Tim Wirth scolds Obama for lack of action on climate change

Environmental leaders who ardently supported Barack Obama in 2008 haven’t had much to celebrate in the past three years, as key pieces of legislation dealing with climate change and controls on the energy industry have been scuttled, diluted or delayed — by a bad economy, an increasingly intransigent Congress, and…

Douglas Bruce: The long, hard fall of a rogue tax crusader

The conviction of controversy magnet Douglas Bruce on tax evasion charges has touched off some high-pitched gloating on liberal-leaning political websites, as well as the expected musings on the irony of the Taxpayer Bill of Rights godfather getting busted by the tax man. For those who hate TABOR, it’s apparently…

Encana blasts EPA report linking fracking to Wyoming water pollution

In a telephone conference with journalists this morning, officials of the Canadian energy giant Encana sharply disputed an EPA draft report that linked the company’s gas drilling operations in Wyoming to contamination of residents’ drinking water, calling the report badly flawed and demanding an independent review of the study’s findings…

Theresa Foster murder fact vs. fiction: Read the 1948 autopsy report

This week’s cover story, “The Case of the Kidnapped Coed,” revisits the wild press coverage surrounding the 1948 murder of eighteen-year-old college student Theresa Foster — and explores how the Denver Post’s rabid campaign to catch a killer tainted the subsequent trial. It’s a cautionary tale about how pseudo-experts (in…

Fracking lovefest blooms from John Hickenlooper’s gas play

Yesterday, amid an unusually genial gathering of environmental and energy leaders, Governor John Hickenlooper unveiled new state rules requiring detailed disclosure of the chemicals used in hydraulic fracturing (or “fracking”) methods of drilling for oil and gas — a major step toward transparency in the controversial drilling practice and a…

Tim Tebow: Top five franchising opportunities

No question about it, the ascension of Tim Tebow has established a unique style of football in Denver. The Broncos have managed to distill all the heart-pounding excitement and nail-biting competitiveness of NFL action and compress it into the final couple of minutes (and sometimes the final couple of seconds)…

The case of the kidnapped coed

Two rabbit hunters found her. She lay face-down, half-buried in the snow beside a frozen stream twelve miles south of Boulder, legs pulled up as if curled in sleep. She appeared to have been dumped there from a bridge fifteen feet above that carried motorists along state highway 93. She…

Fracking: Polluted water in Wyoming could spell trouble in Colorado

The release of an EPA report detailing suspected groundwater contamination from gas drilling operations in Wyoming comes just as Colorado is weighing tougher restrictions and wider disclosures about the hydraulic fracturing or “fracking” process — and may serve as Exhibit A for environmental groups opposing the practice. All of which…

Habitual criminal policy: Who’s going away for a long, long time?

This week’s cover story, “Welcome to Arapahell,” examines Arapahoe County District Attorney Carol Chambers’s frequent filing of habitual criminal charges against repeat offenders, which can triple or quadruple the length of a prison sentence. While other district attorneys use the habitual criminal charge sparingly, reserving it for their most violent…

The Big Bitch

On the Saturday before Easter 2010, Dennis Pauls got it into his head to give his ex-wife a plant. It was an Easter lily, a Christian symbol of suffering and renewal; tradition says white lilies bloomed where Christ’s sweat fell to the ground in the garden of Gethsemane, a sign…