West
Republican DA bucks blue state's 'broken sentencing' with tough-on-crime approach
A tough-on-crime Republican district attorney is using his years of prosecuting some of the most infamous cases in Colorado to crack down on crime across the blue state.
In January, George Brauchler became the first-ever district attorney for Colorado’s 23rd Judicial District, making it the first time in more than 60 years that Colorado added a new judicial district.
He previously served as DA for the 18th Judicial District, where he prosecuted some of the state’s biggest mass shooting cases, including at an Aurora movie theater and Columbine High School.
“I was a very young prosecutor when Columbine happened, and Columbine was the high school immediately to the south of where I graduated from high school,” Brauchler told Fox News Digital during an interview. “And so, when it occurred to be assigned to prosecute the felonies out of that, I thought at the time that would be the biggest, worst case I would ever handle, and I was wrong and that’s an amazing revelation to come to in this job.”
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George Brauchler, lead prosecutor in the case against convicted Colorado theater shooter James Holmes, responds to questions during an interview, Aug. 14, 2015, in Centennial, Colo. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski)
Soon after Brauchler was elected to a “broader version” of his current jurisdiction, the Aurora theater shooting case happened.
“A guy walked into a movie theater at about 2:25 in Alameda and tried to murder a theater full of people, and I ended up prosecuting that. We also ended up having a mass shooting here at a school at the end of my time in office. I was also asked to do the mock cross-examination of the victim in the Kobe Bryant rape case out of Vail back, I don’t know, almost 20 years ago now. It’s not anything you could really ever plan for. It’s just, you’re there. You always say yes,” Brauchler explained while reflecting on his earlier career.
“You end up developing a skill set and an expertise. And then you find yourself in a position to run for the first new district attorney’s office in over 60 years in Colorado. And you think, for whatever it’s worth, as humbly as I can put this, there just isn’t anybody that brings to this job right now the kind of experience that I have. And I hope to use it for the benefit of my community.”
Last month, Brauchler secured a rare first-degree murder conviction in a high-profile DUI case, which marked the first murder trial in Colorado’s newly formed 23rd Judicial District.
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The case involved Paul Stephenson, 57, who Brauchler said drank a bottle of Fireball and two beers before crashing into a minivan that was parked in Castle Rock last August.
“That case was so disturbing to me on a lot of levels,” Brauchler said.
Lt. Col. Matthew Anderson, a 39-year-old Air Force test pilot and father of four, was killed while pumping gas. His wife was inside the gas station store at the time of the crash. One of their children suffered a fractured skull and two others were also injured.
“On a Sunday afternoon, filling his car with gas while his wife goes to get the kids Popsicles, some two-time convicted drunk pours himself into a lifted Chevy Silverado, crosses five lanes of traffic, hops a curb, hits the accelerator to 98% and crushes that car at 45 miles an hour, injuring three of the kids and killing Lt. Col. Matt Anderson,” Brauchler said, describing the horrific scene that unfolded.
“In Colorado, the gut reaction charge would be, oh, that’s vehicular homicide. And that sounds horrible, but in Colorado, we have some of the weakest traffic laws in the country. So vehicular [homicide] would have only been punishable at most by 12 years in the Department of Corrections. Given our broken sentencing scheme, that guy would have been paroled in probably less than four years, and that seemed wholly unacceptable to me and everybody that looked at this case,” Brauchler continued.
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District Attorney George Brauchler talks to the media, May 18, 2016, after a plea hearing for retired Army Col. Eric Henderson, who was accused of hit-and-run, vehicular homicide and drunken driving resulting in the death of Colorado State Trooper Jaimie Jursevics in November 2015. (Andy Cross/Denver Post via Getty Images)
To ensure that justice was served, Brauchler said his office got a “little aggressive” and charged the driver with first-degree murder based on “extreme indifference.”
“We pursued it. And I’m not going to tell you it didn’t have risks. I’m not going to tell you that I didn’t have a pit in my stomach. But in about three and a half hours of deliberation after about a weeklong trial, the jury came back and said, ‘Yeah, guilty of first-degree murder,’ and we’re all pretty satisfied with that outcome,” Brauchler said.
Brauchler added what this case also highlighted was that he feels “we have lost sight of the purpose of the criminal justice system and taken our eye off the ball on day-to-day crimes,” like DUI.
“One thing about this is that there is no time of day, no road you can drive on that you can say, ‘Well, I’m safe from drunk drivers at this time on this road.’ My God, this was Sunday. On a road in the middle of Castle Rock, not a highway, on a road but across the street from the Douglas County Fair. If we don’t, I think, vigilantly attack this problem as much as any other, maybe more so, we’re going to see more of this, and this is the most preventable crime there is. This guy chose to risk people’s lives, and now he’s going to lose his freedom,” Brauchler said.
