Colorado
Vice President Biden speaks at 19th annual Korbel Dinner at DU
DENVER – Vice President Joe Biden spoke for close to an hour in Denver Thursday night at the annual Korbel Dinner at the University of Denver.
His speech focused primarily on US relations in the world, but he also spent time afterward with DU students who were holding a watch party across the hall.
Arriving to a standing ovation form the students, the vice president joked he wasn’t their teacher so they didn’t have to cheer for him.
Biden was the keynote speaker at the event, which served as a fundraiser for the School of International Studies. Among the international topics he visited, he said the next president needs to better relations with the Pacific and called this November an inflection point in world history.
The vice president also seemed to overtly give some opinions about this year’s presidential race.
“All politics is person. It matters,” he said. “You have to figure out what the other person’s interest is. You’ve got to figure out what their latitude is. You’ve got to figure out what their intentions are.”
After the dinner and his speech, several students took their opportunity to ask Biden some questions of their own.
One hit on the Middle East and another query was on the “Brexit,” but Biden joked with another student who asked about his thoughts on not running for president.
“I learned one way to become the most popular politician in America – you know what that is: Announce you’re not running for president,” he quipped.
Biden will stay in Denver overnight before heading to Houston to reveal new plans in advancing his Cancer Moonshot plan to speed up 10 years of cancer research into five years.
———
Sign up for Denver7 email alerts to stay informed about breaking news and daily headlines.
Gov. Hickenlooper is ‘sympathetic’ to proposed minimum wage hike; study says it will benefit Colo.
DENVER – Colorado’s governor says he remains “sympathetic” to a ballot measure that would increase the state’s minimum wage to $12 an hour by 2020 on the same day a report from a consortium of state colleges and universities noted the measure would benefit most of the state’s minimum wage workers.
The report from the University of Denver and Colorado Women’s College, in collaboration with The Women’s Foundation of Colorado, says the state’s gross domestic product (GDP) would increase by $400 million and 20 percent of Coloradans would see household income increases. Continue reading
Mistrial declared after hung jury in Paige Birgfield murder case
GRAND JUNCTION, Colo. – A Mesa County District Court judge declared a mistrial Friday in the murder trial of Lester Jones, who is accused in the 2007 kidnapping and murder of Paige Birgfield.
The decision came after four days of jury deliberations in the trial, which has been ongoing for several weeks.
The jury told the judge Friday morning they could not reach a unanimous decision in the case, and after the judge sent jurors back for further deliberations, they again could not come to a unanimous decision on first or second-degree murder and kidnapping charges.
The jury was split, with nine people finding Jones guilty, but three determining there was too much doubt to convict him.
District Attorney Daniel Rubinstein said he and the defense would go back to the judge Sept. 16 to reset a trial date.
Birgfield was a Grand Junction mother of three who secretly ran an escort service. She disappeared in June 2007 and her car was found burning in a Grand Junction parking lot days later.
Birgfield’s skeletal remains were found five years later in Delta County.
Police arrested Jones in December 2014 on murder and kidnapping charges, to which he pleaded not guilty. He was allegedly a client of Birgfield’s escort service, Models Inc.
He denied knowing Birgfield, though phone records connected the two and Jones worked across the street from where her car was found.
ABC News will feature a special report on the case Friday evening.
Sign up for Denver7 email alerts to stay informed about breaking news and daily headlines.
South Carolina man pleads guilty to tricking Colorado girls into sending explicit photos
DENVER – A South Carolina man previously convicted of sex offenses pleaded guilty Thursday to using fake Facebook profiles to trick six teenaged Colorado girls to send him explicit photos of themselves.
Christopher George White, 37, of McCormick, South Carolina, pleaded guilty to six counts of coercion and enticement of a minor in U.S. District Court Thursday.
He faces at least 10 years and up to life in prison, as well as a $250,000 fine, for each count.
The crimes happened over about a week during the summer of 2014. The plea agreement says White targeted girls aged 13 and 14 and used a fake Facebook profile to convince the girls he was a teen boy.
The convicted sex offender originally contacted the girls on Facebook, then talked with them through text messages and over the phone. Prosecutors say White would threaten the girls with violence or to send their explicit photos to their friends on social media if they did not send more photos.
Prosecutors say he used the fake names of “Kent Noelle” and “Glenn Black” to contact the girls and that he may have more victims. Anyone who believes they or their child was a victim is asked to call Homeland Security Investigations at 866-347-2423.
White is scheduled to be sentenced Dec. 14.
Sign up for Denver7 email alerts to stay informed about breaking news and daily headlines.
Stanford researchers develop marijuana saliva test based off cancer screening technology
PALO ALTO, California – Researchers at Stanford University say they have developed one of the first possible roadside tests to find out whether people are driving under the influence of marijuana.
