Club Q victim wants to shift the focus from the shooter

Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 23:05:21 GMT

Club Q victim wants to shift the focus from the shooter DENVER (KDVR) — Word of a potential plea deal has been reported for the person charged in the mass shooting at Club Q, and victims are ready to shift focus.It might have taken years to mete out justice if Anderson Aldrich had been tried for the Club Q shooting that killed five people in November. Now, a guilty plea could come as early as the upcoming arraignment on June 26. Colorado law requires victims to be notified of deals like this. Club Q shooting suspect expected to take plea deal Victims given that advance notice have also been asked to prepare for the possible release of surveillance video from the attack.Ashtin Gamblin, a former door girl at the club, was shot nine times that fatal night but survived. She said the focus shouldn't be on news reports about Aldrich but on the victims and survivors and what their message is. "We need to respect the victims and survivors and put a focus towards pride, that this is Pride month," Gamblin said.Pride: 'This is the month for speak...

Hickenlooper talks gun violence solutions

Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 23:05:21 GMT

Hickenlooper talks gun violence solutions DENVER (KDVR) — Violent crimes involving guns continue to rise in Denver. The issue was highlighted on a national stage after the Denver Nuggets won their first-ever world championship. A mass shooting left 10 injured near 20th and Market streets early Tuesday morning as crowds thronged downtown to celebrate the NBA Finals victory. Polis responds to property tax plan critics All the victims are expected to survive, and two people were arrested in connection to the shooting. Police are still investigating what led to the incident but say it may be drug-related, as fentanyl was found at the scene. U.S. Sen. John Hickenlooper reacted to the shooting on "Colorado Point of View" this week. "It’s unacceptable that people are going to come in and shoot up a happy celebration, after you went almost 50 years it takes to win the NBA title, and a bunch of kids ruin it for everybody," Hickenlooper said.Denver violent crime on pace to break recordsThe problem isn’t new though. Data through Apr...

Hickenlooper on what to do about the migrant crisis

Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 23:05:21 GMT

Hickenlooper on what to do about the migrant crisis DENVER (KDVR) — The federal government is giving Denver an $8.6 million grant to assist with migrant shelter in the Mile High City.Mayor Michael Hancock said the city has already spent close to $18 million since December to help more than 11,000 migrants. The federal grant adds to the more than $909,000 approved in early May. Hickenlooper talks gun violence solutions A spokesperson for the city said the funding can only cover expenses from March 1 of this year to Sept. 30, 2025. The money can only be used for shelter, food, some medical aid, staffing and transportation. Colorado also received $1.2 million after sending Denver $3.5 million to help with the migrant emergency. U.S. Sen. John Hickenlooper said the city and state will still need more resources."For the federal government to shift this burden onto cities around Colorado isn’t fair," he said. The Democrat said he, along with the rest of Colorado’s congressional delegation, will keep after the federal government to secure...

No more climate consensus as politics of net zero heats up in Britain

Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 23:05:21 GMT

No more climate consensus as politics of net zero heats up in Britain LONDON — The U.K.’s net zero debate is starting to boil over. With a little more than a year to go until the likely date of a general election, the government and opposition are trading blows over energy policy. As the rhetoric ratchets up, both sides accuse the other of pushing policies that leave Britain vulnerable to Vladimir Putin’s Russia. Whereas for a time there was broad political consensus about climate, particularly under former Prime Minister Boris Johnson, an enthusiastic advocate for net zero, in recent weeks political fault lines over green policies have reopened, thrusting the issue back up the agenda ahead of a likely election next year. The opposition Labour Party — currently well ahead in the polls — has started to lay out its policy stall, committing to ban new oil and gas developments in the North Sea and reaffirming plans to follow Joe Biden’s example by putting big state fiscal firepower behind the green transition.  The proposals are the only ...

‘Elemental’ a delightfully odd Disney/Pixar treat

Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 23:05:21 GMT

‘Elemental’ a delightfully odd Disney/Pixar treat Wonderfully weird, Pixar’s animated “Elemental” is a gift from the Magic Kingdom as it presents an astounding world where the citizens are one of the four elements: Fire, Water, Earth, Air.“Elemental” is about the rocky courtship that asks: Can a Water person find happiness – and continued life – with a Fire person?Specifically, can sweet-natured inspector Wade Ripple (voiced by Mamoudou Athie) find a soul mate and life partner with explosive, short-tempered Ember Lumens (Leah Lewis)?After all, these are two worlds that rarely meet much less become coupled. Can they touch?  Will Ember boil Wade?  On his part, he can easily extinguish her flame.While Earth and Air are reduced to bit parts without much interest, “Elemental” has other things in mind beyond its Romeo and Juliet warring families set-up.There is a vivid contrast between what would be the upper middle class of Water world where families live in plush high rises and nearly constantly break into (comical) gushes of tears.The...

