"I am the Way, the Truth, and the Life"

Father God, thank you for the love of the truth you have given me. Please bless me with the wisdom, knowledge and discernment needed to always present the truth in an attitude of grace and love. Use this blog and Northwoods Ministries for your glory. Help us all to read and to study Your Word without preconceived notions, but rather, let scripture interpret scripture in the presence of the Holy Spirit. All praise to our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ.

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Showing posts with label Colorado. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Colorado. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 8, 2024

Bits and Bites from Around the World > Pensioner fights off 4 bear intruders

 

74-year-old man fights off bear, 3 cubs

that broke into Colorado home




A 74-year-old man managed to fight off a mother black bear and her three cubs after they broke into his Lake City, Colo., home through a partially cracked sliding glass door, authorities say.

The man, who was not named, sustained “significant wounds” in the attack but declined hospital treatment, Colorado Parks and Wildlife stated in a press release.

The four bears were euthanized after the incident. Wildlife authorities say this “tragic” result underscores the need to prevent bear-human interactions as much as possible, for the safety of not just people, but bears too.

“It’s a terrible set of circumstances,” Colorado Parks and Wildlife area manager Brandon Diamond said.

“Clearly, these bears were highly habituated and were willing to enter an occupied house with the residents sitting just feet away. When a bear reaches this level of human habituation, clearly a lot of interaction with people has already happened, and unless communities are working with us collaboratively and communicating issues, we have no opportunity to intervene.”





Monday, September 16, 2024

Narco State? > Is Colorado America's first Narco State?

 

Fed-up suburbs look to sue Denver after sanctuary city

welcomed 42,000 migrants — and the gang Tren de Aragua

to Colorado


Fed-up Denver suburbs are looking to sue their big sanctuary city neighbor and the state government after suffering strained budgets and crime after 42,000 migrants flocked to Colorado — bringing the violent gang Tren de Aragua with them.

Most recently, the council for the city of Castle Rock – just south of Denver – unanimously voted to research legal options against its largest neighbor, CBS News Colorado reported.

The vote came amid a wave of other suburbs that have voted to sue, or to look into suing over the migrant crisis in Colorado.

Darren M. Weekly, sheriff of Douglas County, which contains Castle Rock, Colorado.
Jeremy Sparig
Waves of Denver suburbs are looking into suing over the migrant crisis in Colorado.
Jeremy Sparig

The goal: reverse policies and laws that made Denver a haven for the tens of thousands of illegal migrant — most of them from Venezuela.

Law enforcement officials in the suburb of Aurora and others areas outside of Denver are also warning that Tren de Aragua, the brutal Venezuelan prison gang, followed the migrants into Colorado.

The gang members have since spread out across the state — taking over apartment complexes, dealing drugs and robbing jewelry stores.

“This isn’t just a decision that Denver gets to make because,” Castle Rock Town Councilmember Max Brooks told CBS Colorado. “The idea is to join with other municipalities and say it’s time to stop.”

Another Denver suburb, Parker, is also exploring legal action, CBS reported, as well as the city of Aurora — which has gained national attention for its problems with the gang.

Meanwhile, Douglas County, where Castle Rock is located, has joined a group of six Colorado counties suing the state and Democratic Gov. Jared Polis over laws they claim limit their ability to cooperate with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).

Officials in Aurora, Colorado, facing a crime wave from Venezuelan gangs
Jeremy Sparig

“It is happening; we are having issues here in Douglas County. You know, we are having migrants come in here; there have been instances of crime,” Brooks told CBS.

The lawsuit against the state challenges two laws: one that stops law enforcement from detaining a person based on their immigration status, and another that prevents counties from allowing ICE to use their jails.

Way to go Governor, invite criminal gangs in and then pass laws to make it impossible for police to deal with them. What madness!



Thursday, May 9, 2019

‘Magic Mushrooms’ on Par with LSD & Heroin Now Legal in Denver

Is this what John Denver had in mind when he wrote
'Colorado Rocky Mountain High"?

File Photo: © Reuters / Arnd Wiegmann

The city of Denver, Colorado, has become the first in the US to decriminalize ‘magic mushrooms’, however the Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) still classes the psychedelic drug in the same category as LSD and heroin.

The public vote was narrowly passed and means the personal use and possession of psilocybin mushrooms by people aged 21 or older will be Denver’s “lowest law-enforcement priority.” The legal change is expected to take effect as soon as next year.

Do you suppose they were all smoking pot when they passed this bill?

