Colorado
Letters: Colorado stores’ anti-theft measures inconvenience legitimate shoppers
We’re the ones paying for all this theft
Re: “Grocery stores ramp up theft deterrents,” Sept. 7 news story
Depending on the neighborhood, The Denver Post reported that stores are securing merchandise or going to extraordinary lengths to inconvenience legitimate shoppers from purchasing items. Items under lock and key now necessitate a store employee to provide the key to the locked storage. Good luck with getting a quick response.
Store and corporation policy dictates against any employee action against shoplifting because of liability and risk of violence. But in the meantime, legitimate shoppers have to foot the bill.
Police and the courts are too involved in more serious crimes to effectively prosecute shoplifters since it is only a misdemeanor. Good luck with having a police officer respond to the scene. Lastly, the media publicizes these incidents of no prosecution and thereby encourages more errant behavior.
The five-finger discount is alive and well in Denver.
Philip Arreola, Denver
Wolves suffer in human interventions
Re: “Death in pack as wolves captured,” Sept. 10 news story
I did not vote for wolf reintroduction. Why? Because efforts like the proposed reintroduction always mean suffering, trauma, and death for the subject animals. When will humans look beyond their own limited interests and really think of other species we share the planet with?
Think about the fear the four juveniles and their mother are now experiencing while in captivity. The male is dead. Then, think about the terrible suffering the ranch animals experienced.
Wolves had naturally found their way to Colorado. Let’s leave well enough alone.
Marianna Young, Monte Vista
Coach Payton right to remain a mystery
Re: “Time for Payton to prove he’s worth $18M by outcoaching Macdonald,” Sept. 8 sports commentary
Call this a novice’s opinion, but I don’t think anyone, the Denver sports writers included, has figured out what Broncos Coach Sean Payton is really all about. That’s what got former coach Nathaniel Hackett into trouble, being too honest. Personally, I am in the “let’s see where the team is at Thanksgiving” camp; any more thought about it will tax my few remaining brain cells.
Payton will, and should, hold his cards close to the vest. All coaches will, and he who has the last card will win it all. And as the famous Howard Cosell would say, nothing more to be said about that.
Gary Rauchenecker, Golden
Husker fan not pining for Prime
Re: “Why does Coach Prime drive Husker fans nuts? ‘They wish they had him’,” Sept. 8 sports story
Cornhuskers are jealous of Coach Prime? Nah, keep him. Long live Matt Rhule! We Husker fans just want some competent refs.
Pamela Bell, Thornton
Not a fan of Cornhuskers’ balloon release
Almost daily the news reports tell us that plastic is strangling our rivers and oceans, smothering the soil, and invading our bodies through our food supplies worldwide.
How, in the face of this terrible threat to our earth, can the University of Nebraska allow clouds of red balloons to be released to pollute their state and neighboring states? Why on earth were all those balloons allowed at a football game? There is nothing joyous about spreading litter across the countryside with complete disregard for the people, the plants, the animals, and the waterways, which will suffer from all that plastic fallout.
Nebraska, you can find better ways to celebrate.
Doris Cruze, Centennial
Colorado
Colorado residents face earliest water restrictions ever — a harbinger of worse to come
As a result of a snow drought and a heat wave that have both set records, some Colorado residents face the earliest restrictions on their water use ever imposed.
Denver Water announced Wednesday that it is seeking a 20% cut in water use, asking people to turn off automatic watering systems until mid-May and restricting the watering of trees and shrubs to twice a week.
“The situation is quite serious,” said Todd Hartman, a spokesperson for the utility. “We’re in such a dire situation that we could be coming back to the public in two or three months and saying you’re limited to one day a week.”
It is the earliest in the year that Denver Water has ever issued a restriction, Hartman said.
Colorado’s snowpack peaked at extremely low levels on March 12 — nearly a month earlier than usual — then cratered during the recent heat wave that cooked nearly every state in the West.
“We already had the lowest snowpack we’ve seen since at least 1981, and now, with the heat wave conditions, we’ve already lost about 40% of the statewide snowpack” since the March 12 peak, said Peter Goble, Colorado’s assistant state climatologist. “Conditions are looking more like late April or early May.”
The water restrictions are a harbinger of what’s to come in many Western states as officials try to manage widespread drought concerns. Nearly every snow basin in the Mountain West had one of its warmest winters on record and is well behind normal when it comes to water supply, according to the U.S. drought monitor. The dwindling snowpack is likely to raise the risk of severe wildfires, hamper electricity generation at hydropower dams and force water restrictions for farmers.
