Colorado
Federal judge hears first statements in Denver homeless lawsuit
DENVER – A federal judge on Wednesday held the first of what is likely to be many hearings on a lawsuit filed on behalf of thousands of homeless people in Denver alleging the city and some of its employees have violated their constitutional rights and dignity.
Judge Craig B. Shaffer allowed dozens of homeless people into the courtroom without identification after an order last week.
He first pointed out the case has still not been certified as a class-action lawsuit. Though a motion to establish a class of homeless people was filed in early September, it does not have to be ruled on until Oct. 28.
READ: The full lawsuit can be found here.
Several plaintiffs and supporters rallied outside the Federal Courthouse just before the hearing
“We’re here to end the sweeps,” said plaintiff Jerry Burton.
Burton told Denver7 that 13 homeless people have died from hypothermia this year.
“Not because they were drunk,” he said. “Not because they were drug addicts. Not because they had mental issues… because of hypothermia. That can’t happen in a world-class city.”
Burton said no one will stop him from sleeping on sidewalks and putting up a tent, if the weather warrants.
He said he won’t stay in a shelter, because every time he does, he comes down with an illness.
“I will be out here,” he said. “I refuse to move. Police? I don’t care. The Mayor? You suck!”
He also said he can’t get an apartment because of his credit.
Lead plaintiff Garry Anderson said he’s been homeless in several cities and that Denver “is by far the worst.”
He said Seattle allows the homeless to set up tent cities under the freeway.
“Police actually patrol the tent city,” he said. “They have dumpsters out along the alleyways. They’ve set up portable toilets for the homeless community. They can do it here.”
Anderson also said that homeless people have a responsibility to not leave anything behind when they sleep outside.
“When I get up in the morning, you never know I was there that night,” he said. “I don’t leave garbage. In fact, I’ll pick up other people’s garbage, just because that’s what we need to do.”
City’s Response
When asked about the city’s response to the lawsuit, the Mayor’s Deputy Communications Director, Jenna Espinoza replied via email:
“The City and County of Denver spends nearly $50 million a year on direct and indirect homeless services. In the last several years, the City has increased direct services, including overnight and day shelter services as well as increased access to housing for all people. Our focus is on connecting people who are on the streets to the individualized assistance needed to help them stabilize their lives and move forward. The city’s practice is to first try and connect people to services and treatment, and if that doesn’t work, people are given notice, usually multiple times, before any enforcement action is taken. These are complex challenges and we strive to be as compassionate as possible while also ensuring safety and public health for all Denver residents.”
Judge’s concerns
Judge Shaffer voiced concerns over discovery in the case, as both defense attorneys and prosecutors pointed to difficulty in finding applicable information that could be used as exhibits in the case.
The defense said it had already put together more than 100 gigabytes of data for its discovery.
The lawyers said they had been using keywords such as “camping ban,” “Denver Rescue Mission,” and “homeless sweeps” in search to put together discovery, which Judge Shaffer called “fundamentally problematic.”
Attorneys for the plaintiffs argue in the suit that the city has engaged in “a systemic evisceration of thousands of displaced persons’ constitutional rights in order to clear the way for new housing and economic development in the Downtown Denver area.”
The argument comes after the city cleared homeless people from public spaces near downtown shelters – actions that allegedly continue, according to one homeless advocacy group.
In court Wednesday, those same attorneys argued the “enforcement of the policy in place is unconstitutional.”
Much of Wednesday’s discussion revolved around the defendants in the lawsuit. Aside from the city, Mayor Michael Hancock, Police Chief Robert White, Public Works Manager Jose Cornejo and the mayor’s chief of staff, Evan Dreyer, are among other defendants named in the case.
But Judge Shaffer explained to attorneys for the plaintiffs that some of those specific employees could claim qualified immunity in the case, which protects them from having to pay out civil damages in cases like this.
Some of the individual defendants have yet to answer the original complaints, which allows time for lawyers for the plaintiffs to drop some of those individuals from the lawsuit if they wish.
Judge Shaffer suggested the plaintiffs’ lawyers should instead focus on the city and county.
He also all-but invalidated the claim that the homeless people’s Eighth Amendment rights were being broken, noting that clause is normally applied to people who are incarcerated.
