Man Sentenced to Life Without Parole for Gunning Down In-Laws in Valley Center A man who gunned down his father-in-law and brother-in- law in Valley Center was sentenced Friday to life in prison without the possibility of parole, plus 50 years. Christian Bobila, 46, was ... 05/31/2024 - 12:15 pm | View Link
Man sentenced to life for gunning down in-laws in Valley Center A man who gunned down his father- and brother- in-laws in Valley Center was sentenced on May 31 to life in prison without parole. 05/31/2024 - 11:11 am | View Link
Man sentenced to life in prison for gunning down 2 in-laws in Valley Center A man who gunned down his father-in-law and brother-in-law in Valley Center was sentenced Friday to life in prison without the possibility of parole, plus 50 years. Christian Bobila, 46, was convicted ... 05/30/2024 - 1:00 pm | View Link
Former King County jail guard pleads guilty to bribery, drug charges A former King County Jail guard pleaded guilty Thursday, May 30 in U.S. District Court in Seattle to bribery and distributing methamphetamine and fentanyl pills, according to a U.S. Department of ... 05/30/2024 - 10:51 am | View Link
Few homes in metro Denver can claim to have a million-dollar view. But a listing about to hit the market near Morrison’s Willowbrook neighborhood will test how much Colorado buyers are willing to pay up to be able to look down.
In whatever direction Liz Wilson looks out from the home she and her husband Rick built on Lyons Ridge, just north of West Belleview Avenue, she is met with amazing views and recollections that span decades.
Directly to the south, Wilson can see the home where she was born and raised and beyond that, the rolling hills leading into the Ken Caryl area.
Colorado could come across as dinosaur-obsessed — and with good reason.
The Rocky Mountain West has unparalleled access to artifacts from the dinosaur age because the uplift that formed the mountains unearthed layers of rock that were buried for millennia prior, said Bruce Schumacher, senior paleontologist with the U. S. Forest Service.
That’s why when development companies start digging on new projects, they often stumble across dino remains.
Christopher Fazzari has fired off more than 200 job applications since graduating from the University of Denver last year.
The 23-year-old would at least like to receive the occasional rejection notice.
Most of the time, he never hears anything from employers after uploading his credentials into an online abyss where algorithms — not humans — often get the first crack at whittling down hundreds of job candidates.
Fazzari, a Denver resident, wants to break into media or communications to write, podcast and inform people about education policy and news relevant to teachers.
BOULDER — Brad Lidge traveled to Italy in March to explore a remote, wooded section of southeastern Tuscany.
Brad Lidge uses a GPS/topographical survey station to map an ancient Etruscan site in Siena, Italy, in July of 2023. (Photo provided by Brad Lidge)
“We were surveying this area, looking for Medieval sites, when we came across an undocumented Etruscan tomb,” Lidge said last week, sitting on the patio of his 5 1/2-acre spread near Boulder.
It still hasn’t completely sunk in for Zeev Buium.
A year ago, Buium was the top recruit in the University of Denver’s incoming freshman class, but he arrived with a fraction of the hype of players like Macklin Celebrini at Boston University and the trio of Will Smith, Ryan Leonard and Gabe Perreault at Boston College.
Now, as Buium prepares for the NHL draft combine next week in Buffalo, N.
It’s usually after two rounds of playoff basketball that our collective NBA consciousness can start to take stock of the season’s big-picture lessons. Four teams remain, a small enough number for each of their respective roads to the conference finals to feel significant, but also still a more hearty sample size than the NBA Finals.