Showing posts with label assault. Show all posts
Showing posts with label assault. Show all posts

Saturday, December 22, 2012

Fort Carson soldier court-martialed in sex assault case

Font ResizeColorado NewsBy Bob Stephens
The Gazettedenverpost.comPosted: 12/22/2012 02:49:39 PM MSTDecember 22, 2012 9:54 PM GMTUpdated: 12/22/2012 02:54:20 PM MST

Army Sgt. Alberto Silva-Sadder was found guilty of multiple charges by a Fort Carson court-martial Friday and sentenced to 35 years in military prison.

According to Maj. Earl Brown, spokesman for Fort Carson's 4th Infantry Division, Silva-Sadder will get a dishonorable discharge when he's served his time.

Silva-Sadder, who was assigned to the post's 10th Combat Support Hospital, was accused by four women in the past three years of sexual misconduct.

After a weeklong trial, a panel of seven Army officers convicted Silva-Sadder on 21 charges, including two counts of aggravated sexual assault, three counts of forcible sodomy, two counts of possession of child pornography and a kidnapping charge.

Read the complete story in The (Colorado Springs) Gazette.



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Friday, December 21, 2012

War comes home for founder of group fighting for assault weapons ban

Font ResizeLocal NewsBy David Olinger
The Denver Postdenverpost.comPosted: 12/21/2012 02:37:16 PM MSTDecember 22, 2012 12:37 AM GMTUpdated: 12/21/2012 05:37:26 PM MST

 Josh Sugarmann came out of college determined to protect people — particularly children — from the proliferation of guns in America.

He founded a unique gun control advocacy group, the Violence Policy Center, 24 years ago. His center didn't argue about the rights of U.S. citizens to own guns. It didn't treat gun control as a political battle. It did call 300 million guns in circulation a public health threat.

His target: Assault-style weapons.

Sugarmann and the Violence Policy Center witnessed the wanton use of assault-style weapons to kill children, adults and themselves again and again.

Last Friday the madmen's war on children finally landed at Sugarmann's doorstep, in a quaint New England community called Newtown.

"Yeah, it's my home town," he said Thursday. "Class of 1978. I grew up there."

It has been a long week at the Violence Policy Center in Washington, D.C. Calls have come in from all over the world from people asking how in the world 20-year-old Adam Lanza managed to murder 20 children and six adults in an elementary school he once attended.

Some callers expressed shock and horror. Many asked questions about the status of assault-style weapons in the U.S. Others just asked how they could help.

For Sugarmann it was a bittersweet week.

"The friends I've talked to only recently stopped crying," he said.

On the bright side, many people have united to say that now is the time to talk about guns — particularly semiautomatic rifles, shotguns and pistols, 100-round ammunition drums and other weapons possessed by lunatics.

Assault-style weapons also include police Glock pistols with more than 10 rounds and semiautomatic weapons that can be turned into machine guns.

In the last week, sportscasters, football and basketball coaches, pro-gun Republican and Democratic congressmen and the president of the United States agreed that now is the time to do something about keeping these types of weapons out of the wrong hands.

And this time, Sugarmann hopes, President Barack Obama and Congress will do what is needed.

When Congress enacted a temporary assault weapons "ban" in 1988, Sugarmann objected that the new law created a small island of regulation in a vast sea of laissez-faire manufacture.

The ban grandfathered every existing assault-style weapon in the U.S., as well as ammunition drums, armor-piercing bullets and second-hand police weapons — everything from Glock pistols to Army rifles.

"We warned about the limits of the original ban," he said.

The Violence Policy Center also warned about the "sporterization" of assault weapons as purported hunting guns, when some were clearly designed to hunt people.

"The grotesque irony?" Sugarmann asked. "The National Shooting Sports Foundation locale. They've taken the lead in working to rebrand assault weapons as modern sporting rifles."

The National Shooting Sports Foundation is headquartered in Newtown, in a building across the street "from the old duckpin bowling alley," he said. "It's their neighborhood, their community, their friends, their families."

Sugarmann said he has seen the ship of state slowly turning on assault-style weapons ownership for about two years.

It began, he said, with the attempted assassination of U.S. Rep. Gabrielle Giffords outside a Tucson grocery store, followed by the killing of a Florida kid who looked suspicious to a vigilant neighbor and then, in July, the murderous rampage in an Aurora movie theater.

Now, in Newtown, the world has watched a parade of tiny coffins.

"How can it get any worse?" Sugarmann asked. "This is so much worse. People are looking in the mirror and saying we just can't put up with this any more."

In the outpouring of support, "there's anger, of course, and helplessness," he said. But also, "in the reaction across the country, people are just saying what can I do? I want to help."

Sugarmann no longer lives in Newtown. He last visited his hometown when a friend's dad died. The funeral reception was held at the volunteer firehouse, the staging area for the massacre response last week.

Sugarmann, who graduated from Boston University with a journalism degree, still subscribes to his hometown paper, the Newtown Bee.

Newtown remains "charming in its small-town way," he said.

The volunteer fire department raises money with lobster bakes. At yearly town meetings, "they vote down the budget three times. The news should be the Newtown savings bank giving another $1,000 to a scholarship fund. It really brings to me how people in Columbine and Aurora must feel."

