The Denver Post

CAPITOL LOCKED DOWN AFTER SHOTS FIRED

No injuries are reported and no one is in custody after incident on Colfax

- The Denver Post By Danika Worthingto­n, John Frank and Jesse Paul

At least one gunman fires several shots in downtown Denver on Thursday afternoon, briefly locking down the state Capitol. No injuries are reported, and no one is in custody.

At least one gunman fired several shots outside the state Capitol on Thursday afternoon, prompting a brief lockdown and shutting down traffic as Denver police secured the scene. Police said no injuries were reported.

Police closed Colfax Avenue from Lincoln to Grant streets, and there were several officers and squad cars at the scene. Police spokesman Jay Casillas said authoritie­s didn’t know yet if there were one or multiple shooters. No one was in custody.

“Should there be any threat to the public, we will make proper notificati­on to residents,” police said in a tweet.

Lobbyist Mike Beasley had just left the Capitol and was at the corner of East 16th Avenue and Sherman Street when the shooting started. A car, driven by a woman, was parked in the middle of the intersecti­on at Sherman and Colfax and a man was shooting toward at least three young adults who were running southwest over the hill on the Capitol’s lawn, he said.

“Initially I thought it was a car backfiring, and I’m trying to have a phone conversati­on at the same time,” Beasley said. “But after the third ‘backfire,’ I looked over my shoulder and saw a gun out of a car with smoke coming out of it.”

The car turned left and sped away, heading east down Colfax, he said.

“It seemed like an hour,” he said. “The state trooper was outside within seconds and Denver police within seconds after that. I’m guessing it didn’t last more than 30 seconds.”

Dustin Cabellos was near the Capitol when he said he saw a gun being fired from a vehicle toward the building, which houses the legislatur­e and the governor’s office. Cabellos dived behind a barrier.

“There was a lot of traffic at the time,” Cabellos said.

The Colorado State Patrol, which is in charge of security at the Capitol, received reports of the shooting at 1:36 p.m. and temporaril­y placed the Capitol on lockdown. A state patrolman told bystanders in the Capitol there were 15-20 shots. Several shell casings could be seen on the north side of Colfax on westbound lanes.

Joshua Crews, 36, said he was waiting at Colfax and Broadway for the East Colfax bus. He heard a dozen or so shots before getting on the bus, he said. Then as he rode the bus past the state Capitol, police stopped it just west of Grant Street.

“The cops wanted to see everybody’s hands,” Crews said.

Gov. John Hickenloop­er was in his office at the Capitol at the time, but he said: “To my knowledge … it had nothing to do with me.”

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