Psilocybin is a hallucinogenic chemical obtained from certain types of fresh and dried mushrooms. It has been federally illegal in the US since 1968, and is classed by the DEA as a ‘Schedule 1’ substance along with heroin and LSD.


Psilocybin or "magic mushrooms" © DEA

Officials with the DEA office in Denver told NPR they still consider psilocybin to have “no accepted medical use and a high potential for abuse.” However studies by medical researchers have shown the substance is not addictive, rarely results in hospital visits, and can be used to treat people with anxiety, depression, PTSD and OCD.

Last year the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) granted psilocybin “breakthrough therapy” designation.

Denver could now set an example of society's changing attitudes that campaigners need to enact similar law amendments around the country. Advocates have already been working to introduce changes to psilocybin laws in Iowa, Oregon and California.

And what happens to people who share them with children? Is there even a law against it, or a penalty for it? How do you determine if a vehicle driver is high on mushrooms? Is there a blood test, or breathalyzer, for that? Good grief! Do they even know what they've done? Do they know they have legitimized magic mushrooms in the eyes of teenagers? 



Monday, June 4, 2018

Supreme Court Sides with No-Cakes-for-Gays Baker, Noting Anti-Religion ‘Hostility’

A married gay man carries the US and rainbow flags © Lucy Nicholson / Reuters

The Supreme Court has ruled in favor of a Christian baker from Colorado who, on religious grounds, had refused to bake a wedding cake for a gay couple. It declared that the case against the baker violated his religious rights.

In a 7-2 decision, the justices said that the Colorado Civil Rights Commission had shown “impermissible hostility” toward religion when it found that the baker, Jack Phillips, violated anti-discrimination laws by refusing to bake the requested cake.

The justices did not, however, clarify whether a cake is the type of expressive act protected as free speech by the First Amendment. Nor did they issue a ruling on the specific circumstances under which people may seek exemption from anti-discrimination laws.

The ruling was authored by Justice Anthony Kennedy, who also authored the 2015 ruling to legalize gay marriage nationwide. Despite his pro-gay marriage judicial work, Kennedy is a staunch advocate for free speech and religious freedom.

Two of the Supreme Court’s four liberal justices sided with their five conservative colleagues to deliver the verdict. Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Sonia Sotomayor were the two dissenting voices.

The gay couple at the center of the story, David Mullins and Charlie Craig, were married legally in Massachusetts, but wanted the cake baked for their wedding reception in Colorado in 2012. While gay marriage was not legal in Colorado at the time, the state’s anti-discrimination laws included sexual orientation as a protected category, allowing the couple to file a complaint.

While the justices ruled 7-2 in favor of Phillips, some media outlets downplayed the clarity of the decision. NBC, Reuters, Politico and NPR all called the court’s decision “narrow.” While this may technically be in reference to the fact that the judges’ decision was specific to this particular case, conservatives saw it as proof of a biased media working against them.

Senator Ted Cruz (R-Texas) meanwhile called the decision “a major victory for religious liberty.”

That could be an overstatement, but at least the decision was right and the insight into anti-Christian hostility is right-on. It is obvious in so many areas, such as the comments below, and in the media bias that all except those hostile to Christianity can see, which includes MainStream Media (MSM). 

This is obvious from the very title of this article out of RT. The 'No-Cakes-for-Gays Baker' line is completely false as the bakers did not refuse the customers because they were gay, but because they wanted to celebrate a gay wedding. Had there been another theme to the cake, there would have been no problem. 

This is typical of the 'slant' MSM puts on things in order to dress-up their far-left ideologies and make-fun of Christian values. They don't realize they are making fun of God. Of course, they don't believe in God, as though that makes any difference in His existence, or His pending judgment.

Some progressives, on the other hand, were unhappy with the ruling. Wisconsin Democrat Cathy Myers said that the decision will only embolden other “bigoted bakers,” (Hmmm. No hostility there.) while writer Robert Sandy said that the decision gave Phillips license to be a “homophobic a**hole.”

If he didn't have that right, Mr Sandy, you might not have the right to call him such immature names.

Anyway, congratulations SCOTUS on getting it right.


Monday, May 28, 2018

Why Colorado's Black Market for Marijuana is Booming 4 Years After Legalization

Briar Stewart · CBC News

Criminal organizations have moved into Teller County, a community of 24,000 nestled in the Rocky Mountains about 160 km south of Denver, and are illegally growing marijuana there that they smuggle out of state. The sheriff's office in the county says it has 400 kilograms of marijuana sitting in storage as evidence. (Teller County Sheriff)

When recreational marijuana went on sale in Colorado in 2014, the government's goal was to regulate and tax a drug that was already widely used and to squeeze out dealers and traffickers in the process.