Judicial and law enforcement agencies have for years tried to devise a plan for testing a driver’s impairment since the psychoactive ingredient in marijuana can stay active in a person’s cells for up to 45 days and breaks down in the body differently than alcohol.
The researchers at Stanford believe they may have the answer with their “potalyzer,” which the university says can quickly detect the presence of THC in a person’s saliva and measure its concentration levels in a few minutes.
The device uses magnetic biosensors, originally used in cancer screenings, that can detect THC molecules.
Field officers could theoretically swab a person’s cheek and receive the results of the test on a phone or computer in as little as three minutes, the researchers say.
Colorado drivers can be charged with driving under the influence if the amount of THC in their blood is at or above five nanograms per milliliter of blood.
The Stanford research model would be able to detect between 0 and 50 nanograms per milliliter of saliva.
Colorado State Patrol is in the midst of a three-year pilot program testing devices similar to the one developed at Stanford.
Over the past year, at least 150 troopers started using one of five tests that look at a driver’s saliva as well. CSP says it wants to collect several years’ worth of data before choosing a specific device.
More information on the Stanford model can be found here.
Denver burglar caught red-handed when paint trail leads back to his home
DENVER – A burglar was literally caught red-handed after he left a trail of paint from the convenience store he broke into back to his home.
A newly-unsealed search warrant show Daniel Cline, 37, made off with quite the haul when he burglarized the Mexicana Mart on West Alameda Avenue in late July.
After he broke into the store through a window air conditioning unit, he allegedly stole two laptops, cartons of cigarettes, pipes, an internet router, blunt wraps and a cordless drill, among other items.
But he apparently failed notice he had knocked over a can of bright red paint that had been sitting atop the air conditioning unit and had gotten it all over himself while rifling through the store.
A responding Denver Police Department officer noticed a trail of red footprints leading back out of the business and followed them down a nearby alley to a home in the 1500 block of West Alameda.
The officer noted in an affidavit for Cline’s arrest that there was red paint on a door jamb at the house and on its floor.
A back door was open, so the officer went inside and found Cline asleep inside with red paint on his arms, hands and socks.
Police confirmed Cline was the same man seen burglarizing the convenience store on surveillance video and charged him with second-degree burglary. He is due in court on the charge Sept. 26.
3 arrested in foiled kidnapping and ransom after man taken from Lakewood sex toy store
DENVER – A man kidnapped from a Lakewood sex store at gunpoint was returned to his family days later after they paid $200,000 in ransom money, and at least three people now face charges in the plot.
The kidnapping happened Aug. 30 at Chrystal’s in Lakewood and was followed by days of negotiations with the victim’s father. Ransom demands started at $500,000, and the kidnappers eventually received $200,000 in cash before local and federal authorities foiled the plan.
Andres Flores-Paredes, 27, was snatched from the adult store by several men wearing bulletproof vests and armed with assault rifles and grenades, among other weapons. The suspects had originally tried to kidnap his brother in a plan that had been in the making for months or even years, according to court documents.
Suspects were acquaintances of family of kidnapped man
Three people have already been arrested in the case and a fourth faces charges but has not been arrested.
One of the men allegedly involved in planning and carrying out the ordeal is still at large. Marco Antonio Cota-Tamaura, 36, “had a major conflict” regarding the horse industry and Flores-Paredes’s father, Andres Flores-Zapata, who runs a ranch near Commerce City.
Two brothers arrested in the plot – Raymundo Maldonado-Salgado, 22, and Jonatan Maldonado-Salgado, 19 – each knew the family as well, according to the documents. A third man, Hernando Aguilar-Banuelos, 30, has also been arrested for his alleged involvement.
After the initial kidnapping, court records say the men drove Flores-Paredes to different stash houses in Weld and Adams counties, where they repeatedly called Flores-Zapata to demand money, lest they kill his son.
Agents found suspects by tracing cell phones, addresses
The day after the kidnapping, Flores-Paredes’s car and phone were dropped back off at the family ranch. The demands continually decreased, but Flores-Zapata eventually agreed with the kidnappers to pay the $200,000 in ransom money, which would be dropped on the side of the road at an exit off I-70 near Bennett.
Meanwhile, authorities were tracing the cell phones being used by the suspects to make demands and communicate amongst themselves. DNA found on zip-ties recovered from the sex shop was traced to Cota Tamaura.
Jonatan Maldonado-Salgado was eventually identified as one of the suspects when his phone number led authorities to his Facebook page. A photo on that page showed him wearing the same hat he wore during the initial kidnapping, which was caught on surveillance cameras.