Franks: Trump should return to being unpredictable

Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 23:05:21 GMT

Franks: Trump should return to being unpredictable The best move for former President Donald Trump is the one most unexpected. Being unpredictable or unconventional was the trait that helped him win the White House in 2016, and it would help him today.The baseball pitcher that tips off his pitches eventually gets hit hard, looks bad, and does not last long in a game against professional hitters. Trump must do something that no one would expect – maybe a change up pitch after countless fastballs.Trump should be magnanimous and withdraw from the presidential race. It would be in his best interest, and it would be for the good of the country. For the leading candidate for the Republican nomination to gracefully bow out now would allow Trump to give an endorsement next year that would help ensure a Republican victory in 2024.If Trump were to take himself off the stage, I believe the drama would be gone. And most Americans would feel more positive about Trump because of this sacrifice, his willingness to help the nation by taking the spo...

Scherer: AM Radio bill already having positive effect

Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 23:05:21 GMT

Scherer: AM Radio bill already having positive effect Ford Motor Co. announced last month that it would not remove AM radio from 2024 vehicle models. The surprise announcement comes on the heels of a bipartisan bill requiring auto manufacturers to maintain AM radio capabilities in all new vehicles at no additional cost to consumers.Known as the AM for Every Vehicle Act, the measure addresses the recent trend in manufacturers choosing to phase out AM radios from electric vehicles.To that effect, the act already appears to have a noticeable effect. Ford’s policy reversal seems to have been influenced by recent discussions between company CEO Jim Farley and policy leaders “about the importance of AM broadband radio as part of the emergency alert system.” If that’s true, then other manufacturers may eventually reach similar conclusions.This is good news for consumers because it means regardless of whether the act becomes law, it may still force a change in industry behavior. Consumers deserve access to as many sources of information as pos...

Editorial: Council vote to cut police budget undermines Boston

Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 23:05:21 GMT

Editorial: Council vote to cut police budget undermines Boston A question for the members of the Boston City Council who voted to cut some $31M from the police budget – just what city are you representing?Judging by your vote, it can’t be Boston, the city with 213 gun-related arrests and 55 shooting incidents year-to-date, according to BPD data. Those numbers are down from the past year, thanks in large part to the very police department these councilors have targeted for budget cuts. Logically, those statistics point to a need to keep police funding where it is, or even increase it.But logic is in short supply here.While some crimes are on the downswing, gun violence still threatens Boston’s safety, and there have been 14 homicides so far this year compared to six the same time last year, according to the BPD. News of Boston police officers arresting drug traffickers, thus getting cocaine, fentanyl and other illicit, often deadly substances off the streets is hard to miss. Boston Police officers are doing yeoman’s work ...

Chris Hemsworth kicks up the action in stellar ‘Extraction 2’

Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 23:05:21 GMT

Chris Hemsworth kicks up the action in stellar ‘Extraction 2’ Is it a spoiler just to review “Extraction 2” after the ending of its 2020 predecessor? The oldest tricks are the best. When we last saw him, Tyler Rake (Chris Hemsworth aka Thor), whose name summons the ghosts of the Tom Clancy-school of spydom. , took a header into the Ganges, leaving us doubting his chances of survival. Are you kidding me? “Extraction,” which featured some of the most exciting action of any action film of the time, thanks to former stunt coordinator-turned-director Sam Hargrave and screenwriter Joe Russo (“Extraction,” “The Gray Man”), was a smash hit for Netflix and created a character that gave Australian actor Hemsworth a rare and coveted second signature role. Based on the graphic novel “Ciudad” by Ande Parks, “Extraction” was also the international film debut of Indian actor Randeep Hooda as Rake’s adversary. Would Hargrave’s “Extraction 2” provide an adversary as imposing and charismatic?Not quite, but Georgian gun and drug-smuggler and super-vi...

‘Blue Jean’ revisits tense life as a gay woman in Thatcher’s Britain

Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 23:05:21 GMT

‘Blue Jean’ revisits tense life as a gay woman in Thatcher’s Britain Boasting a breakthrough, award-winning performance by Brit Rosy McEwan (“The Alienist”), writer-director Georgia Oakley’s “Blue Jean” charts the dangerous and uncharted land traveled by a gay woman (a PE teacher at a public high school) in Newcastle in northeast England in 1988. At a time when Margaret Thatcher is calling for a return to “traditional values” and her supporters bemoaned the pernicious influence gay people could exert upon children, a gay teacher has to tread very carefully and even remain in the closet to safekeep her livelihood.Thatcher even passed Section 28, a law prohibiting the “promotion of homosexuality.” It remained in effect until 2000. At school and in public, Jean Newman, who lives alone in a semi-attached property, is cautious and passive. A busybody across the way keeps an eye on Jean. In opening scenes, Jean, a bottle blonde, is applying bleach to her hair. With her fair skin and make-up free face, the effect suggests a desire to be invisible. At ...