Lawsuits
Taylor Swift defense team will get to probe ex-Denver radio DJ’s claims about lost audio tape
DENVER – The defense team for singer Taylor Swift will get to cross-examine the man accused of grabbing her buttocks before a Denver concert in 2013 over how a tape of the man speaking with his radio station bosses about the incident disappeared while he was pursuing legal options in the case.
The trial involving Swift and the man, former KYGO radio host David Mueller, is set to begin Aug. 7 in the U.S. District Court of Colorado in Denver.
Judge William J. Martinez on Wednesday decided that the famed singer’s defense attorneys will get to cross-examine Mueller over how the full tape disappeared so the jury can decide if he acted maliciously and destroyed evidence of the full tape himself, or whether a series of accidents and misplacements ended in the full tape disappearing.
Mueller was fired from his job in early June 2013—days after a member of Swift’s security team claimed that Mueller had grabbed her buttocks underneath her skirt while taking a photo together ahead of a concert at the Pepsi Center.
He sued Swift and some members of her team in September 2015, claiming they slandered him and forced his firing without cause, though the radio station said it did its own internal investigation before firing Mueller.
And Swift filed a counterclaim months later calling Mueller’s claims that it was a different KYGO employee who actually touched Swift’s buttocks “specious” and called for a jury trial to settle the back-and-forth allegations.
Swift’s attorneys filed documents in late June and early July claiming that Mueller destroyed the secret tape he had made of the conversations involving his superiors.
Judge Martinez’s decision on those motions came Wednesday, but he stopped short of declaring Mueller had committed an “adverse interference” in the case when the tapes went missing.
Mueller secretly recorded the meeting, which is legal under one-party consent rules in Colorado, with his superiors on June 3, then edited the full two-hour tape into clips, which he sent to his attorney.
Mueller kept the full audio file on his computer and on an external hard drive, he testified. But at some point after making the edited clips, he spilled coffee on his computer, then went and got a new one without saving its hard drive. The judge’s ruling says he got the new computer sometime in 2015.
And Mueller also claimed when he was deposed that his external hard drive “stopped working” and that he threw it away “because it was junk.”
Thus, the full audio of the meeting has never been heard by anyone except for Mueller, and the meeting between him and his superiors plays a central part in the case.
Judge Martinez found that the full tape would have helped Swift’s team in discovery and possibly in the upcoming trial, but could not say, based on the evidence, that Mueller lost or destroyed the full tape by doing so “in bad faith”—a requirement for proving an adverse interference.
Instead, the judge decided he had lost or destroyed the tape out of “mere negligence”—which is still a “sanctionable spoliation of evidence,” he wrote.
“Although the Court declines to make a finding that Plaintiff acted in ‘bad faith’ in the sense that he intended to destroy evidence, it also cannot characterize the loss or destruction of evidence in this case as innocent, or as ‘mere negligence,’” Judge Martinez wrote.
Judge Martinez said that Mueller should have known that legal movement in the case was “imminent” and thus should have known he would be require to preserve evidence relevant to the case.
“[I]t is quite likely that the reason Plaintiff secretively recorded his conversation with Call and Haskell (his former employers at KYGO) was because he knew that some form of adversarial legal action was likely to follow,” Martinez wrote. “Moreover, Plaintiff later edited the audio file in order to send ‘clips’ to his own attorney…because Plaintiff himself was actively considering [litigation].”
Because of this, Judge Martinez wrote, Swift’s team was “prejudiced by the loss of evidence,” because not having access to the recording limited their “ability to explore whether Plaintiff has or has not ‘changed his story.’”
The judge wrote that Mueller “failed to take any number of rather obvious steps to assure that this evidence was not lost.”
“While the spill of liquid on his laptop may have been Plaintiff’s fault, it was an entirely foreseeable risk,” Judge Martinez wrote. “Indeed, the same thing had happened to Plaintiff’s previous laptop not long before…Plaintiff could and should have made sure that some means of backing up the files relevant to litigation was in place, but this was not done.”
Judge Martinez also chided Mueller for being “unjustifiably careless” in handling the audio file after seeking claims of $3 million against Swift for defamation.