The town newspaper "asks questions of kids every week," he said.

So what happens now?

Sugarmann recalls the words of Charlton Heston, brought in to give the National Rifle Association a well-loved face:

"The final war has begun."

David Olinger: 303-954-1498, dolinger

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Lakewood police on alert for sexual assault suspect

Font ResizeLocal NewsThe Denver Postdenverpost.comPosted: 12/21/2012 06:08:10 PM MSTDecember 22, 2012 1:9 AM GMTUpdated: 12/21/2012 06:08:21 PM MST

Lakewood Police are asking for the public's help in finding a man who may be a suspect in three different sexual assaults.

One of the attacks happened at about 7 p.m. Tuesday, when a woman was walking to her car in the 7600 block of West Colfax Avenue.

The man sexually assaulted the woman, but the woman was eventually able to fight the man away. He then fled in a blue minivan.

Just 20 minutes later a man in a similar vehicle followed another woman in the 1900 block of South Kipling Parkway.

The man attacked the second woman, but she was able to spray him with pepper spray and escape.

Lakewood Police are investigating the possibility that the two attacks may be related to a similar attack that happened last week.

In that attack, a man driving a gold Plymouth Laser or Mitsubishi Eclipse on Dec. 10 in the 9000 block of West Dartmouth Avenue crashed into a woman's vehicle.

When the woman got out of her vehicle, the man sexually assaulted her.

The suspect is described as a white or light-skinned Hispanic in his 30s. He is described as being about 5 feet, 5 inches to 5 feet, 8 inches tall with a medium build, short dark blond or light brown hair and heavy acne.

The man may have scratches or injuries to his face and eyes from the assaults this week.

The minivan used in the two Tuesday attacks is described as a blue, early 2000s model Ford Windstar or Dodge Caravan.

The gold Plymouth Laser in the Dec. 10 incident is described as having no front plate, a cracked windshield and old body damage on the front driver's side.

Anyone with questions or information about these attacks is asked to call Detective Bryan Feik at 303-987-7536.



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Tuesday, December 18, 2012

Jury finds Denver cop guilty of felony kidnapping, sex assault

Font ResizeCops and CourtsBy Jessica Fender
The Denver Postdenverpost.comPosted: 12/18/2012 07:08:20 PM MSTDecember 19, 2012 2:20 AM GMTUpdated: 12/18/2012 07:20:45 PM MST

Denver cop Hector Paez grasped his forehead and quietly muttered "I don't understand" as he stared at the 12 men and women who who had just convicted him Tuesday evening of felony rape and kidnapping.

His wife, and the mother of their four children, collapsed into tears.

It had been more than two weeks of trial and more than two years since Paez was first accused of arresting a woman, driving her to a secluded spot in a deserted warehouse district and coercing her into oral sex.

The rape case — a test of credibility — put the dishonest cop up against an accuser with a checkered history that includes heroin abuse and a prostitution conviction.

Jurors deliberated for less than a day before reaching the verdict that will end Paez' career as a Denver police officer and could land him in prison for up to life. 

Chief Deputy District Attorney Doug Jackson said isn't always easy to fire errant officers, let alone convict them in criminal court.

"Jurors want to believe cops are good guys, and most are," Jackson said. "This is a good day for the Denver Police Department. There are a lot of good, hard working cops in that department, and now they can get rid of Officer Paez."

The 33-year-old Paez, who was cuffed and taken into custody, will remain in jail until a status hearing Thursday. At that point, District Court Judge John Madden will decide whether he can remain free on bond until he's sentenced.

The victim said Tuesday evening that she plans to ask Madden to keep Paez locked up, saying he threatened her during the May 16, 2010 assault and also stared her down as she testified.

The verdict was an emotional moment for her, too, she said.

"I was so overwhelmed. I just fell down to my knees, thanked God and I cried," she said. "I've been called a liar. This just justified everything."

Paez could face as little as probation for the felony charges. The rape carries a penalty of up to life in prison and the kidnapping up to 24 years in prison. He was also convicted of the misdemeanor charge of providing false information to authorities.

"We're both surprised and disappointed," said defense attorney Gary Lozow. "Hopefully an appeals court will get it right."

He argued during trial that Paez kept the woman in his car to gather intelligence on her heroin dealer and drove to an out-of-the-way spot so she wouldn't be spotted by her pimp.

The woman testified she was meeting her now fiance — not a pimp — at the lightrail station where she first encountered Paez.

Jurors filed out Tuesday without comment on what evidence they found most compelling.

Jackson and internal affairs Sgt. Jaime Lucero lined up GPS tracking data from Paez' patrol car, calls that the woman overheard on his car radio following the assault and accounts from other officers to piece together Paez' actions that day.

Paez' case was plagued by delays — the biggest coming in September 2011 when evidence misplaced by investigators surfaced and prompted a mistrial.

Throughout the life of the case, Paez' wife, brother and other family members have dutifully attended hearings.

But on Tuesday, some in tears, they declined to comment on the conviction as they filed out of the courtroom.

Jessica Fender: 303-954-1244 , jfender

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