A Culture of Deception at the VA?

Our January 15 cover story, “Tell No One,” delved into an evolving sexual harassment quagmire at an Aurora outpatient clinic operated by the Department of Veteran Affairs; several female health care workers who complained of inappropriate conduct by a male nurse say they’ve suffered retaliation from administrators, including punitive job…

Rx for Bronco Recovery: Time to Be Underdogs Again

It wasn’t hard to get all nostalgic about football players from bygone eras yesterday, amid the godawful and spiritless performance of the Denver Broncos against the workmanlike Indianapolis Colts — who, unlike their decrepit hosts, managed to seem at least mildly interested in heading on to the AFC championship game…

Indy Writer’s Wacky, Tasteless Linkage of Broncos, James Holmes

I’m still mulling over what point Indianapolis Star writer Gregg Doyel was trying to make in a bizarre column that appeared yesterday, entitled “Next to Broncos, a Mass Murder Suspect Awaits.” All sorts of motivational drivel gets written in the pimp-happy world of sports journalism this time of year, as…

ACLU Sues Trinidad, Cops for False Arrests in Drug-Sting Fiasco

UPDATE: Third Judicial District Attorney Frank Ruybalid has reached a settlement in a state ethics investigation of his office. Ruybalid admitted to thirteen violations of Colorado’s rules for professional conduct of attorneys, and received a suspended six-month suspension of his law license and 23 months of probation. According to a…

Exposing the CIA: Mark Udall’s Unfinished Business?

After ten years in the House of Representatives and six as a U.S. Senator, Mark Udall would prefer to go out known as a champion of individual liberty and the environment, rather than the faltering “Senator Uterus” who one-noted his re-election campaign and badly underestimated the Republican who unseated him,…

The Year in Fracking: Quakes, Spills and Backroom Deals

The battle over fracking in Colorado continued to attract national media attention in 2014, and with good reason. The use of hydraulic fracturing to extract oil and gas, and the attendant debate over economic benefits versus possible health and environmental risks, has been playing out here with more twists and…

Colorado’s Worst Poaching Case and the Decline of Hunting

A few weeks ago a 56-year-old hunting guide on the Western Slope was sentenced to 27 months in federal prison for violations of the Lacey Act. Christopher Loncarich’s crime consisted of going to absurd lengths to insure that the slaughter of mountain lions and bobcats in Utah and Colorado would…

Female Prison Guard Accused of Groping Male Inmates

In a highly unusual case, a female correctional officer who worked at the state prison in Sterling has been charged with multiple counts of unlawful sexual contact, after inmates reported being groped by the officer during pat-down searches. And one prisoner who claims to have triggered the investigation says it…

JonBenet Ramsey, DNA and the Phantom of Heilbronn

Television shows like CSI have given us, the channel-surfing American public, an almost mystical faith in the crime-solving abilities of DNA. We expect the presence of foreign DNA in the victim’s bite wound to nail the perp, and the absence of any traces of the stuff to help absolve the…

JonBenet Ramsey and the Rise of an Internet Subculture

This week’s cover story, “The Coldest Case,” looks back at the still-unsolved 1996 murder of six-year-old JonBenet Ramsey — and the long, lonely battle waged by Fleet and Priscilla White, former friends of the Ramseys, to learn how the investigation got so badly derailed. The case had a devastating impact…

Roan Plateau Compromise Hailed as “The Colorado Way”

Six years after the drill-baby-drill crusaders of the Bush administration targeted one of Colorado’s most ecologically unique places for widespread energy leases, a surprisingly reasonable compromise has been hammered out over the fate of the Roan Plateau. The deal is being praised by state and federal officials as well as…

Tonight: Two Colorado Mysteries Converge at Tattered Cover

Two local authors will be celebrating their just-published novels at the LoDo Tattered Cover tonight — one in the flesh, one in spirit. And since the authors have an intertwined history and the novels involve the latest exploits of series characters, it’s important to keep things straight. Former Denver Post…

Photos: Bhutan Refugees Chronicle Their Journey to Colorado

A photography exhibit opening this weekend offers rare glimpses of an arduous journey: The long road taken by displaced people from Bhutan, many of whom have spent years in refugee camps awaiting resettlement opportunities, to strange new worlds — like Aurora, Colorado. The images were taken by young refugees themselves,…