Colorado
Colorado man accused of breaking into apartment mailboxes in three cities
A man who forged keys out of silverware in order to steal mail from apartment mailboxes has been indicted on federal fraud charges.
Adam Christopher Turner, 40, was arrested in May and indicted late last month by a federal grand jury.
The Colorado Springs resident is accused of using his fake keys to access “cluster boxes” at apartment buildings in three cities. His break-ins have been traced back to February 2023, according to details in his indictment.
Turner was first arrested November 12, 2023 by Lone Tree PD after he used stolen credit cards at several businesses. On him, Lone Tree officers found 20 different credit cards from 20 different people. They also discovered a half dozen keys, all master keys to mailboxes, or “arrow keys.” Turner apparently had fabricated them out of dinner knives.
The Lone Tree arrest violated the terms of a deferred sentence Turner received for a burglary in 2022. But Turner only received a probation sentence for both infractions, according to the indictment.
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Soon after his Lone Tree arrest, a detective with the El Paso County Sheriff’s Office’s Financial Crimes Unit began investigating incidents in which stolen credit cards were used at Colorado Springs businesses. Ultimately, the detective learned about mailbox thefts from 16 victims in Colorado Springs, Peyton and Parker. And, as surveillance video rolled in from a number of Front Range businesses, the detective quickly identified Turner as the culprit who was using the victims’ stolen credit cards.
A Peyton resident’s debit card was used for a $793 purchase at a Walmart in Colorado Springs.
One Parker resident’s credit card was used to buy $3,523 in goods from Scheels in Colorado Springs.
Another Peyton residents credit card was used to buy $3,870 of products at Scheels in Johnstown.
Yet another Peyton resident’s Home Depot credit card was used to snag $1,086 worth.
Two victims living in Colorado Springs and Peyton had their Target credit cards used to buy a total of $2,426 and $2,517.
In one surveillance video, the El Paso detective saw Turner leaving one store wearing a sweatshirt he had illegally purchased earlier at a different store.
The detective also saw Turner driving a black Camaro or a black Dodge Ram pickup to the stores he visited. In one video, the pickup truck’s plates were visible. They were the plates which registered to the vehicle owned by a mail theft victim in Peyton.
RELATED Ongoing mail theft in Colorado city the result of United States Postal Service master key stolen years ago
After studying five month’s of infractions, authorities obtained a search warrant in May – three weeks after his Lone Tree sentencing – for Turner’s residence, vehicles and cell phones.
At his residence, investigators found thousands of dollars worth of new or like-new tools, mechanical, and electrical equipment, according to the indictment. In a storage unit rented by Turner, they found eight counterfeit arrow keys co-mingled with a collection of dinner knives.
Inside the truck was stolen mail, including gift cards and credit cards, and two more arrow keys.
The truck was also equipped with an electronic license plate flipper. The device allowed Turner to flip the stolen license plate over the truck’s legitimate license plate while engaging in illegal activity.
Turner’s cell phone records also indicated his phone was in the area of the stores at the times the stolen credit cards were used, per the indictment.
Guns were found in the residence and in the Camaro, along with amounts of methamphetamine. Drug offenses are among the charges in the indictment. Being a convicted felon, Turner was not legally permitted to own the firearms.
Turner made his first appearance in federal court July 8. He is already set for a trial in late August. His probation in the Lone Tree case has been revoked as well.
Colorado
Denver Silent Film Festival highlights upcoming feature film
Denver Film is hosting its Silent Film Festival beginning Friday, including eight feature films and 11 shorts with live musical accompaniment.
Howie Movshovitz, Programmer for the Denver Silent Film Festival, joined CBS Colorado in the studio on Tuesday to highlight the film “Queen Kelly” and share what festivalgoers have to look forward to.
In the film “Queen Kelly”, produced in 1928-1929, a convent girl is abducted and seduced by a prince betrothed to a mad queen, an event that drastically changes the course of her life.
“People talk about ‘Queen Kelly’ as a restoration, but it isn’t because it was never finished. In 1928, Gloria Swanson got together with her producer/lover Joseph Kennedy, father of JFK, and they got together with Eric von Stroheim, a celebrity director, and they went to make Queen Kelly. And about halfway into it, Gloria Swanson fired him,” Movshovitz said.
