Politics
Denver council to take up, hear public opinion on extending Denver pot store hours on Monday
DENVER – The first public hearing and city council discussion on a bill that would allow Denver’s marijuana shops to stay open until 10 p.m. are set to get underway at Monday evening’s council meeting.
The city council’s special marijuana issue committee tentatively approved the measure in early April that would add three hours to the time Denver medical and recreational marijuana shops are allowed to stay open.
Currently, Denver requires stores within its city limits to close at 7 p.m. Other nearby municipalities, like Glendale and Edgewood, let pot shops stay open until midnight. Shops in Aurora, Boulder and Commerce City are open until 10 p.m.
The original bill had proposed a midnight closing time, but that was amended by the marijuana committee after weeks of discussion with marijuana business owners, law enforcement and marijuana proponents.
The bill passed committee by 12-1 and 11-2 votes.
When the state legalized recreational marijuana in 2014, it said shops could be open from 8 a.m. until midnight each day, but it also allowed municipalities to determine the hours the shops would stay open.
And in 2015, the state allowed medical shops to stay open for the same hours as recreational shops.
Discussions to keep Denver’s shops open longer have been ongoing for years, but took a step forward in January, when the proposal first was discussed.
Proponents of extending shop hours have argued doing so would make the city more competitive with its neighbors, despite the city having raked in about half of last year’s sales statewide.
A Denver Post questionnaire done ahead of the last city council election found many of the current councilors said they would at least consider extending marijuana shop hours.
Monday’s council meeting starts at 5:30 p.m. The bill is likely to get another hearing before a final vote.
If you’d like to speak at the public hearing, sign up with the Council Secretary before 5 p.m. in Room 451 of the City and County building, or sign up during the council’s recess.
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Undocumented Aurora mother of 4 detained for deportation by ICE after years of compliance: lawyer
DENVER – An undocumented woman from Aurora with a single conviction for driving without a license is set to be deported by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement after she was detained Wednesday in Centennial, according to her lawyer.
Maria de Jesus Jimenez Sanchez is a mother of four, including a developmentally-disabled daughter, and has lived in Aurora since 1999, according to her lawyer, Lakewood attorney Jennifer Kain-Rios.
Though Jimenez Sanchez received a deportation order in 2001, according to Kain-Rios, she was able to stay in the country.
In 2012, Jimenez Sanchez was pulled over and cited for driving without a license, after which she spent six months in detention by immigration officials, according to her attorney. Colorado now allows undocumented immigrants to obtain driver’s licenses.
But Jimenez Sanchez was granted a stay of removal, which has been renewed for the past four years because of her’s daughters condition, until she learned that the most recent request for a stay had been denied last month. She was picked up in Centennial Wednesday when she showed up for her routine immigration check-in despite knowing her stay had been denied, her lawyer says.
“Maria de Jesus complied with her check in appointment yesterday because she hoped that ICE would restrain itself, considering her good-faith efforts to comply with her Order of Supervision,” Kain-Rios said. “Maria de Jesus asked for the assistance of Rep. Coffman and Sen. Bennet’s offices to obtain a meaningful explanation, but only received curt and opaque responses from ICE.”
Kain-Rios says when they spoke with Coffman, he said that enforcement policies had changed under the new administration.
Jimenez Sanchez went to the meeting because she and her attorney had asked for an appeal of her stay’s rejection and they thought they would get an explanation for its denial, Kain-Rios told Denver7.
Kain-Rios says Jimenez Sanchez has four children: the 15-year-old developmentally-disabled daughter, and three other children aged 7, 8 and 19.
“[Jimenez Sanchez] has a critical meeting regarding her daughter’s education plan next week she needs to attend,” Kain-Rios said. “She wants to stay so she can continue to take care of her children.”
When reached for comment Thursday, an ICE spokesman told Denver7 he did not have information on the case readily available.
The children of another Denver-area undocumented woman, Jeanette Vizguerra, sent off for Washington Wednesday to protest ICE immigration enforcement actions, which the Department of Homeland Security has vowed to enforce more-strictly under the new administration.
Vizguerra and another Denver-area woman have sought sanctuary at local churches, as both are scheduled to be deported. Vizguerra’s situation is similar to Jimenez Sanchez’s as both saw their stays of deportation denied after several years of seamless compliance.
Nearly all of Colorado’s law enforcement agencies say they are in compliance with federal immigration rules.
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Coffman extends olive branch to progressives, but stands strong on health care decision in town hall
AURORA, Colo. – Rep. Mike Coffman made headlines Wednesday when he said that White House press secretary Sean Spicer “needs to go,” but the five-term Congressman from Colorado’s first in-person town hall of the year saw much more of a focus from those in attendance on the ongoing debate over the U.S. health care system.