Brauchler said Anderson’s wife and children have recovered, but the ripple effects of witnessing the horrific scene are “still unknown as to how far they stretch through their lives.”
“How does seeing the violent death of their father in front of them, the way they saw him lying in the parking lot with a massive head injury, missing his leg above the ankle, how does that haunt them throughout the rest of their lives? I don’t think anybody knows,” Brauchler said.
Members of a police SWAT team march to Columbine High School on April 20, 1999. (AP/File)
“I have spoken with the widow many times. She is resilient and tough, but you can also see there’s something missing in her eyes. I don’t know how better to describe it, but I’ve seen it a lot with loss like this and that blue flame that flickers back there that tells you somebody’s fully engaged is just a little more diminished. It’s a little harder to see. And my hope for that family is that they can figure out a way to find happiness even without Col. Anderson.”
Tom Mustin, director of media relations for Brauchler’s office, told Fox News Digital that “typically, DUI cases lead to vehicular homicide charges, but this case set a new precedent and reflects DA Brauchler’s tough-on-crime approach that helped win him the office.”
“I don’t shy away from the description ‘tough on crime,’ but when did simply enforcing the law and having an expectation that there would be accountability for breaking it become ‘tough on [crime]?’” Brauchler said. “That just tells you how far we’ve shifted away from the idea of personal responsibility for criminal conduct. But I’m proud of the position we’ve taken. It’s been well-received everywhere. And I mean not just in our jurisdiction, but when I go to other jurisdictions.”
Brauchler, a Republican DA in the heavily blue Denver metro area, said Colorado has “taken such a sharp turn towards the progressive left that every other office is now dominated by Democrats,” which makes his position unique.
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A woman embraces her daughter after the Columbine High School shooting. (AP/File)
“I’ll tell you one thing that sticks out to me that’s odd is that I’ve made a real point of telling the public, even before I took office, we’re going to be an office that stands for the rule of law, and that if people come down here to steal from us or victimize us, they ought to expect to be incarcerated,” Brauchler said. “That message has been so overwhelmingly received and in a positive way, like people clap when I say that.”
Brauchler added that when he started working in his field 30 years ago and had this same messaging, it would have been a “yawn fest.”
“People would have been like, ‘Duh, that’s what prosecutors and police do.’ But that’s how far we’ve shifted in the other direction,” Brauchler said.
When asked about other high-profile cases like the Menendez brothers’ case in California, Brauchler said “there’s no good message that comes out of these two ever walking out of prison.”
“I remember when these cases happened, and I followed them like everybody else,” Brauchler said. “But this was a brutal, planned murder for the most selfish reasons possible. Anything they come up with at this point, by way of excuse, has already been air-dried in front of the jury and rejected when they were convicted. There’s no good message for America that comes out of these guys ever taking a free breath again.”
Brauchler said what is troubling about the Menendez brothers’ case being brought back up is that “every time something like this happens and someone sees any amount of success, it encourages others to do this.”
“You have to believe that there are any number of defense attorneys out there who are willing to shoot for the notoriety or the paycheck. In order to try to capture something like this, I’m not denigrating them. I know that’s business, but the answer should be that we should forget about the Menendez brothers.”
Brauchler said what the Menendez brothers’ case highlights is something that has been happening since the Aurora theater shooting that is amplifying killers.
“There has been a real concerted effort by decent people and many in the media to no longer amplify the killers; like, we should be focused on the victims. I would say since the Aurora theater shooter, I’ve said that guy’s name maybe four times through the whole trial, which lasted from Jan. 20th until April 7th, 2015. I said his name exactly twice. And that was by design,” Brauchler explained.
“And so here we are again, focused on the Menendez brothers and the Netflix things about the Menendez brothers. And I understand that, but we should really de-glorify the criminals and focus more on the victims and the crime that was committed. And I think that if you let these guys out, you do the opposite.”
Brauchler added that there are even studies now about the correlation between the amount of notoriety that a criminal gets and then copycat-type crimes.
“I’ll give you an example with Columbine. The STEM school mass shooting that I covered, both of those shooters had passing fascination with those Columbine shooters. We had a near-mass shooting at another high school right down the road from my kid’s high school. They both had a fascination with the Columbine shooters and the Aurora theater shooter. Guess which case he researched before he left his apartment back on July the 19th to go murder these people? Columbine. So, the more notorious an event or some people become, it does have an effect on other folks,” Brauchler said.
