Sentinel Colorado 5.19.2022

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JUSTICE TRAVAILS

Weeks after Aurora film students were attacked on a rural Park County mountain road, cops and courts keeping quiet

SENTINELCOLORADO.COM MAY 19, 2022 • HOME EDITION • 50¢

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It’s not so much the look you would throw me if I were on your porch and asked if you would like to buy some magazines to keep me off the streets or ask to come in and talk about how Jesus can change your life.

t never fails that I get “the look” when I’m out of state and tell people I’m from Colorado.You know that one, a mix of surprise, fear and quickly darting eyes that makes clear you would chew off your arm to get out of the situation. No, this look is more of a wide smile and a half of a nod. A wink, wink, nudge, nudge thing. The kind of look you’d get if a big bottle of Viagra fell out of your shirt pocket and rolled right over to the bartender, who had to hand it back to you.

“Ohhhhhhh. Colorado,” they always say. Then they either tell me about who they know that just went there, or they give me their best shot at a pot pun. “So is it really mile high stadium?”

Huh.

ety hasn’t broken down into frequent public scenes of reefer madness.

Those most likely to smoke are men, without a college degree and making less rather than more money, according to a pretty groundbreaking report from the Colorado Department of Health a couple of years ago.

A number that has gone up is the quantity of party rentals at nearby Airbnb homes, often with a lot of vacant-eyed visitors staring at the lawn.

If people outside of Colorado ask me for advice, I tell them to go slow. Smoke it, don’t eat it until you figure it all out. I’ve never heard of anyone being stoned to death, but there’s a huge plague of visitors wolfing down edibles that for hours after wished they’d never heard of the stuff.

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“I have some friends who just got back from there,” a restaurant manager in Lawrence, Kansas, said while I was in town not too long ago, headed to Kansas City to sate a serious ‘cue problem I have. “They wanted to go ski-ing,” he said, leaning into the word “ski-ing,” and then holding the word to judge my expression.

DAVE PERRY Editor

It always takes a couple of seconds for me to catch up to this kind of thing. It’s pretty natural when you’re from “ohhhhhhh — Color-ad-doh” for people to come here to “ski.” So you can expect a lot of even odder looks when you chime back to them, “Cool. Where?”

Crickets. The look again. More crickets.

“Ohhhhhhhhh,” I always have to gush. “They came for the dope.”

That immediately brings on the horrified widening of the eyes, the slight lowering of the jaw, and the oh-my-gahd-he-said-dopeout-loud rubber-necking. As if they expected a half-dozen DEA agents to pounce from the shadows and throw us all face down onto the floor. Despite the fact that the number of states that have gone to the dark side is now 18 and counting, and that Colorado is into year six of the greatest experiment ever — like, ever, dude — the interest in Colorado outside of Colorado is still keen.

If you’re from somewhere other than here, you’ll have to excuse us. Not that we weren’t the first great state to end pot prohibition and take up where we left off the day before recreational pot became legal. But excuse us because we’ve now gotten over it.

It would appear the rest of the world has not. Folks my age are always dying to know what it’s like.

They’re almost always disappointed when I tell them that it’s a lot like it is in Lawrence, Kansas City, Dallas, New York, Phoenix… You get the picture. Folks, it’s not like we invented marijuana in Colorado. We just put it in stores and tax it.

I’m old, and I’ve lived here my entire life, so I know a lot of people. Most of my peers gave smoking dope at least a try when we were younger, and a lot of us got pretty good at it. And as we got older and caught up in mortgages, careers and progeny, we traded our leisure bong time for haunting the clearance shelves

of Home Depot and Walmart — a task you would never attempt stoned. I pretty much gave up dope for pretending to think with my eyes closed on the couch with a toddler on the end of a leash: “It’s fun! You can pretend that you’re my dog and I’ll pretend I’m lying here thinking of cool names for you with my eyes closed.”

When life happens, stuff like finding the time and inclination to get high simply does not happen. I always tell people who wonder aloud when it is you actually become a grown-up that it happens when you no longer complain about being bored, but actively seek it out.

I pretty much lost interest in buying and smoking pot about the same time metro area police lost interest in penalizing people for smoking it.

It wasn’t until Colorado legalized medical marijuana in 2000 that most folks I know gave it much thought. Suddenly, the whole state practically collapsed into a giant state of mass medical malady, seeing how you had to have a doctor’s prescription to be a legal consumer of weed back then. Who knew that so many Colorado residents had bad backs and chronic nausea, and that marijuana could cure just about anything?

The pot shops went up. Life went on. Nobody really cared all that much until voters were asked if they wanted to drop the bad-back pretense and go all the way with ending prohibition. It was pretty much a no-brainer. The last 100 years or so made it perfectly clear how easy it was to produce and find pot regardless of whether it was legal. Since so many people were smoking it anyway, why keep putting on a show that it was totally for “medicinal needs” wink, wink, nudge, nudge?

It’s been almost 20 years now since weed became another form of beer, and much hasn’t changed in Colorado. Polling data shows that about 2 in 10 adults smoke it up sometimes or all the time, about what they did before it was legal. National polling shows it’s more like 3 in 10 adults riding the canna-bus at least once a month here in Colorado, not drastically different than what goes on in the rest of the country.

Despite the hand-wringers’ predictions of a Colorado apotcalypse, it appears that soci-

It’s a lot like being really, really drunk, only when you’re young and wasted on cheap beer, you don’t know so much at the time how messed up you are. But when you’re too high, you can’t do anything but totally focus on how really messed up you are, and how you’re going to die, and everyone will know you died that way because you’re transmitting your stonerdeath-mind signal all over the planet and it’s probably being picked up and re broadcast by Fox or CBS. You can’t move from your prone position because it would cause you to explode like an IED, so you must watch the clock crawl for what seems like months until you’re just way high and cognizant enough to realize that, if you live through this, you’ll never do that again.

But given the right amount and the right circumstances, a pleasant buzz now is no different than what it was like way back when. Just like a couple of beers are as good now as they were when you used your own ID instead of your fake one to buy a six-pack in college.

And then you get the other look. The look of disappointment. People from out-of-state are so disappointed when you tell them that legalized recreational marijuana is just not a big deal, despite the fact that pot shops are selling hundreds of millions worth every month.

There are no lines any more. Ever. There are sales and competition, just like liquor stores. Holidays like 4/20 celebrations in Denver Civic Center Park are now passe. Headline writers like me have long run out of pot puns about taking the high road to profitability.

We even have a long list of belt-and-suspender political types fighting to make sure the “cannabis industry” as they like to call it, is treated as totally legit. The commercial marijuana industry has become respectable. Of course, a billion dollars or so a year buys a lot of virtue.

You can tell from the faces of out-of-staters that’s not what they want to hear. They want to hear that it’s freakin’ heaven here, dude. They’ve developed strains that grow hair, result in rapid weight loss, make you look 10 years younger and I can’t believe how much fun it makes my job every goddam day.

Sorry. It’s pretty much just one more thing you have to remember to stop by and pick up when the weatherman predicts a big snow coming. It’s convenient. And it’s just about the same as it always was.

Reprinted from a few years ago in honor of the 20th anniversary of Amendment 64. Follow @EditorDavePerry on Twitter and Facebook or reach him at 303-750-7555 or dperry@SentinelColorado.com

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Colorado’s reputation is now set in stoned all these years after legal weed

Few things speak to how fundamentally broken the nation is than our tolerance for enraged gunmen regularly hunting down people in places like stores, churches, schools and even movie theaters. Combined with politicians and zealots profusely and openly lying and propagating dangerous and malevolent disinformation and propaganda, America rivals fascist Europe of the 1930s in its’ scope and breadth of depravity.

Once hugely proud and protective of American freedoms, the nation has now ceded any sense of the word to a minority of our nation that refuses to see reason when it comes to controlling epidemic gun violence and the open support of racism and xenophobia.

Just days after hundreds of millions of Americans were sent reeling by the gruesome facts surround the terrorist slaughter of Black people in Buffalo, the usual suspects are trotting out their equally usual distractions and deceits to perpetuate what they see as a net gain: fearful and confused Americans increasingly eager to blame the “others.”

Few know better than residents from Colorado — and especially Aurora, Littleton and Boulder — how critical it is to prevent the shootings that tore gaping holes in our communities.

Years and years after Columbine and the Aurora theater shooting, we firmly understand how complicated the problem of gun violence and mass shootings are, and how complicated the solutions will be.

Just providing more and better mental health care isn’t enough.

Just ensuring so-called “red flag” laws are better used won’t be enough.

Just working with kids and pulling them back from drowning in violent games and media isn’t enough.

Just ignoring rather than elevating raucous racists, bigots and psychologically-infirm political stars won’t end the violence.

Just ending ghastly immunity for gun manufactures and the industry, and holding them to the same standards as we do opioid makers won’t end the mass killings.

Just banning the ownership and use of military-style firearms won’t keep racist terrorist from finding a way to shoot dead minority targets.

Just prohibiting the use of concealed weapons and public display of firearms won’t be enough.

Just creating a nationwide ban on high-capacity magazines won’t stop the bloodshed.

Just keeping people with guns from donning bullet-resistant body armor won’t stop more gun shooting deaths.

Just making illegal the creation and possession of so-called “ghost guns” won’t end youth gun violence.

Just creating a national, real-time database of people flagged against gun possession won’t stop the shootings.

Just creating real, universal healthcare that allows real intervention in the lives of psychologically-troubled people won’t stop school shootings.

We must do all of those things, and we must do them with fervor and passion like we never have before.

We know that gun buybacks really do get people to give up their guns. Aurora City Councilmember Curtis Gardner, a Republican, has helped lead the community through three buyback events, doing real work toward preventing murders or suicides.

We know these things work, because they work in other modern, free and democratic nations. We know we want them to work, because we don’t want to live in fear anymore of being gunned down anywhere, but especially when we’re just living the most unavoidable parts of our lives.

We know in Aurora that racism and bigotry can ebb when people openly work, live, play and go to school with others from all races, cultures and backgrounds.

We know here and in communities like Aurora that pushing back hard and regularly against those who seek to blame “others” — or make themselves out to be, as white supremacists, victims of a multicultural community — are nothing more than pathetic and dangerously fearful.

Our subjugation to gun violence and the bullies who wield it, as the price we must pay to live in the United States, has to end.

We can’t wish it away. We tried. We can’t let a minority of Americans hiding behind their political party force the vast majority of people to live in fear or wallow in their malevolent lies and delusion.

Only in the U.S. are we guaranteed the power to make meaningful changes in our lives by electing leaders who will do it.

If you truly are done with living in a nation that assents to living in constant fear of domestic terrorists, vote for people who really want to end it badly enough to do the things above that will make it stop.

We’re living in gray times, bobbing in a sea of information where there is no longer much black or white. We have access to more content than ever — plus raging uncertainty about how much is fact or fiction.

Some folks are convinced they can’t trust politicians or news reporters or even medical experts, and it often seems that no amount of Googling gets us to the truth of many matters. Which brings me to Hollywood and its current crop of films and quasi-documentaries.

Example: Paramount+ is running a 10-part series called “The Offer,” about the making of 1972’s mob epic “The Godfather.” It’s riveting and made all the more compelling by the implication that this is the real backstory of Francis Ford Coppola’s classic. Turns out screenwriter Michael Tolkin got rather carried away in inventing plot lines. He’s been quoted as saying he prefers to forget what’s real and what’s not and “just write.”

Consider the recent Netflix multi-parter “Inventing Anna,” about the con artist who called herself Anna Delvey. The series is based on a well-reported piece in NewYorkMagazine, but by the time it was massaged by Hollywood — and padded to fill nine installments — it required the snarky on-screen disclaimer: “This whole story is completely true, except for all that parts that are totally made up.”

Maybe Hollywood needs some parameters, like the kind used for peanut butter and jelly. Federal law says a product must have 90 percent peanuts to be called peanut butter, while jelly requires at least 45 percent actual fruit. So what about movies — especially the supposedly fact-based kind that are popular these days on streaming services? What percentage of facts should a film have to be considered true?

Hollywood has a long history of altering details to fit the screen. But today’s streaming services have expanded the market for content loosely based on real people or real events. It comes at a time when Americans are already struggling to separate truth from lies in cable-TV news coverage. And it plays into the muddle of semi-truths on social media.

HBO recently wrapped up a multi-part series about the Los Angeles Lakers called “Winning Time,” but complaints about accuracy of the pro-

duction are far from over. The real-life Magic Johnson, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and Jerry West have all complained bitterly about how they were depicted. Abdul-Jabbar wrote last month that the series was “deliberately dishonest,” adding that the show replaced “solid facts” with “flimsy cardboard fictions.”

This is an era some observers are calling Peak TV, but one that might also be termed Bloated TV. Stories that might have made tidy two-hour films are being stretched into multiple installments to accommodate marketing needs of streaming services. Also concerning is the rise of what are loosely called “documentaries” — a genre that once implied journalistic accountability, but currently includes a wide range of fictionalized and romanticized treatments.

Showtime’s 10-part drama “The First Lady” examines the historically-significant lives of Michelle Obama, Betty Ford and Eleanor Roosevelt. The producer, Cathy Schulman, described the creative task as “imagining the kind of conversations – and arguments – that must have happened inside those White House walls between these events we all know.”

Aaron Sorkin squeezed several year’s worth of occurrences in the lives of Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz into a single dramatic week in Amazon’s “Being the Ricardos.” In one pivotal scene, FBI boss J. Edgar Hoover is heard on the telephone declaring that Lucy is “100% cleared” of being a Communist — a call that never actually happened.

Sorkin’s film provides a good example of the struggle viewers face nowadays in seeking out the truth. A few months after its release, Amazon presented a documentary called “Lucy and Desi,” directed by Amy Poehler, which takes a more factbased look at the showbiz couple. Watching both productions is almost like switching between Tucker Carlson and Anderson Cooper in search of accurate news.

If it’s true that art imitates life, then producers are inadvertently doing a bang-up job of mimicking what’s so confusing these days in news and politics. Hollywood needs to cut back on what Trump aide Kellyanne Conway famously called “alternative facts.”

Peter Funt’s new memoir, “Self-Amused,” is now available at CandidCamera.com.

SENTINELCOLORADO.COM 3 | MAY 19, 2022 Opinion
Editorials Sentinel
We don’t have to suffer being hunted at stores, cinemas and schools
PETER FUNT, CONTRIBUTING COLUMNIST
Hollywood, like society, has trouble with even recognizing the truth

The partner of ousted Aurora police chief Vanessa Wilson is accused of fabricating a report that claimed Councilmember Danielle Jurinsky sexually abused her toddler son, according to an arrest affidavit.

Robin Niceta, 40, faces charges of retali-

ter Jurinsky appeared on KNUS host Steffan Tubbs’ talk-radio show and criticized Wilson’s leadership, referring to Wilson as “trash.”

Investigators with the department later determined that the allegations against Jurinsky were unfounded, and law enforcement concluded that Niceta placed the call after

‘I was inconsolable’

place weren’t open at the time, and the holiday party never took place. Witnesses and employees corroborated that the allegations never happened.

“I was inconsolable,” Jurinsky said Monday after learning of the allegations Niceta allegedly made, describing the incident as “a parent’s worst nightmare.”

Suzanne Taheri, a lawyer representing Jurinsky, said during a Monday news conference that one of the first questions Jurinsky asked her was whether similar incidents had happened to others. Teheri said the department’s “culture” needs to be examined.

Former

police chief’s partner allegedly falsified child abuse claims against critical council member

ation against an elected official, a sixth-degree felony, and making a false report of child abuse as a mandatory reporter, a second-degree misdemeanor. Police say Niceta worked in the Arapahoe County Department of Human Services at the time she made the false report.

The Arapahoe County Sheriff’s Office said Niceta was booked Monday at the Arapahoe County Jail and released in lieu of a $4,000 bond.

Aurora Councilmember Danielle Jurinsky addresses member of the media and her supporters May 16, 2022, on the steps of the Arapahoe County social services center in Aurora. Jurinsky said she was falsely accused of child sex assault as part of retaliation scheme created by the partner of former Police Chief Vanessa Wilson.

Jurinsky said she believes the false accusations were made in retaliation for criticism of Wilson. She emerged as one of Wilson’s most outspoken critics before the chief was fired by City Manager Jim Twombly in April.

The story was first reported by the KCNC TV 4 News.

The affidavit, signed by an Arapahoe County Sheriff’s Office sergeant, says Niceta called the Department of Human Services anonymously to report that Jurinsky had abused her son in the presence of her employees.

The call was placed on Jan. 28, the day af-

finding that her number matched the number of the anonymous caller and in light of forensic analysis of Niceta’s cell phone and county-issued laptop.

Among other pieces of evidence, roughly four minutes before the call was placed, Niceta allegedly used the search engine Bing on her county laptop to look up “does the child abuse hotline keep phone numbers in colorado,” according to the affidavit.

A few hours after the call was placed — too soon for her to have known about the report through normal departmental channels, an attorney for the county told law enforcement — Niceta also referenced the complaint in a text message from her phone.

Niceta repeatedly denied having made the call but told law enforcement information that conflicted with the evidence recovered from her electronic devices.

Niceta said Wilson and her two children also had access to her phone, though she said her children would not have called. When pressed about who could have called, Niceta said “it wasn’t me,” the affidavit said.

The supposedly anonymous caller said Jurinsky had fondled her son’s genitals in restaurants she owned and during a holiday party for employees. Jurinsky told investigators the places where the alleged abuse took

In a statement, county spokesman Luc Hatlestad said the county has “zero tolerance for this type of behavior, which undermines the critical work of our team.”

“Upon receiving an allegation of false reporting by an employee, we immediately engaged law enforcement and conducted an internal investigation,” he said. “It would be inappropriate to provide any further comment on this personnel matter.”

Hatlestad also forwarded a May 4 email from Niceta in which she announced her immediate resignation but did not offer an explanation for her decision.

At the Monday news conference, Jurinsky said she believed Niceta should have been fired, rather than allowed to resign.

Lara Baker, an attorney representing Niceta, said in a statement, “We trust the judicial system to give Ms. Niceta her day in court, and we will leave politics to the politicians.”

It’s unclear whether Wilson knew about the allegations her partner made and when. Jurinsky said she believed that if Wilson knew, she should also be prosecuted.

An attorney for Wilson was not immediately available for comment.

SENTINELCOLORADO.COM 4 | MAY 19, 2022 Metro
— SentinelManagingEditorKaraMason contributed to this report

METRO Aurora to accept security grant applications

Businesses that need help installing surveillance cameras, alarms, lighting and other security features can apply for funds starting May 16 through the City of Aurora’s Safety and Security Grant Program.

Aurora lawmakers green-lighted the program in January, earmarking $3 million in federal pandemic relief money to launch the program. Onesixth of the money, or $500,000, is being set aside specifically for locations on Colfax Avenue between Yosemite Street and Peoria Avenue and between 14th and 16th avenues.

Eligible improvements include making “physical changes related to lighting, alarms, cameras, windows, entrance doors and mirrors, allowing law enforcement to more efficiently and effectively respond to public safety issues,” according to a city press release.

The grants are also open to nonprofits and community groups. Applicants will go through an assessment process with the police department, and the work must be done by a city-approved, local contractor.