Slated to speak with constituents at the CU Anschutz campus for an hour, Coffman instead listened to tough questions and demands from constituents for an additional 45 minutes, sometimes trying to find an olive branch and other times rebuffing those in attendance.
The roughly 800-person capacity room was not entirely filled despite tickets to the event selling out ahead of time. And the lengthy rules list for the event, which banned yelling, among other things, was never quite enforced. Though progressive groups protested Coffman both before and after the event, it’s unclear if any of the people who showed up solely to protest asked questions inside.
Many of the three-dozen or so people who asked questions pressed Coffman on his support for the American Health Care Act, the Paul Ryan-backed plan to repeal and replace Obamacare that was pulled before it could face a perhaps-embarrassing failed vote in the full House.
“Are you going to side with Trump or…stand with your constituents?” asked one woman.
“What will it take you to vote with your constituents?” another pressed.
“I voted for you because I thought you’d be a leader,” one constituent said, according to Politico’s coverage of the event. “I don’t see you leading.”
Still others asked about the pre-existing conditions, and others pressed Coffman on Medicaid, which hundreds of thousands of Coloradans utilize for health care coverage and the AHCA would have cut significantly over the next 10 years, according to the Congressional Budget Office.
Coffman said he ran on the idea that he would repeal and replace Obamacare, which is why he carried through supporting the Republican proposal, though he said he would “protect those with pre-existing conditions.”
Coffman has already been targeted by the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee as a seat Democrats hope they can flip in 2018.
His district, Colorado’s 6th, went to Hillary Clinton by 9 percentage points in 2016, and also went to Sen. Michael Bennet by a wide margin in 2014.
He already faces a challenge from Democrat Jason Crow, a Denver attorney who is a former paratrooper and Ranger in the U.S. Army who declared his candidacy Monday. A 25-year-old newcomer, Gabriel McArthur, is also running on the Democratic side.
Still, both face uphill battles to de-seat Coffman, who beat Morgan Carroll in 2016 by 31,000 votes – a few thousand fewer than he won by when he defeated Andrew Romanoff in 2014.
The last close election Coffman faced was in 2012, when he beat out Democrat Joe Mikloski by just 7,000 votes. That race also had fairly strong turnouts for Libertarian and independent candidates.
The district was the only in the state that saw a margin of victory between the candidates less than 10 percent in 2016.
But Coffman on Wednesday tried to find ways to meet Democrats in the audience and Republicans who are not pleased with Trump somewhere in the middle – something he did during the 2016 election but which has been mostly forgotten after his support for the AHCA.
He said he was “heading in [the] direction” of supporting having an independent counsel investigate possible ties between Russia and Trump associates.
He also said he supported a proposed law forcing the president, vice president and members of Congress to release their tax returns.
Immigration also came up, and Coffman said he would like to see undocumented immigrants who “have broken our immigration laws but haven’t broken our other laws” to “come out of the shadows.”
But the most noteworthy statement of the night for most opposed to Trump came at the end of the session, when Coffman was asked about Spicer’s comments, which he apologized for afterward, in which he said that Hitler didn’t use chemical weapons during World War II while comparing that to the gassing of civilians in Syria.
“He needs to go,” Coffman said of Spicer after being pressed on the issue.
But the seasoned Republican didn’t give in entirely to the crowd, saying that those “on the extreme left” would “never be satisfied,” while saying he would continue to vote as he felt necessary.
“When I disagree with the president, I will speak out against the president,” Coffman said. “But I’m not going to do it every other day.”
Coffman follows up town hall with interview Thursday
On the topic of healthcare, Coffman told Denver7 reporter Marc Stewart in an interview Thursday that he hopes the Republicans will likely write another healthcare bill.
“Do you think this is something we would see by the end of the year?” asked Stewart.
“I hope so,” Coffman said. “I mean, in my view, the end of the year is too late. I think we need to do it as soon as possible.”
He said he hopes that happens “in the next couple months.”
On immigration, Coffman sides with the president about securing the border, but feels policies also need to be realistic, especially when it comes to DREAMers.
“I think there ought to be some kind of DREAM Act for the young people that would allow them — through military service, through education, through work history — to have a path to citizenship.”
As far as undocumented immigrants living here now, Coffman provided no promises.
“Should you have that concern you could picked up by an ICE agent for no other reason than your citizenship status?” asked Sewart.
“I’m not going to speak to that,” Coffman said. “I think the administration is looking at different directions. I mean, they’re in violation of the law, and that’s why we have to reform the law.”
