Denver, CO
Denver’s sheriff, fire and police chiefs reappointed after City Council vote
Denver’s police chief, fire chief, sheriff and public safety director will continue to serve as part of Mayor Mike Johnston’s administration after the City Council unanimously approved their reappointments on Monday.
Ron Thomas will remain the chief of the Denver Police Department, a role he was first appointed to by Johnston’s predecessor, Michael Hancock, in October 2022. Thomas joined DPD in 1989 and served in various roles over the decades including in the department’s investigations, special operations and patrol divisions.
Denver Fire Chief Desmond Fulton has 25 years of experience in his department. Hancock first appointed him in 2020.
Elias Diggins remains the city’s sheriff, leading the department that operates Denver’s two jails. He is also a department veteran originally appointed by Hancock. He joined the Denver Sheriff Department in 1994.
Finally, Armando Saldate III will remain in his role as executive director of the Department of Public Safety. Hancock first picked him for that cabinet post in 2022. His department oversees the other three public safety agencies as well as Denver 9-1-1, Community Corrections and other public-safety-related offices and services in the city.
The four appointments passed unanimously as part of the council consent agenda, but Councilwoman Serena Gonzales-Gutierrez did call them out for comments. She emphasized that the council was not rubber-stamping Johnston’s choices for what she considers the most consequential jobs in the administration.
She called for an independent survey to be done of the rank-and-file employees of each of the public safety departments sometime over the next two years so that the public and council can assess the four leaders’ performance.
“I see it as all of our responsibility to take those kinds of assessments and act on them to improve the services for the people of Denver,” she said.
Johnston’s selection process was subject to further scrutiny later in the meeting when Lisa Calderón spoke during the meeting’s public comment period. Calderón, a nonprofit leader and criminal justice reform advocate who came in third place in the 2023 mayoral election, criticized the sheriff and fire departments in particular for alleged sexism that prevented women from moving up the ranks.
She called for changes to the appointment process in the future to give the public a voice.
The four appointees did speak at Monday’s meeting.
“I’m committed to the mayor (and) committed to the city,” Thomas told The Denver Post in an interview earlier in the afternoon. “I intend to be here for a long time and continue to be of faithful service to the citizens of Denver.”
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Denver, CO
Two Colorado smoke shops shut down for selling restricted products to minors
A smoke shop in Denver and another in Fort Collins were both ordered to cease operations this month by city and state regulators.
The Vibe Smoke Shop at 7530 East Colfax Avenue was ordered Tuesday by the City and County of Denver’s Department of Licensing and Consumer Protection to promptly close its doors and post a notice of summary suspension on the premises until further notice.
A summary suspension refers to the city immediately suspending the business’s license to operate, even if further proceedings are scheduled to determine its future.
“This is one of the worst cases of alleged illegal products sales by a business the city has ever uncovered in random inspections of convenience stores in Denver history,” stated Eric Escudero, the DLCP’s Director of Communications, in a press release. “In most licensing discipline cases, the city issues a show cause order where a business can continue to operate while the licensing discipline case plays out. A summary suspension is the most severe form of licensing discipline the city can take and is reserved for only the most serious cases of unlawful activities.”
In Denver, as in the state of Colorado, it is illegal to purchase tobacco, flavored tobacco, alcohol, recreational marijuana, kratom, or psylocibin products under the age of 21. DLCP’s Escudero stated that Vibe Smoke Shop allegedly violated city and state laws by, at different times, selling all of those items to minors.
Alleged violations by Vibe Smoke Shop date back to June 2025, according to the summary suspension order provided by DLCP. It was then that the outlet reportedly sold cigarettes and other tobacco/nicotine products to a 19-year-old person. That 19-year-old was working as part of an undercover operation to catch such activity.
Vibe Smoke Shop’s ownership was cited for the infraction, according to the order. But the monetary penalty for the citation has not been paid and is in collections, per DLCP.
Later that year, a Denver Police Department school resource officer was reportedly told by a student that other underage students were buying marijuana products from the same smoke shop and were re-selling them on school grounds throughout the day, “especially during lunch hours,” as stated in the order.
Denver PD and the Denver Department of Public Health and Environment joined DLCP for further undercover operations and enforcements. Meanwhile, a parent of an underage Vibe customer also complained to authorities that his 17-year-old son and his son’s friend were able to purchase kratom products with a fake ID and, at times, without an ID at all. That parent said both boys required addiction treatment services as a result of their kratom use.
In March of this year, another complaint was received about the business hosting after-hours parties for minors, as alleged in the DLCP order. When phoned by a DLCP inspector, Vibe’s ownership reportedly refused inspection of the business and hung up, per the order. An unannounced inspection was nevertheless conducted less than a week later, and a back room in the business was allegedly found to have cases of beer and alcoholic lemonade, bottles of beer and liquor in the refrigerator, and more than a dozen hookahs. Vibe ownership did not have a liquor license, per DLCP.
That inspection, and later ones, uncovered numerous non-compliant or improperly labeled marijuana, kratom and mushroom product, according to the DLCP order. A subsequent Notice of Violation from the health department determined some of those products “constituted an imminent health hazard” and ordered them destroyed.
The DLCP scheduled a hearing on June 26 in the case. Then, Vibe Smoke Shop ownership will have the chance to explain why its business license should not further suspended or revoked entirely, as explained by DLCP’s order.
According to the Colorado Secretary of State’s database, Vibe Smoke Shop LLC is owned by an Aurora resident, Desalegn Berhane Weldegebriel. CBS Colorado left a voicemail message at the only publicly listed phone number for Weldegebriel requesting comment.
