Colorado
Judge: Colorado shooting suspect incompetent to stand trial
BOULDER, Colo. (AP) — A choose dominated Friday {that a} man charged with killing 10 individuals at a Colorado grocery store final 12 months remains to be mentally incompetent to face trial, additional delaying court docket proceedings within the case.
The prosecution of Ahmad Al Aliwi Alissa, 22, has been on maintain since December, when Choose Ingrid Bakke first dominated that he was mentally incompetent — unable to grasp authorized proceedings and work together with his attorneys to defend himself.
The ruling got here practically a month after Boulder, the house of the College of Colorado, marked the primary anniversary of the assault that killed employees, prospects and a police officer who rushed inside the shop.
Alissa is being handled on the state psychological hospital and was not in court docket for Friday’s listening to.
Few particulars have been launched about Alissa’s situation. Stories on his evaluations aren’t obtainable to the general public, however a court docket submitting discussing one of many evaluations final 12 months mentioned he had been provisionally identified with an unspecified psychological well being situation that limits his means to “meaningfully converse with others.”
Throughout the listening to, Bakke famous that specialists on the Colorado Psychological Well being Institute at Pueblo have mentioned there’s a substantial likelihood that Alissa could be restored to competency throughout the “cheap future” and stay competent by taking medicines, a prognosis she first talked about in a March 11 scheduling order.
The choose set a July 21 listening to to once more consider Alissa’s competency to face trial.
Competency is a unique authorized concern than a plea of not responsible by cause of madness, which entails whether or not somebody’s psychological well being prevented them from understanding proper from flawed on the time against the law was dedicated.
After the listening to, District Lawyer Michael Dougherty mentioned the common time to revive somebody to competency is six months. He declined to invest on when Alissa, who as been on the state hospital for 4 months, could also be thought-about competent.
Robert Olds, the uncle of one of many 10 individuals killed, front-end supervisor Rikki Olds, mentioned Alissa has extra rights than the victims. He stays pretty hopeful Alissa will go on trial however doesn’t need to anticipate what is going to occur subsequent as a result of the authorized course of has been shifting slowly.
“Finally it’ll occur, I hope,” he mentioned of a trial. “There’s at all times that exterior probability it received’t occur.”
Investigators haven’t launched any details about why they consider Alissa launched the assault or why he might have focused the grocery store. He lived within the close by suburb of Arvada, the place authorities say he handed a background examine to legally purchase the Ruger AR-556 pistol he allegedly used six days earlier than the taking pictures.
The March 22, 2021, assault at a King Soopers grocery shocked a state that has seen its share of mass shootings, together with the 1999 Columbine Excessive College bloodbath and the 2012 Aurora movie show taking pictures.
Boulder police Officer Eric Talley, a 51-year-old father of seven, was shot and killed whereas speeding into the shop with an preliminary workforce of cops. Along with Rikki Olds, Denny Stong, Neven Stanisic, Tralona Bartkowiak, Teri Leiker, Suzanne Fountain, Kevin Mahoney, Lynn Murray and Jody Waters had been killed inside and outdoors the grocery store.
The transformed King Soopers reopened in February, with about half of those that labored there on the time of the taking pictures selecting to return.
Copyright 2022 The Related Press. All rights reserved.
Colorado
Colorado authorities shut down low-income housing developer
The Colorado Division of Securities is pursuing legal action against a man whom it claims deceived investors and used the ownership of federally supported low-income housing projects to line his own pockets.
Securities Commissioner Tung Chan announced its civil court filings against Michael Dale Graham, 68, on Nov. 12.
Chan’s office filed civil fraud charges against Graham, and also asked for a temporary restraining order and freezing of Graham’s assets and his companies’. A Denver district court judge immediately granted both. Since then, two court dates to review the those orders have canceled; a third is scheduled for mid-January.
Graham operates Sebastian Partners LLC, Sebastiane Partners LLC, and Gravitas Qualified Opportunity Zone Fund I LLC (“GQOZF”), all of which were controlled by Graham during his “elaborate real estate investment scheme,” as described by the securities office in a case document.
The filing states Graham collected more than $1.1 million from eight investors to purchase three adjacent homes in Aurora. The Denver-based Gravitas fund and its investors purportedly qualified for the federal Qualified Opportunity Zone (QOZ) program with the homes. Qualified Opportunity Zones were created by the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act passed by Congress in 2017. The zones encouraged growth in low-income communities by offering tax benefits to investors, namely reductions in capital gains taxes on developed properties.
Graham formed Gravitas in early 2019 and purchased the three homes located in the 21000 block of E. 60th Avenue two years later. He quickly sold one of them with notifying investors, according to the case document. While managing the other two, Graham and Gravitas transferred the fund’s assets and never operated within QOZ guidelines to the benefit of its investors or the community, according to the state.
Gravitas also transferred the titles for the two properties to Graham privately. As their owner, Graham obtained undocumented loans from friends totaling almost $600,000. The two loans used the two properties as security.
Gravitas investors were never informed of the two loans, according to the case document. Also, Gravitas never sent its investors year-end tax reports, the securities office alleges.
Graham used the proceeds of the loans for personal use. No specific details were provided about those uses.
“Effectively, Graham used Gravitas as his personal piggy bank,” as stated in the case document, “claiming both funds and properties as his own. Graham never told investors about the risks associated with transferring title to himself. On September 1, 2023, he sent a letter to investors, stating that the properties ‘we own’ are doing well and generating growth due to record-breaking home appreciation. But Gravitas no longer owned the properties.
“Gravitas no longer had assets at all.”
Furthermore, the securities office said Graham failed to notify investors of recent court orders against him in Colorado and California. In total, Graham was ordered to pay more than $1 million in damages related to previous real estate projects.
Graham’s most recent residence is in Reno, Nev., according to an online search of public records. He evidently has previously lived in Santa Monica, Calif., and Greenwood Village.
Colorado
Colorado weather: Temperatures staying in the 60s Sunday
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Colorado
Colorado Springs police search for missing 20-year-old
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (KKTV) – Police are searching for a missing at-risk adult.
They said 20-year-old Brandon Hugney was last seen Saturday night, around 7 p.m., at the Walmart on Platte avenue.
They shared a picture of Hugney, describing him as a 6′ man last seen wearing black-framed glasses with red trim, a grey fleece, blue pajama pants and black and white slippers.
Police said he likely isn’t properly dressed for the weather and was last seen heading west behind Walmart.
If you know where he is or see him, call police at (719) 444-7000.
Copyright 2024 KKTV. All rights reserved.
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