Colorado
Firearms training instructor speaks about how new Colorado gun law will impact him

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Colorado
Colorado first responders help deliver newborn, mother and baby okay after roadside delivery

Sunday was a day some Colorado firefighters and sheriff’s deputies will never forget.
South Adams County Fire
South Adams County Fire Department’s Engine 23 team responded to what they initially thought was a vehicle crash. It turned out to be a childbirth in progress.
Deputies from the Adams County Sheriff’s Office had arrived moments earlier, and when the firefighters got there, they said “they found a (deputy) holding a newborn baby, delivered moments before.”
The firefighters quickly provided care to the new mother and baby girl. They helped to cut the umbilical cord and heard the baby’s first cry.
Once the baby and mother were taken to the hospital, a physician praised the first responders for providing great care.
Colorado
Colorado bars and restaurants preparing for possibility of ICE inspections

It was a weekend night in April at Williams & Graham, the trend-setting speakeasy in Denver’s Highland neighborhood, and the staff was worried federal immigration agents had shown up nearby.
One of them called Tiffany Hernandez, a local bartender who had recently organized a seminar with a civil rights attorney that went over what to do in a similar situation. Hernandez reached out to the attorney, who said he would be at the bar in 20 minutes.
The officers outside Williams & Graham turned out to be Denver Police officers conducting routine underage drinking enforcement rather than immigration agents, bar co-owner Saydee Hopkins told The Denver Post in an e-mail. The attorney wasn’t needed that night.
But the scene is indicative of the trepidation hanging over bars and restaurants across the country following President Donald Trump’s re-election. Earlier this month, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents checked the work authorizations of employees at 100 restaurants in Washington, D.C. as part of a larger sweep, according to the New York Times.
In Colorado, ICE officers have raided apartment complexes in Aurora and a clandestine party in Colorado Springs, and migrant rights’ advocates and attorneys say it’s not a question of “if” they will move on to restaurants and other businesses in the state, but “when.”
“I’m kind of surprised we haven’t seen this yet,” Raquel Lane-Arellano, a spokesperson for the Colorado Immigrant Rights Coalition, said. “It’s just a matter of time before we see a business hit in a significant way.”
As a result, the food and beverage industry is preparing itself in several ways.
The Colorado Immigrant Rights Coalition, Service Employees International Union and Colorado Restaurant Association have held webinars and prepared guides on how managers of restaurants or other establishments should conduct themselves in case ICE arrives for an inspection. For their information, the restaurant association consulted with Fisher Phillips, a national law firm that runs a 24/7 hotline employers can call for advice during a sweep.
Hernandez, 32, doubled down on those efforts by taking it upon herself to keep her fellow bar managers informed and by traveling to industry conventions across the country.
The bar lead at Xiquita Restaurante y Bar, Hernandez was born and grew up in Los Angeles, set on making it big in the bartending world. Proud of her Mexican heritage, she took the job at Xiquita so she could work with agave spirits, like tequila.
When Trump won his second term, it seemed like the nation was rejecting that heritage, she said. “We’re seeing abuse of our culture and our people.”
More ICE activity
The American food industry is reliant on immigrant labor. The Center for Migration Studies last year estimated that 1 million people were working in restaurants undocumented.
That’s partly why a police presence near or at bars can snowball into rumors of visits from ICE agents, amplifying the unease felt by owners and their workers.
“We are hearing of more ICE activity in local restaurants and are working with our members to educate them about how to prepare for ICE raids and audits,” Colorado Restaurant Association spokesperson Denise Mickelsen said in a statement. “We … continue to share information from our legal partners so that restaurant workers and operators feel prepared.”
A spokesperson for ICE said in an e-mail that its agents have recently held “worksite enforcement operations in and around the Denver area,” but wouldn’t specify businesses or if they included places where food and drink are served. The agents requested I-9 forms — documents that verify a person’s legal work status — from owners for their staff, the spokesperson said.
Anguished over the mass deportations around the country and scared for the future of her industry, Hernandez reached out to Milo Schwab, a civil rights attorney and a regular, with his wife, at Xiquita. The restaurant was already hosting regular talks about the culinary scene. She invited Schwab to come and pass along some basic information to bar managers about due process during an official search.
About 60 people attended the January meeting, Hernandez said. She then led a workshop at Pony Up, a downtown bar, the following month and another at Jungle in Boulder a month after that.
They looked over the types of warrants ICE agents were likely to show up with. They walked over the difference between public and private spaces inside of restaurants. Mainly, they answered questions from a group unfamiliar with, and concerned over, immigration check-ups.
Federal agents cannot conduct a business search without a warrant, though agents have shown up with improperly signed and even unsigned warrants in the past, Schwab said. The goal of the workshops, he said, is to give managers a little insight into these potential discrepancies.
“It still is a mystery to many of them,” he said. “Because, while hopefully I demystified it just a touch, they still haven’t been through it.” (It was Schwab whom Hernandez later dispatched to Williams & Graham for what turned out to be a false alarm.)

