Colorado

Arapahoe House of Colorado to end detox services next June

DENVER – Arapahoe House of Colorado, the state’s largest provider of substance abuse treatment, is ending all of its detox services in six months.

Mike Butler, the non-profit’s CEO, knows firsthand what resources like the center mean to Coloradans.

“I have close to 29 years of sobriety, and not a day goes by that I’m not thinking about drinking,” he said. “I’m committed to helping others like me find the help that they need.”

But he says Arapahoe House isn’t being reimbursed enough for the 10,000 patients it puts through detox each year, and that the business can’t keep up with the funding gap.

“With the changing landscape and the complexity around health care reform, we’re having to make tough decisions about where we’re focusing our resources,” Butler said.

He says three in 10 Coloradans suffer from some sort of substance abuse or mental health disorder, and that someone in Colorado will die of an accidental overdose every 9 ½ hours.

“There’s a tremendous and overwhelming need for treatment in Colorado,” Butler said. “Every day we turn around individuals who are at a point in their illness where they need help and we can’t get them into our programs fast enough.”

Arapahoe House will stop detox services on June 30 of next year. It says it will put those resources toward more in-treatment programs they believe will have a lasting impact.

Arapahoe House has three detox centers in Aurora, Commerce City and Wheat Ridge. Butler says he’s working with other organizations to fill the void they will leave next summer.

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Colorado’s growth rate of 1.68 percent was 7th in nation from July 2015-16

DENVER – Colorado was the seventh fastest-growing state between July 2015 and July 2016 in terms of population percentage, and more than 90,000 people moved to the state in that time period, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.

The 91,726 people who came to the state between last summer and this past summer amounted to a 1.68 percent population increase.

The U.S. as a whole saw a population growth of 2.2 million people, or 0.7 percent.

With the added people, Colorado’s population as of July was estimated at 5.54 million people.

Texas, Florida and California saw the highest overall population growth in terms of people; in terms of percentages, Utah, Nevada and Idaho saw the highest population growth.

Colorado ranked eighth in terms of the number of people who moved to the state – far ahead of ninth-place Oregon, which added 68,831 people.

Of the new people, 30,300 were new births (compared to deaths) in Colorado, and 60,700 people moved here from other states. Florida saw the highest migration growth at 95 percent, while nearly 90 percent of California’s growth came from new births.

The Census Bureau said Colorado ranked seventh in job growth. Between 2010 and 2016, Colorado ranks fourth – behind North Dakota, Texas and Utah – in terms of its average annual growth rate, which was1.6 percent over that time period.

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After raucous electoral vote in Colorado and removal of elector, Trump reaches 270 votes anyway

DENVER – In a raucous occasion at the Colorado state Capitol Monday, the state’s nine Democratic electors voted for Hillary Clinton and Tim Kaine as state law requires them to, but only after several last-minute court decisions were made regarding electors’ oaths and one elector was replaced when he failed to vote for Clinton.

The vote happened after more than a week of court filings and arguments over interpretations of the state and federal constitutions, as a group of “Hamilton electors” argued the constitution does not bind electors to vote for a certain candidate and pushed for the Electoral College to put someone other than Donald Trump in the White House. Continue reading

Denver City Council approves gender-neutral single-stall bathroom code changes

DENVER – The Denver City Council voted unanimously Monday night to require all existing and new single-stall bathrooms be designated as gender-neutral.

The move, originally put forth by the Denver LGBTQ Commission, councilors Jolon Clark and Robin Kniech and the Department of Community Planning and Development, will amend the city building code.

Every single-stall bathroom will now require a sign that clarifies each bathroom is open to use by anyone.

For single-stall bathrooms already in place, property owners have until May 1, 2018 to get into compliance and put up new signs.

“Denver will take every step we can to remove barriers for our people while creating more convenience. This is who we are as a city and I’m very proud of that,” Mayor Michael Hancock said in a statement. “This code change was a commonsensical action that we know will allow people to live their lives without anxiety about something as simple as bathroom access. This is also another way in which Denver demonstrates that we are a welcoming and inclusive place to call home for all our people.”

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Family of slain deputy Nate Carrigan sues Park County Sheriff’s Office over his death in shootout

DENVER – The family of the Park County deputy killed in February by a man who had previously threatened to harm officers has filed a federal lawsuit against the sheriff’s office claiming the negligence of commanders led to their son’s death.

The lawsuit was filed Wednesday in U.S. District Court of Colorado on behalf of Nate Carrigan’s estate, his parents, John and Melissa Carrigan, as well as Park County Deputy Kolby Martin, who was injured in the incident.

The defendants in the suit are the Park County Sheriff’s Office, Sheriff Fred Wegener and Cpt. Mark Hancock, who was also shot in the incident, though the bullet only grazed his ear.

