Showing posts with label Colo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Colo. Show all posts

Friday, December 13, 2013

Student gunman wounds 2 classmates in Colo. school



(AP) — A teenager who may have had a grudge against a teacher opened fire Friday with a shotgun at a suburban Denver high school, wounding two fellow students before killing himself.


Quick-thinking students alerted the targeted teacher, who quickly left the building, and police immediately locked down the scene on the eve of the Newtown massacre anniversary, a somber reminder of how commonplace school violence has become.


One of the wounded students, a girl, was hospitalized in serious condition. The other student suffered minor gunshot-related injuries and was expected to be released from the hospital Friday evening, authorities said.


A third person was being treated for unspecified injuries but had not been shot, a hospital spokeswoman said.


Arapahoe County Sheriff Grayson Robinson initially reported that the most seriously hurt student was wounded after confronting the gunman, but he later said that did not appear to be the case.


The gunman made no attempt to hide the weapon when he entered the school from a parking lot and started asking for the teacher by name, Robinson said.


When the teacher learned that he was being targeted, he left “in an effort to try to encourage the shooter to also leave the school,” the sheriff said. “That was a very wise tactical decision.”


Jessica Girard was in math class when she heard three shots.


“Then there was a bunch of yelling, and then I think one of the people who had been shot was yelling in the hallway ‘Make it stop,’” she said.


A suspected Molotov cocktail was also found inside the high school, the sheriff said. The bomb squad was investigating the device.


Within 20 minutes of the first report of a gunman, officers found the suspect’s body inside the school, Robinson said.


Several other Denver-area school districts went into lockdown as reports of the shooting spread. Police as far away as Fort Collins, about a two-hour drive north, stepped up school security.


Arapahoe High students were seen walking toward the school’s running track with their hands in the air, and television footage showed students being patted down. Robinson said deputies wanted to make sure there were no other conspirators. Authorities later concluded that the gunman had acted alone.


Nearby neighborhoods were jammed with cars as parents sought out their children. Some parents stood in long lines at a church. One young girl who was barefoot embraced her parents, and the family began to cry.


The shooting came a day before the anniversary of the Newtown, Conn., attack in which a gunman killed 20 children and six adults at Sandy Hook Elementary School.


Arapahoe High stands just 8 miles east of Columbine High School in Littleton, where two teenage shooters killed 12 classmates and a teacher before killing themselves in 1999. The practice of sending law enforcement directly into an active shooting, as was done Friday, was a tactic that developed in response to the Columbine shooting.


Since Columbine, Colorado has endured other mass shootings, including the killing of 12 people in a movie theater in nearby Aurora in 2012. But it was not until after the Newtown massacre that state lawmakers moved to enact stricter gun-control laws. Two Democratic lawmakers were recalled from office earlier this year for backing the laws, and a third recently resigned to avoid a recall election.


The district attorney prosecuting the theater shooting, George Brauchler, lives near the high school. At a news conference, he urged anyone who needed help to call a counseling service and gave out a phone number.


Tracy Monroe, who had step-siblings who attended Columbine, was standing outside Arapahoe High on Friday looking at her phone, reading text messages from her 15-year-old daughter inside.


Monroe said she got the first text from her daughter, sophomore Jade Stanton, at 12:41 p.m. The text read, “There’s sirens. It’s real. I love you.”


A few minutes later, Jade texted “shots were fired in our school.” Monroe rushed to the school and was relieved when Jade texted that a police officer entered her classroom and she was safe.


Monroe was family friends with a teacher killed in the Columbine shooting, Dave Sanders.


“We didn’t think it could happen in Colorado then, either,” Monroe said.


After hearing three shots, freshman Colton Powers said everyone “ran to the corner of the room and turned off the lights and locked the door and just waited, hoped for the best. A lot of people, I couldn’t see, but they were crying. I was scared. I didn’t know what to do.”


His mother, Shelly Powers, said she first got word of the shooting in the middle of a conference call at work.