Applicants can request as much as $10,000. More information about eligibility and applying is available at AuroraGov.org/ARPAGrants. The application period will close June 30, 2023, or whenever funding is exhausted.

The city said in its press release that other grants programs targeting small businesses and nonprofits that are also being funded through the American Rescue Plan Act will be launched “in the coming weeks.”

Aurora lawmakers champion security upgrades

A law passed in the final week of Colorado’s legislative session gives religious organizations and other nonprofit organizations more money for security upgrades, something that advocates say is a necessity in an era of increasing hate crimes.

The Colorado Nonprofit Security Grant Program was sponsored by Aurora-area Reps. Iman Jodeh and Dafna Michaelson Jenet, and Sens. Kevin Priola and Chris Hansen.

The federal government provides grant money to organizations considered to be at high risk of a terrorist attack to pay for security upgrades. The new law will create a similar program at the state level for Colorado organizations that qualified for the federal program but did not receive grant money.

According to the bill text, last year 51 organizations in Colorado applied for the grant but only 10 were approved. From 2019 to 2020, the bill said that hate crimes in Colorado increased by 22.3%.

The law designates $500,000 from the state’s general fund toward the program for the 20222023 fiscal year. Grant recipients can use the money for new security infrastructure, upgrades to existing features and security-related train-

ing and personnel.

Jodeh, Colorado’s first Muslim lawmaker, said that she believes bigoted rhetoric from politicians over the past years has increasingly given constituents permission to act in violent ways toward minority groups.

“There are three or four mosques in my district and all of them unfortunately have fallen victim to things that have motivated this bill to pass,” Jodeh said.

She noted that Aurora is especially suited to benefit from the law because it is one of the most diverse places in the state.

Over 50 different religious groups and other organizations voiced support for the bill, including the Anti-Defamation League Mountain States branch, LGBTQ organization Center on Colfax and the Interfaith Alliance of Colorado.

Some organizations that received money from the federal program in the past testified at the legislature about how helpful it had been for them, Jodeh said.

Harry Budisidharta, executive director of the Asian Pacific Development Center in Aurora, said that the center supported the bill because the Asian-American community has experienced a rise in hate crimes since the start of the pandemic.

The APDC has received several threats but luckily no actual attacks, he said. He knows of several nonprofits serving refugees in the Aurora area that have experienced vandalism.

With money from the grant program, the APDC would be able to make security upgrades to its building that it has not been able to afford, Budisidharta said, including putting in more security cameras and better outside lighting.

It’s often difficult for nonprofits to pay for physical infrastructure upgrades because there are few grants available for the purpose and it’s not something that attracts donations, Budisidharta said.

“Most donors, whether it’s foundations or individuals, prefer to pay for services rather than capital improvements,” he said.

Jenet, who is Jewish, said that the hostage situation at a synagogue in Colleyville, Texas in January spurred her to try and get the law passed.

The current federal grants don’t go far enough, she said, and put minority organizations in a position where they’re all competing for the same funding.

“We all deserve to have a safe place to pray and to send our children,” Jenet said.

According to a 2021 audit of antisemitic incidents by the Anti Defamation League, Colorado ranked 8th in the nation, with 92 reported incidents of assault, harassment and vandalism.

“That’s scary to the community,” Jenet said. “We’re not sure why hate crimes have increased so much, we don’t have the answers to that, but we do know what we need to keep our houses of worship and our schools safe.”

EDUCATION APS readying for school opening

Colorado’s youngest entrepreneurs got a sneak peek of their future school this Saturday as the Clara Brown Entrepreneurial Academy hosted a meet and greet for students who were accepted to the new magnet school’s inaugural class and their families.

The Clara Brown Entrepreneurial Academy (CBEA) will open this fall as one of APS’ two new magnet schools being built as part of the Blueprint APS process. The other, the Charles Burrell Visual and Performing Arts Campus, will provide education in the arts to students in

kindergarten through 12th grade.

The school’s namesake, Clara Brown, is believed to be one of the first Black people to settle in Colorado. Born into slavery in Virginia in 1800, Brown became a prominent entrepreneur and philanthropist in Colorado during the Gold Rush and helped newly freed slaves relocate to Colorado until her death in 1885. She was posthumously inducted into the Colorado Women’s Hall of Fame, which was present at the meet and greet to educate families about Brown’s legacy.

Eventually, the district plans to open a new magnet school focused on a different career track in each of the district’s seven geographic regions.

The CBEA will open on the site of Wheeling Elementary, and will eventually serve students in kindergarten through 8th grade. It will open in the fall for students in kindergarten through third grade, and will add an additional grade each year.

So far, 200 students have been accepted to the school, principal Laura Burke said. There will be 50 students per grade level with two classrooms of 25 students per grade. Applications are open for the school’s waitlist, and Burke encouraged families who are still interested to apply because some family’s plans may change between now and the fall. Students were selected

›› See METRO, 6

MAY 19, 2022 | SENTINELCOLORADO.COM | 5 In May, our Conversations with a Commissioner events return to in-person gatherings! Learn more about our latest efforts to address homelessness and provide feedback to your district commissioner about all County business. All events are from 6:30 p.m.–7:30 p.m., and refreshments will be provided. Visit arapahoegov.com/townhall for full details. • Thursday, May 19, Nancy Sharpe (District 2), Greenwood Village City Hall • Thursday, May 26, Nancy Jackson (District 4), Mission Viejo Library, Aurora Be a Volunteer! The Arapahoe County Fair needs you! Do you love helping your community? Do you enjoy being outdoors? Volunteer at the Arapahoe County Fair! Volunteers receive a free t-shirt, snacks, preferred parking, and entered for a chance to win $100 gift card. Learn more and apply at arapahoecountyfair.com/volunteer. Join our team! arapahoegov.com Arapahoe County is always hiring! A full listing of open positions are available on arapahoegov.com/jobs or scan the QR code with your smartphone. ARAPAHOE COUNTY

METRO ›› METRO, from 5

Obituary

Carolyn Sherman

August 23, 1939 - May 1, 2022

Carolyn Sherman was born on August 23rd, 1939 in Daytona Beach, Florida and passed away peacefully in Denver, Colorado on May 1st, 2022. She was 82 years young. Carolyn graduated from Miami Senior High School in 1960, where she was lovingly known as “Teddy”. She is survived by her two children Roby and Carol, her grandchildren Olivia, Henry, Jordan, Anthony, Jessica, her great granddaughter, Regan and her step grandson Zach. Carolyn lived a full life, traveling to many places in her younger days like Japan, Australia, New Zealand, Canada, New York, California, the Bahamas, and Jamaica. Later on in life she would settle in Denver, Colorado to be closer to the mountains and her children. She loved watching old movie musicals, John Wayne and Robin Williams movies and she collected teddy bears, teapot ornaments and Disney memorabilia. Her favorite music was from the 1950’s and 1960’s, as well as the music of the Bee Gees and Elvis. Carolyn loved to cook, her favorite restaurant food was sushi, and she took pleasure in sharing meals with her family. She was a generous and loving mother and grandmother and enjoyed spending time in the company of those she loved. She will be greatly missed.

In lieu of flowers, please make a donation to the Alzheimer’s Foundation of America at www.alzfdn.org or to 322 Eighth Ave 16th Floor New York NY 10001 Phone: 866-232-8484.

“It was important we weren’t creating barriers to attend,” Burke said.

At the meet and greet, families got to speak with some of the local and national partners the school will be working with, learn about the curriculum and meet with teachers, fill out paperwork and play games. Burke said she was encouraged by how many families attended the event.

The school will use the same curriculum as the rest of the district to ensure that it is meeting the required standards, but will use a project-based learning approach that sets it apart, instructional coach Lori Large told The Sentinel.  Students will have entrepreneur-focused lessons about how to come up with ideas for products, conduct market research, create a business model and promote their ideas to other people, Large said. Whether or not they choose to focus on business when they’re older, the skills are designed to help them as they pursue a career or higher education.

“Parents are really excited about the idea of their kids getting to do something different,” Large said.

The school will also build social-emotional learning concepts into the school day, which Large said will help give students the tools they need to manage their own emotions and naturally complement their

entrepreneurial skills—it’s hard to run a business without the ability to solve conflict or work with a team.

Throughout the school year, community organizations such as the Denver Museum of Nature and Science and The District Credit Union will come into the school to teach lessons.

The nonprofit Magnet Schools of America consulted on Clara Brown’s design, and the academy is the first magnet school in Colorado to partner with the nonprofit. The nonprofit will provide support to the school and help keep it in line with best practices for magnet schools across the country.

Heidi Targee, who provided consulting, said that more and more schools nationwide are interested in entrepreneurship but Clara Brown is one of the few that has built an entire curriculum around it. She recently visited an entrepreneurship-focused elementary school in Nashville and said she was impressed with what she saw.

“The students own the learning in a way that’s internalized differently,” she said.

A more rigorous educational experience is what parents said drew them to Clara Brown.

Zoe Roberts, who operates a salon and has a son who will be entering third grade at Clara Brown, said she liked the focus of the school since she’s a business owner herself. She hopes her son will get more personalized attention at Clara Brown and will benefit from the project-based learning model.

Kijana and Patrick Bailey were at the meet and greet with their son Donovan, who will be entering second grade at Clara Brown. The couple hopes Donovan will get more opportunities to pursue STEM subjects at Clara Brown then are available at his current school.

“We call him our little engineer,” Kijana Bailey said. The family also hopes he will be challenged more.

“We’re looking for a little more intense learning, not just accepting the baseline,” Patrick Bailey said.

— CARINA JULIG, Sentinel Staff Writer

Aurora Public Schools is asking community members to complete a survey giving feedback on two new taglines and logos the district is considering for adoption.

APS entered into a $200,000 contract with Denver-based firm Mission Minded last fall to develop a new logo and tagline that will be rolled out in the upcoming school year, replacing the current logo from 2007.

The rebrand is part of helping the APS establish a stronger visual identity, district spokesperson Corey Christiansen told The Sentinel in April.

›› See METRO, 7

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6 | SENTINELCOLORADO.COM | MAY 19, 2022
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HIGH ROAD TO HELL

Aurora film students struggle for justice after they were attacked on a quiet mountain road

The Staffords’ cabin in the hills of rural Park County — long the family’s respite from metro Denver — became the site of a violent confrontation that a group of Community College of Aurora students say made them fear for their lives earlier this year.

Malarie Stafford-Mustacchio chose the quiet spot near Bailey for a film school project. Packing cameras and other gear for their weekend trip, the 19-year-old and four other students set out for the cabin on March 18.

Once Malarie got to the cabin, she watched as her friends struggled to make it past the snowy, sloping gravel road near the cabin. Kate Wilhelm was invited along by her friend, another CCA student, who drove the two of them to the cabin on that day. The driver agreed to speak with the Sentinel on the condition of anonymity, citing concerns for her safety.

The two were the last to join the group. Like the other students, they had a hard time making it over the snow-slick road, and before they knew it, they had gotten stuck.

Then, Kate and her friend noticed a man — who deputies have since identified as Jon Spencer — walking up to their car. An attorney representing Jon said the 28-year-old did not want to comment on the March 18 incident.

“It looked like he fell from the sky, honestly,” the driver said. “I thought it was one of our crew members, and so I rolled down our window.”

Jon immediately began questioning them about what they were doing there, claiming he owned the road and asking who they knew that lived nearby, the two women told The Sentinel.

“He was like, ‘You need to leave. You’re not where you belong,’” Kate said. She and her friend both noted Jon smelled like he’d been drinking and was slurring his speech.

Soon, Jon began hurling insults at the group. He singled out the driver for abuse in particular. But unlike the other students, some of whom had also gotten stuck on the same stretch of road earlier, the driver is Black.

“He goes up to the car, and goes up to the window, and was calling her a dumb, Black b - - - h and saying, ‘That’s why you can’t drive,’” Malarie said.

“He was calling us c - - - s and b - - - - - s, and saying we were worthless,” the driver said. “He said, ‘You’re a dumb, Black b - - - h.’ … He was insinuating that because I had dark skin that I was incompetent.”

One of the students captured part of the confrontation on video using their cell phone — in the video, the man identified as Jon argues with the

Cabin

driver, telling her “you’re Black, and you’re dumb.”

As more of Malarie’s group gathered around the car, they said they tried to explain to Jon that the vehicle was stuck and that they were trying to get off the road.

One of the students, who was the director of their film project, at one point shook hands with Jon, which seemed to de-escalate the situation. But soon, the three said Jon resumed shouting at them, telling them the county-owned road was private and that they needed to leave.

The driver said she turned to Kate to say that Jon was upsetting her. Then, she said Jon tried to reach in through the car window and grab her.

The situation escalated quickly. The director who

shook hands with Jon stepped in between the two of them and told him not to touch her. The three women said Jon grabbed the director and began choking and punching him before taking him down to the ground.

They said that as Jon pummeled and choked the student on the snow-covered road, shouting that he was going to kill them, other group members tried to pull him away. Kate called 911.

“They asked if we were safe, and I said, ‘No, somebody’s beating up my friend,” Kate said.

“I just remember trying to pry his fingers off his throat,” the driver said. “He said, ‘I’m going to kill you guys.’ … It felt like his intent was to murder us.”

At that point, another man, who the students believe was Jon’s neighbor, approached with what looked like an AR-15 rifle. Malarie yelled to the others that the man had a gun. Some of them ran down the road.

“My friend was literally about to die in front of my eyes, and I was just terrified,” the driver said.

“I’m still just trying to fathom what happened to this day,” Kate said. “My brain wasn’t working at that point.”

But the second man returned to his vehicle and put his rifle away. At that point, the director had gotten the upper hand over Jon. Malarie said the man who had the rifle walked back toward the stranded Jeep driven by Kate’s friend. The three women said he made threatening comments about wanting to hurt the director before walking over to Jon and helping him beat the student.

“It was so scary,” the driver said. “I didn’t want to increase their anger any more but I didn’t want to see my friend die in front of me.”

“I really, really did not know what to do,” Kate said.

As Malarie struggled to pull the men off the director, he was able to slip away and run down the road, away from the car. Kate said his face at that point was “very, very bloody,” and Malarie said the director had a large

swelling on his head.

Once the driver got her car free, reversing back up the gravel road, she joined the other students at the cabin to wait for deputies.

Arrest came the next day

Jon was arrested the following day in connection with two counts of third-degree assault and five counts of harassment — all misdemeanors. He has since posted a $1,000 bond and was released from jail.

The students and some of their family members have questioned why the charges Jon faces don’t include a bias-motivated crime enhancement, in light of the racially-charged language he used while accosting the driver. They also questioned why it took an entire day to arrest Jon and why the man with the rifle wasn’t charged at all.

Park County Sheriff Tom McGraw said Tuesday that a judge’s order prohibited him from discussing the specifics of the case, but when asked about the time elapsed between the March 18 incident and Jon’s arrest, he said, “I definitely have an opinion about it.”

The sheriff said his office would defer to the legal expertise of the 11th Judicial District Attorney’s Office regarding hate crime charges. When The Sentinel reached out to the district attorney’s office, they were told office employees had been instructed not to discuss the case with the news media.

In a now-deleted Facebook post, the sheriff’s office confirmed the basic facts of the case and said “the District Attorney’s Office has reviewed all of the statements from everyone involved and have declined to press charges for a hate crime at this time, nor will they be charging the neighbor for his involvement in the incident (because he thought he was defending his neighbor).”

MAY 19, 2022 | SENTINELCOLORADO.COM | 9
Above: Malarie Stafford-Mustacchio stands for a portrait at the Community College of Aurora Centretech Campus. Stafford-Mustacchio and her friends were accosted and assaulted by two men in Bailey, CO while filming a project for film school. Portrait by PHILIP B. POSTON/Sentinel Colorado.
›› Continues on 10
Left: Road to the cabin

“These college students were simply going to a friend’s house for a get-together and when they got stuck, they unfortunately encountered a person who was completely out of line and apparently prejudiced,” the post read. “This one incident should not reflect badly on the citizens of Park County, nor Sheriff’s Office staff, as the majority of our citizens would have gladly helped them get their vehicle rolling again.”

In a March 19 phone call with Malarie and members of her family, part of which the family recorded, a man who identified himself as the sheriff apologized to the family and said that he would review the conduct of deputies and determine why no one was arrested on March 18.

The sheriff later said that the deputies involved had not been retrained or disciplined for their conduct on the 18th. The names of the deputies were not available.

Call for help ends in confusion

Once deputies arrived on scene, Malarie and Kate said the group was ordered to come out of the cabin with their hands raised. After persuading the deputies that they weren’t armed, they went back into the cabin and tended to the director’s injuries.

The women present said the director had a large swelling on his head, and Kate said he seemed disoriented. When one of the deputies asked him whether he needed medical attention, the director said he didn’t know, and according to Malarie and Kate, the deputy said over her radio that the director had refused medical help.

The director told the deputy that he wasn’t refusing help. According to Kate, the deputy then told the director to “make up his mind,” and when he eventually said that he wanted assistance, Malarie and Kate said the deputy announced over the radio that the director had changed his mind.

Malarie’s mother, Becky, drove up from Aurora after her daughter called while the incident was still taking place. The three said the deputies cracked jokes as they interacted with the students and did not take statements from them at the time. They said deputies asked if the students could give formal statements the following day because they did not have the necessary paperwork with them at the time.

“It seemed like she was being trained in the moment, like she had never experienced something like this before,” Kate said of the deputy who radioed for medical help. “They just weren’t taking it seriously at all.”

“The police just seemed nonchalant, like it wasn’t even a big deal,” Becky said.

Malarie and Kate said law enforcement suggested the students would be safe to stay at the cabin that night. Malarie, her mother and the driver also said police told them they didn’t want to arrest Jon that night because they were worried about causing a domestic violence incident between Jon and his wife, and that they also hadn’t arrested the other neighbor.

“They said they didn’t want to start anything in the dark when it was just the two females,” Malarie said. Her mother said the deputies “seemed afraid, and that’s why they didn’t do anything.”

Instead of staying at the cabin, the group left, and Malarie and her mother drove the director to a hospital, where medical staff said he might have suffered a concussion. The director’s car was left at the cabin.

The next day, Malarie and her mom were part of a group that returned to the cabin to pick up the car and some camera equipment. They were accompanied by another sheriff’s deputy, who met them at the Loaf ‘N Jug in Bailey. They said the deputy cautioned them not to take longer than 30 minutes to get the car and other items that were left behind.

At the cabin, they said they also spoke on the phone with the sheriff, who would not promise that Jon’s charges would include a bias-motivated crime enhancement. Jon still had not been arrested at that time.

“We were amazed,” Malarie said. “I had gotten stuck, and our friend had gotten stuck, and we’re both white, and [Jon] didn’t say anything to us.”

“I don’t want people to be locked up for life, but I don’t know how I’m feeling,” the driver later said. “I just don’t understand how the protocol is supposed to be.”

Quiet community with a quiet problem

The allegations of a violent, bias-motivated crime aren’t the first to rock rural Bailey. Just last year, the FBI announced it was investigating the homicide of 17-yearold Maggie Long, the child of Chinese and Vietnamese immigrants, as a hate crime.