But law enforcement authorities in the state say legalization has done the exact opposite.

Even though there are more than 500 recreational marijuana dispensaries in the state, the black market is booming. It's being driven by criminal organizations that grow weed in Colorado and smuggle their crop into states where it is still illegal and can be sold for a much greater profit. 

The black market hasn't gone away within the state, either, because some marijuana users are deterred by the higher dispensary prices and are loyal to their long-time dealers.

Investigators say the illegal trade has flourished because the state laws around growing marijuana were overly generous in the beginning and hard to enforce.

As Canada prepares for legalization, CBC News spoke to insiders to get their perspective on why the black market is thriving in a place where pot is legal.

The DEA

Investigators with the federal Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) focus on the largest and most serious drug trafficking rings operating in the United States.

Paul Roach, a DEA supervisor, says his team spends about 15 per cent of its time on marijuana trafficking cases — a threefold increase from before legalization.

"Colorado has basically become the marijuana capital of the United States," he said.

And Canada is determined to become the marijuana capital of the world! There are several companies already planning on growing massive amounts of pot in Canada and shipping it to Europe. Of course, they will only be going to legitimate markets

"You find drug trafficking organizations moving here, setting up shop in Colorado and sending it back to their home states where they can sell it at incredible profit."

Not in Canada, all our drug trafficking organizations will be legal, honest and completely trustworthy. Sunny ways, my friends, sunny ways.

DEA agents document Operation Golden Gopher, in which they raided several Denver warehouses they say housed marijuana intended to be smuggled out of state.

Colorado's high-altitude weed is being trafficked to dozens of states, but some of its largest recipients are Florida, Illinois and Texas, according to a report by the Rocky Mountain High Intensity Drug Traffic Area. It works to support the national drug control strategy while co-ordinating investigations between different authorities. 

When DEA agents raided this home in April, they found marijuana grow lights, dodgy electrical wiring, and mildew and mould. They say the people who were living here had hastily packed up. (Briar Stewart/CBC)

Criminal organizations, including groups tied to Mexican and Cuban drug cartels, are growing marijuana in rental homes, warehouses and even on forested federal land.  

In some cases, they are operating in plain sight and are disguised as legitimate operations.

"The cartels and drug trafficking organizations, in general, will go where they will make money," Roach said.

"If they see an opportunity in Canada to increase their profits by exploiting Canada's laws, then I expect them to do that."

The local sheriff

Jason Mikesell is sheriff of Teller County, Colo., a rural community nestled against the Rocky Mountains.

This picturesque county of 24,000 is favoured by young families and retirees, but Mikesell says criminal organizations are also moving in to smuggle pot out.

"Never would we have thought that we would have this issue going on in our community," he said.

Jason Mikesell, who will soon be up for re-election as Teller County sheriff, says the issue of illegal marijuana is a major concern for his rural community. (Chris Corday/CBC)

While he believes most of the illegal marijuana grown in Teller County is destined for out of state, he also says there is a local black market.

Last fall, Mikesell wanted to sell an SUV, so he listed it on Cragislist. A prospective buyer offered to trade for nearly two kilograms of pot.

Mikesell set up the trade, and when the buyers arrived, they were arrested and charged with illegal distribution of marijuana. One of them was convicted and recently sentenced to four years in prison.

Bucolic Teller County has seen an uptick in illegal activity related to marijuana following legalization of the drug in Colorado in 2014. (Briar Stewart/CBC)

Mikesell says Colorado was the test subject for legal weed in the U.S., and the state regulations that made enforcement difficult because people were allowed to grow so much of their own marijuana.

In the beginning, each person could grow up to six plants, and they could pool them together in a co-op.

Medical patients could grow up to 99 plants and appoint a caregiver to grow it for them.

More restrictive laws were introduced earlier this year, limiting each residence to a maximum of 12 plants, so the sheriff's office has been able to ramp up enforcement.

The sheriff's team has raided eight houses so far this year and has seized more than $3.5 million US of marijuana. During those investigations, they arrested more than 20 cartel members with connections to Cuba and Miami. 

Mikesell says his team has been tipped off about some of the grow operations because people have called in complaining about strong odours in their neighbourhood. 

"We know there are another 60 or 70 marijuana houses we haven't got to yet," said Mikesell.