“I dropped all my devices, got my keys and got in my car,” she said. “I was crying all the way here.”


More than 2,100 students attend Arapahoe High, where nine out of 10 graduates go on to college, according to the Littleton Public Schools website.


___


Associated Press Writer P. Solomon Banda in Centennial contributed to this report.


Associated Press



Powered By WizardRSS.com | Full Text RSS Feed | RFID | Amazon Affiliate

Top Headlines

Student gunman wounds 2 classmates in Colo. school

Friday, December 6, 2013

Udall, Hickenlooper Hold Small Leads in Colo.



Two Democrats running for re-election in Colorado next year appear to be vulnerable, as both have approval ratings that are underwater.


But according to a new survey conducted by the Democratic Party-affiliated Public Policy Polling, Gov. John Hickenlooper and Sen. Mark Udall still hold leads against all of their potential Republican challengers, despite their slipping numbers.


Hickenlooper, who ascended to office with an easy victory over former U.S. Rep. Tom Tancredo in 2010 (and who is occasionally mentioned as a potential 2016 presidential contender), now has the approval of just 45 percent of the state’s voters, while 48 percent disapprove of him.


But he leads Tancredo — who is running for governor again and currently leads the GOP primary field, according to PPP — by an eight-point margin (48 percent to 40 percent) in a hypothetical general election matchup.


The Republican candidate who comes closest to topping Hickenlooper in one-on-one matchups is state Sen. Greg Brophy, who trails the Democrat by just one point (44 percent to 43 percent).


But Brophy, who does not enjoy high name recognition statewide, sits in third place in the Republican field with just 9 percent of the GOP vote, far behind Tancredo (34 percent) and Secretary of State Scott Gessler (15 percent).


In the Senate race, the survey showed that 40 percent of voters approve of Udall, while 41 percent disapprove.


But the first-term Democrat leads all of his potential Republican opponents, including Ken Buck, who lost the 2010 Senate race to Democrat Michael Bennet — an outcome that was one of the toughest for the GOP to swallow in a year that otherwise saw Republicans riding a wave of victories nationwide.


Bennet won that race in large part by portraying Buck as an extremist on social issues. But Buck is currently the top choice for Republican primary voters to put up against Udall, earning 45 percent of the vote in the PPP survey.


State Sen. Randy Baumgardner was in a distant second with 8 percent of the vote and state Rep. Amy Stephens drew 7 percent support.


Udall’s lead over Buck in the poll was 46 percent to 42 percent, while his advantages over Baumgardner (47 percent to 40 percent) and Stephens (44 percent to 37 percent) were larger.


A major reason why both Colorado Democrats appear vulnerable is that President Obama’s approval rating in the state (which he won in both 2008 and 2012) has slipped to just 43 percent with 54 percent of voters disapproving of him.


The poll of 928 Colorado voters (including 355 “usual” Republican primary voters) was conducted Dec. 3-4. In the overall survey, the margin of error was plus or minus 3.2 percentage points; it was plus or minus 5.2 points for the GOP sample. 




RealClearPolitics – Articles



Udall, Hickenlooper Hold Small Leads in Colo.

Monday, September 16, 2013

Flooded Colo. towns clean up as rescues continue







Mud from flooding is shown covering the main street Sunday Sept. 15, 2013 in Estes Prk, Colo., after water and debris swamped the town when the Big Thompson River surged through Estes Park late Thursday and early Friday. In Estes Park, some 20 miles from Lyons, hundreds of homes and cabins were empty in the town that is a gateway to Rocky Mountain National Park. High water still covered several low-lying streets. Where the river had receded, it had left behind up to a foot of mud. (AP Photo/Jeri Clausing)