“I get it, we have to report the bad guy or bad girl at least once,” Brauchler continued. “Then after that, let’s not talk about them anymore. Let’s talk about the crime. Let’s talk about the victims, and let’s go to court.”
Stepheny Price is a writer for Fox News Digital and Fox Business. She covers topics including missing persons, homicides, national crime cases, illegal immigration, and more. Story tips and ideas can be sent to stepheny.price@fox.com
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Oregon
Marion County may join 6 other counties to control garbage, recycling
What to know about the Coffin Butte Landfill expansion proposal
Republic Services has asked Benton County for a conditional use permit to expand the 178-acre landfill.
Seven Oregon counties could join together to build and manage solid waste infrastructure and services, under a proposal being considered by a legislative task force.
The aim is to lower costs, provide stability, and ensure that one or two counties don’t bear the financial and environmental costs of taking the entire region’s garbage, Rep. Sarah Finger McDonald, D-Corvallis, told the 12-member Joint Task Force on Municipal Solid Waste in the Willamette Valley.
The Oregon Legislature created the task force last year, to identify solutions for solid waste disposal in the valley, after the region’s garbage disposal options were thrown into flux.
The Reworld incinerator in Brooks, where most of Marion County’s garbage was burned for four decades, closed at the end of 2024.
And residents in nearby Benton County are fighting an expansion of Coffin Butte Landfill, which takes much of Marion County’s and the region’s waste. Even with an expansion, the landfill is expected to close in little more than a decade.
The task force has met six times since mid-December 2025. It must submit a report to interim legislative committees related to the environment by Dec. 15. The task force sunsets on Dec. 31.
Finger McDonald’s proposal, which is the only one yet considered by the task force, would create a voluntary state and local partnership program designed to help counties, cities and regional governments finance and build garbage, recycling, composting and waste-reduction infrastructure.
It would include Marion, Polk, Yamhill, Linn, Benton, Lincoln and Tillamook counties.
“The cities and counties will come together to make a plan. The cities and the counties in this region know what the problem is,” McDonald Finger said. “Whatever is going to be built is going to be expensive.”
The proposal authorizes local governments and regional authorities to direct waste into approved systems when necessary to support infrastructure financing and long-term system stability.
Marion County is currently the only county in the state with a law giving it control over waste disposal, although Oregon Metro manages garbage and recycling for the three-county Portland Metro area.
The proposal would allow the state to help local governments with bonding assistance, matching grants, technical assistance and more. Local governments could choose to build transfer stations, recycling facilities, composting systems, methane capture projects or other infrastructure projects.
“And then those cities and counties would build that infrastructure they need, and would have the option of establishing a fee,” she said.
The proposal also could allow public-private partnerships and collaboration with private waste operators, Finger McDonald said.
The earliest the legislature could pass a bill authorizing the plan would be 2027, Finger McDonald said, meaning it would not go into effect until 2028.
Tracy Loew covers the environment at the Statesman Journal. Send comments, questions and tips: tloew@statesmanjournal.com or 503-399-6779. Follow her on X at @Tracy_Loew
Utah
Utah Royals FC Announce the Addition of Assistant Coach Jessie van den Broek to 2026 Coaching Staff | Utah Royals
HERRIMAN, Utah – (Thursday, June 25, 2026) – URFC announced today the addition of assistant coach Jessie van den Broek to the 2026 technical staff.
The Dutchwoman brings experience from several levels of soccer across Europe. Her coaching journey has steadily progressed through commitment to player development, making her a strong addition to the Royals as the club continues to build for the future.
After gaining coaching experience at various levels, van den Broek made the jump to professional soccer in Germany’s Bundesliga, joining as an assistant coach and second in command to head coach Robert de Pauw and helping to support the club in its sixth place finish during the 2023-24 season. After a year and a half in Germany, she followed de Pauw to England, joining the coaching staff of Aston Villa Women, continuing to expand her experience in one of Europe’s top leagues.
In 2025, van den Broek returned to her native country of the Netherlands to join the coaching staff of HERA United, the country’s first stand-alone women’s soccer club. Her work with HERA United further strengthened her coaching abilities and her dedication to the women’s game. Following the conclusion of the club’s season in May 2026, she has now accepted her first position overseas, joining the Utah Royals, bringing the international experience and diverse coaching background with her.
Away from the pitch, van den Broek attended Radbound University in the Netherlands, earning a bachelor’s degree in Public Administration. She also earned an A Licence through the Union of European Football Associations in 2025. Her combination of education and coaching credentials, along with her experience in Germany, England and the Netherlands gives Utah Royals FC a coach with high-level experience and a proven commitment to the game of women’s soccer.