The suit claims the “grossly negligent decision making” of the defendants “were not just a lapse in judgment or honest mistake.” It says their actions “exposed Deputies Martin and Carrigan to dangers that should have been entirely preventable.”

Carrigan and Martin were shot by Martin Wirth on Feb. 24 while serving him an eviction notice. He had previously threatened to kill police in the months before and had refused to leave his home in Bailey.

A report on the incident released in August by the Colorado Bureau of Investigations, Hancock told investigators he believed Wirth would be “physically combative” and had said the office “didn’t really feel that it warranted a SWAT call.”

The suit cites the CBI report throughout in detailing the timeline of that day, and notes Wirth had said if he were evicted, it would be “a shootout like the OK Corral.”

Wirth retreated back inside the home, and Hancock grew worried that too much time had passed and that deputies were in danger. But rather than retreating, he and Carrigan went to the door.

The report says Hancock told investigators he didn’t know if he got permission (the lawsuit says the sheriff gave permission), but told Carrigan to kick in the door since Wirth had barricaded himself inside.

Martin entered first and was followed by another deputy. As he rounded a corner, Wirth shot him eight times in the pelvis and legs.

Carrigan was shot through the armpit as he breached the door, and Hancock was grazed sometime during the incident.

At one point, Wirth escaped out of the home into the woods, where he was eventually shot dead by Hancock.

Wegener said in August that his deputies “did what they were supposed to” and called them heroes. The suit says, however, that many plans originally made to serve the eviction that day were not followed, nor was standard operating procedure followed by Hancock or Wegener.

It says they “ignored their own training” and that the deputies lacked the training and equipment to confront Wirth that day.

Martin and Carrigan’s family are both seeking compensatory and special damages, and lost past and future earnings, among other things.

Sheriff Wegener told Denver7 neither he nor the sheriff’s office had been served as of 11:15 a.m.

“We’re sorry that the family has taken this direction, but will certainly wait to let the justice system work, and wait and see what happens,” he said.

Carrigan had worked for the sheriff’s office for 13 years and was well-known in the community after growing up there and coaching at Platte Canyon High School. His family first discussed their intent to sue with Denver7 in August.

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Report says throttle malfunction cut engine, caused Thunderbird pilot to crash after Academy flyover

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. – An Air Force Thunderbird that crashed in Colorado Springs after a flyover at the Air Force Academy’s graduation ceremony in June suffered a throttle malfunction before the crash, according to a report from Air Combat Command.

The pilot of the F-16CM Thunderbird, Maj. Alex Turner, reported engine trouble and ejected before the crash. The $29 million airplane went down in a field south of Peterson Air Force Base but was destroyed.

The Accident Investigation Board determined that Maj. Turner had started landing procedures, but “inadvertently rotated the throttle,” which cut the engine.

The board said that normally, a full throttle rotation is impossible unless its trigger is pressed, but it said the trigger was stuck in the “pressed” position because of wear and debris accumulation, according to a new release.

The board says Maj. Turner tried to restart the engine, but was unsuccessful because of how low the plane was flying. It said he put off ejecting until he had brought the plane to a safe landing zone in the field.

Air Combat Command says Maj. Turner had more than 1,200 hours flying F-16s and 1,447 total flight hours. He is still flying with the Thunderbirds.

Maj. Turner met with President Barack Obama, who was attending the Academy’s graduation, shortly after the crash. ABC News reported that the president thanked the pilot for his service and said he was relieved Turner wasn’t seriously injured.

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Colorado electors appeal to state Supreme Court, arguing that state has no jurisdiction to punish

DENVER – The attorney for two Colorado electors seeking to block a state law requiring them to vote for Hillary Clinton has filed an emergency appeal with the Colorado Supreme Court to try again to have the case heard before they have to cast their electoral votes on Monday.

Polly Baca, a former state senator from Denver, and Robert Nemanich, an elector from Colorado Springs, are a part of the so-called “Hamilton electors” movement that is trying to keep President-elect out of the White House and send the election to the House of Representatives for the third time ever. They filed suit last week. Continue reading

President-elect Trump feuds over Russia reports, attacks magazine that wrote negative article

DENVER – President-elect Donald Trump again took to Twitter Thursday morning to feud with U.S. intelligence agencies over allegations that Russia interfered with the General Election, and to again denigrate a magazine that wrote an unfavorable story about one of his properties.

As national news outlets continue to publish stories citing unnamed government sources who point to Russian interference in the election and possible hacks by agents with Russian ties, Trump continued – as he has in recent weeks – to question their findings.

“If Russia, or some other entity, was hacking, why did the White House wait so long to act? Why did they only complain after Hillary lost?” Trump tweeted.

His tweet, however, is mostly false – just as it was when he said news of the hacks “wasn’t…brought up before [the] election” on Dec. 12.

The Obama Administration blamed the Russian government for hacking the Democratic National Committee and Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee on Oct. 7.

