Make My Day Better bill: Okay to use deadly force at work?

A running gag in the classic comedy Raising Arizona is that just about everybody in the vicinity of Tempe is packing heat — even the pimple-faced kid at the convenience store, who whips out a Dirty Harry special and starts blasting away at stickup man Nicholas Cage. But it’s no…

Killer sheepdogs and five other top terrors of the backcountry

Anyone thinking about abandoning the safety and comfort of the big city for a trip to Colorado’s savage backcountry, take heed. Not only might you be braving the caprices of nature and the hardships of an untamed wilderness, but you could also encounter a particularly fierce breed of sheepdog. According…

Pinon Canyon foes blast Army’s plans for helicopter missions

Lately, ranchers and community leaders in southeastern Colorado are feeling a bit like the battle-weary Michael Corleone of The Godfather Part III. Every time you think you’re out, they pull you back in — “they” being the Pentagon planners seeking more intense use of the Pinon Canyon Maneuver Site, a…

Shell settles one royalty dispute with feds for $25 million

This week’s cover story, “Drilled, Baby, Drilled,” reports on the efforts of a group of federal auditors to hold energy companies accountable for underpaid royalties on oil and gas leases. On the eve of its publication, the U.S. Office of Natural Resources Revenue (ONRR) announced a $25 million settlement with…

Ken Salazar’s plans for tourism in San Luis Valley generates protests

Two weeks ago, Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar surfaced in Alamosa, surrounded by state leaders, to present the results of a federal study aimed at promoting tourism and conservation in the San Luis Valley. The National Park Service’s study pushes for conservation easements, recreational trails and landmark designations for…

Phil Anschutz remains elusive in The New Yorker

Few people can endure the scrutiny involved in a lengthy New Yorker profile with their mystique intact. But the magazine hardly makes a dent in the armor encasing Phil Anschutz, despite the wealth of information about the “secretive mogul” amassed in Connie Bruck’s “The Man Who Owns L.A.,” in the…

Dougherty Gang members Ryan, Dylan and Lee-Grace send Colorado love

Last summer’s wild multi-state crime spree by the Dougherty Gang — two scary-looking brothers and their stripper sister — understandably drew some superheated media coverage, what with Lee-Grace Dougherty’s online bikini shots and all. But the story fizzled shortly after the trio’s brief rampage ended in a police chase and…

Juvenile lifers targeted for rape, excessive isolation in adult prisons

Juveniles doing time in adult prisons, surrounded by older and stronger criminals, rarely fare well. But juveniles serving sentences of life without parole in the United States face particularly daunting prospects of sexual assault, neglect and long periods of solitary confinement, according to a grim new report from Human Rights…

Ken Salazar: How green is his San Luis Valley?

On Wednesday, Alamosa-born Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar will return to his roots — again — as part of a long-simmering effort to promote tourism and conservation in Colorado’s much-praised, much-neglected San Luis Valley. Accompanied by Governor John Hickenlooper and Senators Michael Bennet and Mark Udall, Salazar will visit…

Robert Hood: A former supermax warden’s resolutions for 2012

A former warden at the highest-security prison in the country — the federal supermax prison outside Florence — has some intriguing advice for fixing the nation’s troubled, budget-draining corrections system in the coming year. Intriguing, in part, because some of the changes Robert Hood urges (apparently with a straight face)…