“Given these claims, it is very hard to understand how he spent so little time and effort to preserve the very evidence which—one might think—could have helped him to prove his claims, and why he evidently responded with nonchalance when that evidence was lost,” Judge Martinez wrote.
As such, he said that giving Swift’s defense the chance to cross-examine Mueller would give the jury the best opportunity to determine whether Mueller got rid of the tape on purpose, as both of his KYGO superiors are already expected to testify at the trial.
The judge wrote that he didn’t want to “put too heavy of a thumb on the scale” against Mueller’s claims, and that giving Swift’s attorneys the chance to cross-examine him would give her team “the benefit of allowing the jury to make its own assessment” of Mueller’s actions.
“The Court has little doubt that if the jury concludes Plaintiff acted with bad faith or an intention to destroy or conceal evidence, they will draw their own adverse inferences,” Martinez wrote.
A final pre-trial preparation conference in the case is set for July 21. The trial is set to begin Aug. 7 at 8:30 a.m. and is scheduled for nine days.
Swift will be in court during the case, and has said in the past that if the jury finds in her favor that she’d donate any money to charities whose missions are to protect women from sexual assault.
Lawsuit: By restricting life-saving Hepatitis treatments, Colorado prisons putting taxpayers on hook
DENVER – Eighteen inmates in Colorado prisons died over a three-year period because of the state’s “cruel and arbitrary” system for treating Hepatitis C infections, which is leaving thousands of inmates without access to treatments, according to a federal class action lawsuit filed Wednesday by the ACLU of Colorado against the state Department of Corrections.
As of last December, there were 2,280 prisoners in Colorado who had been diagnosed with some degree of the virus, which amounts to about one-ninth of the state’s total prison population. Hepatitis C is the most-prevalent blood-borne infectious virus in the U.S. Continue reading
Denver Sheriff Department disputes ICE claim it didn’t notify of inmate’s release
DENVER – The Denver Sheriff Department is disputing allegations it never notified U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents it was releasing an inmate with an immigration detainer from custody.
Late on Tuesday, ICE said it had picked up Ricardo Daniel Lopez-Vera, 19, and was holding him pending a hearing in front of a federal immigration judge.
ICE said it had placed an immigration detainer on Lopez-Vera on July 11—a day after he was involved in a fight that left another inmate dead. Continue reading
Colorado Dems call for Trump election integrity commission to be disbanded, citing voter withdrawals
DENVER – Three of Colorado’s members of Congress are calling for President Donald Trump’s controversial election integrity commission to be disbanded or handcuffed in the wake of nearly 4,000 voter registration withdrawals in their home state over the past three weeks.
Sen. Michael Bennet, D-Colo., sent a letter to the commission, its vice chair, Kris Kobach, and Vice President Mike Pence asking they “immediately terminate” the commission, which he said was “wasteful and harmful” and formed only “as the result of delusion, conspiracy theories, and truly ‘fake news.’”
He said the “entire premise for its origination has zero basis in any peer-reviewed study or analysis” in the letter before going on to call the commission’s quest to get voter roll information from each state a “taxpayer-funded fishing expedition” that he said was “eroding trust and confidence in our democratic institutions and perpetuating fear in communities throughout the country.”
Bennet pointed to the nearly-4,000 Coloradans, most of whom are Democrats or unaffiliated voters, who had withdrawn their voter registrations since the commission’s request was sent to Colorado Secretary of State Wayne Williams as reasons why the commission should be dissolved.
“Given the spike in these registration withdrawals, I request that you immediately end the commission and describe how you intend to reverse the damage that it has already caused in my state,” Bennet wrote.
Most of the registration withdrawals since June 28 have been chalked up to the commission’s vice chair’s request, and Colorado Secretary of State Wayne Williams’ saying that he’d hand over the voter roll information that he’s required to under state law.
In Colorado, that means he’s required to send a voter’s full name, address, party affiliation and date the person registered, phone number, gender identity, birth year, and information about if a person has voted in prior elections.
The commission had also requested two things that Colorado won’t hand over: a voter’s Social Security number and a voter’s birth date—things that aren’t public record in Colorado.