At another bar near Williams & Graham, whose owner asked to remain unnamed to quell misinformation, rumors of ICE sightings have previously spread on two separate instances. One was police serving a liquor license violation; the other was officers coincidentally responding to a car crash on the street, the owner said.
Denver police spokesman Doug Schepman said in a statement that officers are prohibited by state and local law from enforcing civil federal immigration laws and don’t ask about immigration status when they are handling liquor license issues.
Taking no chances
The federal government’s immigration crackdown has spread fear among Latinos in the U.S., 42% of whom worry they or someone they know could face deportation, according to a Pew Research Center report from April. Immigration sweeps in restaurants are also not unprecedented and were a notorious practice for two decades under former Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio in Arizona.
So, when a friend invited her to attend Arizona Cocktail Week in Phoenix in March, Hernandez asked if she could speak at the industry convention. There she partnered with Juliana Manzanarez, another immigration attorney who will accompany her to upcoming bar conventions in New Orleans, Nashville and Brooklyn, she said. The pair is raising funds to cover airfare and lodging for the events.
To Manzanarez, who remembers Arpaio’s immigration sweeps in Phoenix and is concerned about whether the current presidential administration is violating people’s Constitutional rights, the rumors and level of high alert in Denver are warranted.
“Enforcement now is heavy. Don’t assume that it can’t happen to you,” Manzanarez said.
For Hernandez and the two attorneys, the point is not to keep officials from doing their job; rather, it’s for restaurants to document the interaction they may have and for officers to comply with the rules for a search.
“People are now just understanding a hundred days in [to Trump’s presidency] actually how important it is to know what their constitutional rights are,” Hernandez said. “Because we’re already seeing due process getting taken away.”
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Colorado
Deion Sanders Sends Reminder To Colorado Buffaloes Players, Staff Amid Memorial Day Weekend

Compared to most other Power Four college football programs, the Colorado Buffaloes haven’t had many players make headlines for negative off-field incidents since coach Deion Sanders took the helm in 2022. Still, a gentle reminder now and then can help keep it that way, especially as many attend social events over Memorial Day weekend.
On Sunday, “Coach Prime” posted a message on X encouraging his players and staff members to stay out of trouble. As Sanders noted, even one mistake can hurt one’s goal of playing football at the next level.
“All my PLAYERS & STAFF. I love u @ I miss u,” Sanders wrote. “Please be safe & don’t do anything to jeopardize your opportunity to be a Professional. Be careful out there because everyone around u ain’t really down for u and everybody else is just there.”
Sanders typically send out a daily piece of advice each morning on social media, and at least one Colorado player is taking Sunday’s message to heart. About 15 minutes after Sanders posted his plea to stay safe, freshman defensive end Brandon Davis-Swain commented “yes sir.” Davis-Swain totaled two tackles in two games last season but will likely take on a bigger role during his upcoming second season with the Buffs.
A few current Colorado players were in Tennessee on Saturday for Travis Hunter’s wedding, including linebacker Jeremiah Brown and cornerback DJ McKinney. Offensive analyst Rashad Davis was also in attendance, along with former Colorado wide receivers Jimmy Horn Jr. and Xavier Weaver.
Meanwhile, incoming freshman linebacker Mantrez Walker was in Georgia on Saturday for his Buford High School graduation. Walker enrolled early this past semester and played in Colorado’s spring football game last month. Fellow incoming freshman Julian “JuJu” Lewis, who’s competing with Liberty transfer Kaidon Salter for Colorado’s starting quarterback job, attended his own Georgia high school graduation earlier this month.
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While Colorado has been a disciplined team off the field over the past two-plus years, “Coach Prime” is looking for that to translate into game action next season.
“We’re so darn disciplined around here, I don’t know why we don’t take the disciplinary things on the field, so we’re going to fix that,” Sanders said after Colorado’s spring game. “We got to fix that. We have officials at practice, so we call it then, and they have disciplinary actions when they’re offsides or do something stupid to cause us a penalty. But we got to be better with that. We would not be the most penalized team in the Big 12 again this season. I’m putting my name on that.”
The Buffs will reconvene in Boulder later this summer for offseason workouts and preseason camp. They’ll begin the 2025 season at home against the Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets on Aug. 29.
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