Colorado
Police in Colorado scout vehicles with too dark window tint, issue citations
Boulder police officers are running into a major problem- drivers having their window tint too dark in their vehicles. To fix this issue, the department is increasing patrols to spot these vehicles and even fine drivers.
Boulder Police Officer Steve Coon tells CBS News Colorado First Alert Traffic Tracker Reporter Brian Sherrod if they can’t see inside your vehicle, they can pull you over right away. If officers can’t see your silhouette, your window tint is way too dark.
According to Colorado’s Motor Vehicle Window Tint Law, HB19-1067, motor vehicles registered in Colorado have to transmit at least 70% of light through the windshield and 27% of light through other windows. The bill requires motor vehicles registered outside Colorado but operated in Colorado to transmit at least 20% of light through windows other than the windshield. Boulder police told CBS Colorado the top strip on the front windshield can be tinted but nothing lower than four inches from the top.
Boulder Police officers test the windows with a tint meter and a calibration strip. The tint on your windows can be no more or less than 2% of the 27% or 70% law requirement. The machine reads the numbers after being placed on the windows.
Coon told CBS Colorado that with the upcoming Hands-Free Law that goes into effect next month and for their safety, the tint needs to be lighter.
“The danger for police officers is we can’t see out of the vehicle,” Coon said. “A lot of times, I try to focus on the tint that is so dark you can’t see in it at all. I can’t see a silhouette of who’s driving so that’s dangerous for me because I don’t know what’s in the car or what’s going on in the car when I walk up to the car.”
Coon said there are no programs right now that will pay to have your window tint lighter. Drivers will have to visit a tint repair shop to get it completed.
In Colorado, if you are pulled over, this is a misdemeanor traffic offense, with a fine between $500 to $5,000.
Colorado
Suspect arrested after starting vehicle fire in Colorado Springs
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (KKTV) – Colorado Springs police arrested a suspect late Thursday night after he was suspected of starting a vehicle fire.
Colorado Springs police said at about 12:15 p.m., officers were called to the 2100 block of Vickers Drive, near North Academy Boulevard, to assist Colorado Springs firefighters with a vehicle fire.
During the investigation, police said officers learned that the suspect broke the front window and threw a lit object into the cab of the vehicle.
The vehicle was then engulfed in flames and was a complete loss, police said.
No one was in the parked vehicle at the time of the fire, police said.
At about 11 p.m., police said officers located and arrested the suspect, identified as 32-year-old Graison Dortch in the 4300 block of N Chestnut Street, near I-25 and Garden of the Gods Road.
Dortch was booked into the El Paso County Jail on charges of second-degree arson and use of an incendiary device, police said. Officers said both are class five felonies.
According to court records, as of Friday morning, Dortch is being held on no bond.
Copyright 2026 KKTV. All rights reserved.
Colorado
Douglas County, Colorado, celebrates Independence Day without fireworks
Colorado
MAP: Where Colorado wildfires are burning
-
Movie Reviews6 minutes agoThe Kernel: Freshly popped film reviews — Batch #6 – Excalibur
-
World18 minutes agoAI ‘Organisms’ Come Alive in Kuala Lumpur as Dutch Artist Unveils Immersive Show
-
Health41 minutes agoIs Skipping Breakfast Bad? The Weight-Loss Truth May Surprise You
-
Lifestyle56 minutes agoNearly half of Americans surveyed don’t know what America 250 commemorates
-
Technology1 hour agoAmazon updated 2023’s Fire HD 10 tablet with 4GB of RAM
-
World1 hour agoInterpol issues red notice for Ukrainian woman wanted for Monaco apartment bombing targeting oligarch
-
Politics1 hour agoMamdani blasts ICE agents, Elon Musk and ‘supremacy’ in America 250 speech ahead of July 4 weekend
-
Health1 hour agoWhat killed Americans in 1776? The answer is dramatically different from today