The Royals return to NWSL play on July 5 to take on the Chicago Stars at Northwestern Medicine Field at Martin Stadium with kickoff set for 3:00 p.m. MT. The match is available to watch on CBS Sports Network and KMYU.
Washington
NFL announces dates for loaded 2027 draft in Washington, D.C.
The 2027 NFL Draft in Washington, D.C., will be held April 29-May 1, the league announced Thursday, setting the nation’s capital as the backdrop for what could be one of the deepest classes in recent history.
NFL commissioner Roger Goodell announced in May 2025 during an Oval Office news conference with President Donald Trump, Commanders owner Josh Harris and D.C. mayor Muriel E. Bowser (D), that D.C. was selected as the host site for ’27 and is expected to draw more than a million visitors.
“It will be something that will show the world how far the nation’s capital has come and where it’s going,” Goodell said at the time.
How does the NFL draft work?
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Although plenty could change over the next 10 months, the 2027 draft has a chance to be the most anticipated in recent memory because of the star power of the class.
Like most drafts, the 2027 group will be largely judged by the quarterbacks. Texas’ Arch Manning is at the top of the list, and if he picks up where he left off last season, he has a great chance to follow in the footsteps of his uncles, Peyton and Eli, and be drafted No. 1. Dante Moore would punch his ticket for the first round with another productive year at Oregon, and scouts are optimistic for the developmental paths of South Carolina’s LaNorris Sellers, LSU’s Sam Leavitt, Oklahoma State’s Drew Mestemaker, Miami’s Darian Mensah and several others.
The class will also likely include former Cincinnati and Texas Tech quarterback Brendan Sorsby, barring any successful legal action after the NFL declined his application and chose not to hold a supplemental draft in 2026.
But the depth of the 2027 class goes far beyond the quarterbacks. Notre Dame’s Leonard Moore could be one of the highest-graded cornerbacks of the last decade. South Carolina’s Dylan Stewart is a twitched-up pass rusher with top-10 traits. And Ohio State receiver Jeremiah Smith is on track to be one of the best overall prospects in recent years.
The three-day event will be spread across multiple sites in the District, with the main stage held on the National Mall in front of the Capitol and the NFL Draft Experience spanning Pennsylvania Avenue NW between 3rd and 7th Streets, in front of the National Gallery of Art.
For nearly four decades, the NFL Draft was held at multiple locations in New York. But in 2015 and ’16, because of a scheduling conflict at Radio City Music Hall, the league moved it to Chicago and has since held it in various NFL cities across the country. The change has turned the draft into one of the league’s most popular, and accessible, events of the year.
The 2024 draft, which D.C. bid to host, was ultimately held in Detroit and brought a then-record 600,000 attendees, a figure topped by this year’s draft in Pittsburgh, which drew 805,000 visitors.
Prior to the 2026 draft, the Steelers and Visit Pittsburgh estimated the event would bring in roughly 500,000 visitors that would generate anywhere from $120 million to $213 million in regional economic impact.
“We’re confident that the return, with the number of people who attended over the course of the three days and really the course of the week, that we’ll be in good shape there,” Steelers VP of business development and strategy Dan Rooney III told The Athletic after the event.
A delegation from D.C. attended the Pittsburgh draft and took the official handoff from the Steelers at the conclusion, setting in motion a busy year in D.C.
Planning for the 2027 draft began four years ago, when Harris and his group of investors purchased the team for $6.05 billion from former owner Daniel Snyder. The group essentially revived details of the team’s earlier bid, which some believe failed because Snyder still owned the team.
NFL Draft host cities are typically announced two years in advance because of the extensive planning required. But having it in D.C. adds even more layers of complexity, much like the Commanders’ new stadium, which will be built on the site of the former RFK Stadium along the Anacostia River.
For one, the National Mall is federally owned and managed by the National Park Service, which typically does not approve permitting for events more than a year in advance.
The last time D.C. hosted the NFL Draft was Dec. 10, 1940, at the Willard Hotel. The draft was 22 rounds back then.
“This is a historic moment for our organization, our fans, and the entire region,” Commanders president Mark Clouse said in a release Thursday. “The Draft has become one of the premier events in sports and entertainment, and with the momentum around football in this area, from the rapid growth of youth flag football to our return to the RFK site, there is no better time to bring it to the nation’s capital.”
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Utah38 minutes agoUtah Royals FC Announce the Addition of Assistant Coach Jessie van den Broek to 2026 Coaching Staff | Utah Royals