Long was killed at her home in Bailey in 2017 after police say multiple assailants broke into her home, stole firearms and other property, tied the teenager up and set her on fire.

The Park County Sheriff’s Office also faced criticism for how they handled the Long case — the slain teen’s family and friends told Colorado Public Radio earlier this year that the office asked them not to talk to the media or publicly for a week after the fire and did not publicly release suspect information for several weeks, during which time suspects could have fled.

No arrests have been announced in connection with the killing, though the consideration of Long’s death as a possible hate crime came with more resources as well as the participation of the FBI and state police.

McGraw said he believed the two cases had “nothing in relation.” Dick Elsner, chairperson of the Park County Board of County Commissioners, said he also did not believe the two cases were indicative of a larger pattern of prejudice in the unincorporated community of Bailey.

“My feeling is they are isolated incidents,” he said. “I would hate to think that we have those issues in our department or in the community itself. We do have some people who are, I don’t know how you want to call it, racially charged? But I don’t think it’s greater than anywhere else in Colorado.”

“That type of thing has no place up here,” he added.

Data published by the U.S. Department of Justice indicates that the number of hate crimes in Colorado predicated on race, ethnicity or ancestry increased from 78 in 2018 to 184 in 2020. The total number of hate crimes increased from 123 to 283.

The Park County Sheriff’s Office reported one hate crime to the Colorado Bureau of Investigations in 2021 — a property damage case involving bias against Black people. The office previously reported one hate crime in 2020, two in 2019 and none in 2018.

One vocal advocate for charging the March 18 incident as a hate crime is former Colorado House of Representatives legislator Debbie Stafford, who is also Malarie’s grandmother and the owner of the cabin in Bailey.

Debbie said she forwarded information about the case to the FBI and that an agent had been assigned to look into it. Vikki Migoya, a public affairs officer for the FBI’s Denver field office, said the agency could not confirm or deny its involvement in the case.

While Debbie said the residents of the Harris Park neighborhood had been largely supportive after what happened, some lashed out at her on social media after she posted an article about it by Westword in a local Facebook group.

Debbie said she believed Jon and the other resident were newer in the area. While she said her relationship with her neighbors had generally been “cordial,” after the incident involving her granddaughter, she added, “I think they think they own everything around them.”

“My kids are afraid they’re going to come mow me down,” she said. “To think he’s angry with any of my grandkids… If they just pick us off out here… It’s pretty scary.”

Keeping facts in the case quiet

Jon Spencer and his attorney, Kylie Whitaker, appeared virtually in the courtroom of Park County Court Judge Brian Green for a pre-trial conference April 26. Arguing for restrictions on publicity ahead of a possible trial, Whitaker criticized the sheriff’s office for its Facebook statement about the case, which was later taken down.

“He gets half of the facts wrong from the case, and I’m not exaggerating,” Whitaker said. “There’s 18,000 potential jurors in Park County, and 10,000 people follow the Park County Sheriff on Facebook. So, assuming those people disseminate that statement or article to other people, … I question whether my client could even get a fair trial at this point in Park County.”

She also criticized a previous article about the case published by Westword, saying it was “very disparaging.” After 11th Judicial District Attorney Linda Stanley said she agreed that a potential trial needed to be “fair for all sides,” Green ordered the attorneys to limit the sharing of information about the case with the media and the public.

He also ordered Jon to have no contact with the five students and not possess firearms, alcohol or illegal drugs. When asked if he understood the order, Jon responded, “Yes, sir.”

At the same time, the students and their supporters held a rally outside of the courthouse in Fairplay. Debbie was there along with a handful of supporters.

They returned to the Loaf ‘N Jug in Bailey on May 1, where Debbie said about two dozen people joined to hold signs and show support for the students. She said the reception was mostly positive, with many people honking and waving.

Jon’s next court date is May 24. While the wheels of justice have begun to turn, the students and their families say they are still waiting for Jon’s neighbor to be charged in connection with the incident and for a bias-motivated crime enhancement to be included among the charges facing Jon.

Malarie, Kate and the driver said that they are all still processing the violent encounter which they said made them fear for their lives and the lives of their friends.

“I just keep replaying it in my head, like, ‘Maybe if we did this, it wouldn’t have happened,’” Kate said. “We’re just starting to slowly realize there was nothing we could have done differently.”

As for the driver, who was the target of the racially-charged language used on March 18, she said she has experienced anxiety while driving since March, because Jon knows her vehicle. She has also struggled with feelings of anger and vulnerability after she was unable to stop the two men from attacking her friend.

“It’s like, every day, I’m reliving it. Like, today is the day my friend gets beaten up,” she said. “I’ve never had that feeling of just wanting to kill someone, but I felt that way when they were trying to kill my friend. I wanted to help, but I didn’t want to hurt someone.”

“I’m just trying to move on, but it’s like it’s still going on.”

10 | SENTINELCOLORADO.COM | MAY 19, 2022
›› Continued from 9

Preps

RIGHT: Regis Jesuit sophomore Mary Clare Watts tracks her shot during her No. 1 doubles semifinal match with partner Lily Filippini at the Class 5A girls state tournament on May 13 at Gates Tennis Center.

BELOW: Filippini guides a return during the Raiders’ two-set loss to Cherry Creek. The Regis Jesuit team ended up placing fourth in the No. 1 doubles bracket at the end of the three-day tournament. (Photos by Courtney Oakes/Sentinel Colorado)

Ayoung Regis Jesuit girls tennis team got a good number of matches over three days at the Class 5A state tournament and ended up in ninth place when it wrapped up May 14 at the Gates Tennis Center.

Between three singles and four singles positions for coach Laura Jones’ Raiders, only three players had competed in state before. Fittingly, two of the returns experienced the most success and helped Regis Jesuit to its highest state point total since 2018.

season, Watts and Filippini had a successful season that they capped with a regional championship to qualify for state.

The opening day for the duo came with backto-back three-set victories, including a 7-6, 2-6, 7-6 outlasting of Ralston Valley’s Sara Scherff and Adia Faling, who they lost to when they played earlier in the season at the Western Slope Invitational in Grand Junction.

Best bet vets

The No. 1 doubles teams of sophomores Mary Clare Watts and Lucy Filippini — who played at state in 2021 with different partners — scored the majority of the Raiders’ 12 points and finished in fourth place.

The Raiders’ duo played a total of five matches over three days, which culminated in a 6-2, 6-2, defeat at the hands of Mountain Vista’s Peyton Hostelley and Olivia Ivankoe in the third place match.

“Knowing how many people are here and knowing how loud it is, it’s good to have gone through it before and be prepared,” Watts said. “But it’s state, so it’s hard no matter what.”

Watts and her graduated partner scored one of Regis Jesuit’s two points at last season’s state tournament at No. 3 doubles with a first round win before falling in a three-set quarterfinal match, while Filippini and her partner lost a first round and playback match in the No. 4 bracket.

Paired together in the top doubles spot this

Watts and Filippini faced a semifinal against the Cherry Creek team of Vivienne Bersin and Victoria Moldovan, who they had lost to in the regular season as well. The Bruins again prevailed (6-2, 6-0) to send the Raiders into the consolation bracket. They rebounded with their most decisive win, a 6-0, 6-1 defeat of Columbine’s Addi Burns and Makenna Schneider, to set up a Continental League rematch with Hostelley and Ivankoe. The Golden Eagles needed three sets to win the league matchup, but did it in two in the rematch.

The No. 1 doubles team earned seven points for Regis Jesuit, while five more came from the singles ranks from the group of junior No. 1 Madison Wei, junior No. 2 Quinn Binaxas and senior No. 3 Peyton Tinsley.

Wei was the only player in the group with previous state tournament experience as she played a first round and playback match at No. 3 singles a year ago and she again got multiple matches after moving up to the top spot in the lineup.

After a first round win, Wei lost to Fairview star Quinn Bernthal, who went on to make the state final and lost in three sets. Bernthal’s semifinal win over Cherry Creek standout Jacqueline Pearsall brought Wei into the playback bracket and she ended up facing Pearsall with

a spot in the third-place match on the line after she won a decisive playback opener. Pearsall went on to a 6-0, 6-0 win and then placed third.

Tinsley won her state tournament debut before eventual state champion Jisele Boker of Cherry Creek stopped her in the next round. Tinsley won yet again in the playback bracket before she lost to Heritage’s Megan Johnson for the third time on the season.

Binaxas won her No. 2 singles first round match before she lost to eventual state runner-up Stella Laird of Fairview in the quarterfinals. She also dropped her playback match.

The No. 2 doubles team of Brenna Radebaugh and Ebba Svard, the No. 3 duo of Elise Holt and Anna Neff and the No. 4 tandem of Cait Carolan and Elise Duffield all dropped their first round matches and were not brought back into playbacks for Regis Jesuit.

The remainder of Aurora’s contingent of state qualifiers — which consisted of Grandview’s two singles players (No. 1 Shriya Ginjupalli, a freshman, and senior No. 2 Halia Pena) and Cherokee Trail’s No. 2 singles player Sierra Martin, a sophomore — all lost opening round matches and did not get playbacks.

SENTINELCOLORADO.COM 11 | MAY 19, 2022
5A GIRLS STATE TENNIS GIRLS STATE TENNIS PHOTO GALLERY AT COURTNEYOAKES. SMUGMUG.COM

Surf ’n turf

REGIS JESUIT BOYS SWIM TEAM CLAIMS PROGRAM’S 23 ALL-TIME STATE TITLE; CITY HAS MORE TITLES POSSIBLE ON LAND

Luke Dinges can feel the energy every time he watches video of the conclusion of the 2018 Class 5A boys state swim meet.

The Regis Jesuit senior wasn’t at the Veterans’ Memorial Aquatic Center on that day four years ago, but he could appreciate the pandemonium created when the Raiders touched out Fossil Ridge in the 400 yard freestyle relay to secure the state championship.

Dinges, fellow senior Gio Aguirre and juniors Ronan Krauss and Hawkins Wendt found themselves in nearly the same din on the same deck May 14, but with decidedly less pressure. The program’s 23rd all-time state championship was already secured, so their performance was just the icing on the cake.

“I wasn’t even there, but watching that video always gives me the chills,” Dinges said of the 2018 final race that saw Elijah Warren, Ty Coen, Elliott Steinberg and Will Goodwin win by 0.33 of a second to rally past Fossil Ridge to the championship.

“Every year before the season starts, we rewatch that video and I get goosebumps,” he added. “I got the same ones today, even though I knew we had it in the bag. I still got the same nervous feeling like ‘this is it,’ and we did it.”

Dinges, Aguirre, Krauss and Wendt also beat a team from Fossil Ridge in the 400 freestyle relay, but did so by a margin of more than a second and without worry.

It certainly allowed head coach Nick Frasersmith to sit back and appreciate it more than the 2018 race that had him and everybody else in the pool area on the edge of their collective seats.

“We knew going into that 400 freestyle relay that even if we DQ’d, we would still win, so that was a little more comfortable than 2018, but we always wanted to walk out of here winning at least one event,” said Frasersmith, who was chosen as 5A’s Swim Coach of the Year.

“It kind of put the icing on the cake and brought it all together,” he added.

Indeed, in a major contrast to the 2018 state meet — in which the Raiders won a slew of

events — this one came as the product of overwhelming depth.

Until the 400 freestyle relay, Regis Jesuit swimmers had been kept off the top spot of the medal podium in every event.

Aguirre had his bid for a second straight 100 yard freestyle title denied by Chatfield’s Tristen Davin — who finished more than a second in front of him — while Krauss saw Fort Collins’ Jack Ballard surge past him late to deny him the individual title in the 500 yard freestyle. The 200 yard freestyle relay team of Aguirre, Wendt, senior Mack Dugan and junior Carter Anderson also finished second.

It made Aguirre — who anchored the closing relay — cherish the end all the more.

“Going into finals with so many A finalists, we were expecting a few first places, but we didn’t really get that until the last event,” Aguirre said. “That was definitely disappointing. ...It (the relay) was an amazing swim to say the least. I wanted to make all the guys proud with that last swim.”

Regis Jesuit’s depth was evident, especially in events like the 50 freestyle (four) and 200 freestyle (three), in which they had a host of finalists.

Aguirre, Dugan and Dinges all finished fourth or better in two individual events, Anderson and fellow juniors

Charlie Klein and Truman Inglis scored in a pair events and Wendt supplemented a sixthplace finish in the 50 by swimming on all three relays, which finished first (400 freestyle), second (200 freestyle) and third (200 medley).

Senior Dylan Mullen earned points for Regis Jesuit with a seventh-place finish in the morning 1-meter diving competition.

“They came together as a group and swam for each other, so I couldn’t be more proud,” Frasersmith said.

The victory also made sure the senior class didn’t finish on the wrong side of team history.

They might have been the first group in school history graduate without winning a state championship after they were robbed of their sophomore year by the coronavirus pandemic and were distant runners-up to Cherry Creek as freshmen in 2019 and as juniors in 2021.

“There has never been a class at Regis Jesuit that has not won a state title, so if we would have lost, we would have broke that streak,” Dugan said. “Obviously, we did not lose. We won. It was because of all hard work everybody put in.”

Buffs, Wolves, Cougars and Penguins, oh my!

Next up among Aurora programs at the Class 5A state meet was Smoky Hill, which finished with 183 points — a major jump from 110 in 2021 — that saw the Buffaloes scored in all three relays and get individual event scoring from eight different swimmers.

Sophomore Daniel Yi led

the charge for Smoky Hill in the 100 yard breaststroke in which it had three top-11 players in Yi (who was third), senior Joshua Nieves (who was fifth) and senior Isaac Yi, who won the consolation heat to finish 11th. Coach Scott Cohen’s Buffaloes also racked up significant points in the 500 freestyle behind sophomore Jake Baker’s fifth-place finish along with freshman Ian Noffsinger’s ninth.

Nieves, fellow senior Brayden Pearce and Daniel Yi scored in multiple events for Smoky Hill, which got its highest relay finish from the 200 freestyle, which saw both Yis, Nieves and junior Antonio Goris team up to place seventh.

Grandview scored 52 points in 2021 at the state meet and nearly tripled it this season with 146 that came on the strength of three top-13 relays and five scoring performances in individual events.

Freshman Oliver Schimberg made the championship finals in both of his events in his state meet debut and finished fifth in the 100 backstroke as well as seventh in the 100 butterfly. Junior William Schimberg had the other championship finals appearance for coach Dan Berve’s team, as he finished eighth in the 200 freestyle.

The Wolves’ relay team of the Schimbergs, junior Matthew Scicchitano (who made the consolation finals in two individual

5A boys Memorial Frasersmith, Regis winning onship. state championship brates

Courtney

12 | SENTINELCOLORADO.COM | MAY 19, 2022 PREPS
TOP: Regis Hawkins style relay

Regis Jesuit juniors Ronan Krauss, right, and Hawkins Wendt celebrate after the 400 yard freerelay victory for the Raiders to finish the Class boys state swim meet May 14 at the Veterans’ Memorial Aquatic Center. LEFT: Head coach Nick Frasersmith, second from left, and members of the Jesuit boys swim team jump into the pool after winning the program’s 23rd all-time state championship. ABOVE: Senior Gio Aguirre holds up the 5A championship trophy as Regis Jesuit celeits first state crown since 2018. ( Photos by Courtney Oakes/Sentinel Colorado)

events) and sophomore Evan Higgins grabbed fifth place to finish off the meet.

Coach Kipp Meeks’ Cherokee Trail team took 17th behind two individual consolation finals swims by senior Tucker Meeks (14th in the 100 freestyle, 18th in the 200 freestyle), while he teamed with Bronson Smothers, Dominic McCoy and Hugh Mullen on a 400 freestyle relay team that won the consolation heat for 11th.

The Aurora Public Schools’ co-op team had just two individual qualifiers in senior diver Liam Ross and junior Gavin Harding and both earned points for coach Beth Himes’ Penguins. Ross finished in 9th

place in the 1-meter diving competition and Harding collected 19th place in the 100 butterfly.

Grandview girls soccer team headed to Class 5A semifinals

Junior Naomi Clark set up the first goal of the game — scored by teammate Isa Dillehay — and added two goals of her own in the second half to lead the Grandview girls soccer team to a 3-1 win over Legacy May 16 Legacy Stadium.

Senior goalkeeper Jordan Nytes and a veteran defense allowed just one goal to the high-powered Lightning — who came into the game with an average of 5.5 goals per game — and that came on an awarded penalty kick. Coach Brian Wood’s Wolves turned out to have plenty of offense as Clark netted when held up as her sixth game-winning goal of the season in the 68th minute.

Grandview earned a rematch with Valor Christian — which dealt it a 1-0 loss back in April — in the 5A semifinals May 19 at the University of Denver (visit sentinelcolorado.com/preps for results). The winner of that

game and the other semifinal between No. 6 Columbine and No. 2 Broomfield will play for the 5A state title at 8 p.m. May 25 at Dick’s Sporting Goods Park.

Regis Jesuit boys lacrosse team in 5A

quarterfinals

Regis Jesuit, the top seed in the Class 5A boys lacrosse state playoffs, came off a first round bye to pick up an 11-6 second round win over Denver East May 14 at Lou Kellogg Stadium.

Seniors AJ McBorrough and Logan White and juniors Mattie Cain and Ethan Hughes scored two goals apiece as the Raiders held off a scrappy Angels team and won despite a lengthy goal drought in the second half.

Regis Jesuit advanced to a home quarterfinal matchup with Kent Denver May 18 with a win securing a spot in the semifinals schedule for May 21 at the University of Denver.

City athletes in position to clean up at state track meet

The Class 5A and 4A state track & field meet is scheduled for May 19-21 at Jefferson County Stadium and it could be an ex-

TOP LEFT: Grandview senior goalkeeper Jordan Nytes (1) skies to punch away a corner kick service during the Wolves’ 3-1 win over Legacy in a Class 5A girls soccer state quarterfinal playoff game on May 16 at Legacy Stadium. LEFT: Freshman Maddy Jokerst, right, finds an opening during the Regis Jesuit girls lacrosse team’s 11-10 loss at Cherry Creek in a Class 5A state quarterfinal playoff game May 13. ABOVE: Senior Haley Esser and two Eaglecrest relay teams head to the Class 5A girls state track meet May 19-21 at Jefferson County Stadium as top seeds with championship hopes.

PHOTOS BY COURTNEY OAKES/SENTINEL COLORADO GALLERIES AT COURTNEYOAKES.SMUGMUG.COM

tremely successful event for local boys and girls athletes.

The Grandview boys are the defending 5A state champions and have blown away the competition in every meet they’ve had this season. The Wolves won the Centennial League championship as a tune-up and in the process had its 4x100 meter relay team set the state record with a time of 40.59 seconds.

That bettered the 41.21 run by a team from Overland back in 2007 at the state meet as the state standed in the event.

Grandview has everything at its disposal in its repeat quest, including a load of sprinters such as senior Evan Johnson (who set the school record in the 100 meters as the league meet), junior David Maldonado and more. Senior hurdler Malique Singleton and senior jumper Mateo Munoz both should also pick up significant points for the Wolves.

Cherokee Trail has a jumping favorite in Nate Gaye and some high-powered relays that should put on a big showing, while Regis Jesuit has the defending 200 meter state champion in junior D’Andre Barnes.