But Williams still hasn’t sent over any of the information, as the commission asked last week that no states send the voter roll information over until a federal lawsuit in Washington D.C. is decided.
But Bennet was joined by fellow Colorado Democratic members of Congress in expressing their displeasure with the commission this week, when Reps. Diana DeGette and Jared Polis joined more than 70 other members of the U.S. House of Representatives in also calling for the commission to end its quest for voter roll information.
“The federal government has an obligation to protect the personally identifiable information of the American people. We believe your June 28th request to the states would do the opposite by ignoring the critical need for robust security protocols when transmitting and storing sensitive personally identifiable information and by centralizing it in one place,” the members of Congress wrote.
The commission has gone back-and-forth about how it wanted the states to transmit the information, eventually opting for a secure network on the same day the commission asked states not to send any information over until the lawsuits were resolved.
Calling the commission “bogus,” DeGette said its request was deterring people from participating in democracy.
“It’s clear that many Coloradans simply don’t trust this ill-conceived effort, and for good reason,” DeGette said. “Maintaining the integrity of our elections is a critical priority, but this ‘investigation’ is the wrong solution.”
Williams, as have many others, has repeatedly said that voter fraud in the U.S. is extremely rare.
He noted in a letter to Kobach on Friday in which he outlined Colorado’s voter system that there were only 18 election-related crime cases prosecuted or under investigation in Colorado since November 2000. He also said that the information the commission requested wouldn’t be able to be used to verify the accuracy of voter rolls in the U.S., as most states are withholding some of the information the commission requested–including Kobach’s own Kansas.
There are more than 3.3 million active registered voters in Colorado, meaning that the number of withdrawals amounts to about 0.1 percent of the state’s total voting population.
Hundreds withdraw Colorado voter registrations in response to compliance with commission request
DENVER – At least two Colorado county clerks say they’ve seen a large increase in the number of people who have withdrawn their state voter registration since Colorado Secretary of State Wayne Williams said he would send the Trump administration’s election integrity commission some voter-roll information in accordance with state law.
Alton Dillard, a spokesperson for the Denver Elections Division, said 180 people have withdrawn their registration in the county since July 3. When compared to the eight people who withdrew their registration from June 26-29, it marks a 2,150 percent increase, according to Dillard. Continue reading
Trial over Denver radio host accused of groping Taylor Swift starts in less than a month
DENVER – The court battle between Taylor Swift and a former Denver country radio host accused of grabbing her buttocks during a meet-and-greet ahead of a June 2013 concert in Denver is heating up a month ahead of the trial.
Swift will appear in person in U.S. District Court of Colorado for the trial, which is set to begin Aug. 7 and scheduled for nine days. A final pre-trial preparation conference is set for July 21.
The world-famous musician has been embroiled in lawsuits and counter-suits for several years with David Mueller, a former radio personality from KYGO, a Denver country radio station.
Mueller was fired from his job days after a member of Swift’s security team claimed that Mueller had grabbed her buttocks underneath her skirt while taking a photo together ahead of a concert at the Pepsi Center.
He sued Swift and some members of her team in September 2015, claiming they slandered him and forced his firing without cause, though the radio station said it did its own internal investigation before firing Mueller.
And Swift filed a counterclaim months later calling Mueller’s claims that it was a different KYGO employee who actually touched Swift’s buttocks “specious” and called for a jury trial to settle the back-and-forth allegations.
At the end of May, Judge William J. Martinez issued a summary judgment denying Mueller’s tort claims that Swift and her team had slandered him, but upheld the rest of both suits.
Swift and handfuls of witnesses have been deposed in the case, and there are hundreds of pages of testimony, documents and photos that have been submitted as evidence.
Her attorneys have argued in documents filed in the past two weeks that Mueller purposely spoiled evidence relating to the case several times, including recordings he made with his bosses that fired him.
They also argue that a photo of the two together proves that Mueller indeed grabbed her, but the photo is sealed in evidence records.
Swift has said in the past that if the court finds in her favor, she’d donate any money to charities aimed at protecting women from sexual assault.