Mud from flooding is shown covering the main street Sunday Sept. 15, 2013 in Estes Prk, Colo., after water and debris swamped the town when the Big Thompson River surged through Estes Park late Thursday and early Friday. In Estes Park, some 20 miles from Lyons, hundreds of homes and cabins were empty in the town that is a gateway to Rocky Mountain National Park. High water still covered several low-lying streets. Where the river had receded, it had left behind up to a foot of mud. (AP Photo/Jeri Clausing)





Loaders scrape up mud Sunday Sept. 15, 2013, from the flooding that swept through Estes Park, Colo., that swamped the town’s main street when the Big Thompson River surged through Estes Park late Thursday and early Friday. (AP Photo/Jeri Clausing)





Carlos Duron, 3, and his mother, Vilma Maldonado, are evacuees from Longmont, Colo., staying at Mead High School with the Red Cross on Sunday, Sept. 15, 2013 in Mead, Colo. The National Weather Service says up to 2 inches of rain could fall Sunday, creating a risk of more flooding and mudslides. (AP Photo/The Daily Camera, Cliff Grassmick) NO SALES





People rush into LifeBridge Church to escape the rain in Longmont, Colo., on Sunday, Sept. 15, 2013. The National Weather Service says up to 2 inches of rain could fall Sunday, creating a risk of more flooding and mudslides. (AP Photo/The Daily Camera, Cliff Grassmick) NO SALES





A woman and little girl rush into LifeBridge Church to escape the new rain in Longmont, Colo., on Sunday, Sept. 15, 2013. The National Weather Service says up to 2 inches of rain could fall Sunday, creating a risk of more flooding and mudslides. (AP Photo/The Daily Camera, Cliff Grassmick) NO SALES













Buy AP Photo Reprints







(AP) — As Colorado mountain towns cut off for days by massive flooding slowly reopened, shopkeepers in this gateway to majestic Rocky Mountain National Park worked to both clean up and remove salvageable goods from ravaged businesses for fear the swollen Big Thompson River would rise again.


“We have limited time to get as much out as possible,” Aspen Evergreen owner Tamara Jarolimek said as she and her husband, James, worked furiously Sunday.


Outside, crews plowed up to a foot of mud left standing along Main Street after the river late Thursday and early Friday coursed through the heart of town.


“I hope I have enough flood insurance,” said Amy Hamrick, who had friends helping her pull up flooring and clear water and mud from the crawl space at her coffee shop. Her inventory, she said, was safely stashed at her home on higher grounds.


Meantime, hundreds of residents and evacuees gathered for updates from the town’s administrator, Frank Lancaster, who said “we are all crossing our fingers and praying” that it won’t happen again.


Across town, comparisons were repeatedly drawn to two historic and disastrous flash floods: the Big Thompson Canyon Flood of 1976 that killed 145 people, and the Lawn Lake flood of 1982 that killed three.


“Take those times 10, that’s what it looks like in the canyon,” said Deyn Johnson, owner of the Whispering Pines cottages, three of which floated down the river after massive amounts of water were released from the town’s dam. Johnson said the only warning she and her husband had to evacuate their home and their guest cabins came from their cat, Jezebel, who jumped on her sleeping husband at 4:30 a.m., batting at him and yowling.


“I always thought we were safe unless the dam went,” she said. “I credit the cat with saving my family and the lives of everyone in the cottages.”


From the mountain communities east to the plains city of Fort Morgan, numerous pockets of individuals remained cut off by the flooding. Sunday’s rain hampered the helicopter searches, and rescuers trekked by ground up dangerous canyon roads to reach some of those homes isolated since Wednesday.


The surging waters have been deadly, with four people confirmed dead and two more missing and presumed dead after their homes were swept away.


Gov. John Hickenlooper said on NBC’s “Today” show that 16 or 17 helicopters would resume searching Monday for cut off residents. “Our primary focus is making sure we get everyone in harm’s way out of there,” he said.


“You’re got to remember, a lot of these folks lost cellphones, landlines, the Internet four to five days ago,” he said. “I am very hopeful that the vast majority of these people are safe and sound.” However, he said, authorities expect the death toll to rise.