The star of the 5A state meet on the girls side is likely to be Regis Jesuit senior Fabiola Belibi, who is the defending state champion in the long jump and is also qualified in the 100 and 300 meter hurdles, events she could also win.

Grandview sophomore Gabriella Cunningham will have something to say about the hurdles state championships and could win one or both herself, while the Wolves have five relays and a slew of jumpers in the mix.

Cherokee Trail finished a close second to Cherry Creek at the Centennial League championship meet and that could be the battle for the top at state as well. The Cougars have junior sprint star Symone Adams (the state’s fastest 100 and 200 meter runner thus far) leading the way on the track, while freshman Kaeli Powe is just one of an impressive group of jumpers that could finish all up and down the medal podium.

Eaglecrest has designs on state championships in the 4x100 and 4x200 meter relays, events in which the Raptors enter as the fastest teams in Colorado regardless of classification.

MAY 19, 2022 | SENTINELCOLORADO.COM | 13 PREPS

Through her eyes

WOMEN PHOTOGRAPHERS ARE CENTER STAGE AT THE DENVER ART MUSEUM THIS SUMMER IN “MODERN WOMEN/MODERN VISION”

Perhaps the most iconic photograph of the Great Depression wouldn’t have been produced if it weren’t for a gut instinct that Dorothea Lange turn back to a pea-pickers camp in Nipomo, California in 1936.

The image — a black and white close-up of a gaunt-looking woman holding a sleeping baby flanked by two more small children — “exists in more formats, prints, and places than (arguably) any other photograph in the world,” Museum of Modern Art curator Sarah Hermanson Meister wrote in a 2018 book about the 20th century photographer.

On display this summer at the Denver Art Museum in “Modern Women/Modern Vision,” Lange’s photo is remarkably more powerful in person, hanging among the work of other impactful female photographers who also followed their intuition to capture vital images vital for journalism, history and photography as an artform.

“Women embraced the medium early on, in part because photography had fewer barriers for female participation, compared with more traditional art forms such as painting and sculpture,” said Christoph Heinrich, the Frederick and Jan Mayer Director of the Denver Art Museum.

It was thanks to groups such as The Photo League and Group f/64 — which welcomed women during eras where opportunities in the art world were hard to come by — that some of the world’s most iconic images exist.

The DAM exhibit is divided into six parts, spanning from “modernist innovators” such as documentary photographer Margaret Bourke-White who went on to be the first woman to serve as a U.S. war correspondent to contemporary creatives, which includes Carrie Mae Weems and her iconic fictional Kitchen Table Series, where she turned the camera on herself.

“Women working in photography today owe much to the generations who paved the way during the 20th century,” said Eric Paddock, the exhibit’s local curator. “The diverse styles, subject matter, techniques and intentions exemplified by the artists in ‘Modern Women/Modern Vision’ demonstrate the determination and inventiveness with which women pursued their craft.”

For some, it was urban street photography. Helen Levitt, New York’s unofficial “visual poet laureate” who was an early pioneer of modern street photography, captured gritty working-class neighborhoods over the space of several decades with a discreet shooting style that spawned images that were both theatrical and realistic.

For others, the camera and lens allowed even more creative freedom, and traditional techniques helped to evolve photography, pushing the boundaries of what the medium can do. “Revenge of the Goldfish” — a staged photograph — by Sandy Skoglund, who will also be speaking at the museum on May 22 as part of the exhibit’s events, is an easy measure of how many possibilities a tool meant to capture the real can have in a made-up space.

“The origins of my interest in mixing natural and artificial arise from my being a spectator of myself as I behave in the world. I see myself naturally attracted to some very artificial things, almost as if my life depended on it…,” she said in a 2008 interview about her art. “To me, a world without artificial enhancement is unimaginable, and harshly limited to raw nature by itself without human intervention… the mixing of the natural and the artificial is what I do everyday of my life, and I hope that I am not alone in this process.”

In all, “Modern Women/Modern Vision” features more than 100 images and a series of programming designed around the exhibition. A full schedule can be found at www.denverartmuseum.org.

If you go:

Modern Women/Modern Vision is on display through Aug. 28 Denver Art Museum’s Hamilton Building’s Anschutz Gallery, 100 W 14th Ave Pkwy, Denver, CO 80204

For more information call (720) 865-5000 or visit www.denverartmuseum.org. Exhibition is included in general admission: $13 for Colorado resident adults, $18 for non-residents. Children’s tickets are free.

SENTINELCOLORADO.COM 14 | MAY 19, 2022
The Magazine
Dorothea Lange (American, 1895-1965)

Blackademics presented by The Vintage Theatre

Malinalli on the Rocks at Museo De Las Americas

Skyward: Breakthrough in Flight at Wings Over the Rockies

scene & herd

Rescue puppies & yoga at Stanley Marketplace

Now through July 23. Open noon to 6 p.m. Tuesday through Friday, noon to 5 p.m. on Saturday, closed Sunday and Monday. Register for tickets as www.museo.org.

The Art of Banksy

Every third Saturday at 9:30 a.m. at Stanley Marketplace starting May 21. 2501 N. Dallas St., Aurora, CO 80010. Donations of $20 will benefit the Mile High Lab Mission

Down dogs bring a whole new meaning to your yoga practice this weekend with Vibe Wellness in Aurora’s Stanley Marketplace, because what goes better with a vinyasa flow than puppies? The answer: absolutely nothing. Little playful, chubby furballs with that stale coffee breath make everything better, especially a workout already meant to mellow you out. Bring your own mat, water and sunscreen for this outdoor class. The $20 donation benefits the Mile High Lab Mission, which has been working to find homes for labs, especially from high-kill shelters, since 2010. To sign up, visit www.myvibewellness. com.

Let Us Know Your scene & herd

May 20 through June 19 - Friday and Saturday at 7:30 p.m.; Sundays at 2:30 p.m. $20 - 34. Call 303-8567830 for more information or visit vintagetheatre.org. The Vintage Theatre is located at 1468 Dayton St., Aurora 80010

In “Blackademics,” two Black female scholars arrive for a dinner reservation at a trendy cafe, but in this hilarious play written by Idris Goodwin, their celebration takes a turn. They first debate and then battle as the women “figuratively and literally vie for a seat at the table.” Goodwin is an award-winning playwright and Colorado local, serving as the director of The Colorado Springs Fine Arts Center at Colorado College. He’s the first Black man to hold the position in the center’s 100-year history. Director Betty Hart at the Vintage has assembled a cast that includes: Chelsea Frye as Rachelle, Tobi Compton as Ann and Stephanie Saltis as Georgia. The one-hour play, no intermissions, begins May 20 with showings until June 19 every Friday, Saturday and Sunday.

Disney’s Freaky Friday the Musical

How should La Malinche be remembered? An enslaved Aztec girl, Le Malinche was multilingual and therefore a crucial part of Spanish conquistador Hernán Cortés’ brutal takeover of Mesoamerica. There are few records, especially from her point of view, that provide insight into the mind of La Malinche, but her legacy has become somewhat of an artistic endeavor. A major installation of inspired work at the Denver Art Museum and also now Museo De Las Americas invites the community in to decide for themselves what kind of emotion the infamous name should evoke. “If we remove the patriarchal lens and Eurocentric vantage, what we confront is a powerful presence, a woman that survived and overcame adversity,” writes curators at Museo De Las Americas. “Malinalli on the Rocks” is on display until late July. Register for tickets on sale now.

#lovewins by The Denver Women’s Chorus

DWC will perform at the Denver at the King Center on the Auraria Campus on May 20 and 21. #lovewins tickets can be purchased at denverchoruses.org/events.

Open through June 19, exhibit included in the price of admission. 7711 E. Academy Blvd. Denver, CO 80230. Monday-Saturday: 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. Sunday: 12 p.m. - 5 p.m. Visit www.wingsmuseum.org for more information.

Now through June 12. Open daily, closed Tuesdays. Showings begin at 2 p.m. Tickets, $35, on sale now. Showing at the Denver Sports Castle: 1000 North Broadway, Denver, CO 80203. www.banksyexhibit.com. Anonymous artist Banksy’s opinion is that art should disturb the comfortable and comfort the disturbed. Whatever side of that view you find yourself on, prepare to feel something inside “The Art of Banksy,” which showcases $35 million worth of Banksy art in one place — the largest exhibit ever assembled. Among the more than 100 pieces on exhibit are some of Banksy’s most recognizable, such as “Girl and Balloon” — which sold for $1.4 million in 2018 and then immediately went through a shredder as art connoisseurs watched in horror — “Flower Thrower” and “Rude Copper.” However, it’s the lesser-known masterpieces by the world’s top political artists that really make this exhibit shine. Tickets are on sale at www.banksyexhibit. com now until June 12.

April 29 - May 22 at Aurora Fox Arts Center, Thursdays-Saturdays

7:30 p.m. and Sundays at 2 p.m. Tickets at $15. www.aurorafoxartscenter.org

Anybody with a perfectly imperfect family can surely relate to the hilarity that ensues when a highstrung mother switches bodies with her teenage daughter and needs to figure out how to switch back before her wedding. The early-00s Disney fans among us probably could recite almost every line of the movie that taught us Jamie Lee Curtis makes a kickass teenager and Lindsey Lohan also does music, and we don’t hate it. That energy, adapted from its first version of the 1972 book, is back — with choreography and a score by the Pulitzer Prize-winning composers of Next to Normal and If / Then — until May 22 at the Aurora Fox Arts Center. The beloved version of Freaky Friday takes the stage thanks to directorial team Kenny Moten and Trent Hines. Tickets on sale now, with shows every Thursday-Sunday until May 22.

This month, the Denver Women’s Chorus takes on a performance two years in the making. The concert, titled “#lovewins” was originally scheduled to celebrate the fifth anniversary of the Supreme Court’s decision to overturn the Defense of Marriage Act, but COVID-19 had other plans. Now, the group, 130 voices strong, is exploring LGBTQIA+ victories and bringing awareness to the work that remains. Artistic Director Clelyn Chapin says the two-set choral event goes beyond romance. #lovewins explores all aspects of love, including the political. Lin-Manuel Miranda’s “Dear Theodosia” and the words of civil rights activist Ella Baker in “Ella’s Song” are included in the lineup on the Auraria Campus May 20 and 21. A livestream of the event is also available. Tickets on sale at denverchoruses.org.

In the span of one lifetime, mankind went from having no instances of significant flight to landing on the moon. It’s the kind of innovation that makes anything feel possible, and it’s all on display at Wings Over the Rockies through June 19. “Skyward: Breakthrough in Flight” examines all of the major milestones that have gotten us to where we are today: simultaneously curious about commercial flights to the final frontier and also wondering how Frontier could possibly give us less leg room. From the very beginning through today and what’s next for flight, you won’t want to miss the stories and artifacts collected by curators at Wings. The exhibit is on through the beginning of the summer.

MAY 19, 2022 | SENTINELCOLORADO.COM | 15
@AuroraSports SentinelPrepSports Crazy for prep sports? Sports reporter Courtney Oakes has you covered. Visit sentinelcolorado.com daily and follow Courtney for the hottest prep sports news. sentinelcolorado.com PREPS COVERAGE #NoPayWallHere Honest Journalism sentinelcolorado.com

Because the people must know

COMBINED NOTICEPUBLICATION CRS §38-38-103

FORECLOSURE SALE NO. 0060-2022

To Whom It May Concern: This Notice is given with regard to the following described Deed of Trust:

On February 25, 2022, the undersigned Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in the County of Arapahoe records.

Original Grantor(s)

KALEY HUGHES

Original Beneficiary(ies)

MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC. AS NOMINEE FOR MIDWEST EQUITY MORTGAGE, LLC, ITS SUCCESSORS AND ASSIGNS

Current Holder of Evidence of Debt

COLORADO HOUSING AND FINANCE

AUTHORITY

Date of Deed of Trust

June 06, 2019

County of Recording

Arapahoe Recording Date of Deed of Trust

June 06, 2019

Recording Information (Reception No. and/ or Book/Page No.)

D9053676

Original Principal Amount

$160,047.00

Outstanding Principal Balance

$159,850.21

Pursuant to CRS §38-38-101(4)(i), you are hereby notified that the covenants of the deed of trust have been violated as follows: Failure to pay principal and interest when due together with all other payments provided for in the evidence of debt secured by the deed of trust and other violations thereof.

THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN.

CONDOMINIUM UNIT NO. 302, BUILDING NO. 16, SPINNAKER RUN CONDOMINIUMS, IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE DECLARATION RECORDED ON FEBRUARY 1, 1980, IN BOOK 3164 AT PAGE 592, AND CONDOMINIUM MAP RECORDED ON FEBRUARY 1, 1980, AT RECEPTION NO. 1937675 OF THE ARAPAHOE COUNTY RECORDS, COUNTY OF ARAPAHOE, STATE OF COLORADO.

APN #: 197336222142

Also known by street and number as: 12512 E CORNELL AVENUE #302, AURORA, CO 80014.

THE PROPERTY DESCRIBED HEREIN IS ALL OF THE PROPERTY CURRENTLY ENCUMBERED BY THE LIEN OF THE DEED OF TRUST. NOTICE OF SALE

The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, described herein, has filed Notice of Election and Demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust.

THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that I will at public auction, at 10:00 A.M. on Wednesday, 06/29/2022, at The East Hearing Room, County Administration Building, 5334 South Prince Street, Littleton, Colorado, 80120, sell to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of the said Grantor(s), Grantor(s)’ heirs and assigns therein, for the purpose of paying the indebtedness provided in said Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, plus attorneys’ fees, the expenses of sale and other items allowed by law, and will issue to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law.

First Publication 5/5/2022

Last Publication 6/2/2022

Name of Publication Sentinel

IF THE SALE DATE IS CONTINUED TO A LATER DATE, THE DEADLINE TO FILE A NOTICE OF INTENT TO CURE BY THOSE PARTIES ENTITLED TO CURE MAY ALSO BE EXTENDED; DATE: 02/25/2022

Susan Sandstrom, Public Trustee in and for the County of Arapahoe, State of Colorado

By: /s/ Susan Sandstrom, Public Trustee

The name, address, business telephone number and bar registration number of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is:

Alison L Berry #34531

Nicholas H. Santarelli #46592

David R. Doughty #40042

Lynn M. Janeway #15592 Janeway Law Firm, P.C. 9800 S. Meridian Blvd., Suite 400, Englewood, CO 80112 (303) 706-9990

Attorney File # 20-023943

The Attorney above is acting as a debt collector and is attempting to collect a debt. Any information provided may be used for that purpose.

©Public Trustees’ Association of Colorado

Revised 1/2015

COMBINED NOTICEPUBLICATION CRS §38-38-103

FORECLOSURE SALE NO. 0032-2022

To Whom It May Concern: This Notice is given with regard to the following described Deed of Trust:

On February 11, 2022, the undersigned Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in the County of Arapahoe records.

Original Grantor(s)

CATHERINE D MBOZI MBULIIRO

Original Beneficiary(ies)

MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC. ACTING SOLELY AS NOMINEE FOR AME FINANCIAL CORPORATION

Current Holder of Evidence of Debt

LAKEVIEW LOAN SERVICING, LLC

Date of Deed of Trust

September 24, 2009

County of Recording

Arapahoe Recording Date of Deed of Trust

October 13, 2009

Recording Information (Reception No. and/ or Book/Page No.)

B9112206

Original Principal Amount

$183,400.00

Outstanding Principal Balance

$127,442.03

Pursuant to CRS §38-38-101(4)(i), you are hereby notified that the covenants of the deed of trust have been violated as follows: Failure to pay principal and interest when due together with all other payments provided for in the evidence of debt secured by the deed of trust and other violations thereof.

THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN.

LOT 7, BLOCK 14, WILLOW PARK SUBDIVISION FILING NO. 1, COUNTY OF ARAPAHOE, STATE OF COLORADO.

Also known by street and number as: 1525 SOUTH EAGLE STREET, AURORA, CO 80012.

THE PROPERTY DESCRIBED HEREIN IS ALL OF THE PROPERTY CURRENTLY ENCUMBERED BY THE LIEN OF THE DEED OF TRUST.

NOTICE OF SALE

The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, described herein, has filed Notice of Election and Demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust.

THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that I will at public auction, at 10:00 A.M. on Wednesday, 06/15/2022, at The East Hearing Room, County Administration Building, 5334 South Prince Street, Littleton, Colorado, 80120, sell to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of the said Grantor(s), Grantor(s)’ heirs and assigns therein, for the purpose of paying the indebtedness provided in said Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, plus attorneys’ fees, the expenses of sale and other items allowed by law, and will issue to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law.

First Publication 4/21/2022

Last Publication 5/19/2022

Name of Publication Sentinel IF THE SALE DATE IS CONTINUED TO A LATER DATE, THE DEADLINE TO FILE A NOTICE OF INTENT TO CURE BY THOSE PARTIES ENTITLED TO CURE MAY ALSO BE EXTENDED; DATE: 02/11/2022

Susan Sandstrom, Public Trustee in and for the County of Arapahoe, State of Colorado

By: /s/ Susan Sandstrom, Public Trustee

The name, address, business telephone number and bar registration number of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is:

Anna Johnston #51978

Ryan Bourgeois #51088

Joseph D. DeGiorgio #45557

Randall Chin #31149

Barrett, Frappier & Weisserman, LLP 1391 Speer Boulevard, Suite 700, Denver, CO 80204 (303) 350-3711

Attorney File # 00000009399080

The Attorney above is acting as a debt collector and is attempting to collect a debt. Any information provided may be used for that purpose.

©Public Trustees’ Association of Colorado

Revised 1/2015

COMBINED NOTICEPUBLICATION CRS §38-38-103 FORECLOSURE SALE NO. 0062-2022

To Whom It May Concern: This Notice is given with regard to the following described Deed of Trust:

On March 1, 2022, the undersigned Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in the County of Arapahoe records.

Original Grantor(s)

Original Beneficiary(ies)

Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc., as Beneficiary, as nominee for Stearns Lending, LLC, its successors and assigns

Current Holder of Evidence of Debt

Lakeview Loan Servicing, LLC

Date of Deed of Trust

November 20, 2015

County of Recording

Arapahoe Recording Date of Deed of Trust

November 25, 2015 Recording Information (Reception No. and/ or Book/Page No.)

D5135571

Original Principal Amount

$234,179.00

Outstanding Principal Balance

$210,455.84

Pursuant to CRS §38-38-101(4)(i), you are hereby notified that the covenants of the deed of trust have been violated as follows: Failure to pay principal and interest when due together with all other payments provided for in the evidence of debt secured by the deed of trust and other violations thereof.

THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN.

LOT 30, BLOCK 6, STONE RIDGE PARK SUBDIVISION FILING NO. 9, COUNTY OF ARAPAHOE, STATE OF COLORADO. Also known by street and number as: 18805 E. Utah Cir, Aurora, CO 80017. THE PROPERTY DESCRIBED HEREIN IS ALL OF THE PROPERTY CURRENTLY ENCUMBERED BY THE LIEN OF THE DEED OF TRUST.

NOTICE OF SALE

The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, described herein, has filed Notice of Election and Demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust.

THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that I will at public auction, at 10:00 A.M. on Wednesday, 06/29/2022, at The East Hearing Room, County Administration Building, 5334 South Prince Street, Littleton, Colorado, 80120, sell to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of the said Grantor(s), Grantor(s)’ heirs and assigns therein, for the purpose of paying the indebtedness provided in said Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, plus attorneys’ fees, the expenses of sale and other items allowed by law, and will issue to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law.

First Publication 5/5/2022

Last Publication 6/2/2022

Name of Publication Sentinel

IF THE SALE DATE IS CONTINUED TO A LATER DATE, THE DEADLINE TO FILE A NOTICE OF INTENT TO CURE BY THOSE PARTIES ENTITLED TO CURE MAY ALSO BE EXTENDED; DATE: 03/01/2022

Susan Sandstrom, Public Trustee in and for the County of Arapahoe, State of Colorado

By: /s/ Susan Sandstrom, Public Trustee

The name, address, business telephone number and bar registration number of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is:

Amanda Ferguson #44893

Heather Deere #28597

Toni M. Owan #30580 Halliday, Watkins & Mann, PC 355 Union Blvd., Ste. 250, Lakewood, CO 80228

The Attorney above is acting as a debt collector and is attempting to collect a debt. Any information provided may be ©Public Trustees’ Association of Colorado

COMBINED NOTICEPUBLICATION CRS §38-38-103

FORECLOSURE SALE NO. 0070-2022

To Whom It May Concern: This Notice is given with regard to the following described Deed of Trust:

On March 4, 2022, the undersigned Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in the County of Arapahoe records.

Original Grantor(s)

Andrei Bindasov AND Vladimir Bindasov

Original Beneficiary(ies)

MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC. AS NOMINEE FOR FAIRWAY INDEPENDENT MORTGAGE CORPORATION, ITS SUCCESSORS AND ASSIGNS

Current Holder of Evidence of Debt

FREEDOM MORTGAGE CORPORATION

Date of Deed of Trust

May 20, 2019

County of Recording

Arapahoe Recording Date of Deed of Trust

May 23, 2019

Recording Information (Reception No. and/ or Book/Page No.)

D9048346

Original Principal Amount

$309,294.00

Outstanding Principal Balance

$305,572.85

Pursuant to CRS §38-38-101(4)(i), you are

hereby notified that the covenants of the deed of trust have been violated as follows: Failure to pay principal and interest when due together with all other payments provided for in the evidence of debt secured by the deed of trust and other violations thereof. THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN.

SEE ATTACHED LEGAL DESCRIPTION

EXHIBIT A UNIT 204, CONDOMINIUM BUILDING 3, WHITESTONE LOFTS & HOMES, ACCORDING TO THE CONDOMINIUM MAP

THEREOF, RECORDED ON OCTOBER 09, 2018, AT RECEPTION NO. D8099873 IN THE RECORDS OF THE OFFICE OF THE CLERK AND RECORDER ARAPAHOE COUNTY COLORADO, AND AS DEFINED AND DECRIBED IN THE DECLARATION OF COVENANTS, CONDITIONS AND RESTRICTIONS OF WHITESTONE LOFTS & HOMES ASSOCIATION, INC. RECORDED ON JANUARY 16, 2018, AT RECEPTION NO. D8004902 IN SAID RECORDS TOGETHER WITH THE EXCLUSIVE RIGHT TO USE GARAGE SPACE NO. D2, COUNTY OF ARAPAHOE, STATE OF COLORADO Also known by street and number as: 14916 East Hampden Avenue, # 204, Aurora, CO 80014. THE PROPERTY DESCRIBED HEREIN IS ALL OF THE PROPERTY CURRENTLY ENCUMBERED BY THE LIEN OF THE DEED OF TRUST.

NOTICE OF SALE

The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, described herein, has filed Notice of Election and Demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust.

THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that I will at public auction, at 10:00 A.M. on Wednesday, 07/06/2022, at The East Hearing Room, County Administration Building, 5334 South Prince Street, Littleton, Colorado, 80120, sell to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of the said Grantor(s), Grantor(s)’ heirs and assigns therein, for the purpose of paying the indebtedness provided in said Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, plus attorneys’ fees, the expenses of sale and other items allowed by law, and will issue to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law.

First Publication 5/12/2022

Last Publication 6/9/2022

Name of Publication Sentinel

IF THE SALE DATE IS CONTINUED TO

A LATER DATE, THE DEADLINE TO FILE

A NOTICE OF INTENT TO CURE BY THOSE PARTIES ENTITLED TO CURE

MAY ALSO BE EXTENDED;

DATE: 03/04/2022

Susan Sandstrom, Public Trustee in and for the County of Arapahoe, State of Colorado

By: /s/ Susan Sandstrom, Public Trustee

The name, address, business telephone number and bar registration number of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is:

Alison L Berry #34531

Nicholas H. Santarelli #46592

David R. Doughty #40042

Lynn M. Janeway #15592

Janeway Law Firm, P.C. 9800 S. Meridian Blvd., Suite 400, Englewood, CO 80112 (303) 706-9990

Attorney File # 22-026419

The Attorney above is acting as a debt collector and is attempting to collect a debt. Any information provided may be used for that purpose.

COMBINED NOTICEPUBLICATION CRS §38-38-103

FORECLOSURE SALE NO. 0076-2022

To Whom It May Concern: This Notice is given with regard to the following described Deed of Trust:

On March 11, 2022, the undersigned

Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in the County of Arapahoe records.

Original Grantor(s)

Eva J. Oliver

Original Beneficiary(ies)

Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc., as nominee for Cherry Creek Mortgage Co., Inc.

Current Holder of Evidence of Debt

Community Loan Servicing, LLC, a Delaware Limited Liability Company

Date of Deed of Trust

December 15, 2016

County of Recording

Arapahoe

Recording Date of Deed of Trust

December 16, 2016

Recording Information (Reception No. and/ or Book/Page No.) D6145531

Original Principal Amount $165,579.00

Outstanding Principal Balance $155,611.22

Pursuant to CRS §38-38-101(4)(i), you are hereby notified that the covenants of the deed of trust have been violated as follows: Failure to pay principal and interest when due together with all other payments provided for in the evidence of debt secured by the deed of trust and other violations thereof.

THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN.

See Legal Description Attached Hereto and Incorporated by Reference Herein EXHIBIT A LOT 1, BLOCK 1, HEATHER GARDENS FILING NO. 3, COUNTY OF ARAPAHOE, COLORADO, TO WIT: PARCEL 1: AN UNDIVIDED 1/144TH INTEREST IN AND TO SAID LOT, SUBJECT TO EASEMENTS OF RECORD INCLUDING SUCH EASEMENTS AS MAY BE SET OUT IN THE DECLARATION OF CONDOMINIUM OF HEATHER GARDENS AS FILED OF RECORD EXCLUDING ANY INTEREST IN THE BUILDINGS AND EQUIPMENT SITUATE ON SAID LOT AND BLOCK ABOVE DESCRIBED IN WHICH APARTMENT AND TOWNHOUSE UNITS ARE SITUATE EXPECT THE INTEREST IN THE APARTMENT BUILDING AND EQUIPMENT HEREIN CONVEYED. PARCEL 2: ALL OF THAT SPACE WHICH LIES BETWEEN THE CEILING AND THE FLOOR, AND THE WALLS OF THE APARTMENT AT 13635 EAST BATES AVENUE, APT. 112 (FOR CONVENIENT REFERENCE NUMBERED AS UNIT 25042 IN BUILDING NO. 201) NOW OR HEREAFTER CONSTRUCTED ON SAID LOT, SAID BUILDING BEING LOCATED SUBSTANTIALLY AS SHOWN ON THE AREA PLAT PLAN FILED FOR RECORD IN THE OFFICE OF THE CLERK AND RECORDER OF THE COUNTY OF ARAPAHOE, COLORADO, RECORDED FEBRUARY 9, 1973 UNDER RECEPTION NO. 1339813.

PARCEL 3: AN UNDIVIDED 1/48TH INTEREST IN AND TO THE BUILDING AND EQUIPMENT THEREIN INSTALLED AND APPURTENANT THERETO WITHIN THE ABOVE DESCRIBED SPACE OR AREA IS LOCATED, TOGETHER WITH:

(1) THE EXCLUSIVE RIGHT TO USE THE PATIOS AND BALCONIES, AIR CONDITIONERS, OR OTHER APPLIANCES WHICH PROJECT THE SPACE OF AREA ABOVE DESCRIBED AND CONTIGUOUS THERETO.

(2) A RIGHT OF WAY IN COMMON WITH OTHERS, FOR INGRESS AND EGRESS TO AND FROM THE PROPERTY ABOVE DESCRIBED.

(3) THE RIGHT TO USE STAIRS, HALLS, PASSAGE WAYS AND OTHER COMMON AREAS IN THE BUILDING IN PARCEL 2 ABOVE IN COMMON WITH OWNERS OF SUCH BUILDING, INCLUDING THEIR AGENTS, SERVANTS, EMPLOYEES AND INVITEES.

(4) THE RIGHT TO USE COMMON AREAS IN SAID LOT IN COMMON WITH OTHER OWNERS OF SPACE OR AREAS IN BUILDINGS NOW OR HEREAFTER CONSTRUCTED IN SAID LOT, EXCEPT THE USE OF THE COMMON AREAS LOCATED IN BUILDINGS OTHER THAN THAT DESCRIBED IN parcel 2 ABOVE, INCLUDING THEIR AGENTS, SERVANTS, EMPLOYEES AND INVITEES.

(5) THE EXCLUSIVE RIGHT TO USE AND OCCUPY PARKING STALL NO.

16 | SENTINELCOLORADO.COM | MAY 19, 2022 Public Notices for MAY 19, 2022 | Published by the Sentinel
Public Notices www.publicnoticecolorado.com
©Public Trustees’ Association
Revised 1/2015
of Colorado
P-1
SHOWN ON THE
PLAT PLAN FILE OF
IN THE OFFICE OF THE CLERK AND RECORDER OF ARAPAHOE COUNTY, COLORADO SHOWING THE LOCATION OF THE ABOVE STALL. Also known by street and number as: 13635 E Bates Ave Apt 112, Aurora, CO @AuroraSports SentinelPrepSports Crazy for prep sports? Sports reporter Courtney Oakes has you covered. Visit sentinelcolorado.com daily and follow Courtney for the hottest prep sports news. sentinelcolorado.com PREPS COVERAGE
29 IN PARKING LOT NO.
LOCATED SUBSTANTIALLY AS
RECORDED AREA
RECORD

Ilene Dell’Acqua #31755

McCarthy & Holthus LLP 7700 E Arapahoe Road, Suite 230, Centennial, CO 80112

(877) 369-6122

Attorney File # CO-22-898983-LL

The Attorney above is acting as a debt collector and is attempting to collect a debt. Any information provided may be used for that purpose.

©Public Trustees’ Association of Colorado

Revised 1/2015 COMBINED NOTICEPUBLICATION CRS §38-38-103

FORECLOSURE SALE NO. 0037-2022

To Whom It May Concern: This Notice is given with regard to the following described

Deed of Trust:

On February 18, 2022, the undersigned Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in the County of Arapahoe records.

Original Grantor(s)

GARY GALLETTA

Original Beneficiary(ies)

JP MORGAN CHASE BANK, N.A.

Current Holder of Evidence of Debt

JP MORGAN CHASE BANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION

Date of Deed of Trust

September 12, 2006

County of Recording

Arapahoe

Recording Date of Deed of Trust

September 22, 2006

Recording Information (Reception No. and/ or Book/Page No.)

B6136321

Original Principal Amount

$55,000.00

Outstanding Principal Balance

$20,193.03

Pursuant to CRS §38-38-101(4)(i), you are hereby notified that the covenants of the deed of trust have been violated as follows:

Failure to pay principal and interest when due together with all other payments provided for in the evidence of debt secured by the deed of trust and other violations thereof.

THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE

A FIRST LIEN.

LOT 40, BLOCK 4, LEXINGTON EAST

SUBDIVISION FILING NO 2, COUNTY OF ARAPAHOE, STATE OF COLORADO

Also known by street and number as: 1887

S FUNDY WY, AURORA, CO 80017.

THE PROPERTY DESCRIBED HEREIN IS ALL OF THE PROPERTY CURRENTLY ENCUMBERED BY THE LIEN OF THE DEED OF TRUST. NOTICE OF SALE

The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, described herein, has filed Notice of Election and Demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust.

THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that I will at public auction, at 10:00 A.M. on Wednesday, 06/22/2022, at The East Hearing Room, County Administration Building, 5334 South Prince Street, Littleton, Colorado, 80120, sell to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of the said Grantor(s), Grantor(s)’ heirs and assigns therein, for the purpose of paying the indebtedness provided in said Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, plus attorneys’ fees, the expenses of sale and other items allowed by law, and will issue to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law.

First Publication 4/28/2022

Last Publication 5/26/2022

Name of Publication Sentinel

IF THE SALE DATE IS CONTINUED TO

A LATER DATE, THE DEADLINE TO FILE

A NOTICE OF INTENT TO CURE BY THOSE PARTIES ENTITLED TO CURE MAY ALSO BE EXTENDED;

DATE: 02/18/2022

Susan Sandstrom, Public Trustee in and for the County of Arapahoe, State of Colorado

By: /s/ Susan Sandstrom, Public Trustee

The name, address, business telephone number and bar registration number of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is:

Alison L Berry #34531

Nicholas H. Santarelli #46592

David R. Doughty #40042

Lynn M. Janeway #15592

Janeway Law Firm, P.C. 9800 S. Meridian Blvd., Suite 400, Englewood, CO 80112 (303) 706-9990

Attorney File # 22-026287

The Attorney above is acting as a debt collector and is attempting to collect a debt. Any information provided may be used for that purpose.

©Public Trustees’ Association of Colorado

Revised 1/2015

COMBINED NOTICEPUBLICATION CRS §38-38-103 FORECLOSURE SALE NO. 0039-2022

To Whom It May Concern: This Notice is given with regard to the following described

Deed of Trust:

On February 18, 2022, the undersigned

Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in the County of Arapahoe records. Original Grantor(s) Original

MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC. AS NOMINEE FOR UNIVERSAL LENDING CORPORA-

TION, ITS SUCCESSORS AND ASSIGNS

COLORADO HOUSING AND FINANCE

AUTHORITY

September 13, 2016

Arapahoe September 15, 2016

D6103418 $279,837.00

$269,607.99

Outstanding Principal Balance

Pursuant to CRS §38-38-101(4)(i), you are hereby notified that the covenants of the deed of trust have been violated as follows:

Failure to pay principal and interest when due together with all other payments provided for in the evidence of debt secured by the deed of trust and other violations thereof.

THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN.

LOT 41, BLOCK 2, SOMERSET VILLAGE SUBDIVISION FILING NO. 3, COUNTY OF ARAPAHOE, STATE OF COLORADO. Also known by street and number as: 1202 S RICHFIELD ST, AURORA, CO 80017.

THE PROPERTY DESCRIBED HEREIN IS ALL OF THE PROPERTY CURRENTLY ENCUMBERED BY THE LIEN OF THE DEED OF TRUST.

NOTICE OF SALE

The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, described herein, has filed Notice of Election and Demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust.

THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that I will at public auction, at 10:00 A.M. on Wednesday, 06/22/2022, at The East Hearing Room, County Administration Building, 5334 South Prince Street, Littleton, Colorado, 80120, sell to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of the said Grantor(s), Grantor(s)’ heirs and assigns therein, for the purpose of paying the indebtedness provided in said Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, plus attorneys’ fees, the expenses of sale and other items allowed by law, and will issue to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law.

First Publication 4/28/2022

Last Publication 5/26/2022

Name of Publication Sentinel IF THE SALE DATE IS CONTINUED TO A LATER DATE, THE DEADLINE TO FILE A NOTICE OF INTENT TO CURE BY THOSE PARTIES ENTITLED TO CURE MAY ALSO BE EXTENDED; DATE: 02/18/2022 Susan Sandstrom, Public Trustee in and for the County of Arapahoe, State of Colorado

By: /s/ Susan Sandstrom, Public Trustee

The name, address, business telephone number and bar registration number of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is: Alison L Berry #34531

David R. Doughty #40042 Lynn M. Janeway #15592 Nicholas H. Santarelli #46592 Janeway Law Firm, P.C. 9800 S. Meridian Blvd., Suite 400, Englewood, CO 80112

(303) 706-9990

Attorney File # 19-021768

The Attorney above is acting as a debt collector and is attempting to collect a debt. Any information provided may be used for that purpose.

©Public Trustees’ Association of Colorado

Revised 1/2015

COMBINED NOTICE -

PUBLICATION CRS §38-38-103

FORECLOSURE SALE NO. 0044-2022

To Whom It May Concern: This Notice is given with regard to the following described Deed of Trust:

On February 18, 2022, the undersigned

Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in the County of Arapahoe records.

Original Grantor(s)

HENRY L. BUTLER

Original Beneficiary(ies)

MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEM, INC. AS NOMINEE FOR ONE REVERSE MORTGAGE, LLC, ITS SUCCESSORS AND ASSIGNS

Current Holder of Evidence of Debt

REVERSE MORTGAGE FUNDING LLC

Date of Deed of Trust

February 23, 2017

County of Recording

Arapahoe

Recording Date of Deed of Trust

March 01, 2017

Recording Information (Reception No. and/ or Book/Page No.)

D7024021

Original Principal Amount $336,000.00 Outstanding Principal Balance $113,589.96

Pursuant to CRS §38-38-101(4)(i), you are hereby notified that the covenants of the deed of trust have been violated as follows:

Failure to pay principal and interest when due together with all other payments provided for in the evidence of debt secured by the deed of trust and other violations thereof.

THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN.

LOT 4, BLOCK 31, BURNS AURORA, FIFTH FILING, COUNTY OF AURORA, STATE OF COLORADO. Also known by street and number as: 960 NOME ST, AURORA, CO 80010.

The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, described herein, has filed Notice of Election and Demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust.

THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that I will at public auction, at 10:00 A.M. on Wednesday, 06/22/2022, at The East Hearing Room, County Administration Building, 5334 South Prince Street, Littleton, Colorado, 80120, sell to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of the said Grantor(s), Grantor(s)’ heirs and assigns therein, for the purpose of paying the indebtedness provided in said Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, plus attorneys’ fees, the expenses of sale and other items allowed by law, and will issue to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law.

First Publication 4/28/2022

Last Publication 5/26/2022

Name of Publication Sentinel

IF THE SALE DATE IS CONTINUED TO A LATER DATE, THE DEADLINE TO FILE

A NOTICE OF INTENT TO CURE BY THOSE PARTIES ENTITLED TO CURE MAY ALSO BE EXTENDED;

DATE: 02/18/2022

Susan Sandstrom, Public Trustee in and for the County of Arapahoe, State of Colorado

By: /s/ Susan Sandstrom, Public Trustee

The name, address, business telephone number and bar registration number of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is:

Alison L Berry #34531

Nicholas H. Santarelli #46592

David R. Doughty #40042

Lynn M. Janeway #15592

Janeway Law Firm, P.C. 9800 S. Meridian Blvd., Suite 400, Englewood, CO 80112 (303) 706-9990

Attorney File # 22-026274

The Attorney above is acting as a debt collector and is attempting to collect a debt. Any information provided may be used for that purpose.