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Some empty seats as Colorado Rep. Mike Coffman’s talks to constituents in Aurora town hall
DENVER – U.S. Rep. Mike Coffman held a town hall in Aurora Wednesday evening, but it’s the strict list of requirements for admission to the event, not the issues at hand, that seem to be drawing the most attention.
The town hall is set to take place from 6 to 7 p.m. at the Education Building 2 South on the CU Anschutz Campus, located at East 17th Place in Aurora.
WATCH | Denver7 will stream the town hall starting at 6 p.m. in the live player below. If having trouble viewing, tap here.
“I look forward to a robust and informative discussion about all of the critical issues facing our community, state, and nation,” a news release from Coffman announcing the event says, adding that the Republican Congressman will also discuss current and upcoming legislation.
But some foes of Coffman’s say the restrictions to the event will foster anything but a robust discussion, and several progressive and Democratic groups plan to protest the event as such.
Coffman’s announcement for the town hall does carry with it an extensive list of requirements for people wanting to attend.
First, they had to sign up for tickets, which have already sold out. But not even all the people who were able to get tickets will be able to sit in the town hall itself; some will have to stand in an overflow room. People who were able to get tickets had to reserve their seats.
And if you’re not from Colorado’s 6th Congressional District, it’s unlikely you got one of the seats at the town hall even if you have a ticket.
“Due to the overwhelming response to our town hall meeting from across our district and the limited capacity of the venue, we will prioritize access to the auditorium to residents of the 6th District of Colorado,” the press release from Coffman says.
Even then, Coffman’s staff and “university representatives” still reserve the right not to let you in.
And if you are lucky enough to get into the town hall itself, there’s only a chance you’ll get to ask a question. Attendees will receive raffle tickets that will be drawn to determine who asks questions.
But should you manage to get a seat and a raffle ticket, be sure you adhere to the rest of the rules Coffman’s team has put in place for the event:
- Attendees must have a matching photo ID with a valid address that matches their ticket.
- No signs larger than 8.5 x 11 inches are allowed.
- No standing in aisles or blocking doors
- No yelling, shouting or disruptive behavior “So that everyone can participate in a constructive conversation.”
- No backpacks, food, drink or weapons – except for purses “of reasonable size.”
A group involving Indivisible Colorado District 6, Arapahoe County Democratic Party, Colorado Democratic Party, Mi Familia Vota, ProgressNow Colorado and Swing Left plans to organize protests outside of the town hall both before and afterward.
Heated town hall debates have been a staple of the past several months, especially as Republicans tried to convince constituents that the repeal and replacement of Obamacare was necessary – efforts that have so far failed in Congress.
Coffman made national news in January when he left early from a “community event” that his team said were actually one-on-one meetings, angering a large group of constituents present at Aurora’s Central Library for the event.
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Months after 2016 election, race for Colorado’s congressional districts in 2018 already heating up
DENVER – It’s been just over five months since the 2016 General Election, but two 2018 congressional races in Colorado are already heating up.
State Sen. Andy Kerr, a Democrat from Jefferson County, announced his bid for Colorado’s 7th Congressional District seat in an event a Dunstan Middle School in Lakewood – a school he attended years ago. Continue reading
Colorado sheriffs pleased with ICE’s suspension of ‘erroneous’ weekly ‘sanctuary city’ report
DENVER – The Denver Sheriff Department is welcoming the decision by federal immigration officials to stop publishing a controversial weekly report targeting jurisdictions deemed “uncooperative” with federal immigration enforcement efforts.
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement started releasing the report in late March, but it quickly drew backlash from law enforcement agencies and various cities and counties around the country that said the report contained erroneous information. So-called “sanctuary cities” have been targeted under the new administration and threatened with the loss of federal funding. Continue reading
As incidents involving body cameras increase, top manufacturer pushes them for all police
DENVER – Questions about the purpose of police body cameras and when their captured content should be publicly released have been renewed after the chief of police for Fort Collins said Sunday he wouldn’t release body camera video of one of his officers slamming a woman to the ground during an arrest until after an investigation.
The Fort Collins Police Department is one of a handful of Colorado law enforcement agencies that have bought body cameras for their officers, and one of few in the state that has pledged to outfit all of its officers with the technology. Continue reading
Gorsuch could cast key votes on these high-profile cases, could take up Colo. cake shop case
DENVER – Colorado’s Neil Gorsuch is now the ninth U.S. Supreme Court justice, and he will immediately be thrown into several high-profile cases in which he could cast the deciding vote.
The Supreme Court has for more than a year operated with just eight justices after Justice Antonin Scalia died unexpectedly in February 2016.
First up for Gorsuch and the full-bench court will be a case out of Missouri involving a church’s claim that its religious freedom is being violated by the state’s ban on public money going to religious organizations.
