Nearly a year a horrific deadly crash on Highway 285 near Conifer, some surviving victims say their vehicles are still being held in Colorado impound lots.
In June, a semi truck driver slammed into traffic, forcing him to roll his truck on his side and dump a load of pipe and iron on top of five other vehicles. Those pipes fell on top of and killed one driver.
Photos from the aftermath of the crash show twisted and mangled metal that was at one time a Subaru that belonged to Annette Martin.
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Annette Martin
“We had decided we were going to have pizza for dinner and so I was just hopping in the car to run a quick errand,” Martin said.
Nancy Flynn was also a victim in the crash. Her white Infinity was sideswiped. On the back window is a sticker that says “PRAY FOR ME I DRIVE 285.” She believes that call for prayers was answered.
“It was a guardian angel watching over me or else I wouldn’t have survived,” Flynn said.
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Both women are victims of Ignacio Cruz-Mendoza. He was an undocumented driver with no valid commercial driver’s license who caused unimaginable pain in their lives.
Ignacio Cruz-Mendoza
CBS
“It’s something that I could never unsee and I’m sure the rest of the victims will never unsee it,” Flynn said, referring to the crash scene.
Cruz-Mendoza pleaded guilty, was sentenced, served his time and after being released in March he is now set to be deported.
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Flynn and Martin say their vehicles remain as evidence and are part of an open investigation.
“The car is just sitting there accumulating money every day,” Martin said. “$47 a day … that I’m supposed to pay to get the car back when they finally release it.”
Nancy Flynn
Flynn says she was told the same thing when she asked about getting her car back. While her insurance company now owns her car, she claims her agents were never allowed to see it. And when she asked to get items from inside, she says she was told that couldn’t happen.
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Flynn says she wanted something on the car that for her was priceless.
“That particular license plate in our case was … since our son had passed, we had a special license plate made. It was his soccer number and his initials and that meant a lot to us. And if we terminated that, we’d be giving that up,” Flynn said.
Both women say they have struggled for months to get answers from the district attorney’s office in Jefferson County and the Colorado State Patrol about why they would be responsible for paying storage fees associated with the impound lot.
CBS Colorado found they’re not in fact responsible, and the fees cannot start until the legal hold is lifted.
A spokesperson for the Colorado State Patrol, the agency that arranged the tow and storage of the vehicles, says owners are typically responsible, but in a car accident the insurance of the driver responsible for the crash should pay those fees. In this case that would be Monique Trucking company, which, in the days following the crash, was shut down and, the victims learned, had a reduced policy with not enough money to pay for all the damages.
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“That just adds to all the insanity of what’s happened,” Flynn said.
“I feel like the guy that caused the accident got away with a lot it. It was ridiculous,” Martin said. “I feel like we are suffering more punishment than he did.”
As of January, the DA’s office says they offer impound assistance to victims, should they be faced with any fees.
In an email, the Colorado State Patrol says they are working on the ability to store vehicles in a secured lot at no cost to victims.
Police in Northern Colorado are investigating after a crash involving multiple vehicles claimed the life of a pedestrian.
The Greeley Police Department received reports of a crash at the 5500 block of Highway 34 around 5:50 p.m. on Monday. When officers arrived, they discovered that two vehicles were involved in a crash with a 19-year-old woman who attempted to walk across the highway.
Police said there was no crosswalk in the area, and she was struck by the driver’s side of a Chevrolet Blazer. The impact knocked the woman into the inside lane, where she was struck by a Chevrolet Traverse. A witness told officers they saw the woman crossing the roadway ‘as traffic arrived at her location.’
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First responders attempted life-saving measures on the woman at the scene before she was taken to North Colorado Medical Center, where she was pronounced dead. GPD said the Weld County Coroner’s Office will release her identity at a later time.
Neither driver involved was injured in the crash. Police said they don’t expect charges to be filed against those drivers at the moment, but the case remains under investigation. The police department asked anyone with information on the crash to contact Officer Ed Kubala at Edward.Kubala@greeleypd.com.
Colorado’s best ski deal? Maybe one that costs nothing at all. At Steamboat Springs’ Howelsen Hill, “Sunday Funday is taken to an entirely new level,” reads the city webpage for Ski Free Sundays. Yes, on Sundays throughout the season, visitors need only to walk into the ticket office to grab a pass at no charge. […]
While Colorado ranks near the middle of U.S. states for carbon emissions per capita, it still produces enough CO2 per person to rival countries on the World Bank’s list of top emitters internationally.
In 2023, Colorado produced 13.9 metric tons of carbon dioxide emissions per capita. If it had been ranked by the World Bank during the same year, Colorado would have placed 14th among the more than 200 countries on the list, just behind Canada, at 14.1, and just ahead of the U.S. as a whole, at 13.7.
Among U.S. states, Colorado ranked 26th in carbon emissions per capita. Wyoming had the highest per capita emissions in the country, at 92.9 metric tons, while Maryland had the lowest, at 7.8.
Most of Colorado’s emissions come from energy production and consumption, primarily natural gas and oil production and electric power production and consumption.
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The Colorado Sun partners with Gigafact to produce fact briefs — bite-sized fact checks of trending claims. Read our methodology to learn how we check claims.
Sources
References:
Colorado State Energy Profile, U.S. Energy Information Administration, accessed in December 2025. Source link
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2023 Colorado Statewide Inventory of Greenhouse Gas Emissions and Sinks, pg. 128, Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment, November 2024. Source link
Senate Bill 24-230 Oil and Gas Production Fees, Colorado General Assembly, accessed in December, 2025. Source link
Senate Bill 23-016 Greenhouse Gas Reduction Measures, Colorado General Assembly, accessed in December 2025. Source link
Carbon dioxide emissions, World Bank Group, 2024, accessed in December 2025. Source link
Energy-related CO2 emission data tables, U.S. Energy Information Administration, accessed in December 2025. Source link
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Type of Story: Fact-Check
Checks a specific statement or set of statements asserted as fact.
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Cassis Tingley is a Denver-based freelance journalist. She’s spent the last three years covering topics ranging from political organizing and death doulas in the Denver community to academic freedom and administrative accountability at the…
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