©Public Trustees’ Association of Colorado

Revised 1/2015

COMBINED NOTICEPUBLICATION CRS §38-38-103

FORECLOSURE SALE NO. 0046-2022

To Whom It May Concern: This Notice is given with regard to the following described

Deed of Trust:

On February 18, 2022, the undersigned Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in the County of Arapahoe records.

Original Grantor(s)

James C. Schroder

Original Beneficiary(ies)

Brokers Mortgage Group, LTD

Current Holder of Evidence of Debt

US Bank Trust National Association, Not In Its Individual Capacity But Solely As Owner Trustee For VRMTG Asset Trust

Date of Deed of Trust

April 23, 1999

County of Recording

Arapahoe

Recording Date of Deed of Trust

April 30, 1999

Recording Information (Reception No. and/ or Book/Page No.)

A9071234

Original Principal Amount

$79,850.00

Outstanding Principal Balance

$50,890.82

Pursuant to CRS §38-38-101(4)(i), you are hereby notified that the covenants of the deed of trust have been violated as follows: Failure to pay principal and interest when due together with all other payments provided for in the evidence of debt secured by the deed of trust and other violations thereof.

THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN. SEE ATTACHED EXHIBIT A EXHIBIT A LOT 1, BLOCK 1, HEATHER GARDENS FILING NO. 11, COUNTY OF ARAPAHOE, STATE OF COLORADO TO WIT:

PARCEL I: AN UNDIVIDED 1/144TH INTEREST IN AND TO SAID LOT, SUBJECT TO EASEMENTS OF RECORD INCLUDING SUCH EASEMENTS AS MAY BE SET OUT IN THE DECLARATION OF CONDOMINIUM OF HEATHER GARDENS AS FILED OF RECORD EXCLUDING ANY INTEREST IN THE BUILDINGS AND EQUIPMENT SITUATE ON SAID LOT AND BLOCK ABOVE DESCRIBED IN WHICH APARTMENT AND TOWNHOUSE UNITS ARE SITUATE EXCEPT THE INTEREST IN THE APARTMENT BUILDING AND EQUIPMENT HEREIN CONVEYED. PARCEL 2: ALL OF THAT SPACE WHICH LIES BETWEEN THE CEILING AND THE FLOOR, AND THE WALLS OF THE APARTMENT AT 14152 E. LINVALE PLACE, APT. 309 (FOR CONVENIENT REFERENCE NUMBERED AS UNIT 26273 IN BUILDING NO. 220) NOW OR HEREAFTER CONSTRUCTED ON SAID LOT, SAID BUILDING BEING LOCATED SUBSTANTIALLY AS SHOWN ON THE AREA PLAT PLAN FILED FOR RECORD IN THE OFFICE OF THE CLERK AND RECORDER OF THE COUNTY OF ARAPAHOE, STATE OF COLORADO, IN BOOK 36 AT PAGES 42 THRU 65 AND SUPPLEMENTS THERETO.

PARCEL 3: AN UNDIVIDED 1/72ND INTEREST IN AND TO THE BUILDING AND EQUIPMENT THEREIN: INSTALLED AND APPURTENANT THERETO WITHIN THE ABOVE DESCRIBED SPACE OR AREA

IS LOCATED. TOGETHER WITH:

(1) THE EXCLUSIVE RIGHT TO USE THE PATIOS AND BALCONIES, AIR CONDITIONERS, OR OTHER APPLIANCES WHICH PROJECT THE SPACE OR AREA ABOVE DESCRIBED AND CONTIGUOUS THERETO.

(2) A RIGHT OF WAY IN COMMON WITH OTHERS, FOR INGRESS AND EGRESS TO AND FROM PROPERTY ABOVE DESCRIBED.

(3) THE RIGHT TO USE STAIRS, HALLS, PASSAGE WAYS AND OTHER COMMON AREAS IN THE BUILDING IN PARCEL 2 ABOVE IN COMMON WITH OWNERS OF SUCH BUILDING, INCLUDING. THEIR AGENTS, SERVANTS, EMPLOYEES AND INVITEES.

(4) THE RIGHT TO USE COMMON AREAS IN SAID LOT IN COMMON WITH OTHER OWNERS OF SPACE OR AREAS IN BUILDINGS NOW OR HEREAFTER CONSTRUCTED IN SAID LOT, EXCEPT THE USE OF THE COMMON AREAS LOCATED IN BUILDINGS OTHER THAN THAT DESCRIBED IN PARCEL 2 ABOVE, INCLUDING THEIR AGENTS, SERVANTS, EMPLOYEES AND INVITEES.

(5) THE EXCLUSIVE RIGHT TO USE AND OCCUPY PARKING STALL NO. 19 IN PARKING LOT NO. 220 LOCATED SUBSTANTIALLY AS SHOWN ON THE RECORDED AREA PLAT PLAN FILE OF RECORD IN THE OFFICE OF THE CLERK AND RECORDER OF ARAPAHOE COUNTY, COLORADO SHOWING THE LOCATION OF THE ABOVE STALL. COUNTY OF ARAPAHOE, STATE OF COLORADO

Also known by street and number as: 14152 EAST LINVALE PLACE #309, AURORA, CO 80014. THE PROPERTY DESCRIBED HEREIN IS ALL OF THE PROPERTY CURRENTLY ENCUMBERED BY THE LIEN OF THE DEED OF TRUST.

NOTICE OF SALE

The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, described herein, has filed Notice of Election and Demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust.

THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that I will at public auction, at 10:00 A.M. on Wednesday, 06/22/2022, at The East Hearing Room, County Administration Building, 5334 South Prince Street, Littleton, Colorado, 80120, sell to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of the said Grantor(s), Grantor(s)’ heirs and assigns therein, for the purpose of paying the indebtedness provided in said Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, plus attorneys’ fees, the expenses of sale and other items allowed by law, and will issue to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law.

First Publication 4/28/2022

Last Publication 5/26/2022

Name of Publication Sentinel

IF THE SALE DATE IS CONTINUED TO A LATER DATE, THE DEADLINE TO FILE

A NOTICE OF INTENT TO CURE BY THOSE PARTIES ENTITLED TO CURE MAY ALSO BE EXTENDED;

DATE: 02/18/2022

Susan Sandstrom, Public Trustee in and for the County of Arapahoe, State of Colorado

By: /s/ Susan Sandstrom, Public Trustee

The name, address, business telephone number and bar registration number of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is:

Erin Croke #46557

Steven Bellanti #48306

Holly Shilliday #24423

Ilene Dell’Acqua #31755

McCarthy & Holthus LLP 7700 E Arapahoe Road, Suite 230, Centennial, CO 80112

(877) 369-6122

Attorney File # CO-22-898282-LL

The Attorney above is acting as a debt collector and is attempting to collect a debt. Any information provided may be used for that purpose.

©Public Trustees’ Association of Colorado

Revised 1/2015

COMBINED NOTICEPUBLICATION CRS §38-38-103

FORECLOSURE SALE NO. 0048-2022

To Whom It May Concern: This Notice is given with regard to the following described Deed of Trust:

On February 18, 2022, the undersigned

Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in the County of Arapahoe records.

Original Grantor(s)

NICHOLAS BAROS

Original Beneficiary(ies)

MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC. ACTING SOLELY AS NOMINEE FOR CASTLE & COOKE MORTGAGE, LLC

Date of Deed of Trust

October

due together with all other payments provided for in the evidence of debt secured by the deed of trust and other violations thereof.

THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN.

PLEASE SEE ATTACHED LEGAL DESCRIPTION EXHIBIT A LOT 77B, RAINTREE EAST, AS PER MAP RECORDED IN BOOK 23 AT PAGE 90, TOGETHER WITH THE RIGHTS SET FORTH IN THAT CERTAIN DECLARATION OF COVENANTS, CONDITIONS AND RESTRICTIONS RECORDED IN BOOK 2120 AT PAGE 169 TO 189, INCLUSIVE, AND TOGETHER WITH AN EASEMENT FOR PARKING AND STORAGE OVER THAT PORTION OF LOT 77D SHOWN AS EASEMENT NO. 3 ON EASEMENT LOCATION PLAN RECORDED IN BOOK 2143 AT PAGE 618, WHICH EASEMENT IS FOR THE BENEFIT OF AND APPURTENANT TO SAID LOT 77B, COUNTY OF ARAPAHOE, STATE OF COLORADO. Also known by street and number as: 10001 E. EVANS AVE #77B, DENVER, CO 80247. THE PROPERTY DESCRIBED HEREIN IS ALL OF THE PROPERTY CURRENTLY ENCUMBERED BY THE LIEN OF THE DEED OF TRUST.

NOTICE OF SALE

The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, described herein, has filed Notice of Election and Demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust.

THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that I will at public auction, at 10:00 A.M. on Wednesday, 06/22/2022, at The East Hearing Room, County Administration Building, 5334 South Prince Street, Littleton, Colorado, 80120, sell to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of the said Grantor(s), Grantor(s)’ heirs and assigns therein, for the purpose of paying the indebtedness provided in said Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, plus attorneys’ fees, the expenses of sale and other items allowed by law, and will issue to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law.

First Publication 4/28/2022

Last Publication 5/26/2022

Name of Publication Sentinel

IF THE SALE DATE IS CONTINUED TO A LATER DATE, THE DEADLINE TO FILE A NOTICE OF INTENT TO CURE BY THOSE PARTIES ENTITLED TO CURE MAY ALSO BE EXTENDED; DATE: 02/18/2022

Susan Sandstrom, Public Trustee in and for the County of Arapahoe, State of Colorado

By: /s/ Susan Sandstrom, Public Trustee

The name, address, business telephone number and bar registration number of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is:

Anna Johnston #51978

Ryan Bourgeois #51088

Joseph D. DeGiorgio #45557

Randall Chin #31149

Barrett, Frappier & Weisserman, LLP 1391 Speer Boulevard, Suite 700, Denver, CO 80204 (303) 350-3711

Attorney File # 00000009412438

The Attorney above is acting as a debt collector and is attempting to collect a debt. Any information provided may be used for that purpose. ©Public Trustees’ Association of Colorado

Revised 1/2015 COMBINED NOTICEPUBLICATION CRS §38-38-103 FORECLOSURE SALE NO. 0051-2022

To Whom It May Concern: This Notice is given with regard to the following described Deed of Trust:

On February 18, 2022, the undersigned Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in the County of Arapahoe records.

Original Grantor(s) ROBERT M GERHARD

Original Beneficiary(ies) MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC. AS NOMINEE FOR AMERICAN FINANCING CORPORATION, ITS SUCCESSORS AND ASSIGNS

Current Holder of Evidence of Debt

FREEDOM MORTGAGE CORPORATION

Date of Deed of Trust

September 25, 2013

County of Recording

Arapahoe

Recording Date of Deed of Trust

September 27, 2013

Recording Information (Reception No. and/ or Book/Page No.)

D3120942

Original Principal Amount $198,831.00

Outstanding Principal Balance $174,102.68

Pursuant to CRS §38-38-101(4)(i), you are hereby notified that the covenants of the deed of trust have been violated as follows: Failure to pay principal and interest when due together with all other payments provided for in the evidence of debt secured by the deed of trust and other violations thereof.

THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN. LOT 22, BLOCK 1, WILLOW PARK SUBDIVISION FILING NO. 1, COUNTY OF ARAPAHOE, STATE OF COLORADO.

A.P.N.:1975-19-4-09-045

Also known by street and number as: 15176 EAST BAILS PLACE, AURORA, CO 80012.

THE PROPERTY DESCRIBED HEREIN

18 | SENTINELCOLORADO.COM | MAY 19, 2022 Public Notices www.publicnoticecolorado.com
Current Holder of Evidence of Debt Date of Deed of Trust County of Recording Recording Date of Deed of Trust Recording Information (Reception No. and/or Book/Page No.) Original Principal Amount John Frank Eberhardt, Jr AND Linda Ann Eberhardt
Beneficiary(ies)
THE PROPERTY DESCRIBED HEREIN IS ALL OF THE PROPERTY CURRENTLY ENCUMBERED BY THE LIEN OF THE DEED OF TRUST. NOTICE OF SALE
Current Holder of Evidence of Debt PENNYMAC LOAN SERVICES, LLC
12, 2018 County of Recording Arapahoe Recording Date of Deed of Trust
or Book/Page No.) D8102287 Original Principal Amount $215,033.00 Outstanding Principal Balance $208,229.99 Pursuant to CRS §38-38-101(4)(i), you are hereby notified that the covenants of the deed of trust have been violated as follows: Failure to pay principal and interest when
October 16, 2018 Recording Information (Reception No. and/

IS ALL OF THE PROPERTY CURRENTLY

ENCUMBERED BY THE LIEN OF THE DEED OF TRUST. NOTICE OF SALE

The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, described herein, has filed Notice of Election and Demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust.

THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that I will at public auction, at 10:00 A.M. on Wednesday, 06/22/2022, at The East Hearing Room, County Administration Building, 5334 South Prince Street, Littleton, Colorado, 80120, sell to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of the said Grantor(s), Grantor(s)’ heirs and assigns therein, for the purpose of paying the indebtedness provided in said Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, plus attorneys’ fees, the expenses of sale and other items allowed by law, and will issue to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law.

First Publication 4/28/2022

Last Publication 5/26/2022

Name of Publication Sentinel

IF THE SALE DATE IS CONTINUED TO A LATER DATE, THE DEADLINE TO FILE A NOTICE OF INTENT TO CURE BY THOSE PARTIES ENTITLED TO CURE MAY ALSO BE EXTENDED;

DATE: 02/18/2022

Susan Sandstrom, Public Trustee in and for the County of Arapahoe, State of Colorado

By: /s/ Susan Sandstrom, Public Trustee

The name, address, business telephone number and bar registration number of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is:

Alison L Berry #34531

Nicholas H. Santarelli #46592

David R. Doughty #40042

Lynn M. Janeway #15592

Janeway Law Firm, P.C. 9800 S. Meridian Blvd., Suite 400, Englewood, CO 80112 (303) 706-9990

Attorney File # 22-026372

The Attorney above is acting as a debt collector and is attempting to collect a debt. Any information provided may be used for that purpose.

©Public Trustees’ Association of Colorado

Revised 1/2015

COMBINED NOTICE -

PUBLICATION CRS §38-38-103

FORECLOSURE SALE NO. 0052-2022

To Whom It May Concern: This Notice is given with regard to the following described

Deed of Trust:

On February 18, 2022, the undersigned Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in the County of Arapahoe records.

Original Grantor(s)

ALVIN P. THOMPSON AND MELISSA D. THOMPSON

Original Beneficiary(ies)

ROCKY MOUNTAIN LAW ENFORCEMENT FEDERAL CREDIT UNION

Current Holder of Evidence of Debt

ROCKY MOUNTAIN LAW ENFORCEMENT FEDERAL CREDIT UNION

Date of Deed of Trust

December 23, 2020

County of Recording

Arapahoe Recording Date of Deed of Trust

March 11, 2021

Recording Information (Reception No. and/ or Book/Page No.)

E1041616

Original Principal Amount

$78,274.33

Outstanding Principal Balance

$76,090.59

Pursuant to CRS §38-38-101(4)(i), you are hereby notified that the covenants of the deed of trust have been violated as follows:

Failure to pay principal and interest when due together with all other payments provided for in the evidence of debt secured by the deed of trust and other violations thereof.

THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE

A FIRST LIEN.

LOT 14, BLOCK 6, SUMMER BREEZE

SUBDIVISION FILING NO. 1 COUNTY OF ARAPAHOE, STATE OF COLORADO

Also known by street and number as: 17497 E. KENYON DRIVE, AURORA, CO 80013.

THE PROPERTY DESCRIBED HEREIN

IS ALL OF THE PROPERTY CURRENTLY ENCUMBERED BY THE LIEN OF THE DEED OF TRUST.

NOTICE OF SALE

The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, described herein, has filed Notice of Election and Demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust.

THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that I will at public auction, at 10:00 A.M. on Wednesday, 06/22/2022, at The East Hearing Room, County Administration Building, 5334 South Prince Street, Littleton, Colorado, 80120, sell to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of the said Grantor(s), Grantor(s)’ heirs and assigns therein, for the purpose of paying the indebtedness provided in said Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, plus attorneys’ fees, the expenses of sale and other items allowed by law, and will issue to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law.

First Publication 4/28/2022 Last Publication 5/26/2022

THOSE PARTIES ENTITLED TO CURE MAY ALSO BE EXTENDED;

DATE: 02/18/2022

Susan Sandstrom, Public Trustee in and for the County of Arapahoe, State of Colorado

By:

Susan Sandstrom, Public Trustee

The name, address, business telephone number and bar registration number of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is:

Harry L. Simon, P.C. #7942

Harry L. Simon, P.C. 10200 East Girard Avenue, Building B, Suite 120, Denver, CO 80231 (303) 758-6601

Attorney File # 17497 E KENYON DRIVE

The Attorney above is acting as a debt collector and is attempting to collect a debt. Any information provided may be used for that purpose.

©Public Trustees’ Association of Colorado

Revised 1/2015

COMBINED NOTICEPUBLICATION CRS §38-38-103

FORECLOSURE SALE NO. 0065-2022

To Whom It May Concern: This Notice is given with regard to the following described

Deed of Trust:

On March 1, 2022, the undersigned Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in the County of Arapahoe records.

Original Grantor(s)

KEVIN D SMITH AND SHENIQUA M SMITH

Original Beneficiary(ies)

MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS INC., ACTING SOLELY AS

NOMINEE FOR FIRST FRANKLIN A DIVISION OF NATIONAL CITY BANK

Current Holder of Evidence of Debt

Wells Fargo Bank, National Association, as trustee for the holders of the First Franklin Mortgage Loan Trust 2006-FF17 Mortgage

Pass-Through Certificates, Series 2006-

FF17

Date of Deed of Trust

September 13, 2006

County of Recording

Arapahoe

Recording Date of Deed of Trust

September 22, 2006

Recording Information (Reception No. and/ or Book/Page No.)

B6136445

Original Principal Amount

$290,000.00

Outstanding Principal Balance

$338,264.35

Pursuant to CRS §38-38-101(4)(i), you are hereby notified that the covenants of the deed of trust have been violated as follows:

Failure to pay principal and interest when due together with all other payments provided for in the evidence of debt secured by the deed of trust and other violations thereof.

THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN.

LOT 4, BLOCK 1, WOODGATE SUBDIVISION FILING NO 11, COUNTY OF ARAPAHOE, STATE OF COLORADO Also known by street and number as: 4853 SOUTH EAGLE CIRCLE, AURORA, CO 80015.

THE PROPERTY DESCRIBED HEREIN IS ALL OF THE PROPERTY CURRENTLY ENCUMBERED BY THE LIEN OF THE DEED OF TRUST.

NOTICE OF SALE

The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, described herein, has filed Notice of Election and Demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust.

THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that I will at public auction, at 10:00 A.M. on Wednesday, 06/29/2022, at The East Hearing Room, County Administration Building, 5334 South Prince Street, Littleton, Colorado, 80120, sell to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of the said Grantor(s), Grantor(s)’ heirs and assigns therein, for the purpose of paying the indebtedness provided in said Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, plus attorneys’ fees, the expenses of sale and other items allowed by law, and will issue to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law.

First Publication 5/5/2022

Last Publication 6/2/2022

Name of Publication Sentinel IF THE SALE DATE IS CONTINUED TO

A LATER DATE, THE DEADLINE TO FILE

A NOTICE OF INTENT TO CURE BY THOSE PARTIES ENTITLED TO CURE MAY ALSO BE EXTENDED;

DATE: 03/01/2022

Susan Sandstrom, Public Trustee in and for the County of Arapahoe, State of Colorado

By: /s/ Susan Sandstrom, Public Trustee

The name, address, business telephone number and bar registration number of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is:

Anna Johnston #51978

Ryan Bourgeois #51088

Joseph D. DeGiorgio #45557

Randall Chin #31149

Barrett, Frappier & Weisserman, LLP 1391

Speer Boulevard, Suite 700, Denver, CO 80204 (303) 350-3711

Attorney File # 00000009369752

The Attorney above is acting as a debt collector and is attempting to collect a debt. Any information provided may be used for that purpose.

©Public Trustees’ Association of Colorado

Revised 1/2015

COMBINED NOTICEPUBLICATION CRS §38-38-103

FORECLOSURE SALE NO. 0069-2022

To Whom It May Concern: This Notice is given with regard to the following described

Deed of Trust:

On March 4, 2022, the undersigned Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in the County of Arapahoe records.

Original Grantor(s)

DALE F. NICHOLLS

Original Beneficiary(ies) MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC. AS NOMINEE FOR FAIRWAY INDEPENDENT MORTGAGE CORPORATION , ITS SUCCESSORS

AND ASSIGNS

Current Holder of Evidence of Debt COLORADO HOUSING AND FINANCE

AUTHORITY

Date of Deed of Trust

July 19, 2017

County of Recording Arapahoe

Recording Date of Deed of Trust

July 20, 2017

Recording Information (Reception No. and/ or Book/Page No.)

D7082180

Original Principal Amount

$324,022.00

Outstanding Principal Balance

$316,263.21

Pursuant to CRS §38-38-101(4)(i), you are hereby notified that the covenants of the deed of trust have been violated as follows: Failure to pay principal and interest when due together with all other payments provided for in the evidence of debt secured by the deed of trust and other violations thereof. THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN.

LOT 8, BLOCK 1, MISSION VIEJO, FILING NO. 3, COUNTY OF ARAPAHOE, STATE OF COLORADO PARCEL ID NUMBER: 2073-05-3-01-014

Also known by street and number as: 3969 S HANNIBAL ST, AURORA, CO 80013. THE PROPERTY DESCRIBED HEREIN IS ALL OF THE PROPERTY CURRENTLY ENCUMBERED BY THE LIEN OF THE DEED OF TRUST.

NOTICE OF SALE

The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, described herein, has filed Notice of Election and Demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust.

THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that I will at public auction, at 10:00 A.M. on Wednesday, 07/06/2022, at The East Hearing Room, County Administration Building, 5334 South Prince Street, Littleton, Colorado, 80120, sell to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of the said Grantor(s), Grantor(s)’ heirs and assigns therein, for the purpose of paying the indebtedness provided in said Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, plus attorneys’ fees, the expenses of sale and other items allowed by law, and will issue to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law.

First Publication 5/12/2022

Last Publication 6/9/2022

Name of Publication Sentinel IF THE SALE DATE IS CONTINUED TO A LATER DATE, THE DEADLINE TO FILE A NOTICE OF INTENT TO CURE BY THOSE PARTIES ENTITLED TO CURE MAY ALSO BE EXTENDED; DATE: 03/04/2022

Susan Sandstrom, Public Trustee in and for the County of Arapahoe, State of Colorado

By: /s/ Susan Sandstrom, Public Trustee

The name, address, business telephone number and bar registration number of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is:

Alison L Berry #34531

Nicholas H. Santarelli #46592

David R. Doughty #40042

Lynn M. Janeway #15592

Janeway Law Firm, P.C. 9800 S. Meridian Blvd., Suite 400, Englewood, CO 80112 (303) 706-9990

Attorney File # 19-023683

The Attorney above is acting as a debt collector and is attempting to collect a debt. Any information provided may be used for that purpose.

©Public Trustees’ Association of Colorado

Revised 1/2015

COMBINED NOTICEPUBLICATION CRS §38-38-103 FORECLOSURE SALE NO. 0071-2022

To Whom It May Concern: This Notice is given with regard to the following described Deed of Trust:

On March 4, 2022, the undersigned Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in the County of Arapahoe records.

Original Grantor(s)

Joseph Michael Glavan, Jr. and Virginia M. Glavan

Original Beneficiary(ies)

Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc., as Beneficiary, as nominee for Freedom Mortgage Corporation, its successors and assigns

Current Holder of Evidence of Debt

Freedom Mortgage Corporation

Date of Deed of Trust

May 22, 2019

Pursuant to CRS §38-38-101(4)(i), you are hereby notified that the covenants of the deed of trust have been violated as follows: Failure to pay principal and interest when due together with all other payments provided for in the evidence of debt secured by the deed of trust and other violations thereof.

THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE

A FIRST LIEN.

Lot 24, Block 2, Village East, Unit 4-Second Filing, County of Arapahoe, State of Colorado. Also known by street and number as: 1929 S Moline Way, Aurora, CO 80014. THE PROPERTY DESCRIBED HEREIN IS ALL OF THE PROPERTY CURRENTLY ENCUMBERED BY THE LIEN OF THE DEED OF TRUST.

NOTICE OF SALE

The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, described herein, has filed Notice of Election and Demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust.

THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that I will at public auction, at 10:00 A.M. on Wednesday, 07/06/2022, at The East Hearing Room, County Administration Building, 5334 South Prince Street, Littleton, Colorado, 80120, sell to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of the said Grantor(s), Grantor(s)’ heirs and assigns therein, for the purpose of paying the indebtedness provided in said Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, plus attorneys’ fees, the expenses of sale and other items allowed by law, and will issue to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law.

First Publication 5/12/2022

Last Publication 6/9/2022

Name of Publication Sentinel

IF THE SALE DATE IS CONTINUED TO

A LATER DATE, THE DEADLINE TO FILE

A NOTICE OF INTENT TO CURE BY THOSE PARTIES ENTITLED TO CURE MAY ALSO BE EXTENDED;

DATE: 03/04/2022

Susan Sandstrom, Public Trustee in and for the County of Arapahoe, State of Colorado

By: /s/ Susan Sandstrom, Public Trustee

The name, address, business telephone number and bar registration number of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is:

Amanda Ferguson #44893

Heather Deere #28597

Toni M. Owan #30580

Halliday, Watkins & Mann, PC 355 Union Blvd., Ste. 250, Lakewood, CO 80228 (303) 274-0155

Attorney File # CO11366

The Attorney above is acting as a debt collector and is attempting to collect a debt. Any information provided may be used for that purpose.

©Public Trustees’ Association of Colorado

Revised 1/2015

COMBINED NOTICEPUBLICATION CRS §38-38-103

FORECLOSURE SALE NO. 0074-2022

To Whom It May Concern: This Notice is given with regard to the following described Deed of Trust:

On March 8, 2022, the undersigned Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in the County of Arapahoe records.

Original Grantor(s)

Shae Maxwell Smith and Haley Lyn Snape

Original Beneficiary(ies)

Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. as nominee for Caliber Home Loans, Inc., Its Successors and Assigns

Current Holder of Evidence of Debt Caliber Home Loans, Inc.

Date of Deed of Trust

May 30, 2018 County of Recording

Arapahoe Recording Date of Deed of Trust

June 13, 2018

Recording Information (Reception No. and/ or Book/Page No.)

D8057147

Original Principal Amount

$234,671.00

Outstanding Principal Balance

$225,580.19 Pursuant to CRS §38-38-101(4)(i), you are hereby notified that the covenants of the deed of trust have been violated as follows: Failure to pay principal and interest when due together with all other payments provided for in the evidence of debt secured by the deed of trust and other violations thereof. THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN. LOT 232, RE-SUBDIVISION MISSION VIEJO, FILING NO. 1, TRACT G, COUNTY OF ARAPAHOE, STATE OF COLORADO.

Also known by street and number as: 3665 S Kittredge St Apt B, Aurora, CO 800132615. THE PROPERTY DESCRIBED HEREIN IS ALL OF THE PROPERTY CURRENTLY ENCUMBERED BY THE LIEN OF THE DEED OF TRUST. NOTICE OF SALE

The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, described herein, has filed Notice of Election and Demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust.

THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that I will at public auction, at 10:00 A.M. on Wednesday, 07/06/2022, at The East

Hearing Room, County Administration Building, 5334 South Prince Street, Littleton, Colorado, 80120, sell to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of the said Grantor(s), Grantor(s)’ heirs and assigns therein, for the purpose of paying the indebtedness provided in said Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, plus attorneys’ fees, the expenses of sale and other items allowed by law, and will issue to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law.

First Publication 5/12/2022

Last Publication 6/9/2022

Name of Publication Sentinel IF THE SALE DATE IS CONTINUED TO A LATER DATE, THE DEADLINE TO FILE A NOTICE OF INTENT TO CURE BY THOSE PARTIES ENTITLED TO CURE MAY ALSO BE EXTENDED; DATE: 03/08/2022

Susan Sandstrom, Public Trustee in and for the County of Arapahoe, State of Colorado

By: /s/ Susan Sandstrom, Public Trustee

The name, address, business telephone number and bar registration number of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is:

Erin Croke #46557

Steven Bellanti #48306

Holly Shilliday #24423

Ilene Dell’Acqua #31755

McCarthy & Holthus LLP 7700 E Arapahoe Road, Suite 230, Centennial, CO 80112 (877) 369-6122

Attorney File # CO-22-911200-LL

The Attorney above is acting as a debt collector and is attempting to collect a debt. Any information provided may be used for that purpose.

©Public Trustees’ Association of Colorado

Revised 1/2015

COMBINED NOTICE -

PUBLICATION CRS §38-38-103

FORECLOSURE SALE NO. 0075-2022

To Whom It May Concern: This Notice is given with regard to the following described Deed of Trust:

On March 8, 2022, the undersigned Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in the County of Arapahoe records.

Original Grantor(s)

Linda Bingham and Krystle Wetherbee

Original Beneficiary(ies)

Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc., as beneficiary, as nominee for AmeriPro Funding, Inc., dba AmeriPro Home Loans, its successors and assigns

Current Holder of Evidence of Debt

Freedom Mortgage Corporation

Date of Deed of Trust

May 16, 2016

County of Recording

Arapahoe

Recording Date of Deed of Trust

May 19, 2016

Recording Information (Reception No. and/ or Book/Page No.)

D6052035

Original Principal Amount

$274,928.00

Outstanding Principal Balance

$252,870.22

Pursuant to CRS §38-38-101(4)(i), you are hereby notified that the covenants of the deed of trust have been violated as follows: Failure to pay principal and interest when due together with all other payments provided for in the evidence of debt secured by the deed of trust and other violations thereof.

THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN. LOT 2, BLOCK 1, SABLERIDGE SUBDIVISION FILING NO. 2, COUNTY OF ARAPAHOE, STATE OF COLORADO.

Also known by street and number as: 13903 East Arkansas Drive, Aurora, CO 80012.

THE PROPERTY DESCRIBED HEREIN IS ALL OF THE PROPERTY CURRENTLY ENCUMBERED BY THE LIEN OF THE DEED OF TRUST.

NOTICE OF SALE

The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, described herein, has filed Notice of Election and Demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust.

THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that I will at public auction, at 10:00 A.M. on Wednesday, 07/06/2022, at The East Hearing Room, County Administration Building, 5334 South Prince Street, Littleton, Colorado, 80120, sell to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of the said Grantor(s), Grantor(s)’ heirs and assigns therein, for the purpose of paying the indebtedness provided in said Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, plus attorneys’ fees, the expenses of sale and other items allowed by law, and will issue to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law.

First Publication 5/12/2022

Last Publication 6/9/2022

Name of Publication Sentinel IF THE SALE DATE IS CONTINUED TO A LATER DATE, THE DEADLINE TO FILE A NOTICE OF INTENT TO CURE BY THOSE PARTIES ENTITLED TO CURE MAY ALSO BE EXTENDED; DATE: 03/08/2022

Susan Sandstrom, Public Trustee in and for the County of Arapahoe, State of Colorado

By: /s/ Susan Sandstrom, Public Trustee

The name, address, business telephone number and bar registration number of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is: Amanda Ferguson #44893

MAY 19, 2022 | SENTINELCOLORADO.COM | 19 Public Notices www.publicnoticecolorado.com
Name of Publication Sentinel IF THE SALE DATE IS CONTINUED TO A LATER DATE, THE DEADLINE TO FILE A NOTICE OF INTENT TO CURE BY
County
Arapahoe Recording
of Deed of Trust May 29, 2022 Recording Information
No. and/ or Book/Page No.)
Original Principal Amount $278,540.00 Outstanding Principal Balance
of Recording
Date
(Reception
D9050086
$274,981.87

Heather Deere #28597

Toni M. Owan #30580

Halliday, Watkins & Mann, PC 355 Union Blvd., Ste. 250, Lakewood, CO 80228

(303) 274-0155

Attorney File # CO11373

The Attorney above is acting as a debt collector and is attempting to collect a debt. Any information provided may be used for that purpose.

©Public Trustees’ Association of Colorado

Revised 1/2015

COMBINED NOTICEPUBLICATION CRS §38-38-103 FORECLOSURE SALE NO. 0078-2022

To Whom It May Concern: This Notice is given with regard to the following described Deed of Trust:

On March 11, 2022, the undersigned

Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in the County of Arapahoe records.

Original Grantor(s)

James Mckay, Jr.

Original Beneficiary(ies)

WELLS FARGO BANK, N.A.

Current Holder of Evidence of Debt

WELLS FARGO BANK, N.A.

Date of Deed of Trust

September 23, 2005

County of Recording

Arapahoe

Recording Date of Deed of Trust

September 30, 2005

Recording Information (Reception No. and/ or Book/Page No.)

B5147740

Original Principal Amount

$48,020.00

Outstanding Principal Balance

$32,417.20

Pursuant to CRS §38-38-101(4)(i), you are hereby notified that the covenants of the deed of trust have been violated as follows:

Failure to pay principal and interest when due together with all other payments provided for in the evidence of debt secured by the deed of trust and other violations thereof.

THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE

A FIRST LIEN.

SEE ATTACHED LEGAL DESCRIPTION EXHIBIT A

CONDOMINIUM UNIT NO. 120, BUILDING NO. A, TORREY PINES, AT HEATHER RIDGE, IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE DECLARATION RECORDED ON MAY 23, 1979, IN BOOK 2997, AT PAGE 327, AND CONDOMINIUM MAP RECORDED ON MAY 23, 1979, IN BOOK 39, AT PAGE 5, OF THE ARAPAHOE COUNTY RECORDS, TOGETHER WITH THE EXCLUSIVE RIGHT TO USE THE FOLLOWING LIMITED COMMON ELEMENTS: STORAGE SPACE #120A AND PARKING SPACE #120A, COUNTY OF ARAPAHOE, STATE OF COLORADO.

Also known by street and number as: 2281 S. Vaughn Way #120A, Aurora, CO 80014. THE PROPERTY DESCRIBED HEREIN IS ALL OF THE PROPERTY CURRENTLY ENCUMBERED BY THE LIEN OF THE DEED OF TRUST. NOTICE OF SALE

The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, described herein, has filed Notice of Election and Demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust.

THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that I will at public auction, at 10:00 A.M. on Wednesday, 07/13/2022, at The East Hearing Room, County Administration Building, 5334 South Prince Street, Littleton, Colorado, 80120, sell to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of the said Grantor(s), Grantor(s)’ heirs and assigns therein, for the purpose of paying the indebtedness provided in said Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, plus attorneys’ fees, the expenses of sale and other items allowed by law, and will issue to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law.

First Publication 5/19/2022

Last Publication 6/16/2022

Name of Publication Sentinel IF THE SALE DATE IS CONTINUED TO A LATER DATE, THE DEADLINE TO FILE A NOTICE OF INTENT TO CURE BY THOSE PARTIES ENTITLED TO CURE MAY ALSO BE EXTENDED; DATE: 03/11/2022

Susan Sandstrom, Public Trustee in and for the County of Arapahoe, State of Colorado

By: /s/ Susan Sandstrom, Public Trustee

The name, address, business telephone number and bar registration number of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is:

Alison L Berry #34531

Nicholas H. Santarelli #46592

David R. Doughty #40042

Lynn M. Janeway #15592 Janeway Law Firm, P.C. 9800 S. Meridian Blvd., Suite 400, Englewood, CO 80112 (303) 706-9990

Attorney File # 22-026337

The Attorney above is acting as a debt collector and is attempting to collect a debt. Any information provided may be used for that purpose.

©Public Trustees’ Association of Colorado

Revised 1/2015

COMBINED NOTICEPUBLICATION CRS §38-38-103

FORECLOSURE SALE NO. 0079-2022

To Whom It May Concern: This Notice is given with regard to the following described

Deed of Trust:

On March 11, 2022, the undersigned

Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in the County of Arapahoe records.

Original Grantor(s)

ALEJANDRO HERNANDEZ

Original Beneficiary(ies)

MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC. AS NOMINEE FOR GUILD MORTGAGE COMPANY, ITS SUCCESSORS AND ASSIGNS

Current Holder of Evidence of Debt COLORADO HOUSING AND FINANCE

AUTHORITY

Date of Deed of Trust

November 13, 2018

County of Recording

Arapahoe

Recording Date of Deed of Trust

November 14, 2018

Recording Information (Reception No. and/ or Book/Page No.)

D8112086

Original Principal Amount

$143,560.00

Outstanding Principal Balance

$142,418.73

Pursuant to CRS §38-38-101(4)(i), you are hereby notified that the covenants of the deed of trust have been violated as follows:

Failure to pay principal and interest when due together with all other payments provided for in the evidence of debt secured by the deed of trust and other violations thereof. THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN.

SEE ATTACHED LEGAL DESCRIPTION

EXHIBIT A

COMBINED NOTICEPUBLICATION CRS §38-38-103

FORECLOSURE SALE NO. 0084-2022

To Whom It May Concern: This Notice is given with regard to the following described

Deed of Trust:

On March 11, 2022, the undersigned

Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in the County of Arapahoe records.

Original Grantor(s)

Brant Finson

Original Beneficiary(ies)

Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc., as nominee for United Wholesale

Mortgage, Its Successors and Assigns

Current Holder of Evidence of Debt

NewRez LLC, F/K/A New Penn Financial, LLC, D/B/A Shellpoint Mortgage Servicing

Date of Deed of Trust

April 02, 2019

County of Recording

Arapahoe

Recording Date of Deed of Trust

April 30, 2019

Recording Information (Reception No. and/ or Book/Page No.)

