Gangster’s Rap

Salvino Martinez is singing. But not to the Denver cops. At least not directly, though they’ve shown interest in the first album by the gang member and erstwhile rapper because of a murder investigation he alludes to in his songs. The only CMG Westside Bloods talking to the police, Martinez…

Eve of Destruction

Downtown is on the verge of losing the historic Denver Post building, at 15th and California streets, to make way for a “temporary” parking lot. Preservationists are hoping to find a way to save the building, but they may have little chance of doing so. Developer Bruce Berger says he…

Early to Rise

At 6:15 on a recent Thursday morning, the only happy face in the second-floor hallway of the Byron Rogers Federal Building belongs to a bomb-sniffing dog, who is trotting around in advance of the Terry Nichols trial. The thirty or so lawyers milling about are the ones with the sad…

Wayne’s World

Heard the one about the rich car dealer who goes out and blows 89 million bucks on high-priced hookers? Well, needless to say, he has a pretty good time. So do the hookers. There are lots of them, and they all have talent, so nobody has to work very hard…

Get Stuffed

Let us now give thanks. It was one big, dysfunctional family reunited in U.S. District Judge John Kane’s courtroom last week, picking at the carcass of this year’s biggest turkey: Guide the Ride. The $3.5 billion, or $8 billion, or $16 billion, or $20 billion (depending on who’s counting) mass-transit…

Letters

All Fired Up The last issue was a real keeper! Marty Jones’s story on the Denver Turnverein (“Harmony, German Style”) was an important counterpoint to the hate crimes in our city, and Eric Dexheimer’s story on Dottie Grisby, “Dry Society,” was the sort of story about the forgotten “little people”…

Dry Society

At precisely 10:15 p.m., 75 fashionably late minutes from the start of her annual Halloween party, Dottie Grisby parts the orange and black crepe-paper streamers and glides into her dream. Dottie’s Social Club is starting to hop. Dottie is gotten up as a French maid: short black dress, white apron,…

The Burning Boy

One day this past August, fourteen-year-old Justin Gilman of Colorado Springs asked his friends to set him on fire. So the teenagers got some gasoline from the local 7-Eleven and soaked Gilman’s blue jeans with it. Gilman lay down on the grass in the backyard of a friend’s home, and…

Off Limits

Hard of hearing: The voters have spoken, but apparently RTD didn’t listen–because on Thursday, attorney Walter Gerash is scheduled to be in U.S. District Judge John Kane’s courtroom, pleading the RTD board’s already lost cause. In September Kane had issued a preliminary injunction against RTD’s hastily adopted limitations on donations…

The Talks Heat Up

All winds have swept through a state-sponsored and federally funded series of forums on global warming and its alleged effect on climate change. Complaints that the first two of six scheduled forums at various Colorado cities were either biased in favor of the manmade global-warming theory or sabotaged by industry…

Bugging Out

There are a few things Danielle Marie Dixon doesn’t like about her east Denver apartment. There’s the toilet on the sagging floor that she worries is about to collapse into the apartment below. There’s the crumbling tilework in the shower, so powdery she has to rinse her hair three times…

The Bridge Game Finally Ends

For years, a half-dozen concrete bridges have spanned the streets of downtown Denver, the legacy of an ill-conceived 1960s urban-renewal project aimed at taking pedestrians off the sidewalk. Now the little-used “skybridges” are starting to come down, closing a chapter on one of downtown’s more bizarre redevelopment efforts. Two of…

Bitter Lesson

John Hellner waited five years for his day in court. Last week it took less than two hours for a Fort Collins jury to decide that Hellner and eight other parents hadn’t defamed a local elementary-school counselor whom they’d accused of abusing their children. For Hellner, the verdict was grim…

Board and Restless

Andy MacKenzie, lean, blond and 23, goes back a long way. At 17 he was a fearless Vermonter ripping down the double-black-diamond steeps of Mount Snow with Nirvana blasting through his headphones. At 21 he was a streak of blue and white Gore-Tex bombing the scariest precipices of Vail and…

Letters

Tot off the Presses Patricia Calhoun’s “Sitting in Judgment,” in the November 13 issue, was a phenomenal piece of work that said many things that needed to be said. We are indeed “sitting in judgment” of a case in Massachusetts, when similar situations in our own backyard are completely ignored!…

A Case Done to Death

The best argument against the death penalty may be a death-penalty trial. Four weeks after opening arguments in the People v. Jon Morris, the prosecution is still trying to put out all its evidence against Morris, who is on trial for the brutal rape and murder of five-year-old Ashley Gray…

Power Steering

If you liked Envirotest, you’ll love Insure-Rite. Envirotest is the company that lobbied hard to persuade Colorado lawmakers in the early Nineties to change the state’s system of auto-emissions testing. The company then won a lucrative contract to set up testing stations, despite submitting the highest bid. Grousing about Envirotest’s…

Gold Diggers of ’97

Charles “Binx” Rugg looks out his living-room window in the town of Eldora and can see all the places that have shaped his life. Next door is the small, one-story wooden house where he was born 78 years ago. On the other side of the narrow valley are the stables…

Lights Out

The former Bonfils Theatre was once one of Denver’s cultural jewels, a community playhouse that brought thousands of people a year to East Colfax Avenue to watch everything from fairy tales to Shakespeare. For the past decade, however, the 1953 building, which was renamed the Lowenstein Theater in 1985, has…

Off Limits

No-tell hotel: Fred Kummer, owner of the Adam’s Mark, got slammed by a federal magistrate for discriminating against employees at his St. Louis hotel; knocked down the I.M. Pei-designed hyperbolic paraboloid on the 16th Street Mall; gave Denver those odd, alien ballet dancers as a consolation prize; and is in…

The Money Punch

Local boxing aficionados are so desperate for a revived state boxing commission that one of them, Dr. Russell Simpson, even attempted to recruit his friend Liz Romer, the governor’s daughter, to deliver a message to the governor beseeching him to appoint a commissioner by executive order. But despite the unorthodox…

Rox in His Head?

Let’s hear it for Don Baylor. The Rockies skipper has signed up for another two years’ worth of 15-13 games at Coors Field. He’s ready to endure another two years’ worth of ulcers whenever he looks down at the bullpen and sees the reluctant warriors huddled there, praying they won’t…