Some 1,500 homes have been destroyed and about 17,500 have been damaged, according to an initial estimate by the Colorado Office of Emergency Management.


In addition, 11,700 people left their homes, and a total of 1,253 people have not been heard from, state emergency officials said.


With phone service being restored to some of the areas over the weekend, officials hoped that number would drop as they contacted more stranded people.


As many as 1,000 people in Larimer County were awaiting rescue Sunday, but airlifts were grounded because of the rain, Type 2 Rocky Mountain Incident Management Team commander Shane Del Grosso said.


Hundreds more people are unaccounted for to the south in Boulder County and other flood-affected areas.


Air rescue efforts are planned to resume in Boulder County on Monday with improving weather.


The Office of Emergency Management is urging people who are cut off by floodwaters and need to evacuate but have been unable to communicate by phone or other means to signal helicopters passing overhead with sheets, mirrors, flares or signal fires.


The town of Lyons, about 20 miles from Estes Park, was almost completely abandoned. Emergency crews gave the few remaining residents, mostly wandering aimlessly on Main Street, looking for status updates from each other, a final warning to leave Sunday.


One man, a bluegrass musician, has been visiting his home every day and taking photos. The house has a river running through it and he can’t get close.


Most of the town’s trailer parks were completely destroyed. One angry man was throwing his possessions one-by-one into the river rushing along one side of his trailer on Sunday, watching the brown water carry them away while drinking a beer.


In Estes Park, Lancaster called the flood a 500-year event. He said it was worse than previous flash floods because of the sustained rains and widespread damage to infrastructure across the Rocky Mountain Foothills. Major road were washed away, small towns like Glen Haven reduced to debris and key infrastructure like gas lines and sewers systems destroyed, meaning hundreds of homes in Estes Park alone could be unreachable and uninhabitable for up to a year.


The good news here in Estes Park and the Estes Valley, Lancaster said, was there appeared to be no loss of life.


Still, hundreds remained stranded in remote areas.


“We know there are a lot of people trapped but they are trapped alive,” he told people gathered at Red Cross evacuation shelter Sunday afternoon.


And rescues continued throughout the day Sunday any way possible, including zip lines rigged to hoist people and pets across swollen rivers and creeks.


That’s how retirees Jerry Grove and Dorothy Scott-Grove — and their two golden retrievers — were finally rescued Friday night from their vacation cabin in Glen Haven. Although they may not be able to get back to their new car for six months to a year, and they were still trying to figure out how to get home, Scott-Grove said they were glad to be alive and were now looking at the experience as a “great adventure.”


As many as 1,700 homes in the Estes Park area were under evacuation notice, Lancaster said, but the issue was more about lack of access because of washed out roads and destroyed infrastructure.


Even the town’s historic Stanley Hotel, a structure that was the inspiration for Stephen King’s “The Shining,” suffered damaged, despite its perch on a hilltop overlooking the town and the river. Front desk worker Renee Maher said the ground was so saturated that water was seeping in through the foundation, and had caused one suite’s bathtub to pop out “like a keg,” Maher said.


Ironically, the massive Estes Ark — a former toy store two stories high designed to look like Noah’s Ark — was high and dry.


“I don’t know if it’s open anymore, but soon it’s going to be our only way out,” joked Carly Blankfein.


Associated Press




U.S. Headlines



Flooded Colo. towns clean up as rescues continue

Friday, August 30, 2013

DOJ green light for Wash., Colo. pot reformers







Washington state Gov. Jay Inslee, left, is joined by state Attorney General Bob Ferguson as he talks to the media in Olympia, Wash. about the federal government’s announcement that it will not sue to stop Washington and Colorado from taxing and regulating recreational marijuana for adults, on Thursday, Aug. 29, 2013. Last fall, voters made both states the first in the country to legalize the sale of marijuana to adults over 21 at state-licensed stores. The states are creating rules for the system, with sales expected to begin early next year. (AP Photo/Rachel La Corte)