In Church of Columbia v. Pauley, the church argues that the state’s denial of public money to help build a playground violated the U.S. Constitution.
Gorsuch could also be called on to decide six cases argued last year should the other eight justices not be able to come to a majority conclusion. He would be called on to participate in new hearings on the cases and possibly break a 4-4 tie, but cannot issue decisions in any cases that do not end in a tied vote.
Among those cases are one involving a Mexican family suing a U.S. Border Patrol agent who shot their son across the Texas border.
There were two finalized 4-4 votes that resulted from Scalia’s death: one that involved public unions, and one that involved the detainment of undocumented immigrants, according to the New York Times.
The AP reports that those cases included one involving the rights of detained immigrants, and others involving discrimination involving housing and redistricting.
And the Supreme Court is set to hold private conferences on April 13 to decide what other cases it might soon hear.
Among the possibilities is the case involving the Masterpiece Cakeshop in Lakewood, whose owner, Jack Phillips, has asked the U.S. Supreme Court to review his case after a lower court ruled that Phillips discriminated against a gay couple who wanted a wedding cake in 2012.
Phillips has long claimed that as a Christian, he has the religious freedom to deny business to same-sex couples.
The Colorado Supreme Court last August declined to review the case, agreeing with a Colorado Court of Appeals decision that said the shop could continue to enforce its religious beliefs, but not while operating as a business in Colorado.
The U.S. Supreme Court could also take up a gun rights case out of San Diego in which the plaintiff argues the Second Amendment allows people to carry guns openly outside of their home, as well as a voter rights case involving voter identification and redistricting out of North Carolina at the April 13 conference. Four justices would have to vote to take up each case for a full court hearing.
Gorsuch, 49, is now the youngest Supreme Court justice, and Republicans hope that he will tip the majority back to conservatives, as was often the case with Scalia on the bench.
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Congressman Ed Perlmutter announces he’s running for governor of Colorado in 2018
GOLDEN, Colo. – Congressman Ed Perlmutter is joining the race for Colorado’s gubernatorial seat in 2018.
Rep. Perlmutter, a Democrat representing Colorado’s 7th Congressional District, made the announcement Sunday afternoon at a Natural Grocers in Golden.
Perlmutter just announced he is running for CO Gov. @DenverChannel pic.twitter.com/faIXGzDe2R
— Sally (@sallymamdooh) April 9, 2017
“We’ve begun to see part of Colorado’s way of life and economy threatened by the Trump administration when it comes to the environment, public lands, immigration, health care and our national labs,” Perlmutter told a crowd of people Sunday afternoon. “Some of the most important issues of our time are deadlocked in DC right now. That’s why continuing strong leadership at the state level is more important than ever.”
Perlmutter’s name has long been floated as a possible Democratic candidate in the race, with at least four others already putting their names in the hat.
Noel Ginsburg, a businessman, and former state lawmaker Mike Johnston have already announced their candidacies on the Democratic side.
18th Judicial District Attorney George Brauchler announced his candidacy on the Republican side Tuesday afternoon. He will face off against former state lawmaker Victor Mitchell and Loveland’s JoAnne Silva, a former banker from San Francisco who has lived in Loveland since 2003.
Late Sunday morning, former Colorado State Treasurer and Denver CFO Carey Kennedy also announced she will run for governor in 2018, adding she will make the announcement via Facebook Live on Monday, April 10.
More people are expected to file to run in coming months.
Perlmutter has lived in Jefferson County his entire life and is a graduate of Jefferson High School and the University of Colorado.
He worked as a private business lawyer for years before being elected to the state senate in 1994, where he served two terms.
Voters elected Perlmutter to represent the 7th Congressional District in 2006, a seat he has held ever since. He also served as a superdelegate during last year’s election.
Sunday’s announcement will be made at 1 p.m. at the Golden Natural Grocers, located at 2401 Ford Street.
Colorado’s 7th Congressional District covers Denver’s western and northern suburbs, including parts of Lakewood, Golden, Wheat Ridge, Arvada, Thornton, Commerce City and the area surrounding the northern and western sides of the Denver International Airport.
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Rep. Ed Perlmutter to make ‘announcement’ Sunday in Golden; is he running for governor?
DENVER – With a brand new “Perlmutter for Colorado” banner atop the news release, Rep. Ed Perlmutter, the Democrat who represents Colorado’s 7th Congressional District, said he would be making “an announcement” in Golden Sunday afternoon.
The release was accompanied by a long history of Perlmutter’s life and political wins in Colorado, leading many to believe that the congressman will be announcing his candidacy for governor in 2018. Continue reading