Politics

Gov. Hickenlooper pardons Rene Lima-Marin as family fights deportation to Cuba

DENVER – Governor John Hickenlooper heard the calls from lawyers and activists, awarding Rene Lima-Marin a pardon, although he said it’s not yet known if that will help the reformed criminal win his fight to stay in the U.S.

Lima-Marin won a release from prison on Tuesday after a yearslong fight to get him back out of custody. He was originally sentenced to nearly 100 years in prison for a 2000 robbery, kidnapping and burglary case and was mistakenly released into a parole program in 2008. Continue reading

Class-action suit filed alleging Chipotle’s ‘elementary’ security, negligence led to data breach

DENVER – Chipotle faces a class-action lawsuit for the potential data breach the company first reported last month, alleging the company’s willful negligence and “elementary” security measures led to the breach and is now costing banks and customers money.

The Denver-based company first reported the possible breach late last month, saying that credit and debit cards used between March 24 and April 18 of this year may have been compromised by “unauthorized activity” on company servers.

“Consistent with good practices, consumer should closely monitor their payment card statements. If anyone sees an unauthorized charge, they should immediately notify the bank that issued the card,” the company said in its statement. “Payment card network rules generally state that cardholders are not responsible for such charges.”

And that statement is exactly what the lawsuit filed May 4 in the U.S. District Court of Colorado claims is the basis for the suit.

The suit’s class has yet to be certified, but it was filed by New Hampshire-based Bellwether Community Credit Union on the behalf of all “credit unions, banks, and other financial institutions” they may have had to reissue customers’ cards that were compromised in the breach, close compromised accounts, or remedy any false transactions.

The suit claims that there are more than 100 members of the proposed class, and that alleged damages exceed $5 million.

Though it’s still unclear how many customers may have been affected in the alleged breach, the suit claims that the company knew it was putting itself at risk for further security breaches after a 2004 breach and a handful of recent ones involving other food-service companies.

“The deficiencies in Chipotle’s security system include a lack of elementary security measures, which even the most inexperienced IT professional could identify as problematic,” the suit says.

It claims that the company, which had around 2,250 U.S. locations as of March 31, failed to upgrade its security after a breach the company says cost it about $4.3 million between 2004 and 2006.

The suit also cites Chipotle’s February 2017 annual report to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), in which the company itself said:

“We may in the future become subject to additional claims for purportedly fraudulent transactions arising out of the actual or alleged theft of credit or debit card information, and we may also be subject to lawsuits or other proceedings in the future relating to these types of incidents … Consumer perception of our brand could also be negatively affected by these events, which could further adversely affect our results and prospects.

“The liabilities resulting from any of the foregoing would likely be far greater than the losses we recorded in connection with the data breach incident in 2004.”

The suit claims that one of the biggest problems that led to the hacking was Chipotle’s failure to adhere to credit card companies’ regulations that required companies to start using chip technology by October 2015.

The chips mask information contained within transactions about credit card information, unlike the former magnetic strip cards.

But the suit claims that Chipotle stated specifically that it would not switch over to the chip-only system because it would “slow down customer lines.”

By doing so, the company opened itself up to face damages from litigation, as per the regulations set forth by the card companies that said that any business not adhering to the October 2015 deadline would “agree to be liable for damages resulting from any data breaches,” according to the lawsuit.

The suit says that Chipotle has said that 70 percent of its sales involved a debit or credit card transaction, and estimates that “hundreds of thousands” of Chipotle customers could have had their private credit and debit card numbers, and information relating to them, compromised.

Since the burden is on banks to close accounts and reissue new cards, the suit claims that any bank having to do so because of the Chipotle breach is damaged by the breach and subject to compensation.

The class, should it be certified, requests damages and injunctive and declaratory relief on the basis that Chipotle was negligent in its failure to upgrade its security systems for transactions and data storage.

It asks a judge to issue an injunction forcing Chipotle to adhere to industry-standard encryption methods, switch to chip-card readers, and undergo a large audit and subsequent upgrade of its security systems.

A request for comment made to Chipotle had not been returned as of the time of publishing.

A scheduling conference for the case has been set for July 18 in Denver.

Bipartisan bills to protect marijuana from federal crackdown introduced by Colo. members of Congress

DENVER – Efforts to protect states with legal marijuana programs from any possible federal crackdown are gaining bipartisan momentum in Congress, and several of Colorado’s lawmakers are playing a big part in trying to get legislation passed.

U.S. Reps. Diana DeGette (D) and Mike Coffman (R) introduced a bill Thursday that revises the federal Controlled Substances Act to keep Congress or any federal entities from interfering in legal state marijuana markets.