Washington state Gov. Jay Inslee, left, is joined by state Attorney General Bob Ferguson as he talks to the media in Olympia, Wash. about the federal government’s announcement that it will not sue to stop Washington and Colorado from taxing and regulating recreational marijuana for adults, on Thursday, Aug. 29, 2013. Last fall, voters made both states the first in the country to legalize the sale of marijuana to adults over 21 at state-licensed stores. The states are creating rules for the system, with sales expected to begin early next year. (AP Photo/Rachel La Corte)





FILE – In this in Dec. 31, 2012 file photo, Rachel Schaefer of Denver smokes marijuana on the official opening night of Club 64, a marijuana-specific social club, where a New Year’s Eve party was held, in Denver. According to new guidance being issued Thursday, Aug. 29, 2013 to federal prosecutors across the country, the federal government will not make it a priority to block marijuana legalization in Colorado or Washington or close down recreational marijuana stores, so long as the stores abide by state regulations. (AP Photo/Brennan Linsley)





FILE – In this April 20, 2013 file photo, members of a crowd numbering tens of thousands smoke marijuana and listen to live music, at the Denver 420 pro-marijuana rally at Civic Center Park in Denver. The U.S. government said Thursday, Aug. 29, 2013 that the federal government will not make it a priority to block marijuana legalization in Colorado or Washington or close down recreational marijuana stores, so long as the stores abide by state regulations. (AP Photo/Brennan Linsley, File)













Buy AP Photo Reprints







(AP) — For generations, pot crusaders have called for an end to the nation’s prohibition of marijuana, citing everything from what they say are the government’s exaggerated claims about its dangers to the racial disparities in who gets busted for drug possession.


Now, they will get their chance in Colorado and Washington state to show that legalizing pot is better, less costly and more humane than the last 75 years of prohibition — all with the federal government’s blessing.


In a sweeping new policy statement, the Justice Department said Thursday it will not stand in the way of states that want to legalize, tax and regulate marijuana as voters in Washington and Colorado did last fall, as long as there are effective controls to keep marijuana away from kids, the black market and federal property.


“It’s nothing short of historic,” said Dan Riffle of the Marijuana Policy Project, which backed Colorado’s new law. “It’s a very big deal for the DOJ to say that if the states want to legalize marijuana, that’s fine. Everybody in this movement should be thrilled.”


It won’t just be the White House watching to make sure Washington and Colorado get it right. Voters in Oregon and Alaska could weigh marijuana legalization measures next year, and several states could face ballot questions in 2016, activists say.


Meanwhile, Latin and South American countries are also considering pot reform, and the Obama administration’s stance on Washington’s and Colorado’s laws could embolden them, said Ethan Nadelmann, executive director of the New York-based Drug Policy Alliance, which supported Washington’s law. Uruguay has already approved plans to license marijuana growers and shops.


The DOJ’s decision came nearly 10 months after the votes in Washington and Colorado, and officials in those states had been forging ahead to make rules for their new industries without knowing whether the federal government would sue to block sales from ever taking place on the grounds that they conflict with federal law.


Licensed, taxed marijuana sales in the two states are due to start next year, and officials have estimated they could raise tens or hundreds of millions of dollars for state coffers.


The administration’s guidance laid out eight federal law enforcement priorities that states need to protect if they want to authorize “marijuana-related conduct.” They include keeping marijuana in-state, off the black market, and away from children; preventing violence and gun crimes related to marijuana distribution; and preventing drugged driving.


The DOJ noted that it simply doesn’t have the resources to police all violations of federal marijuana law, and so it would focus on entities that threaten those priorities. If a state’s enforcement efforts don’t work, the feds could sue to block the state’s entire pot-regulating scheme, Deputy Attorney General James Cole wrote in a memo to all 94 U.S. attorneys around the country.