In Fort Collins, the Smokin’ Genie was ordered May 20 to close at the end of the month. An investigation by Fort Collins Police Services and the Colorado Attorney General’s Office found that the business did not properly label its kratom products and allegedly sold kratom to a person younger than 21 years of age.
Smokin’ Genie’s owner, Ambreen Vazir of Florida, reached a settlement with the state. The business must cease operations on May 31 and destroy any remaining inventory. Vazir is also banned from conducting “any business in Colorado related to the advertising, marketing, cultivation, processing, manufacturing, handling, labeling, packaging, distribution, and/or sale of Restricted Products,” as stated in the settlement agreement. If Vazir chooses to re-open such a Colorado business after May 31, 2031, he must pay the attorney general’s office $20,000.
Furthermore, if Vazir’s future business violates state law regarding the import, manufacture, storage, assembly, handling, distribution, or sale of restricted products, the agreement states Vazir will be penalized a total of $200,000.
The Colorado Attorney General’s Office stated in a press release that its settlement with Vazir is the first action it has taken under recently passed legislation which regulates the sale of kratom products in Colorado.
CBS Colorado was unable to reach Vazir for comment.
Denver, CO
Denver hockey’s Johnny Hicks wins DU Pioneers’ Male Athlete of the Year
Denver, CO
Rockies’ Ryan Feltner pitches a gem, Jake McCarthy shines in 8-3 win over Giants
The Rockies threw a boffo welcome-back for Ryan Feltner on Saturday night, and the right-hander was the biggest party animal of all.
Coming back from an elbow injury and making his first big-league start since April 23, the right-hander celebrated by pitching six crisp, efficient innings in Colorado’s 8-3 win over the Giants at Coors Field. Feltner allowed no runs, just four hits, struck out two, and walked none. He needed just 63 pitches, throwing 41 for strikes.
“I felt great and felt like all of my pitches were working,” said Feltner, who became the first Rockies starter to pitch six scoreless innings with no walks since lefty Kyle Freeland on Sept. 5 of last season vs. San Diego.
“I was really happy about the efficiency part of the game,” Feltner added. “It’s always important to go deep into a game here (at Coors).”
Manager Warren Schaeffer said there was never any thought about pushing Feltner past six innings after Feltner made just two minor league rehab starts.
“There was no reason to push him into the seventh; he did his job,” Schaeffer said. “His fastball command was exceptional, his slider was good and he got double-play balls early when he needed to. I just thought he controlled his game very well.
“He controlled his emotions, he was in attack mode, and like we talked about before the game, when he does that, he’s pretty dang good.”
The Rockies, who beat San Francisco 8-6 on Friday night on a walk-off homer by Ezequiel Tovar, clinched their first series win since sweeping the Mets from April 24-29 in New York.
Feltner got plenty of support.
The Rockies have had a nasty habit this season of scoring early only to see the offense go into hibernation. That wasn’t the case on Saturday. The Rockies kept piling on and taking away any chance for late-game drama in LoDo.
“When a guy goes out there and grinds away, like Feltner did, you want to reward them with run,” said center fielder Jake McCarthy, who had a big night from the leadoff spot, going 3 for 4 with a walk and driving in four runs.
McCarthy’s 427-foot two-run homer in the fourth off Giants right-hander Adrian Houser gave Colorado a 4-0 lead. McCarthy added an RBI single in the fifth and another in Colorado’s three-run seventh. He also recorded his club-leading 10th stolen base and reached base four times for the eighth time in his career.
“I haven’t been patient the last week, I had a lot of pretty bad at-bats” he said. “But I think it’s just about getting good pitches to hit. … Getting into good counts, seeing pitches and taking pitcher’s pitches you can make it easier on yourself. I think I did a good job of that tonight.”
Also in the seventh, Kyle Karros came off the bench to whistle a leadoff homer to right off Ryan Borucki. It was Karros’ third homer of the season, fourth of his young career, and the first pinch-hit home run of his career. It was also his first home run against a team other than the Dodgers — his father, Eric’s, former team.
“That was becoming a thing, so it’s nice to put that narrative to rest,” Karros joked. “I think I saw somewhere where it said, ‘Are the Dodgers just feeling Karros meatballs?’ That’s certainly not the case.”
The Rockies provided an early comfort zone for Feltner by scoring two runs in the first inning. McCarthy and Hunter Goodman drew walks off Houser, Willi Castro delivered an RBI single, and Sterling Thompson took one for the team, getting plunked by Houser with the bases loaded.
Castro hit 2 for 5, recording a multi-hit game for the fifth time in his last six starts.
San Francisco spoiled a rare Rockies shutout with a two-run homer in the eighth by Drew Gilbert off reliever Blas Castano.
The Rockies (22-37) will play for their third series sweep of the season on Sunday afternoon at Coors. Should the Rockies win, they will move out of the National League West cellar and the Giants (22-36) would fall into last place.
Pitching probables
Sunday: Giants LHP Robbie Ray (3-6, 4.60 ERA) at Rockies RHP Tanner Gordon (0-0, 5.85), 1:10 p.m.
Monday: Rockies LHP Kyle Freeland (1-6, 8.08) at Angels RHP Jose Soriano (6-4, 2.65), 7:38 p.m.
Tuesday: Rockies RHP Tomoyuki Sugano (4-4, 4.01) at Angels RHP Grayson Rodriguez (2-1, 7.53), 7:38 p.m.
Wednesday: Rockies RHP Michael Lorenzen (2-7, 7.22) at Angels RHP Walbert Urena (2-4, 2.44), 7:38 p.m.
TV: Rockies.TV
Radio: KOA 850 AM/94.1 FM
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