“We believe…that only Russia’s senior-most officials could have authorized these activities,” the Office of the Director of National Intelligence said in a joint statement with the Department of Homeland Security that day.

But a Washington Post story and analysis by cyber-firm Crowdstrike published mid-June were the first to raise the flag that Russia may have been behind security breaches.

Only July 25, the FBI announced it was investigating the DNC breach.

Trump even raised the idea that Russia could have been behind the breach and suggested they release Clinton’s emails in his last news conference – held July 27 – though he said the next day he was being sarcastic. Yet on Oct. 9 he suggested at the second presidential debate that “maybe there is no hacking.”

Election Day was Nov. 8, and since then, more actions have been taken by the White House.

President Obama ordered a review of the alleged hacking on Dec. 9, and asked it be ready and on his desk by the time he leaves office.

And on Dec. 12, White House Press Secretary Josh Earnest suggested Trump benefited from the alleged Russian meddling directly since he had praised Russian President Vladimir Putin on the campaign trail as a “strong leader.”

Earnest said Thursday at the daily press briefing it was “obvious” that Trump knew during the campaign Russia was trying to interfere in the election and added that Trump should be supporting an investigation rather than questioning it.

But the hacking allegations weren’t the president-elect’s only point of focus Thursday morning.

He started off by criticizing Vanity Fair, a longtime target of Trump’s that has also feuded with the business magnate in its pages, which published a story a day earlier with the headline “Trump Grill could be the worst restaurant in America.”

“Has anyone looked at the really poor numbers of Vanity Fair Magazine,” he wrote. “Way down, big trouble, dead! [Owner] Graydon Carter, no talent, will be out!”

He has a habit of taking to Twitter to attack people or news outlets that have been critical of him or his policies. Since Dec. 3, he has gone after an Indiana steel union president, Boeing, China, NBC News, CNN, the Green Party, Saturday Night Live and Alec Baldwin on the social media outlet.

Just four minutes after he criticized Vanity Fair on Twitter, he thanked Time Magazine and the Financial Times for naming him “person of the year,” which he said was “a great honor!”

And before tweeting about Russia, Trump fired off another tweet disparaging his favorite target: “the media,” which has rightfully scrutinized his business dealings and connections as they pertain to his soon-to-be presidency.

“The media tries so hard to make my move to the White House, as it pertains to my business, so complex – when actually it isn’t!”

But the communications director for Trump’s transition team, Jason Miller, said just hours later that Trump’s finances were indeed complex.

Trump also canceled a news conference scheduled for this week – his first since July 27 — in which he was to discuss his business dealings and how they will be handled in his transition to the presidency, but only hours later took to Twitter to discuss the matter without taking questions.

He said he would be leaving his businesses and that his sons, Don and Eric, as well as other executives would manage them. He said “no new deals” would be done while he is in office.

Trump has made Twitter his main soapbox for making statements, most-often in lieu of speaking through traditional media outlets he does not trust. But he also failed to invite Twitter to a technology roundtable Wednesday that featured many top U.S. tech companies. Surrogates said the company was “not big enough.”

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Denver man charged with child abuse after 10-week-old daughter hospitalized with serious injuries

DENVER – A Denver man has been formally charged with child abuse for allegedly causing numerous serious injuries to his infant daughter.

Shane Stringfellow, 27, is charged with three counts of child abuse resulting in serious bodily injury — a third-degree felony.

Stringfellow is accused of abusing the young girl since she was born on Oct. 1. She was brought to The Children’s Hospital Dec. 12 with a broken leg, fractured ribs and injuries to her tongue and tonsils, according to the Denver District Attorney’s Office.

His arrest affidavit says Stringfellow reported he “had fallen on the baby” and that the baby’s mother “fell while carrying the baby” at one point, but that the baby had landed in her lap.

Stringfellow also told investigators he would squeeze the baby in order to make her have a bowel movement, and that he would sometimes put his finger in her throat to make her vomit.

The affidavit says the infant girl weighed only seven pounds when she was hospitalized despite being 10-weeks-old.

The mother was also interviewed by police, but investigators determined the baby’s injuries were caused while she was in Stringfellow’s care. She is not currently facing charges.

Stringfellow has already been released from custody on a $50,000 bond and is next scheduled in court Jan. 17.

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Lawsuit filed by 18 disabled patients of Pueblo Regional Center who were strip-searched

PUEBLO, Colo. – Eighteen disabled people housed at the troubled Pueblo Regional Center and their families are suing Colorado’s governor, the Colorado Department of Human Services and a handful of former and current employees over claims they were illegally strip-searched in March 2015.

The plaintiffs and their attorneys say almost a dozen CDHS employees illegally strip-searched people housed at the center, which is operated by CDHS, without consent or a warrant. The lawsuit was filed Wednesday in Pueblo District Court. Continue reading