The Denver Post

DENVER POLICE INVESTIGAT­E BODY IN ERIE

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Denver detectives are investigat­ing the death of a 39-year-old man whose body was dumped on an Interstate 25 frontage road in Erie and covered with plastic bags.

Gene David Cisneros had been fatally shot in Denver, the Denver Police Department said in a news release.

Erie police officers were called at 8:40 a.m. Sunday to an area along I-25 frontage road and Erie Parkway on a report of a person lying on the side of the road.

Officers could tell the person had been shot, but they also realized the shooting had not happened in that location, the news release said.

After two days of investigat­ing, Erie detectives determined the person likely was killed in the 5200 block of Steele Street.

Repeat felon found guilty of attempted murder for shooting Aurora auto shop owner in the face.

A repeat felon who shot the co-owner of an Aurora auto repair business in the face has been found guilty of attempted first-degree murder.

An Arapahoe County District Court jury deliberate­d for about three hours Friday before returning the guilty verdict against Michael Christophe­r Taylor, 36, according to the 18th Judicial District.

On Sept. 5, 2017, Taylor pulled a gun at Shaus Motorsport­s, 15551 E. Sixth Ave., and shot the victim in the face.

Taylor also was convicted of first-degree assault and possession of a weapon by a previous offender.

Taylor was arrested the day after the shooting. He still had the gun. He also had more than $17,000 and had put fake temporary license plates on his vehicle, prosecutor­s said.

The victim survived the shooting but suffers serious, permanent injuries, according to the release.

If convicted as a habitual criminal, Taylor could be sentenced up to 96 years in prison.

Repeat offender who attacked 78-year-old woman in Broomfield is sentenced to 52 years in prison.

A man who attacked a 78-year-old woman as she walked her dog in Broomfield was sentenced Friday to 52 years in prison.

Donald McMillian, 44, pleaded guilty in June to first-degree assault of an at-risk victim, second-degree kidnapping with a deadly weapon and attempted sexual assault as part of a plea agreement that called for the 52-year sentence, according to the district attorney’s office.

The victim and her family agreed to the plea and stipulated sentence to keep the victim from having to relive her trauma at a trial, said Amy Petri Beard, senior deputy district attorney.

Database was hacked, school says, but damage was limited.

GLENWOOD

SPRINGS» A school district says hackers breached a database of special-education students and teachers but didn’t obtain any Social Security numbers or financial informatio­n.

The Glenwood Springs Post Independen­t reported Sunday the database was kept by a contractor working for the Roaring Fork School District. The database involved 119 students and 60 staff members.

Jeff Gatlin, chief operating officer for the district, says some emails also may have been accessed.

The breach occurred in March and was discovered in July.

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