The two introduced a similar bill in 2012 after Colorado voters first approved the constitutional amendment that legalized recreational marijuana in the state, but it ultimately failed.

“This bill makes clear that we’re not going back to the days of raids on legal dispensaries, of folks living in fear that they’re not going to get the medical marijuana they need, or that they might get jailed for using it,” DeGette said.

“While I have opposed the legalization of marijuana, the people of Colorado voted for an initiative in 2012 that legalized marijuana and placed it in our state’s constitution,” Coffman said.

“Since it this is clearly not a matter of interstate commerce, I believe that the people of Colorado had every right, under the U.S. Constitution, to decide this issue for themselves and as their representative in Congress, I have an obligation to respect the will of the people of Colorado and that’s why I’m reintroducing this bill with Congresswoman DeGette,” he continued.

Their bill comes a day after U.S. Sens. Cory Gardner (R) and Michael Bennet (D), along with a bipartisan group of senators, introduced a bill that would ease regulations on how marijuana businesses are allowed to deal with banks.

It would bar federal regulators from stopping or penalizing a bank from working with legal marijuana businesses or taking away FDIC approval from the bank. It would also stop banks and regulators from barring loans to people operating legal marijuana businesses.

While some Colorado marijuana businesses now allow people to use debit or credit cards, many still operate on cashless ATM or cash-only systems.

“The lack of access to banking services for marijuana businesses is a key issue in Colorado,” Bennet said. “It raises significant public safety concerns for both employees and customers of these businesses and creates compliance and oversight challenges.

Rep. Jared Polis (D) introduced a bill earlier this year that aims to have the feds regulate marijuana like alcohol.

Also introduced in recent weeks was a bill by Virginia Republican Rep. Thomas Garrett, which lifts federal restrictions on medical and recreational marijuana programs and allows states to operate their own. The bill also has support from both sides of the aisle.

Some Colorado Republican congressmen back away from Trump amid concerns over Russia conduct

DENVER – Two of Colorado’s most-scrutinized Republican members of Congress said Tuesday they have grave concerns about President Donald Trump sharing highly classified information with two high-ranking Russian officials last week.

The responses from Sen. Cory Gardner and Rep. Mike Coffman came after the Washington Post reported the information sharing, which included details on ISIS operations and plans the U.S. had obtained from a sensitive Middle Eastern ally and had yet to share with other close allies, according to the report. Continue reading

Trump allegedly leaked classified info to Russians: How Colorado’s members of Congress are reacting

WASHINGTON – President Donald Trump shared highly classified information about U.S. operations involving the Islamic State with two high-ranking Russian officials in a meeting last week, according to a story first published by the Washington Post and later corroborated by multiple other news organizations on Monday.

The White House has called the report false, but news outlets are standing by their stories. In Congress, most members have been cautious in their reactions, but many say if the stories are true, that Trump’s actions are concerning. Continue reading

Reports: Colorado Springs Mayor John Suthers not interviewed for FBI director job

DENVER – Colorado Springs Mayor John Suthers won’t be the new director of the FBI after all, as multiple reports Monday say that he wasn’t among the eight people interviewed for the position over the weekend, and that interviews have wrapped.

Bloomberg and CNN report that the eight people interviewed for the job, left open after former director James Comey was fired by the president last week, will be the only candidates considered:

  • Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas
  • Acting FBI Director Andrew McCabe
  • Former Rep. Mike Rogers, R-Michigan, a former FBI agent
  • U.S. District Court Judge Henry Hudson
  • Adam Lee, the FBI special agent heading the Richmond, Virginia office
  • Former U.S. Attorney Michael Garcia
  • Former Homeland Security adviser Fran Townsend
  • Former Justice Department official Alice Fisher

U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions and Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein conducted the interviews over the weekend, and President Donald Trump has hinted that he may name a new director by Friday, before he leaves on a trip to the Middle East.

Fox News reported last Friday that Suthers was among those on the short list to be interviewed for the position.

Sen. Cory Gardner, R-Colo., nominated Suthers, who took over at the mayor’s office in 2015. He previously served as Colorado’s attorney general from 2005 to 2015, and served as the U.S. Attorney for Colorado from 2001 to 2005 after being appointed by President Bush and confirmed.

He began his career by serving as the deputy and chief deputy district attorney in Colorado Springs, and also headed the state’s department of corrections.

In a statement to Colorado Politics on Friday, a spokesperson for Suthers said he was “honored” to be listed as a possibility, but said it would be “premature” to comment further on the possibility.

But Gardner said Suthers would be an “excellent choice” to head the FBI, which was seconded by Rep. Mike Coffman, who added that Suthers was “independent and tough.”

