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COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. — The Colorado Department of Transportation(CDOT) has reported a serious crash that is causing traffic delays on Wednesday morning.
The accident is located around the east side of Colorado Springs.
Highway 94 has been closed at Marksheffel Road due to the crash.
There have been no reports of injury at the time of posting this article.
KOAA News5 will continue to provide updates as we receive them.
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House Republican Lauren Boebert is polling 14 points behind potential Democratic rival Ike McCorkle in a hypothetic matchup for Colorado’s 4th congressional district according to a survey conducted on behalf of his campaign.
The poll found McCorkle, a former Marine, would get 43 percent of the vote against 27 percent for Boebert—with another 33 percent of voters undecided.
In December 2023 Boebert, a Donald Trump-supporting hardliner who represents Colorado’s 3rd congressional district in the House, announced she wanted to stand for the state’s traditionally more conservative 4th district in a surprise move. Boebert said she made the move seeking a “fresh start” after a “pretty difficult year for me and my family,” but critics argued she was worried about losing to Democrat Adam Frisch—who she narrowly beat by around 500 votes in November 2022.
The survey McCorkle commissioned was of 423 likely voters in Colorado’s 4th congressional district, conducted by Gravis Marketing between May 22 and May 24 both online and by text. The poll had a margin of error of 4.7 percent.
McCorkle’s survey also found Donald Trump, the presumptive 2024 Republican presidential contender, had a healthy lead over President Biden in a presidential contest between the two rivals.
Trump led Biden by 45 percent to 35 percent, with another six percent of voters backing independent candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and 14 percent undecided.
Speaking to Colorado Politics, McCorkle said the poll showed he could defeat Boebert later this year.
He said: “All across District 4, we hear the same message from voters across party lines: extremism in Washington is the No. 1 threat to our democracy, and our campaign is the one to fight it and win.
“Our team’s hard work across this district has already doubled our lead over Lauren Boebert, while other Democrats in this race are still 10 points behind her. The math is clear; we are the only Democratic campaign that will be successful in November.”
Newsweek contacted Rep. Lauren Boebert and Ike McCorkle for comment on Thursday outside of usual office hours.
Boebert announced her intention to switch district after Republican Ken Buck, who had represented Colorado’s 4th district in the House, announced he wouldn’t be seeking re-elected in November. Buck later resigned his seat and a special election is due to be held on June 25 though Greg Lopez, the Republican candidate, isn’t seeking to defend the seat in November if he wins—giving Boebert an opportunity.
To secure the Republican nomination for Colorado’s 4th district in November Boebert will have to defeat state representatives Mike Lynch and Richard Holtorf, ex-state senator Jerry Sonnenberg, business owner Peter Yu and former talk radio presenter Deborah Flore. For the Democratic nomination McCorkle is running against engineer John Padora and ex-speechwriter Trisha Calvarese, who will also contest the special election in June.
Boebert has a long history of courting controversy and in September 2023 was asked to leave a performance of the Beetlejuice musical in Denver along with a male companion after becoming disruptive. The congresswoman later apologized for her actions saying she “fell short of my values.”
Earlier this month Boebert was one of a number of Republican politicians who attended Trump’s New York hush money trial in New York as a show of solidarity, prompting criticism from The Colorado Sun columnist Matt Littwin, who labeled her “sycophantic.”
Newsweek is committed to challenging conventional wisdom and finding connections in the search for common ground.
Newsweek is committed to challenging conventional wisdom and finding connections in the search for common ground.
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WHEAT RIDGE, Colo. – A Colorado police officer was left rattled on Sunday night when he searched a car for drugs and instead came face to face with a live rattlesnake, authorities said.
The officer’s body-worn camera captured the moment he opened a large plastic bin in the backseat of a car and found a live rattlesnake cocking its head back and feverishly rattling its tail, the Wheat Ridge Police Department said on Tuesday.
“Yo, you got a rattlesnake in here?” the officer can be heard saying on his body-worn camera as he quickly closes the lid. “What the f— dude! Are you f—ing kidding me? There’s a live rattlesnake in this bin.”
READ: Florida’s native snake population sees decline caused by invasive parasite: Researcher
The officer had been checking park trailheads at 11:30 p.m. when he saw a car with drug paraphernalia in plain sight, police said.
Courtesy: Wheat Ridge Police Department
The vehicle’s owner – who was not in the car at the time – was dropped off at the scene by an Uber around the same time, according to the department. The vehicle owner told the officer that he had lent the car to a friend and was told to pick the car up at that location.
After the car owner gave the officer consent to search the vehicle, police said the officer found drugs, a gun and a large plastic bin, inside which the officer came face to face with the venomous reptile.
The car owner appeared just as stunned as the officer at the wild discovery.
READ: FWC captures massive Burmese python in Everglades
“Does he have any other things that might bite me?” the officer asks the car owner before he continues to search the vehicle.
Police said no charges will be recommended against the vehicle owner, though officers are still trying to contact the friend, as authorities still have “a lot of questions.”
Officers seized the drugs and gun, but told the car owner to take the rattlesnake to a 24-hour veterinarian, FOX 31 Denver reported.
Read more at FOXNews.com.
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