West
Colorado dorm murders suspect was student at university, school says
The suspect arrested in connection to the shooting inside a dorm at the University of Colorado at Colorado Springs that left two people dead was a student, the school confirmed to Fox News.
“On Monday morning, February 19, 2024, members of the Colorado Springs Police Department took a suspect into custody in connection to our investigation into the homicides on Friday, February 16, 2024, on the campus of the University of Colorado at Colorado Springs (UCCS),” the Colorado Springs Police Department posted on X, formerly Twitter.
On Monday, just before 8 a.m., members of the Colorado Springs Police Department’s Motor Vehicle Theft Unit located Nicholas Jordan, who is from Detroit, Michigan, in a vehicle. Police said he was taken into custody without incident.
“Investigative efforts continue to indicate this was an isolated incident between individuals who were known to one another and not a random attack against the school or other students at the university,” the post continued.
COLORADO POLICE IDENTIFY 2 KILLED IN COLLEGE DORM SHOOTING
Nicholas Jordan, 25, has been arrested in connection with the killing of two people inside a University of Colorado dorm. (Colorado Springs Police Department)
The university told Fox News that Jordan was enrolled at the school at the time of the shooting. He was arrested on suspicion of two counts of first-degree murder.
Just before 6 a.m. on Friday, university police received a call that shots were fired from the Crestone House, a campus dormitory.
When officers responded to the room, they found a man and woman inside, later identified as 24-year-old Samuel Knopp of Parker, Colorado, and 26-year-old Celie Rain Montgomery of Pueblo, Colorado, who were both dead, each with one gunshot wound to the head.
COLORADO POLICE INVESTIGATING 2 FOUND DEAD IN DORM ROOM AS HOMICIDE: ‘DOES NOT APPEAR TO BE A MURDER-SUICIDE’
Police officer cruiser at the scene of a crime in Colorado Springs, Colorado. (Helen H. Richardson/MediaNews Group/The Denver Post via Getty Images)
The Coroner’s Office is currently working on the cause and manner of death, as both are being investigated as homicide.
Police said Sunday that the primary focus of the investigation has been on the victims and pursuing justice for them and their families.
Fox News Digital’s Chris Eberhart and Greg Wehner contributed to this story.
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San Francisco, CA
Fatal stabbing leads to fines at SF hospital
SAN FRANCISCO – Cal/OSHA is fining Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital and the University of California San Francisco for violations of worker safety laws in connection to an employee’s deadly stabbing last year.
Hospital fined
What we know:
A social worker died after being stabbed by a patient last December at the hospital’s Ward 86 HIV care clinic.
KTVU has obtained the citation documents that show Cal/OSHA found that the hospital lacked adequate protections to identify, investigate and manage potentially dangerous patients and proposed more than $130,000 in fines. Cal/OSHA found seven violations, including six serious citations at the hospital.
The occupational and safety health division also cited UCSF for lacking an effective workplace violence prevention plan with fines of nearly $143,000. Cal/OSHA found UCSF had eight violations and seven serious citations.
“A social worker at ZSFG (Zuckerberg SF General) was stabbed multiple times by a patient with a knife,” a spokesperson for Cal/OSHA’s statement read. “The social worker, an employee of the Regents of the University of California–San Francisco (UCSF), died of injuries two days later. UCSF’s physicians and other medical professionals provide some of the medical care at ZSFG.”
Cal/OSHA said their workplace violence prevention protocol for healthcare facilities has been in place since 2017.
SAN FRANCISCO, CA – MAY 16: A view of the Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital and Trauma Center on May 16, 2018 in San Francisco, California. In the wake of widespread data breaches at Facebook, patients and nurses at Zuckerberg San Francisco G
The backstory:
Alberto Rangel, 51, was stabbed and killed on Dec. 9, 2025 at the hospital by a suspect, identified as Wilfredo Tortolero-Arreichi, 35.
Police said Tortolero-Arreichi was walking with the social worker toward an elevator when the suspect grabbed the victim from behind and stabbed him numerous times in the neck. Rangel died at the hospital two days later.
Remembering the victim
Rangel was described by colleagues as someone who treated everyone with love and absolute care and as someone who went above and beyond for his colleagues and patients. He ran support groups in English and Spanish.
Outside of work, he was remembered as an artist, an athlete and for his sense of humor and sharp fashion sense.
Activists demanded safety accountability at the hospital in the aftermath of Rangel’s fatal stabbing.
In December, Tortolero-Arreichi, failed to appear in court as the defendant when he was still locked up in a hospital psychiatric ward.
Tortolero-Arreichi remains in custody at the San Francisco County Jail. According to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, it has requested San Francisco to honor an immigration detainer against the suspect once he has been tried and serves any potential sentence. ICE said the suspect is an illegal immigrant from Venezuela with a criminal record.
Denver, CO
Denver Parks and Recreation begins work to rebuild historic bandshell destroyed in fire
Denver’s City Park lost a special piece of history when its bandshell was destroyed by a fire in March. Now, the city says it’s moving forward with rebuilding it.
The original bandstand was constructed in 1896 and has seen a few iterations over the years. It was replaced in 1924, and a replica was constructed on the site in 1984.
Although the structure itself has been replaced, the site has been home to community gatherings, events, concerts and celebrations for the past 130 years. City Park Jazz hosts jazz concerts at the bandshell every week over the summer.
DPR says it holds an important place in local history, and the city has begun the process of rebuilding it.
The recent fire heavily damaged the structure, and a structural assessment found that what remains is not salvageable, DPR explained.
They’ve contracted Mundus Bishop to lead the design for the new bandshell. The city says it’s working to raise the $250,000 needed to cover the insurance deductible and to support construction of the new structure.
City officials say demolition will begin in the fall and that construction of the new bandshell will start by the end of the year. They hope to open it in time for the 2027 CityPark Jazz season.
The city wants the community’s feedback on the new design, and is holding a pop-up event on June 28 to introduce the design team and to share project updates. They invite the community to ask questions and offer input as the project progresses.
More information on the project is available on the city’s website.
Seattle, WA
Chelsea Gray Top Points vs. Seattle Storm
Chelsea Gray Top Points vs. Seattle Storm, 06/08/2026
Video Transcript
Getting some good looks, Seattle.
Just haven’t been able to drop them from outside.
It’s 40% from the floor.
Gray down low.
Bullying High to mid.
Yeah, I think it’s pretty exciting the first few times you get to go up against your idol.
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And they are right here.
She’s gonna try and steal the ball from her right now.
Gray for three, is able to get it to drop.
to the game, she mentioned that sometimes they have the same instincts.
They cut to the same spots, and that’s gonna take time to learn each other.
As Gray falls away.
Eight to shoot.
Gray, able to get it to drop.
Now in double figures
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