Month: July 2017
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.
Ex sought for Aurora 18-year-old’s murder freed from jail 9 days earlier, had 4 prior DV cases
AURORA, Colo. – The 20-year-old man sought by police in the July 1 murder of his ex-girlfriend had been released from jail just nine days before he allegedly killed her, and she broke a permanent civil protection order against him to go visit him the night she was killed.
Those details, and a series of police reports showing that Arturo Garcia, 20, and his ex-girlfriend, Alexandrea “Ally” Raber, had been involved in several domestic violence incidents over the past year were released to Denver7 in police reports and arrest affidavits on Thursday. Continue reading
Can I make my Colorado voter information confidential?
DENVER – If you’re concerned about what the Trump administration’s controversial Election Integrity Commission might do with your personal voting records when Colorado hands over what it’s legally bound to do later this month, there are a few remedies, but you have to meet certain criteria to have your information be made confidential.
Colorado Secretary of State Wayne Williams reiterated Wednesday that he would hand over to the commission what he is already required to give to anyone under state law: 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.
He said he wouldn’t hand over a voter’s Social Security number or full date of birth—two things the commission requested but will not get, as those things are not public record in Colorado.
It’s possible to de-register to vote, though the Denver Elections Division advises against doing so.
Williams also discussed the state’s confidential voter program, which allows certain people—mainly domestic violence victims or stalking—to sign a document saying their information shouldn’t be released because doing so would be a risk to their safety. Lying on the document would make a person subject to perjury charges. Some law enforcement officers may be covered under certain circumstances, especially those working undercover.
Those petitioning for the voter protections will have to pay $5 when they turn their application in to their local county or city clerks’ office.
There is also a similar program called the Address Confidentiality Program, which applies mostly to domestic violence victims, stalking victims, and victims of sexual assault.
“Colorado’s confidential voter program is based through the law, not a fiat from the secretary of state or something else,” Williams said. “It’s based on attestation from the individual, under oath, that they meet one of the criteria.”
According to state law, a person can request that their address not be made public in any public documents if they are a survivor of sexual assault, domestic violence, or stalking and fear for their safety or that of a family member.
Those people will also have to have evidence of their being victimized and had to have moved within the past 90 days or be planning to move.
The program gives a different address to be publicly listed for anyone who qualifies for protection, and applies to all official state documents and other utilities accounts.
Colorado says there are more than 2,500 active participants in the Address Confidentiality Program, and that more than 4,000 people have used the service since it started in July 2008.
The state says it plans to send the voter rolls over to the commission by 8 a.m. July 14.
Read more on the Address Confidentiality Program here. To read more about the commission’s request and Williams’ responses over the past week, click here.
Colorado secretary of state will send voter roll info allowable under state law to feds
DENVER – Colorado Secretary of State Wayne Williams held a news conference Wednesday morning to further address the voter roll information requested by President Donald Trump’s commission on election fraud.
Last week, the vice chair of the Election Integrity Commission, Kris Kobach, sent a letter to Williams and all other secretaries of state requesting the full name, address, date of birth, affiliated political party, last four Social Security number digits and voting history since 2006 of every voter in the state and country. Continue reading
Arrest affidavit details grotesque chats involving Pueblo parents who allegedly assaulted kids
PUEBLO, Colo. – Arrest affidavits for the two Pueblo parents arrested last week on charges they sexually assaulted their own children show the grotesque chatroom messages one of them sent to another person in Florida, which depict the father coercing at least one of his children into performing sexual acts on him.
David Caple, 37, and Kimberly Caple, 31, were arrested last week on sexual assault on a child by one in a position of trust charges. David Caple also faces a sexual exploitation of a child charge. Continue reading
Colo. GOP Rep. Mike Coffman basically started a hashtag telling Trump to stop the Twitter tantrums
DENVER – U.S. Rep. Mike Coffman was back on Twitter over the July 4 weekend imploring President Donald Trump to stop his controversial and often petty Twitter usage.
“Exactly what I meant when I said, #StopTheTwitterTantrums,” Coffman, a Colorado Republican, tweeted Sunday in response to the president’s latest controversial statement: A gif of the president and showbiz entertainer slamming “CNN,” or rather a person with a CNN graphic overlayed on their head, to the ground at a WWE wrestling match.
Exactly what I meant when I said, #StopTheTwitterTantrums https://t.co/A7HMLKEemP
— Rep. Mike Coffman (@RepMikeCoffman) July 2, 2017
The tweet originated on a Reddit board used by proponents of the president, coming from a user with a history of racist posts. It also doesn’t show what happened to Trump in the WWE match afterward: “Stone Cold” Steve Austin delivered his signature move to Trump, the “Stone Cold Stunner.”
It was the second time Coffman used the hashtag #StopTheTwitterTantrums in four days in response to one of the president’s tweets.
Last Thursday, after President Trump took to Twitter to again disparage “Morning Joe” hostess Mika Brzezinski (“low I.Q.”) and host Joe Scarborough (“Psycho Joe”) as part of his ongoing feud with the show, which had long been one of his favorites.
Trump also said Brzezinski was “bleeding badly from a face-lift” when he saw the couple on New Year’s Eve.
Trump’s tweets were panned across the political and social spectrum, including by Coffman.
“The President’s tweets are beneath the dignity of his office. It needs to stop. #StopTheTwitterTantrums,” Coffman tweeted.
The President’s tweets are beneath the dignity of his office. It needs to stop. #StopTheTwitterTantrums
— Rep. Mike Coffman (@RepMikeCoffman) June 29, 2017
And Coffman appears to have popularized the hashtag, which has been used more than 100 times on Twitter since he first used it on June 29.
It had only been used on Twitter three times before Coffman’s tweet—all by various people in response to a Trump tweet.
Coffman has been one of Colorado’s only Republican members of Congress to take a stand against a major Trump initiative, when he voted against the American Health Care Act, the House Republicans’ version of the effort to “repeal and replace” the Affordable Care Act.
He also voted against the repeal of an FCC rule that kept internet service providers from sharing user data and selling it to other companies.
But aside from that, according to FiveThirtyEight’s “Tracking Congress In The Age Of Trump” tracker, Coffman has supported every other major policy measure supported by the president, agreeing with the president’s position 94.6 percent of the time.
Though many Republicans have voiced their opinion that Trump’s tweets are below the office of the President, Democrats and some newspaper op-ed pages have scoffed at those statements, saying Republicans should instead stand up to Trump on policy measures instead of just his tweets.
The Denver Post had a new editorial out Monday as well regarding Trump’s tweets: “Instead of wrestling CNN, Trump should have gone to Comic Con”.