Follow That Story

Denver police officer Daniel O’Bannon was late to his own trial on October 18 — he was still in the loo when Denver County Judge Celeste C de Baca called the courtroom to order just after 10 a.m. — but it didn’t affect the outcome: O’Bannon was cleared on a…

Off Limits

Working hardAs an employee of the Half Price Store at 10755 West Colfax Avenue in Lakewood, it was Debbie Archer’s job to make the displays — including twenty or so mannequins — “visually appealing” to encourage customers to buy clothes. Apparently, she was so good at it that the mannequins…

Get Me Rewrite!

“Colorado Studios announces the launch of the first sitcom to be produced in Colorado and is kicking off a search for the pilot script…Anyone, anywhere, is invited to submit a script…Any kind of sitcom will be considered — there are no limits…There are no specified target audience demographics.” — actual…

¿Qué Pasó, Denver?

The rising popularity of Latin music isn’t just hype. It’s fact — but you wouldn’t know that by looking at the ratings of Denver’s Spanish-language radio stations. On the most recent Billboard Hot 100 chart, five of the thirteen biggest-selling tunes in the United States — ‘N Sync and Gloria…

Road Warriors

Douglas Bruce doesn’t do mellow. Squaring off against a room full of legislators and lobbyists, the anti-tax activist is a study in petulance. He frowns at the testimony of his opponents. He passes urgent notes to Legislative Council staffers, leaves his seat to whisper to a state senator, sits down…

Charmin’ Billy: Part Two

Editor’s Note: This is the second part of a two-part series. You can read last week’s installment at https://www.westword.com/issues/1999-10-14/feature.html By the early afternoon of July 8, 1995, the horrific last ride of “Wild Bill Cody” was drawing to a close. Three women were dead in a townhouse on West Chenango…

Nobody Reads the Papers, Anyway

Journalists aren’t that good at math. That’s why they choose to spend their careers writing instead of crunching numbers. But math is as important to journalism as crisp prose. Without it, there wouldn’t be a newspaper business, and as every good reporter knows, adding and subtracting numbers — especially numbers…

Alex Hunter’s Ramsey Diary: The Lost Pages

Editor’s note: Shortly after last week’s announcement that no indictment will be filed in the murder of JonBenét Ramsey, a small foreign faction left a yellow legal pad on the back stairs at Westword. Our experts say that the handwriting exhibits several points of comparison with that of Boulder District…

Off Limits

Stood upNearly three weeks before 28-year-old Desmond Howard Derrick scaled the Pioneers Monument statue near Civic Center Park on October 14, claiming to be armed with dynamite and forcing the evacuation of nearby buildings and the closure of Colfax, Lincoln and Broadway streets during rush hour, he’d invited “all Westword…

Two Days in the Death of JonBenét

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 12 6:20 a.m.: Flop — copies of the Denver Post and the Rocky Mountain News hit the driveway. The Post gives little indication that the investigation into the 1996 murder of six-year-old Boulderite JonBenét Ramsey is on the cusp of a climax. Even though a grand jury appointed…

Charmin’ Billy

July 28, 1999, Jefferson County Detention Center: William Lee Neal walks in with a grin on his face and his hand extended. “I’m Cody Neal,” he says, shaking hands like a used-car salesman, warm and ingratiating. “Cody’s a nickname…My friends call me Cody.” He glances through the glass partition to…

A Bad Case of Gas

The good news is that a toxic plume is creeping out from underneath the former Lowry Air Force Base slowly, at only about a foot per year. The bad news is that the federal, state and city agencies in charge of cleaning it up are moving even more slowly. Eleven…

Malpractice Makes Perfect

Dr. Karl Shipman’s stumble off a ladder in September 1997 set off a perilous chain of events that led to — but did not end with — his sudden death at age 64. The hardy, athletic internist and former chief of medicine at Presbyterian Hospital had simply broken his wrist…

Off Limits

The Beat goes on:Over the past several years, the estate of writer Jack Kerouac, whose experiences — both real and, uh, imaginary — in Denver during the late Forties are documented in landmark Beat works such as On the Road, has been the subject of a peevish lawsuit, with Kerouac…

Home Improvement

Russell Enloe’s father, the electrician, was baffled by the fluorescent-light decision. “He came in and saw us ripping them down,” Russell remembers, “and he said, ‘Don’t do it! They’re so cheap to run!'” A few hours later, the landlord came by to point out that the storefront at 46 Broadway…

This Is Only a Test

Denverites love their oldies. According to the most recent Arbitron ratings (representing, in the jargon of the industry, “Summer, Phase 2”), four purveyors of flashbacks — KOOL 105, Jammin’ Oldies 92.5 and a pair of classic rockers, the Fox and the Hawk — are in the top ten music-driven stations…

The Final Exam

At the end of August, a twenty-year-old University of Colorado student was kidnapped by six Asian gang members as she walked home in the gray pre-dawn light. They pulled her off the street and into their van with such unexpected force that her feet left her shoes, then drove her…

A Date With Rape

Kate Lacroix is a strong and outspoken young woman, a performer by training. Yet the assault she suffered almost a year ago shook her to the core. It was the kind of attack some people have difficulty even classifying as rape: She was taken in her sleep by a roommate…

Waiting Room

Amy Pollman’s life changed one night in January 1995, when a psychiatric patient at Porter Hospital who was known to be suicidal smothered herself with a plastic bag that had escaped the notice of hospital employees. Pollman was at home when the call came. It was the first suicide at…

Standing Together

Many Colorado nurses fear that if they speak out about improving working conditions, they will be retaliated against by their employers. They feel powerless to change a health-care system they see as flawed. To eliminate their fear so that they can confidently be involved in staffings and other issues in…

A Revolution Per Minute

Juana Barrera was the first one to arrive. She pedaled up to the fountain pond in Civic Center Park last Friday, propped her mountain bike against the stairs and sat down to read and wait for the others — if there were any others. Finally, about twenty minutes later, Shawn…

Digging In

On snowy days, it takes a four-wheel-drive vehicle to get to Bob Allen’s log house off the steep and winding Spruce Canyon Drive. But the same powder that’s such a pain in the winter is welcome come spring when the snowmelt seeps through the soil and enters fractures in the…