A status conference on the case is set for Oct. 20 at 10 a.m. – just less than a week before the deadline for the class to be certified.
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Hillary Clinton campaigns in Pueblo Wednesday
PUEBLO, Colo. – Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton will campaign in Pueblo Wednesday amid a push to get more people registered to vote.
Clinton’s visit will come on the heels of her running mate, Tim Kaine, visiting Denver Monday.
Her campaign says the Pueblo event will be focused on getting more people registered to vote ahead of ballots being mailed starting Oct. 17.
Clinton’s main opponent, Donald Trump, campaigned in Pueblo last week.
The Clinton campaign says the event will run from 11:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Watch the live stream below.
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Hillary Clinton campaigns in Pueblo Wednesday
PUEBLO, Colo. – Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton will campaign in Pueblo Wednesday amid a push to get more people registered to vote.
Clinton’s visit will come on the heels of her running mate, Tim Kaine, visiting Denver Monday.
Her campaign says the Pueblo event will be focused on getting more people registered to vote ahead of ballots being mailed starting Oct. 17.
Clinton’s main opponent, Donald Trump, campaigned in Pueblo last week.
The Clinton campaign says the event will run from 11:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Watch the live stream below.
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Wikileaks emails: Clinton camp wanted to avoid discussing health care in Colorado before primaries
DENVER – Hillary Clinton’s campaign wanted to avoid talking about health care and what at the time was a proposal for a single-payer system in Colorado supported by her primary opponent, Sen. Bernie Sanders, when she spoke to crowds in Denver and Boulder last November.
The revelation was made in emails purportedly from high-level Clinton staffers released by Wikileaks over the past week. Continue reading
“There was a true threat here” Bomb squad dismantles explosive found near Nederland police HQ
BOULDER COUNTY, Colo. – Bomb squad robots moved in on an explosive device found Tuesday afternoon, hours after a police officer picked up a backpack, not knowing what hid in the backpack.
Nederland Police Marshal Paul Carrill said Tuesday night, more than 12 hours after police first stumbled across the device, that officers arriving at work Tuesday morning believed a backpack left near police headquarters in Nederland could have been lost property. Continue reading
Former Colorado Governor Bill Owens says ‘charlatan’ Trump has ‘captured’ GOP
DENVER – Colorado’s Republican Former Governor Bill Owens said the Republican party has been “captured” by “charlatan” Donald Trump in a Facebook post Tuesday.
Owens called for fellow Republicans to “do everything possible” to hold GOP majorities in various levels of state and federal government.
In the post, he called Trump a “narcissist who will throw us aside after doing his best to destroy [the Republican party], just as he has thrown aside so many of his properties and venture.”
Owens called for Republicans to try and hold onto majorities in the U.S. Senate and House of Representatives, and said smaller local races needed help to hold on to Republican seats.
He then pointed to a need to reassess and rebuild the party following the election.
“After November 8 we must rebuild at the Presidential level so that we can once again give Americans a legitimate choice for President,” Owens wrote. “We have done so in the past and our Country needs us to do so again in the future.”
Owens is just the latest in a slew of Colorado Republicans who have denounced Trump or wavered on their support of him over the past week after a tape of Trump making lewd remarks and discussing sexually assaulting women in 2005 was leaked to the Washington Post.
Rep. Mike Coffman told Denver7 Friday he wanted Trump to step aside because of the comments.
Cory Gardner and Darryl Glenn joined Coffman in speaking out against Trump the next day, though Glenn, a candidate for U.S. Senate, said Tuesday he wanted to talk face-to-face with Trump before making his final decision.
Owens served as governor of Colorado from 1999 to 2007 and was re-elected in 2002 with the largest-ever majority in state history.
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Man investigated for vehicular homicide in deadly hit-and-run at Colorado and I-70
DENVER – Police are holding a man for investigation on vehicular homicide charges, among others, after a deadly hit-and-run crash that happened Monday night.
Tyler White, 25, is being investigated on vehicular homicide, DUI and leaving the scene of an accident charges after he allegedly killed a woman in a crash near I-70 and Colorado Boulevard just after 6:30 p.m. Monday.
The crash involved three other vehicles, and White allegedly fled the scene on foot afterward.
