The Denver Post

39 HOMELESS KILLED IN DENVER SINCE 2008

More than a dozen of those Denver cases remain unsolved since 2008

- By Elise Schmelzer

Police have identified a suspect or made an arrest in 22 cases, slightly lower than the department’s overall homicide clearance rate. »

Clint Burtts was attacked during a fight near a busy downtown Denver intersecti­on. In broad daylight. During rush hour.

Burtts, who was homeless, lay on the street near the Colorado Convention Center bleeding before he was taken to a hospital, where he slipped into a coma. The 52yearold later died from the beating.

Five years after the September 2013 fight, Denver police haven’t made an arrest in the killing of Burtts. Investigat­ors issued a call for help locating a potential witness to the fatal fight about a year after the homeless man’s death. Then, nothing.

Burtts is one of more than a dozen Denver homeless homicide victims whose cases over the past decade have never been solved.

Since 2008, 39 people experienci­ng homelessne­ss have been victims of homicide, according to Denver police data.

Of those killings — a total of 37 cases — police have identified a suspect or made an arrest in 22 for a clearance rate of 59 percent, slightly lower than the department’s overall homicide clearance rate.

Over the past seven years, the clearance rate for all Denver homicide cases was about 62 percent, according to previous Denver Post reporting and federal data. Those success rates are higher than the national average. About 49 percent of murder or nonneglige­nt manslaught­er cases in cities with population­s comparable to Denver’s were cleared in 2016, according to federal crime data.

Police investigat­ing killings of the homeless face a number of obstacles that are exacerbate­d by the victim’s housing status, said Lt. Matt Clark of the Denver police major crimes unit. It can be difficult to track down family members of the deceased who know about the person’s background, especially if the victim did not have identifica­tion. Investigat­ors also struggle to find other people experienci­ng homelessne­ss who witnessed the killing or knew the victim because they don’t have fixed addresses or telephone numbers, he said.

“Once we do contact these witnesses, they often cooperate,” he said. “They don’t want those violent offenders in their community. They don’t want to live in fear.”

Such cooperatio­n was key in the investigat­ion of the shooting near Interstate 25 last month that killed three people experienci­ng homelessne­ss, Clark said. Tips and informatio­n contribute­d by the homeless community were instrument­al in the arrest of a sus

pect, Clark said. Testimony from homeless witnesses was also critical in the case of a man convicted last month of murdering a homeless person living by the South Platte River in 2016, he said.

The police department’s homeless outreach program helps establish trust between officers and the transient community that is crucial to solving crimes against the homeless.

“We rely on the trust and help of the homeless community to make progress,” Clark said.

While killings of homeless people occasional­ly make headlines — such as the series of killings in 1999, and the man in a clown costume who stabbed a homeless man in the neck in 2017 — others receive little more than a news brief. The city saw an unpreceden­ted spike in 2013 when seven people experienci­ng homelessne­ss were killed. Only one of those cases was ever solved, but it is difficult to find coverage of the killings in Denver news media, including The Denver Post.

The number of total reported crimes against the homeless in Denver continues to grow as well. In 2013, police received 712 reports of crimes committed against homeless people. That number jumped to more than 1,000 crimes in both 2016 and 2017. The mostreport­ed crimes include simple assault, aggravated assault and theft. In that same time period, the number of people experienci­ng homelessne­ss in the city also jumped from about 2,900 in 2014 to 3,700 the following year.

Through Aug. 23 of this year, police received 651 reports of crimes against the homeless — just shy of the total for all of 2014.

The number of crimes committed against people experienci­ng homelessne­ss are likely underrepor­ted, Kerry Daniel, director of case management at Catholic Charities of Denver, previously told The Denver Post. Victims are often fearful of law enforcemen­t or don’t understand the justice system, she said.

It’s a tension Ray Lyall knows well.

For seven years, Lyall slept on Denver’s streets. He remembers often being startled awake at 4 a.m. by the honking horn of a Denver police cruiser before being ordered to move by an officer.

“I wasn’t doing anything wrong,” he said. “I was just sleeping.”

He said it would be hard for police officers to rebuild relationsh­ips with homeless people who may have had negative experience­s with law enforcemen­t in the past.

Lyall is the lead plaintiff in a classactio­n lawsuit against the city claiming that police sweeps that uproot homeless people from the parks where they sleep and confiscate their personal property violate their civil rights. The sweeps and the city’s camping ban encourage people to sleep in places hidden from view, putting them at higher risk. Women sleeping on the streets often cut their hair and wear baggy clothes to appear like men in order to sleep a little safer.

“When they start hiding, they get more unsafe,” Lyall said. “Stuff gets stolen. You get hurt.”

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