Hartman said nearly every community east of the Rockies, along Colorado’s front range, is in much the same boat as Denver.
City Council members in Aurora are considering similar water restrictions; reservoirs there stand at about 58%, according to the city’s website. In the town of Erie, officials declared a water shortage emergency on March 20 after they observed a massive spike in consumption.
Gabi Rae, a spokesperson for the town, said Erie was perilously close to having taps run dry because so many residents had started watering their lawns early amid the unseasonable heat.
“We were a day away from running out of water. That’s why it was such an emergency,” she said.
Erie officials demanded that residents stop using irrigation systems altogether.
Goble said this month’s heat wave has set records in every corner of Colorado, sometimes by double digits.
“I can’t remember seeing a single heat wave that broke this many records, and seeing it across such a large portion of the country is certainly eye-popping,” he said, adding: “I’m located in Fort Collins, and we got up to 91 last Saturday. The previous record for March was 81, so we smashed that record. And it wasn’t just one day, either.”
Denver Water, which serves about 1.5 million residents in the city and its surrounding suburbs, gets about half of its water from the Upper Colorado River Basin and the South Platte River Basin. The latter’s snowpack was at about 42% of normal Tuesday, the utility reported. The Upper Colorado River Watershed was at 55%.
Systemwide, Denver Water’s reservoirs are about 80% full, which is only about 5 percentage points lower than in a typical year.
“That sounds pretty good,” Hartman said. “Except that what we’re not going to be able to rely on is that rush of water that will bring those reservoirs back up, because the snowpack is so low.”
In other words, the snowpack — a natural water reservoir — is mostly tapped already and won’t replenish reservoirs later this spring and into summer, when runoff usually peaks.
In Erie, city workers plan to aggressively police water use until sometime next week using smart meters that monitor residential usage. Rae said the city is also sending utility workers to patrol neighborhoods and look for sprinklers that are turned on.
“People have been kind of annoyed with how aggressive we were, and I don’t necessarily think they understand the ramifications if we weren’t,” Rae said. “It is an actual serious emergency situation. We were so close to reaching empty, there would literally be no water coming out of the taps — hospitals, schools, fire hydrants, your home would have no water.”
Although the limits on outdoor watering will be lifted soon, Rae expects more restrictions later this spring and summer.
Colorado
Suddenly hazy skies in Denver prompt some residents concerned about wildfire smoke to call 911
Some people who live in the Denver metro area on Thursday afternoon were making calls to 911 after skies became noticeably hazy and winds kicked up. It was due to smoke from wildfires in Nebraska moving into Colorado. A cold front also was moving through the Front Range, and there is dust in the air.
The poor air conditions led to reduced visibility downtown after 3 p.m. Several of CBS Colorado’s City Cams showed dust or smoke in the air.
Temperatures were expected to drop by as much as 20 to 30 degrees with the cold front.
The suddenly dusty skies prompted at least one fire agency to put out a plea to residents to please only call 911 “if you see flames.” That warning was put out by South Metro Fire Rescue, which shared a photo on X of an office building with haze visible outside.
South Metro Fire Rescue said in their post that the smoke is from Colorado’s neighbor to the east. They called it a “significant haze” in the air.
Earlier this month, the Morrill Fire and the Cottonwood Fire burned a significant amount of Nebraska grassland and ranchland. They have mostly been contained by firefighters. Nebraska Gov. Jim Pillen said those two fires combined with several others have burned approximately 800,000 acres of land. On Thursday, Pillen announced that he is signing several executive actions intended to ease the burden caused by the fires.
There were no wildfires burning in the Denver metro area on Thursday afternoon.
Colorado
Colorado homicide suspect wanted in fentanyl-related death arrested in Colombia
ARAPAHOE COUNTY, Colo. (KKTV) – A homicide suspect based out of Colorado, wanted in a fentanyl-related death, is back in the state after being captured in Colombia.
The Arapahoe County Sheriff’s Office (ACSO) said 33-year-old Max Arsenault had been on the run since January 17.
Deputies said this stemmed from an incident in May 2023, where deputies responded to a call for a man named Nicholas Dorotik, who was found unresponsive.
ACSO said the cause of death was a mixed drug overdose involving meth and fentanyl, having about three times the lethal amount of fentanyl in his system.
One year later, Arsenault was arrested. He was scheduled for trial in January 2026 when deputies said he fled the country while on bond three days before the trial was set to start.
He was caught in Medellin, Colombia, on March 4, following a two-month international investigation. He has since been extradited back to Denver, where he is facing charges and awaiting trial.
Copyright 2026 KKTV. All rights reserved.
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