He said that it’s unlikely the three of them would have been able to get along. Although the film was incomplete, he says there have been many attempts to restore it.
“A man named Dennis Doros and his partner/wife, Amy Heller, at Milestone Films did a reconstruction of it, and then a reconstruction of it. It’s been done a number of times, and this is the most recent,” Movshovitz explained. “They work from script. They work from outtakes, the visual quality of what von Stroheim shot, he was a genius, is fabulous. But it’s, of course, an imaginative response to a 1929 movie.”
Movshovitz says the love of silent films is not just about nostalgia.
“There are many films that are utterly brilliant, utterly fabulous, and still work perfectly well today,” he said. “So, it’s a kind of film that people don’t look at very much, but it doesn’t need sympathy, it doesn’t need nostalgia. It needs people to understand that, just as we read old books and don’t think of them as old books, silent film has its own majesty.”
Watching silent films with musical accompaniment makes the experience unique, said Movshovitz, adding that the festival has a skilled group of musicians performing.
The Denver Silent Film Festival runs from April 10-12 at the Sie Film Center in Denver. Click here to learn more about the featured films and to purchase tickets.
Colorado
Colorado’s New Speed Cameras Can’t Be Outsmarted by Waze or Radar Detectors for Good Reason
- Colorado has launched an automated speed camera program on a stretch of I-25, where cameras calculate average speed versus a single instant reading.
- The cameras make radar detectors and alerts from apps such as Waze obsolete, but they’ve greatly reduced excessive speeds in high-risk areas like work zones.
- Violators face a $75 fine mailed to their registered address, with no points added to their license; vehicles without license plates can evade fines.
Since 2023, the Colorado Department of Transportation has had the power to implement speed cameras in what it deems high-risk corridors where speeding is prevalent, such as work zones. The Colorado Speed Enforcement Program has been used in the past to better patrol a stretch of Colorado Highway 119 between Boulder and Longmont during construction, and it’s now popping up along a stretch of I-25 south of Fort Collins, about 35 miles north of Denver, where workers are adding new express lanes.
Speeding in construction zones has obvious dangers for drivers and workers, as well as law enforcement. Using automated detection is easier and safer than trying to patrol construction zones, which tend to have narrow lanes and little or no usable shoulders.
Enforcement for the five-mile corridor began on April 2. Prior to that, there was a 30-day warning period during which would-be violators received a notice but no fine by mail. Before monetary penalties went into effect, CDOT saw a 90 percent reduction of excessive speed in the targeted zone.
Waze May Not Help
Alerts from apps like Waze that warn you to slow down for speed cameras won’t necessarily save you from a fine here. Instead of taking an instant speed reading at one location like radar-based units, the system uses pairs of cameras—officially automated vehicle identification systems—set a distance apart that snap photos of each car, specifically its license plates. Average speed over the stretch is then calculated using the time it took to cover the known distance.
If that average is over the posted speed limit—some outlets are reporting a grace threshold of 10 mph—a bill of $75 for the civil penalty will be mailed to the vehicle’s registered address. In part because the system doesn’t know who was driving at the time, the owner and driver do not receive points on their license. CDOT says most of the revenue collected goes back into funding the Speed Enforcement Program.
The cameras are marked and preceded by warning signs set at least 300 feet up the highway. If you happen to be speeding when passing the first photo location, you still have a shot at avoiding a fine. As long as you slow down enough before reaching the next camera, you can bring the average down to something legal.
License Plates Required
Unfortunately, this is yet another incentive for drivers in Colorado to run their cars without license plates or skip registering them at all (ahem, sovereign citizens), which is already a big problem in the state. License-plate readers used to enforce express-lane tolling have the same issue. We have contacted CDOT to ask what happens if a vehicle without a license plate speeds through the enforcement zone; we’ll update this story if we hear back.
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Ever since David was a wee Car and Driver intern, he has kept a spreadsheet listing all the vehicles he’s driven and tested. David really likes spreadsheets. He can parallel-park a school bus and once drove a Lincoln Town Car 63 mph in reverse. After taking a break from journalism to work on autonomous vehicles, he’s back writing for this and other automotive publications. When David’s not searching for the perfect used car, you can find him sampling the latest in gimmicky, limited-edition foodstuffs.
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