When the money was first dropped at the I-70 exit on Sept. 2, the suspects could not find it. Angry, they called Flores-Zapata – who was working with FBI agents – and agreed that the money be dropped at the front gate of the family ranch instead.
After picking up the money, an affidavit says the suspects drove to the Adams County home they used to hide Flores-Paredes in order to check the money for bugs or false bills. They then returned Flores-Paredes to his family’s ranch around 2 a.m. Sept. 3.
Lakewood Police picked Flores-Paredes up to interview him. He recounted his kidnapping, but was kept hooded and in the two separate places and did not know much else. He told detectives he overheard one of the suspects talked about coming from California “to do this job” and that the man used eight phones for the job.
After connecting cell phone records and traces to the suspects’ addresses, authorities served warrants at several of the suspects’ homes, bringing in the Maldonado-Salgado brothers at a home in Fort Lupton.
Aguilar-Banuelos allegedly stayed at the Adams County home before and after Flores-Paredes’s kidnapping, and knew of the plot despite his initial statements he knew nothing. Authorities discovered he was taken to a hotel for the three days Flores-Paredes was kept at the home, though agents say his story continually changed.
All three men allegedly admitted to kidnapping Flores-Paredes and being involved in extorting his family and face first-degree kidnapping charges.
Raymundo Maldonado-Salgado also faces felony menacing and criminal extortion charges. It is unclear exactly what charges the other two face.
Some of the $200,000 in ransom money put up by the family has been recovered, but not all of it.
Authorities said at a Wednesday news conference regarding the case that Cota-Tamaura should be considered armed and dangerous. Denver Crime Stoppers is offering a $5,000 reward for information leading to his arrest. Call 720-913-STOP with tips.
Sign up for Denver7 email alerts to stay informed about breaking news and daily headlines.
Colorado shows off nation’s first certified hemp seeds
FRUITA, Colo. – The Colorado Department of Agriculture showed off the nation’s first certified domestic hemp seeds Wednesday morning – another milestone in Colorado’s cannabis business.
Officials launched the development program in March, which officials say aims to bring industrial hemp back into agriculture. The seeds, grown and produced in Colorado, will receive CDA and Colorado Seed Growers Association approval and are available to be purchased by farmers.
CDA has worked with CSGA and Colorado State University over the past several months to breed plants that produce seeds under the 0.3 percent THC content threshold to qualify as hemp and not psychoactive marijuana.
Varying seed types were grown and tested in trials in different parts of the state in order to find ideal conditions for hemp so as to not put farmers at risk of having their plants destroyed should they buy the approved seeds.
Congress approved hemp production in 2014, but a state certification like Colorado’s is necessary to raise the crop.
Colorado farmers will be able to start buying and growing the seeds next year.
Report: Colorado’s home appreciation rates among highest in country
DENVER – A new report that looks at housing data shows Colorado has among the top four housing appreciation rates in the country over the past year.
The data, compiled by information company CoreLogic, shows that Colorado had the nation’s third-highest overall home price appreciation rate between July 2015 and July 2016. At 9.3 percent, its appreciation rate trailed only Washington (10.2 percent) and Oregon (11.2 percent).
Even when factoring out “distressed” properties, which include foreclosures, Colorado ranked fourth behind Washington, Oregon and West Virginia.
The rates handily beat the national average of a 6 percent year-over-year change.
In the Denver metro area, the change was even higher than the state average – at 10 percent. CoreLogic considers the housing market here “overvalued” and attributes the rise in appreciation due to continuing low mortgage rates and high purchase rates.
That being said, the report predicts appreciation will continue for at least the next year. Its models show a forecasted 5.9 percent increase over the next year.
It predicts home sales will reach a new peak level in October 2017.
Sign up for Denver7 email alerts to stay informed about breaking news and daily headlines.
Man sentenced to 45 years in brutal 2014 attack on woman at Aurora motel
AURORA, Colo. – A man who pleaded guilty to brutally attacking a woman at an Aurora motel in 2014 will spend 45 years in prison, an Adams County judge ruled Tuesday.
Jamal Michael Miles, 29, pleaded guilty to attempted first-degree murder and attempted sexual assault in the case in July.
Miles had been in the woman’s room at the Pacesetter Motel in March 2014 when he took issue with her asking him to leave.
Miles strangled and stabbed the woman, then slit her throat, raped her and tried to drown her in the motel’s bathtub. He then dragged her into a nearby ditch before a passerby intervened.
“This 45-year sentence means that this defendant will never hurt another member of our community,” Adams County District Attorney Dave Young said.
The woman suffered a fractured skull and deep cuts to her head, neck and hands in the incident, but survived.
A victim statement wasn’t available.
Sign up for Denver7 email alerts to stay informed about breaking news and daily headlines.