The priorities are similar to the factors the Justice Department has previously considered in determining whether to shut down medical marijuana dispensaries. But the memo also clarifies that just because a regulated marijuana operation is big and profitable isn’t reason enough to raid it.


Peter Bensinger, a former head of the Drug Enforcement Administration, criticized the announcement, saying the conflict between federal and state law can’t be reconciled. Federal law is paramount, and Attorney General Eric Holder is “not only abandoning the law, he’s breaking the law,” Bensinger said.


Some in the marijuana-reform community also criticized the memo, noting it did not represent a fundamental change in the law, which would require the approval of Congress.


“It’s like, ‘We’re going to be tolerant of this as long as we feel like it,’” argued Seattle marijuana defense attorney Douglas Hiatt. “Is a new administration just going to come in and shut it down?”


But others pointed to language in the memo they found remarkable coming from the Justice Department: an acknowledgement that a well-designed regulatory system could actually help achieve federal law enforcement goals.


“Indeed, a robust system may affirmatively address those priorities by, for example, implementing effective measures to prevent diversion of marijuana outside of the regulatory system and to other states, prohibiting access to marijuana by minors, and replacing an illicit marijuana trade that funds criminal enterprises with a tightly regulated market in which revenues are tracked and accounted for,” Cole wrote.


A Pew Research Center poll in March found that 60 percent of Americans think the federal government shouldn’t enforce federal marijuana laws in states where its use has been approved. Younger people, who tend to vote more Democratic, are especially prone to that view.


But opponents are worried these moves will lead to more use by young people. Colorado and Washington were states that helped re-elect Obama.


Kevin Sabet, the director of Project Smart Approaches to Marijuana, an anti-legalization group, predicted the new Justice Department policy will accelerate a national discussion about legalization because people will see its harms — including more drugged driving and higher high school dropout rates.


Kristi Kelly, a co-founder of three medical marijuana shops near Denver, said the Justice Department’s action is a step in the right direction.


“We’ve been operating in a gray area for a long time. We’re looking for some sort of concrete assurances that this industry is viable,” she said.


___


Yost reported from Washington, D.C. Associated Press writers Alicia Caldwell in Washington, D.C., Rachel La Corte in Olympia, Wash., and Kristen Wyatt in Denver contributed to this report.


Associated Press




U.S. Headlines



DOJ green light for Wash., Colo. pot reformers

Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Colo. kids stranded at school overnight by snow

Adnan Reza, a senior engineering student at the University of Colorado, from Dhaka, Bangladesh, removes the snow from his car on a sunny morning following a winter storm, in Boulder, Colo., Monday Feb. 25, 2013. Coloradoans are digging out from a major snowstorm that canceled flights, delayed opening of Denver city offices and piled up snow as much as two-feet deep.(AP Photo/Brennan Linsley)

Adnan Reza, a senior engineering student at the University of Colorado, from Dhaka, Bangladesh, removes the snow from his car on a sunny morning following a winter storm, in Boulder, Colo., Monday Feb. 25, 2013. Coloradoans are digging out from a major snowstorm that canceled flights, delayed opening of Denver city offices and piled up snow as much as two-feet deep.(AP Photo/Brennan Linsley)

Buy AP Photo Reprints

(AP) — About 60 students spent the night at their school on Colorado’s Eastern Plains after a windy snowstorm closed surrounding roads.

Miami-Yoder school principal Sharon Webb said Wednesday that the pre-schoolers to 12th graders watched movies, played basketball, ate concession-stand pizza and talked to their parents before bedtime.

The older kids slept on wrestling and gym mats covered with coats while the younger ones curled up on pre-school napping mats.

The school is a large version of a one-room school house. The students all know each other, and many are related, which Webb said gave it the feel of a sleepover.

Some drivers were also stranded. KKTV reported some spent the night at a fire station in Ellicott, southeast of Denver.

Many roads, including the eastern half of Interstate 70 in the state, have since reopened.

Associated Press


Top Headlines


Colo. kids stranded at school overnight by snow