According to Colorado Politics, Suthers also received endorsements from former Gov. Bill Owens, current Gov. John Hickenlooper and current Colorado Attorney General Cynthia Coffman on Friday.

A spokesperson for Colorado Springs told Denver7 Monday that Suthers had no comment on the FBI position.

“Local residents can be assured that this is business as usual in the City of Colorado Springs,” the spokesperson said.

Lawmakers over the weekend called for Trump to nominate a nonpartisan figure to lead the agency amid much uproar over Comey’s firing, which Democrats and Republicans alike say appears to have been politically-motivated.

The FBI Agents Association, the union representing the ground-level FBI agents, endorsed Rogers over the weekend.

Senate rules for nominations such as the FBI director require nominees be confirmed only by 51 votes. The Republicans have 52 seats in the Senate.

Senate Majority Leader announced Monday that Rosenstein will brief all 100 senators regarding Comey’s firing Thursday afternoon.

Rep. Mike Coffman says ‘cloud’ hanging over Trump administration, causing polarized Congress

DENVER – U.S. Rep. Mike Coffman says the appointment of a special prosecutor in the ongoing probe into Russia’s alleged ties with members of President Trump’s campaign and administration is the only way to cut through the “cloud” hanging over the White House and Congress.

Coffman sat down for a one-on-one interview with Denver7 Friday, moments after White House press secretary Sean Spicer wrapped up a contentious press briefing in which he was grilled over Trump’s statements earlier this week in which he hinted that he had fired former FBI Director James Comey because of the Russia probe. Continue reading

Draft rules for Denver’s social marijuana clubs released; patron waiver draws early concern

DENVER – Businesses looking to get one of Denver’s first-of-its-kind social marijuana consumption permits got their first look Thursday at the stringent draft of rules and regulations they will likely have to adhere to if they want one of the permits.

Denver voters approved Initiative 300 last November, which opens up the possibility for the existence of the clubs. The city, state and local organizations have been hammering out exactly what requirements the businesses have to follow since. Continue reading

Hickenlooper says special session might be coming to address roads, health care funding

DENVER – Colorado’s legislative session ended Wednesday, but the Legislature could be back at the Capitol this month after Gov. John Hickenlooper said Thursday he’s considering calling a special session to address what he sees as shortfalls in addressing transportation and health care budget concerns.

Both parties were able to reach some last-minute bipartisan agreements that brought some money in to address state roads and highways, health care concerns, education issues and construction defects. Continue reading

Bennet, other Dems ‘very concerned’ about administration’s stances on opioids, marijuana

DENVER – U.S. Sen Michael Bennet, D-Colo., and five other Senate Democrats sent a letter this week to the acting director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy saying they are concerned about the administration’s “open hostility” to states with legal marijuana and possible budget cuts that they say could exacerbate the opioid crisis.

The letter was signed by six Democrats on the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee and sent to Office of National Drug Control Policy Acting Director Richard Baum on Monday.

Baum had previously asked the committee for input on the administration’s new drug control policy, and Monday’s letter was the Democrats’ response.

“We appreciate any sincere efforts to combat substance use disorders. We are concerned that this administration may revert to a policy that focuses on the criminal justice system over public health efforts,” the letter reads.

The senators say proposed 95 percent budget cuts to the Office of National Drug Control Policy and the repeal of several Obama-era policies aimed at responding to the opioid epidemic and other illicit drug use would have far-reaching negative effects on addressing drug abuse.

“A meaningful effort to combat substance use disorders must focus on the full implementation of [the Comprehensive Addiction and Recovery Act], adequate funding for [the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration], and improving the Affordable Care Act by expanding access to mental health and substance use disorder services and health insurance,” the letter says.

The senators called the Republican replacement for Obamacare, the American Health Care Act, a “major step backwards in the prevention and treatment of drug addiction.”

“We are very concerned that this administration will exacerbate the opioid epidemic rather than alleviate it,” the letter said.

But the senators said they were also worried about the administration’s stance on how it might enforce federal laws regarding legal marijuana.

“We are also concerned by the administration’s open hostility to state policies legalizing or decriminalizing the possession and use of medical or recreational marijuana,” the senators wrote.

They suggested that the Justice Department and Drug Enforcement Agency target deadly drugs instead of focusing any efforts on legal marijuana, which has never itself killed anyone.

“Particularly given the severity of the ongoing opioid use epidemic, federal resources should be targeted at providing comprehensive substance use disorder programs and cutting off the flow of deadly drugs rather than interfering with state regulatory regimes for marijuana,” the letter said.

The administration and Jeff Sessions-led Justice Department are still reviewing their policies.