JusticePrivate Prison To Close Colorado Springs Facility, Forcing The State To Reopen A Shuttered Prison To Rehouse 650 InmatesBy Hayley Sanchez
Government and PoliticsColorado ‘On The Right Path’ To Eliminate Cash Bail With 2020 Bill, Advocates SayBy Andrew Kenney
Justice2020 Colorado Officer-Involved ShootingsBy Natalia V. Navarro, Andrew Villegas, Alison Borden, Colorado Public Radio Staff, and The Associated Press
JusticeDurango Silverton Railroad Could Be Liable For The Costs Of Fighting 2018’s 416 WildfireBy Rachel Estabrook
Justice‘He Ruined That Man’: Colorado’s Catholic Church Reparations Exclude Victims Of Religious Order AbuseBy Andrew Kenney
Government and Politics‘Someone Has Got To Tell The Truth To The American People,’ And Presidential Candidate Tom Steyer Says He’s The GuyBy Anthony Cotton and Xandra McMahon
TransportationLawsuit Alleges RTD’s Hiring Practices Are Discriminatory Against African AmericansBy Nathaniel Minor
Government and PoliticsColorado’s Red Flag Law Goes Into Effect Jan. 1. This Is What People Are Watching ForBy Hayley Sanchez
Government and PoliticsPolis’ First Clemencies Go To A Juvenile Murderer, A Woman In Sanctuary, A Man Who Defrauded Him And OthersBy Megan Verlee
Life and CulturePueblo To Hold First-Ever Menorah Lighting After A Bomb Threat Rallied The City Around Temple Emanuel SynagogueBy Hayley Sanchez
ArtsBy Performing ‘A Christmas Carol,’ Female Inmates Get To Practice Living Out Their Own Second ChancesBy Avery Lill
HealthGovernments Are Suing JUUL And It’s Starting To Feel More Like The Opioid And Big Tobacco FightsBy John Daley
JusticeInvestigations Into Aurora Officer Who Was Found Passed Out Drunk Come As The City Considers How To Police The PoliceBy Hayley Sanchez