Other local police departments in Colorado are getting similar calls from residents who also report excessive noise from air conditioning units and blown electrical transformers, according to the DEA.

I can hardly wait for the stink and the noise to come to Canada full force.

The drug dealer

A dealer who agreed to speak with CBC News on condition that he not be named said he spends most of his days in the front seat of his sedan driving around Denver. An air freshener dangles from the mirror of his vehicle, but it can't disguise the lingering smell of weed.

On his lap, he holds a plastic bag containing marijuana buds.

"In a good day … I am making $400 to $500," he said.

This man advertises online and runs a marijuana delivery service in the Denver area. He has his own plants and also gets product from other growers. (Briar Stewart/CBC)

The father of two advertises online along with dozens of others who grow and sell marijuana illegally.

He runs a delivery service and sells marijuana that he's picked up from a network of growers who have "extra" product, and he also grows his own. He compares himself to a pizza delivery man because, he says, he guarantees delivery to anywhere in Denver in less than an hour.

He says legalization hasn't had a big impact on his business because he caters to clients who don't want to be seen going into a dispensary. 

"I have had nurses that have contacted me via the internet and have a delivery brought to their home or their office or wherever they feel comfortable," he said.

His clientele also includes a number of truck drivers, who are prohibited from using marijuana under federal transportation laws.

Dozens of ads listing cannabis for sale in bulk quantity can be viewed on sites like Denver Craigslist. (Craigslist)

While the dealer's operation helps him provide for his family, it isn't his full-time job. He says he has a couple of more "respectable" side projects that keep him busy, but he says one of his goals is to make marijuana more accessible.

He does worry about being caught by the police but admits there are other risks to operating in the black market.

"I have had people sit right there ... with a gun to my head," he said, pointing to the front passenger seat.

"It's a definite risk."

This tourist from Michigan was one of the thousands who gathered in Denver's Civic Center Park in April to take part in the city's annual 420 celebration. (Chris Corday/CBC)

The advocate

Whenever Larisa Bolivar, 42, wants to pick up some marijuana, she heads to one of her preferred Denver dispensaries where she can buy cannabis to smoke and edibles to eat. 

As president of Colorado's Cannabis Consumers Coalition, she is both a longtime user and an advocate. For the past two years, she has conducted online surveys by polling marijuana users about just where they get their pot from. She reached out through the coalition's Facebook page, which has 17,000 members, and contacted people directly after obtaining customer lists from cannabis-related companies. 

Larisa Bolivar, president of the Cannabis Consumers Coalition, conducted a series of online surveys asking people to disclose where they purchase their marijuana. The surveys found around 50 per cent of respondents are not getting their marijuana at dispensaries. (Briar Stewart/CBC)

She had 527 people respond to her 2017 survey, and while she is still tallying the results for this year, she says the findings are consistent. 

Black market still bigger than legal one

"There is still a larger percentage of people buying from the black market [than legally]," she said.

The results of Bolivar's Facebook survey suggested nearly 50 per cent of the respondents were not shopping at the state's licensed dispensaries. Bolivar says most are buying their pot off of friends or sticking to their regular dealers because they trust them.

In Colorado, you have to be 21 to buy from a dispensary, and you have show identification. Bolivar says accessibility is also an issue: not all communities have retail stores.

And, there is a large market for under-21s that needs to be serviced. Legalizing pot does not reduce the number of teens accessing it. In Colorado, more teens are using pot than ever and it is very dangerous for teens, especially young or mid-teens, to smoke pot as it frequently results in the onset of Schizophrenia and/or other psychotic disorders that seriously affect the rest of your life.

Colorado, which has a population of around 5.6 million, has more than 500 recreational marijuana dispensaries. (Briar Stewart/CBC)

Taxes and fees on marijuana have brought in more than $250 million US to the state last year. Bolivar says those additional costs are the biggest driver toward the local black market.

"I really think a lot of it has to do with price," Bolivar says.

The tax rates vary by municipality. In Denver, for example, people buying recreational marijuana pay a tax of 23.15 per cent.

"If I can save $5 on a purchase, that is a cheap lunch," Bolivar said.

The haste in Canada to start collecting taxes from pot smokers without serious study of the consequences, is extremely disturbing. I believe there will be unforeseen, and even foreseen consequences that will cost Canadian society dearly. Instant and inexpensive gratification will continue to increase dramatically to the detriment of long-term planning and the next generation. Nothing good will come out of this.