About three hours after the crash, a person called dispatch to report a man matching White’s description was seen at City Park.
Police spokesman Lt. Robert Rock said EMS workers arrived to find White nude and in the lake at the park. He was taken to an area hospital to be treated for his injuries.
Rock said White is not a Denver resident and was here from Tennessee, likely looking for work.
Police have not named the person killed in the crash, but said Tuesday there were no other injuries.
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Authorities identify suspect arrested in ‘extreme domestic violence’ murder
GARFIELD COUNTY, Colo. – Authorities have identified the suspect arrested in the “extreme domestic violence” case that left a Glenwood Springs woman dead last Friday.
Gustavo Olivo-Tellez, 27, faces first-degree murder charges in the shooting death of 28-year-old Blanca Judith Jurado Salas. He also faces a prior domestic violence charge, as well as third-degree assault and obstruction of telephone services charges.
The Garfield County Coroner identified Salas as the victim Tuesday. Previous reports said the victim was 24 years old.
Grand Junction SWAT team members arrested Olivo-Tellez early Saturday after finding Salas dead at a Glenwood Springs apartment the night before.
The coroner’s office says Salas was shot several time.
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Eric Trump to campaign for father in Greeley Tuesday
GREELEY, Colo. – Donald Trump’s son, Eric, will campaign for his father Tuesday morning in Greeley after visiting a business event in Greenwood Village Monday.
Eric Trump appeared at the Small Business Roundtable at NexGen Resources Corporation in Greenwood Village at 1:30 p.m. Monday and will make an appearance at the new Weld County Trump for Colorado office Tuesday morning at 9:30 a.m.
The new office will be located at 361 71st Ave. in Greeley. Trump will be in attendance to speak with supporters and volunteers, according to the Trump campaign.
Eric is the latest member of the Trump campaign to visit Colorado in recent weeks. Ivanka Trump, Donald Trump Jr. and Mike Pence all visited the state last month, and Donald Trump campaigned in Pueblo and Loveland last week.
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1 dead, 1 injured in Sunday shooting were both teens; suspect arrested after weapon discovered
DENVER – Police have arrested a man for investigation on murder and attempted murder charges after he allegedly shot two teenagers who had apparently gotten into his backyard marijuana plants early Sunday.
One of the teens, a 15-year old, was killed in the shooting, and the other, who is 14 years old, may be paralyzed, according to a probable cause statement for 48-year-old Keith Hammock’s arrest.
Police were called to a backyard between Race and High streets, near 28th Avenue, just after 2 a.m. Sunday.
They found the two teenagers unresponsive, according to the probable cause statement. Both were taken to Denver Health Medical, where one of them died.
The backyard in which the teens were found backed up to the backyard at 2830 High St., where officers found several “mature” marijuana plants.
Officers talked to Hammock, who lives at that address, and he told them his motion detector light had turned on around the time of the shooting, and that he had seen movement. He told officers he went to the yard and saw the two teens lying on the ground.
He then stopped talking to police and requested an attorney be present before he talked again, according to the probable cause statement.
Officers talked to Hammock’s roommate and former girlfriend, who told them she owned three guns, including a .22-caliber rifle.
The medical examiner notified police a .22-caliber bullet was recovered in the chest cavity of the teenager killed in the shooting.
After obtaining several search warrants to go through both the backyard and the home, police found two rifles, spent cartridge casings and a box of .22-caliber ammunition inside one of the rooms.
The screen of the window that faced the yard where the shooting occurred had also been tampered with, according to the probable cause statement.
In another room that faced the same direction, officers found two more rifles, as well as spent .22-caliber casings and more ammunition. Two spent casings were on the window seal of the window that faced the crime scene, and a .22-caliber rifle was sitting on a nearby chair, police wrote.
At some point afterward, officers arrested Hammock. The probable cause statement says the mother of the 14-year-old said the teen was shot twice and “may be paralyzed from the waist down.”
Terry O’Malley, a local defense attorney, used his trial experience in evaluating the case.
“You just don’t have the option of deadly force when somebody is outside your home,” O’Malley said. “I can’t go shooting in the dark at somebody for being on my property. There’s a real change when somebody comes inside your home.”
The case remains under investigation and interviews with witnesses are ongoing. Neither of the victims have been identified.
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