Denver, CO
Broncos’ depth at outside linebacker will be tested following Nik Bonitto’s injury

Broncos defensive coordinator Vance Joseph understands the reality of the team’s depth at outside linebacker.
Second-year edge rusher Nik Bonitto will not play in Saturday’s game against the Detroit Lions due to a knee injury. While Baron Browning is fully healthy, outside linebacker Jonathon Cooper (ankle) was limited at practice this week, and rookie inside linebacker Drew Sanders, who has spent some time on the edge in recent weeks, is still getting up to speed.
Not to mention, Ronnie Perkins was waived on Thursday after playing in five games.
Joseph thinks the Broncos have enough at outside linebacker. And if they don’t, Denver has no choice but to work with what it has.
“The game is Saturday night. We can’t draft anybody else right now,” Joseph said.
Bonitto’s absence is a big loss for the Broncos. He has been an effective pass-rush unit in recent weeks and recorded a team-best seven sacks and 18 quarterback hits in 13 games (three starts).
It remains to be seen if Cooper is 100% healthy. Still, having Cooper available is beneficial for Denver’s defense. He has started in every game this season, totaling 5.5 sacks and 60 total tackles.
The Broncos have rotated their edge rushers during games. With Bonitto out, expect Sanders to have an increased workload against the Lions. Last week against the Chargers, Sanders played 32 defensive snaps — the most he has played since Week 4 against the Bears, when he was on the field for 57 snaps.
Sanders was drafted in the third round, joining Josey Jewell and Alex Singleton in the inside linebackers room. Lately, he has been working with the edge rushers, a position that he has some familiarity with: The former Arkansas standout played both linebacker spots while he was in college.
Even though Sanders has experience playing the edge, he mentioned that he is still learning how to play the position effectively at the NFL level.
“Every week (I’m) just getting better and better,” he said. “I got a lot of great guys in that room to learn from.”
Sanders entered the season with tremendous upside. But as the season has progressed, it’s been evident that he is still adjusting to the pro level. He has totaled 14 tackles and a fumble recovery in 13 games for the Broncos. Sanders went through a five-game stretch where he played a combined 23 defensive snaps. Sanders’ playing time has increased over the last three weeks since he transitioned to outside linebacker.
As an inside linebacker, Sanders had to learn how to play in space and drop in coverage. He said those traits have helped him as an outside linebacker. Each week, he believes that he is developing a better understanding of what opposing offenses are trying to do, different formations and the speed of the game.
“(Sanders has) been fine,” Joseph said. “Obviously, it’s a different role for him so there’s some learning curve, (but) he’s playing well.”
Denver’s defense has excelled at getting to the quarterback over the past four games. The Broncos have recorded 17 sacks during that span, including six against the Chargers. Yes, their depth at outside linebacker is questionable. But Denver has been able to generate sacks and pressures from players outside of its edge rushers, providing optimism that the team can weather past Bonitto’s absence.
“I feel like our (defensive backs), (inside) linebackers and (defensive line) have stepped up. It’s amazing to see,” Cooper said.

Denver, CO
Man kidnapped, sexually assaulted 4 women at gunpoint in Denver and Aurora, police say

A metro Denver man kidnapped four women at gunpoint and sexually assaulted them after he found them on hookup websites, according to an arrest affidavit.
Glen Orion Meridith, 36, was arrested May 13 on suspicion of eight counts of sexual assault, three counts of kidnapping and menacing and one count of assault related to drugging a victim.
Aurora and Denver police identified Meridith while investigating four assaults across the two cities in December, January, February and March, detectives wrote in the affidavit.
The assaults followed a similar pattern — Meridith would meet the women, some of whom were escorts, through websites or apps for personal ads, including the site “Mega Personals.”
He would then pick up the victims in his red Jeep and, in some cases, give them money before he pulled out a gun and pressed it to their necks or temples. He threatened them and forced them into the back seat, where the doors were locked with child locks, then took their phones and sexually assaulted them multiple times.
Meridith would sometimes snort or smoke cocaine and drink during the assaults and record them on his phone, investigators said. He forced one of the women to take cocaine during an assault.
Several of the women reported choking, struggling to breathe and vomiting during the assaults, police wrote.
With two victims, he accused them of being responsible for him being robbed after previous “hookups,” but the women told police they had never met Meridith before. In one incident, Meridith kept the victim in his car for 13 hours after the assault as he drove around Denver before she was able to escape, investigators said.
After the other assaults, Meridith would drive to a different location and threaten to kill the women if they didn’t leave immediately.
Investigators believe there may be other victims in the case, and anyone with information can contact the Denver Police Sex Crimes Unit at 720-913-6040.
Meridith is in custody at the Denver County Jail on a $1 million bond. He’s set to appear in court on June 12.
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Denver, CO
Denver sues Trump administration over threat to withhold $600 million in transportation funding

Denver this week sued the Trump administration over its threat to withhold as much as $600 million in federal transportation funding if the city refuses to align its politics with the president’s stances on issues of immigration and diversity.
Denver joined nearly three dozen other cities and counties in the 105-page lawsuit, filed Wednesday in U.S. District Court for the Western District of Washington.
The cities and counties take issue with U.S. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy’s April memo that warned local jurisdictions they could lose access to federal transportation funding if they do not comply with the Trump administration’s positions on both immigration enforcement and diversity, equity and inclusion efforts.
Any program or policy “designed to achieve so-called ‘diversity, equity and inclusion,’ or ‘DEI,’ goals, presumptively violates federal law,” Duffy warned in the memo. Localities receiving federal funds must also fully cooperate with federal immigration enforcement or risk losing the money, he wrote.
The cities and counties that sued argue the new federal conditions on awarding the funding are unconstitutional and that the Trump administration does not have the authority to set conditions beyond what Congress has established.
“The Trump administration is willfully breaking the law and, in ignoring the separation of powers between Congress and the White House, violating the bedrock constitutional foundation on which our country was built,” Denver Mayor Mike Johnston said in a statement Friday.
Denver’s Department of Transportation and Infrastructure is the recipient of about $300 million in federal funding, while Denver International Airport received about $310 million between the 2022 and 2024 fiscal years, according to the mayor’s office.
The airport is expected to be eligible for an additional $267 million in grants from 2025 to 2028, a city spokesman said in a news release.
Across the almost three dozen cities and counties that are suing — including San Francisco, New York, Boston, Seattle, Minneapolis, Pittsburgh and Nashville, Tennessee — almost $4 billion in awarded or soon-to-be awarded federal funding is at risk, the lawsuit alleges.
“Allowing the unlawful grant conditions to stand would negatively impact Plaintiffs’ committed budgets, force reductions in their workforce, and undermine their ability to determine for themselves how to meet their communities’ unique needs,” the lawsuit says.
The effort is Denver’s second lawsuit this month against the Trump administration. The city last week joined a lawsuit with Chicago after the Federal Emergency Management Agency refused to pay Denver $24 million in previously awarded grant money.
Additionally, the U.S. Department of Justice sued Denver and Colorado earlier in May over state and local laws that limit how much local police can cooperate with federal immigration officials.
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Denver, CO
Denver Public Library’s interim director apologizes after removal of replica of prop desk

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