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List of the 5 most destructive wildfires in Colorado history


Black Forest Fire
498 homes destroyed
The Black Forest Fire burned through a heavily-populated area surrounded by dense forest on the south end of the Palmer Divide.
Two people died, and the El Paso County Sheriff s Office counted 498 homes destroyed.
East Troublesome Fire
366 homes destroyed
The East Troublesome Fire started deep in the Arapaho National Forest on Oct. 14. Six days later, the fire started spreading dramatically, forcing evacuations in Grand Lake and eventually, all of Estes Park. More than 35,000 people were forced out of their homes.
From Oct. 21-22, the fire burned more than 87,000 acres through Grand County and across the Continental Divide. Drought, dead trees, high winds and low humidity fueled its rapid spread, even during the night. ....

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A Year After Passing A Sweeping Police Reform Law, Advocates Struggle To Maintain Their Momentum At The Capitol


David Zalubowski/AP
A year after passing a sweeping police accountability bill with bipartisan support, it s a very different climate for criminal justice reform at the Capitol this year.
Amid a flurry of police brutality protests in the wake of George Floyd’s murder, criminal justice reform advocates at the Colorado legislature seized the moment last summer and passed one of the most sweeping police reform laws in the country. 
Advocates and lawmakers hoped to nudge those efforts forward this year  introducing a series of criminal justice bills that could further overhaul how police officers do their jobs, liberalize laws on when people have to go to jail and make it easier to let people out of prison.  ....

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Colorado's legislative session experiencing a rising tide of law enforcement bills


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Retired Omaha, Neb., police officer Mike Douglas watches the motorcade of law enforcement and first responders on March 30
to honor Boulder police officer Eric Talley, who was killed in a mass shooting at a King Soopers on March 22.
The Gazette
Courtesy of Sophie Hackett, office of Rep. Leslie Herod
(Colorado Politics file photo) ....

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Making a List—of Cops Who Can't Be Trusted


Making a List—of Cops Who Can’t Be Trusted
A new Colorado bill would force disclosure of information on police accused of bias.
Colorado is poised to become the first state to regulate how its law enforcement agencies handle “Brady lists” of police officers whose credibility could undermine a case in which they are involved.  
“No one bill will address what all of the law enforcement agencies in the state are doing with these lists, but this bill brings honesty and fairness to the process.”
If passed, Senate Bill 21-174 would require local law enforcement agencies to notify district attorneys of any internal investigations against officers alleged to have made untruthful statements; demonstrated a pattern of bias against a protected class; commited a crime involving dishonesty, violating someone’s constitutional rights; or tampered with evidence.   ....

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