Denver, CO
What Denver’s mayoral candidates think about the LoDo indictment
A handful of outstanding candidates for Denver mayor expressed help for the grand jury’s indictment of a police officer, whereas some contenders are standing with legislation enforcement.
- Others are avoiding the subject altogether.
Why it issues: The indictment is the primary main divider within the crowded metropolis race and the place the candidates’ stand supplies insights into their views on policing.
State of play: Mayor Michael Hancock responded to the costs towards Denver officer Brandon Ramos on Wednesday, saying he was “shocked” the occasions amounted to prison intent.
At the least 4 would-be successors contradicted Hancock and backed the grand jury.
- “Mayor Hancock is as soon as once more defending the indefensible,” stated Lisa Calderón, a Regis College professor and neighborhood advocate.
- Terrance Roberts, a civil rights activist and former gang member, stated the indictment was acceptable and criticized the mayor. “He simply mechanically sides with the facet of legislation enforcement.”
- State Rep. Leslie Herod counseled the transfer, saying “the officer have to be held accountable.”
- “I do suppose that it was acceptable given the details,” added former state Sen. Mike Johnston.
Sure, however: Others took a extra middling method, or expressed issues.
- State Sen. Chris Hansen stated he has “lots of confidence within the district lawyer” and shared help for a “extremely accountable police pressure,” however averted direct remark.
- Debbie Ortega, a long-serving council member, expressed help for the officer. She stated Ramos’ intent “was to guard and protect life.”
- Ean Tafoya, an environmental activist, stated he desires to attend for a court docket resolution and to see division insurance policies change.
- Kelly Brough, a former Denver chamber of commerce chief, declined to reply questions on the problem, noting in a press release the “consequence of accountability can be determined by the courts.”
- State Rep. Alex Valdez didn’t reply.
What they’re saying: Many candidates noticed the second to increase on their platform in the case of policing.
- Hansen stated the subsequent mayor “must have fun nice policing and put money into nice policing.” That begins with doing “a greater job of recruiting,” he added. On the identical time, these recruits must know that “town goes to face by its officers once they’ve acted accurately.”
- Calderón stated Denver’s “whole” public security system wants “reforming.” If elected, she desires to create commissions that oversee legislation enforcement leaders, together with the general public security director, as a substitute of them reporting on to the mayor.
- Tafoya stated, not like Hancock, he would “maintain judgment” on comparable incidents till “we’ve seen the entire proof and due course of is full.”
- Ortega added that town must “proceed to supply coaching” to officers “to finest put together them for worst-case eventualities.”
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Denver, CO
Economic hardship applications granted for Denver historic homeowners
The Denver Landmark Preservation Commission approved owners’ applications for economic hardship regarding two damaged historic homes.
This decision came after the owners requested the buildings to be demolished in June. A request that was denied.
The historic homes at 1600 Colfax Ave. and 1618 Colfax Ave. were built in 1895. Both buildings are located in the Wyman historic district.
Annie Levinsky, Executive Director of Historic Denver, Inc. explained their importance to the Denverite in a 2018 interview, stating the homes are some of the last of their kind along Colfax Ave.
The discussion on the fate of the structures has been ongoing. Community groups pushed back against the idea of demolition in 2018. At that point, the owners developed plans to restore and preserve the structures. However, they were never implemented. Construction costs increased from the beginning of the project planning in 2019 through 2022, the owners said, making the plan no longer feasible.
A fire at 1600 E Colfax Ave. in March 2024 caused significant damage to the structure. The owners said the structure was already deteriorating prior to the fire and the costs of restoration were too high.
The owners submitted applications to demolish the buildings in April 2024. After the commission denied their request, they filed appeals arguing that the cost to repair the homes outweighs the potential value after they’re restored. They claimed that the inability to demolish the buildings would cause economic hardship.
Estimates provided in the appeals state the rehabilitation of the 1600 structure reflects a negative value of $6 million, while the 1618 structure reflects a negative value of $4.1 million.
Both appeals were approved at the Commission’s Dec. 17, 2024 meeting.
Denver, CO
New Report on Potential Zach LaVine to Denver Nuggets Trade
Chicago Bulls star Zach LaVine has been involved in NBA trade rumors since the offseason. Several reports over the summer indicated LaVine had little to no trade value, as his contract and injury history kept teams away. Now amid a strong season, LaVine has been productive and healthy for the Bulls.
Averaging 21.7 points, 4.4 rebounds, and 4.2 assists this season, LaVine could help several contenders. Putting up these numbers on great efficiency, LaVine is knocking down 50.1% of his field goal attempts and 42.8% of his three-point attempts. On Tuesday, the Denver Nuggets were named as a team reportedly interested in adding this production to their lineup.
Per Sam Amick and Tony Jones of The Athletic, the Nuggets have a “significant” level of focus on LaVine ahead of the NBA trade deadline.
Via Amick and Jones: “League sources say the focus on LaVine in recent discussions is significant, with the Nuggets interested in the 29-year-old who is averaging 21.7 points, 4.4 rebounds and 4.2 assists this season. LaVine, a two-time All-Star, is owed $43 million this season, $45.9 million next season and has a player option worth $48.9 million for the 2026-27 campaign.”
As The Athletic noted, any LaVine trade would likely require Denver to include Michael Porter Jr. for salary purposes, which the team may be hesitant to do. That said, LaVine is a more complete scorer than Porter, and could help ease the burden on Nikola Jokic offensively.
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Denver, CO
Broncos’ Week 17 game at Cincinnati set for Saturday afternoon kick
The Broncos have been planning for a Saturday game at Cincinnati in Week 17.
The NFL made the date official Tuesday morning.
Denver’s road game at the Bengals will kick off at 2:30 p.m. on Saturday, Dec. 28, the league announced Tuesday.
It’s part of a triple-header to be broadcast on NFL Network, though there will also be a local broadcast for the game in the Denver market, too.
Denver coach Sean Payton said Monday the team had been planning for the league to put the game on Saturday. Denver and Cincinnati was one of five matchups for the week eligible to be slotted into three windows.
The other two: The L.A. Chargers — Denver’s Thursday night opponent — travel to New England for an 11 a.m. kick and then Arizona visits the L.A. Rams at 6 p.m.
The Broncos’ Week 18 home game and regular-season finale against Kansas City could also end up on either Saturday or Sunday, Jan. 4-5.
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