen. Gardner: And so I believe there are additional steps that we should take though. I think the administration ought to look at additional secondary sanctions on Chinese entities or individuals who are violating our sanctions to make sure they are held accountable if they’re helping North Korea gain resources or dollars for the proliferation of their nuclear program.

Sen. Gardner: And so while I’m very pleased to see more pressure being brought to bear on both China and North Korea, I would like to see more in terms of secondary sanctions place on violators of our sanctions.

Miller: You seem to have more of a grasp on some of this North Korea stuff than some of, possibly, your fellow senators. Anything they had to say about what they learned today?

Sen. Gardner: I think there’s a lot of newfound interest in North Korea. Two years ago, when I took over the chairmanship of the East Asia subcommittee, I recognized that North Korea was going to be one of the National Security flashpoint that this Congress would face.

Sen. Gardner: And certainly, as we’ve seen five nuclear tests over the past couple of years – dozens of ballistic missile launches and attempts – it’s actually come to fruition as a national security flashpoint. And so what we have to do now is No. 1, maintain our goal of peaceful denuclearization of the North Korean regime. No. 2, we have to enlist our great allies like Japan and South Korea in this effort. And No. 3, we have to put the maximum pressure on China to make sure that they are using their economic leverage to pressure the Kim Jong-Un regime into denuclearization.


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