The trial is set to begin at 8:30 a.m. on Monday, Aug. 7.
Federal prosecutors appeal Uzbek terror suspect’s imminent release in Colorado
DENVER – U.S. Justice Department prosecutors on Monday appealed the granting of bail to Uzbek terrorism suspect Jamshid Muhtorov, and his release was postponed Monday to later this week in order to give the court more time to be sure that his home is an acceptable place for him to stay while he awaits trial on a terrorism charge.
U.S. District Court of Colorado Judge John Kane on Friday ordered Muhtorov released from custody while he awaits trial, and set a hearing for today to determine what Muhtorov’s terms and conditions of release would be. Continue reading
Masterpiece Cakeshop owner says he’s lost 40% of business, welcomes SCOTUS hearing
DENVER – The owner of the Masterpiece Cakeshop, whose case involving his denial to make a cake for a gay couple was taken up by the U.S. Supreme Court Monday after being declined nearly a dozen times, says the lower court’s decision, which will now be argued in front of the nation’s highest court, has caused him to lose business and that he’s received threats.
Jack Phillips spoke with his attorneys from the Alliance Defending Freedom, a conservative group that took up his case, after the Supreme Court decided it would hear oral arguments in his case sometime later this year. Continue reading
Trump signs ‘historic’ VA oversight bill supported by all of Colorado’s congressional delegation
DENVER – President Donald Trump on Friday signed a bill supported by all of Colorado’s congressional delegation aimed at making it easier to fire bad Veterans Affairs employees and protect whistleblowers after several high-profile scandals over the past several years.
The VA Accountability and Whistleblower Protection Act of 2017 passed the Senate on June 7 with support from both of Colorado’s senators, Michael Bennet and Cory Gardner.
It passed the House on June 13, with all of Colorado’s House of Representatives members from both sides of the aisle voting in favor of the bill.
The bill, sponsored by Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., fulfills one of the president’s campaign promises of dismissing employees at the VA “who let our veterans down,” he said at Friday’s bill signing ceremony, promising more VA reform in the future.
“What happened was a national disgrace and yet some of the employees involved in these scandals remained on the payrolls,” Trump said at the signing, according to NPR.
“After multiple scandals at the VA, Congress worked in a bipartisan fashion and passed additional reforms that will have a real impact on our nation’s veterans,” Gardner said Friday.
Gardner, Bennet and Coffman have all lauded the bill in recent weeks.
Bennet said the bill “encourages managers and patients to address poor performance and misconduct of VA employees and grants more oversight of the department.”
He and Gardner last year worked an amendment into the national defense budget that ordered the Government Accountability Office to study the VA’s oversight over construction projects, including the plagued Aurora VA hospital, which is running years behind schedule and millions of dollars over budget.
The bill also comes three years after several veterans died while waiting for care at the Phoenix VA hospital and other centers across the country as some VA employees covered up the lengthy wait times.
Gardner said upon the Senate’s passage of the bill that he was “thrilled” and that he looked forward to the president signing the bill.
Coffman called the bill’s passage in the House a “significant step in the right direction.”
The bill was the 40th piece of legislation so far signed by President Trump, according to NPR, though the majority of those pieces have repealed Obama administration policies or modified already-existing programs.
Information from The Associated Press contributed to this report.
SCOTUS again declines to take up Colorado cake store discrimination case
WASHINGTON – The U.S. Supreme Court again failed to act on the case involving the Masterpiece Cakeshop in Lakewood after being listed for consideration for an 11th time.
The judges could still decide to take up the case, despite it being distributed for conference each week since Feb. 21 and still not being taken up.
Jack Phillips, who owns the cake store, has petitioned the court after a lower court ruled he discriminated against a gay couple who wanted him to make them a wedding cake in 2012. Phillips has long claimed that as a Christian, he has the religious freedom to deny business to same-sex couples.
The Colorado Supreme Court last August declined to review the case, agreeing with a Colorado Court of Appeals decision that said the shop could continue to enforce its religious beliefs, but not while operating as a business in Colorado.
The Supreme Court declined to take up a similar case involving a New Mexico photographer after multiple conferences in 2014.