D9038379

Original Principal Amount

$143,313.00

Outstanding Principal Balance

$142,322.79

Pursuant to CRS §38-38-101(4)(i), you are hereby notified that the covenants of the deed of trust have been violated as follows: Failure to pay principal and interest when due together with all other payments provided for in the evidence of debt secured by the deed of trust and other violations thereof.

THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE

COMBINED NOTICEPUBLICATION CRS §38-38-103 FORECLOSURE SALE NO. 0086-2022

To Whom It May Concern: This Notice is given with regard to the following described

Deed of Trust:

On March 11, 2022, the undersigned

Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in the County of Arapahoe records.

Original Grantor(s)

Sandy Baker and Kim T. Baker

Original Beneficiary(ies)

Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. as nominee for Taylor, Bean & Whitaker Mortgage Corp. its successors and assigns Current Holder of Evidence of Debt BANK OF AMERICA, N.A.

Date of Deed of Trust

July 15, 2009 County of Recording

Arapahoe Recording Date of Deed of Trust

July 23, 2009

Recording Information (Reception No. and/ or Book/Page No.)

B9079569

Original Principal Amount

$199,755.00

Outstanding Principal Balance

$157,879.41

Pursuant to CRS §38-38-101(4)(i), you are hereby notified that the covenants of the deed of trust have been violated as follows:

Failure to pay principal and interest when due together with all other payments provided for in the evidence of debt secured by the deed of trust and other violations thereof.

THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN.

$284,900.00

Outstanding Principal Balance

$264,461.40

Pursuant to CRS §38-38-101(4)(i), you are hereby notified that the covenants of the deed of trust have been violated as follows: Failure to pay principal and interest when due together with all other payments provided for in the evidence of debt secured by the deed of trust and other violations thereof.

THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN.

LOT 16, BLOCK 37, CONSERVATORY SUBDIVISION FILING NO. 1, CITY OF AURORA, COUNTY OF ARAPAHOE, STATE OF COLORADO.

Also known by street and number as:

20169 E College Pl, Aurora, CO 80013. THE PROPERTY DESCRIBED HEREIN IS ALL OF THE PROPERTY CURRENTLY ENCUMBERED BY THE LIEN OF THE DEED OF TRUST.

NOTICE OF SALE

The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, described herein, has filed Notice of Election and Demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust.

CONDOMINIUM

UNIT NO. A-10, BUILDING NO. A-17, CHERRY GROVE EAST CONDOMINIUM, A CONDOMINIUM IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE DECLARA-

TION RECORDED MARCH 24, 1982 IN BOOK 3597 AT PAGE 438, SPECIAL AMENDMENT NO. 1 TO THE DECLARATION RECORDED MARCH 30, 1983 IN BOOK 3826 AT PAGE 416 AND FIRST SUPPLEMENTAL DECLARA-

TION RECORDED MARCH 23, 1984 IN BOOK 4118 AT PAGE 1, AND THE 2ND SUPPLEMENTAL MAP RECORDED ON MARCH 23, 1984, UNDER RECEPTION NO. 2390281, COUNTY OF ARAPAHOE, STATE OF COLORADO.

APN: 1975-07-2-08-100

Also known by street and number as:

14497 E 1ST DR #A10, AURORA, CO

80011. THE PROPERTY DESCRIBED HEREIN IS ALL OF THE PROPERTY CURRENTLY ENCUMBERED BY THE LIEN OF THE DEED OF TRUST.

NOTICE OF SALE

The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, described herein, has filed Notice of Election and Demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust.

THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that I will at public auction, at 10:00 A.M. on Wednesday, 07/13/2022, at The East Hearing Room, County Administration Building, 5334 South Prince Street, Littleton, Colorado, 80120, sell to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of the said Grantor(s), Grantor(s)’ heirs and assigns therein, for the purpose of paying the indebtedness provided in said Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, plus attorneys’ fees, the expenses of sale and other items allowed by law, and will issue to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law.

First Publication 5/19/2022

Last Publication 6/16/2022

Name of Publication Sentinel

IF THE SALE DATE IS CONTINUED TO

A LATER DATE, THE DEADLINE TO FILE

A NOTICE OF INTENT TO CURE BY THOSE PARTIES ENTITLED TO CURE MAY ALSO BE EXTENDED;

DATE: 03/11/2022

Susan Sandstrom, Public Trustee in and for the County of Arapahoe, State of Colorado

By: /s/ Susan Sandstrom, Public Trustee

The name, address, business telephone number and bar registration number of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is:

Alison L Berry #34531

Nicholas H. Santarelli #46592

David R. Doughty #40042

Lynn M. Janeway #15592

Janeway Law Firm, P.C. 9800 S. Meridian Blvd., Suite 400, Englewood, CO 80112 (303) 706-9990

Attorney File # 19-023725

The Attorney above is acting as a debt collector and is attempting to collect a debt. Any information provided may be used for that purpose.

©Public Trustees’ Association of Colorado

Revised 1/2015

A FIRST LIEN. SEE ATTACHED EXHIBIT A EXHIBIT A ALL THE REAL PROPERTY, TOGETHER WITH IMPROVEMENTS, IF ANY, SITUATE, LYING AND BEING IN THE COUNTY OF ARAPAHOE, STATE OF COLORADO, DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS: CONDOMINIUM UNIT NO. 307H, BUILDING H, RED SKY CONDOMINIUMS, ACCORDING TO THE CONDOMINIUM MAP FILED OF RECORD ON APRIL 10, 1979 IN PLAT BOOK 38 AT PAGE 25 AND SUPPLEMENTS THERETO AND AS DEFINED IN THE DECLARATION OF CONDOMINIUM OF RED SKY RECORDED JANUARY 11, 1979 IN BOOK 2918 AT PAGE 601, RECORDS OF ARAPAHOE COUNTY COLORADO, TOGETHER WITH THE EXCLUSIVE RIGHT TO USE PARKING SPACE(S) AND/OR CARPORT NO. (S) H307 AND TOGETHER WITH THE EXCLUSIVE RIGHT TO USE STORAGE SPACE DESIGNATED 307S IN BUILDING H, COUNTY OF ARAPAHOE, STATE OF COLORADO.

Also known by street and number as: 14896 E 2nd Ave, Unit H-307, Aurora, CO 80011. THE PROPERTY DESCRIBED HEREIN IS ALL OF THE PROPERTY CURRENTLY ENCUMBERED BY THE LIEN OF THE DEED OF TRUST. NOTICE OF SALE

The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, described herein, has filed Notice of Election and Demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust.

THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that I will at public auction, at 10:00 A.M. on Wednesday, 07/13/2022, at The East Hearing Room, County Administration Building, 5334 South Prince Street, Littleton, Colorado, 80120, sell to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of the said Grantor(s), Grantor(s)’ heirs and assigns therein, for the purpose of paying the indebtedness provided in said Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, plus attorneys’ fees, the expenses of sale and other items allowed by law, and will issue to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law.

First Publication 5/19/2022

Last Publication 6/16/2022

Name of Publication Sentinel

IF THE SALE DATE IS CONTINUED TO A LATER DATE, THE DEADLINE TO FILE A NOTICE OF INTENT TO CURE BY THOSE PARTIES ENTITLED TO CURE MAY ALSO BE EXTENDED; DATE: 03/11/2022

Susan Sandstrom, Public Trustee in and for the County of Arapahoe, State of Colorado

By: Susan Sandstrom, Public Trustee

The name, address, business telephone number and bar registration number of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is:

Erin Croke #46557

Steven Bellanti #48306

Holly Shilliday #24423

Ilene Dell’Acqua #31755

McCarthy & Holthus LLP 7700 E Arapahoe Road, Suite 230, Centennial, CO 80112 (877) 369-6122

Attorney File # CO-21-892773-LL

The Attorney above is acting as a debt collector and is attempting to collect a debt. Any information provided may be used for that purpose.

©Public Trustees’ Association of Colorado

Revised 1/2015

LOT 4, BLOCK 2, LYN KNOLL - THIRD FILING, ACCORDING TO THE RECORDED PLAT THEREOF, COUNTY OF ARAPAHOE, STATE OF COLORADO.

Also known by street and number as: 13198 East 2nd Avenue, Aurora, CO 80011. THE PROPERTY DESCRIBED HEREIN IS ALL OF THE PROPERTY CURRENTLY ENCUMBERED BY THE LIEN OF THE DEED OF TRUST. NOTICE OF SALE

The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, described herein, has filed Notice of Election and Demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust.

THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that I will at public auction, at 10:00 A.M. on Wednesday, 07/13/2022, at The East Hearing Room, County Administration Building, 5334 South Prince Street, Littleton, Colorado, 80120, sell to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of the said Grantor(s), Grantor(s)’ heirs and assigns therein, for the purpose of paying the indebtedness provided in said Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, plus attorneys’ fees, the expenses of sale and other items allowed by law, and will issue to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law.

Last Publication 6/16/2022

Name of Publication Sentinel

IF THE SALE DATE IS CONTINUED TO A LATER DATE, THE DEADLINE TO FILE

A NOTICE OF INTENT TO CURE BY THOSE PARTIES ENTITLED TO CURE MAY ALSO BE EXTENDED;

DATE: 03/11/2022

Susan Sandstrom, Public Trustee in and for the County of Arapahoe, State of Colorado

By: /s/ Susan Sandstrom, Public Trustee

The name, address, business telephone number and bar registration number of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is:

Erin Croke #46557

Steven Bellanti #48306

Holly Shilliday #24423

Ilene Dell’Acqua #31755

McCarthy & Holthus LLP 7700 E Arapahoe Road, Suite 230, Centennial, CO 80112 (877) 369-6122

Attorney File # CO-22-898737-LL

The Attorney above is acting as a debt collector and is attempting to collect a debt. Any information provided may be used for that purpose.

©Public Trustees’ Association of Colorado

Revised 1/2015

COMBINED NOTICEPUBLICATION CRS §38-38-103

FORECLOSURE SALE NO. 0087-2022

To Whom It May Concern: This Notice is given with regard to the following described

Deed of Trust:

On March 11, 2022, the undersigned

Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in the County of Arapahoe records.

Original Grantor(s)

Nicolle Joy Prieto

Original Beneficiary(ies)

Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. as nominee for Guild Mortgage Company, a California Corporation, Its Successors and Assigns

Current Holder of Evidence of Debt Guild Mortgage Company LLC

August

THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that I will at public auction, at 10:00 A.M. on Wednesday, 07/13/2022, at The East Hearing Room, County Administration Building, 5334 South Prince Street, Littleton, Colorado, 80120, sell to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of the said Grantor(s), Grantor(s)’ heirs and assigns therein, for the purpose of paying the indebtedness provided in said Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, plus attorneys’ fees, the expenses of sale and other items allowed by law, and will issue to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law.

First Publication 5/19/2022

Last Publication 6/16/2022

Name of Publication Sentinel IF THE SALE DATE IS CONTINUED TO A LATER DATE, THE DEADLINE TO FILE A NOTICE OF INTENT TO CURE BY THOSE PARTIES ENTITLED TO CURE MAY ALSO BE EXTENDED; DATE: 03/11/2022

Susan Sandstrom, Public Trustee in and for the County of Arapahoe, State of Colorado

By: /s/ Susan Sandstrom, Public Trustee

The name, address, business telephone number and bar registration number of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is:

Erin Croke #46557

Steven Bellanti #48306

Holly Shilliday #24423

Ilene Dell’Acqua #31755

McCarthy & Holthus LLP 7700 E Arapahoe Road, Suite 230, Centennial, CO 80112 (877) 369-6122

Attorney File # CO-22-899451-LL

The Attorney above is acting as a debt collector and is attempting to collect a debt. Any information provided may be used for that purpose.

©Public Trustees’ Association of Colorado

Revised 1/2015

COMBINED NOTICEPUBLICATION CRS §38-38-103 FORECLOSURE SALE NO. 0089-2022

To Whom It May Concern: This Notice is given with regard to the following described Deed of Trust:

On March 11, 2022, the undersigned Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in the County of Arapahoe records.

Original Grantor(s)

GREG KEVIN CLARK

Original Beneficiary(ies)

MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC. AS BENEFICIARY, AS NOMINEE FOR LOW VA RATES, LLC

Current Holder of Evidence of Debt VILLAGE CAPITAL & INVESTMENT, LLC

Date of Deed of Trust

September 15, 2017

County of Recording

Arapahoe

Recording Date of Deed of Trust

September 20, 2017

Recording Information (Reception No. and/ or Book/Page No.)

D7107364

Original Principal Amount $455,534.00

Outstanding Principal Balance

$441,724.02

Pursuant to CRS §38-38-101(4)(i), you are hereby notified that the covenants of the deed of trust have been violated as follows:

Failure to pay principal and interest when due together with all other payments provided for in the evidence of debt secured by the deed of trust and other violations thereof.

THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN.

SEE ATTACHED LEGAL DESCRIPTION EXHIBIT A ALL THE REAL PROPERTY TOGETHER WITH IMPROVEMENTS, IF ANY, SITUATE, LYING AND BEING IN COUNTY OF ARAPAHOE AND STATE OF COLORADO, DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS: LOT 2, BLOCK 2, TRADITIONS SUBDIVISION FILING NO. 2, COUNTY OF ARAPAHOE, STATE OF COLORADO. SUBJECT TO ALL EASEMENTS, RESER- VATIONS, COVENANTS, CONDITIONS, AGREEMENTS OF RECORD, IF ANY. BEING THE SAME PREMISES AS CON- VEYED IN DEED FROM NATHANIEL SCOTT CORD AND ELIZABETH AU-

20 | SENTINELCOLORADO.COM | MAY 19, 2022 Public Notices www.publicnoticecolorado.com
First Publication 5/19/2022
Date of Deed of Trust
25, 2017
of Recording Arapahoe Recording Date of Deed of Trust August 28, 2017 Recording Information (Reception No. and/ or Book/Page No.) D7098080 Original Principal Amount
County
DREY CORD RECORDED 06/29/2017 IN DOCUMENT NUMBER D7072825 IN SAID COUNTY AND STATE. COMMONLY

KNOWN AS: 25462 E. 5TH PL., AURORA, CO 80018

Tax Id: 197708228002

Also known by street and number as: 25462 E 5TH PL, AURORA, CO 80018.

THE PROPERTY DESCRIBED HEREIN IS ALL OF THE PROPERTY CURRENTLY ENCUMBERED BY THE LIEN OF THE DEED OF TRUST.

Also known by street and number as: 25462 E 5TH PL, AURORA, CO 80018.

THE PROPERTY DESCRIBED HEREIN IS ALL OF THE PROPERTY CURRENTLY ENCUMBERED BY THE LIEN OF THE DEED OF TRUST. NOTICE OF SALE

The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, described herein, has filed Notice of Election and Demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust.

THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that I will at public auction, at 10:00 A.M. on Wednesday, 07/13/2022, at The East Hearing Room, County Administration Building, 5334 South Prince Street, Littleton, Colorado, 80120, sell to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of the said Grantor(s), Grantor(s)’ heirs and assigns therein, for the purpose of paying the indebtedness provided in said Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, plus attorneys’ fees, the expenses of sale and other items allowed by law, and will issue to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law.

First Publication 5/19/2022

Last Publication 6/16/2022

Name of Publication Sentinel IF THE SALE DATE IS CONTINUED TO A LATER DATE, THE DEADLINE TO FILE A NOTICE OF INTENT TO CURE BY THOSE PARTIES ENTITLED TO CURE MAY ALSO BE EXTENDED;

DATE: 03/11/2022

Susan Sandstrom,

Public Trustee in and for the County of Arapahoe, State of Colorado

By: /s/ Susan Sandstrom, Public Trustee

The name, address, business telephone number and bar registration number of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is:

Alexis R. Abercrombie #56722

David W Drake #43315

Scott D. Toebben #19011

Randall S. Miller & Associates PC 216 16th Street, Suite 1210, Denver, CO 80202 (720) 259-6710

Attorney File # 18CO00545-5

The Attorney above is acting as a debt collector and is attempting to collect a debt. Any information provided may be used for that purpose.

©Public Trustees’ Association of Colorado

Revised 1/2015

COMBINED NOTICE -

PUBLICATION CRS §38-38-103

FORECLOSURE SALE NO. 0092-2022

To Whom It May Concern: This Notice is given with regard to the following described Deed of Trust:

On March 15, 2022, the undersigned Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in the County of Arapahoe records.

Original Grantor(s)

GREGORY NELSON

Original Beneficiary(ies)

MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC. ACTING SOLELY AS NOMINEE FOR FCF SERVICES INC.

DBA FIRST CHOICE FINANCIAL SERVICES INC.

Current Holder of Evidence of Debt

PHH MORTGAGE CORPORATION

Date of Deed of Trust

April 21, 2009

County of Recording

Arapahoe

Recording Date of Deed of Trust

May 04, 2009

Recording Information (Reception No. and/ or Book/Page No.)

B9045250

Original Principal Amount

$195,395.00

Outstanding Principal Balance

$157,887.40

Pursuant to CRS §38-38-101(4)(i), you are hereby notified that the covenants of the deed of trust have been violated as follows: Failure to pay principal and interest when due together with all other payments provided for in the evidence of debt secured by the deed of trust and other violations thereof.

THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN.

LOT 9, BLOCK 1, VILLAGE EAST UNIT 3, 1ST FILING, COUNTY OF ARAPAHOE, STATE OF COLORADO

Also known by street and number as: 1485 S. KINGSTON STREET, AURORA, CO 80012-4121. THE PROPERTY DESCRIBED HEREIN IS ALL OF THE PROPERTY CURRENTLY ENCUMBERED BY THE LIEN OF THE DEED OF TRUST.

NOTICE OF SALE

The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, described herein, has filed Notice of Election and Demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust.

THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that I will at public auction, at 10:00 A.M. on Wednesday, 07/13/2022, at The East Hearing Room, County Administration Building, 5334 South Prince Street, Littleton, Colorado, 80120, sell to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of the said Grantor(s), Grantor(s)’ heirs and assigns

therein, for the purpose of paying the indebtedness provided in said Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, plus attorneys’ fees, the expenses of sale and other items allowed by law, and will issue to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law.

First Publication 5/19/2022

Last Publication 6/16/2022

Name of Publication Sentinel

IF THE SALE DATE IS CONTINUED TO A LATER DATE, THE DEADLINE TO FILE

A NOTICE OF INTENT TO CURE BY THOSE PARTIES ENTITLED TO CURE MAY ALSO BE EXTENDED;

DATE: 03/15/2022

Susan Sandstrom, Public Trustee in and for the County of Arapahoe, State of Colorado

By: /s/ Susan Sandstrom, Public Trustee

The name, address, business telephone number and bar registration number of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is:

Anna Johnston #51978

Ryan Bourgeois #51088

Joseph D. DeGiorgio #45557

Randall Chin #31149

Barrett, Frappier & Weisserman, LLP 1391 Speer Boulevard, Suite 700, Denver, CO 80204 (303) 350-3711

Attorney File # 00000009449182

The Attorney above is acting as a debt collector and is attempting to collect a debt. Any information provided may be used for that purpose.

©Public Trustees’ Association of Colorado

Revised 1/2015

AURORA POLICE DEPARTMENT

Date Report Run : Wed, Apr-20-22

PUBLIC AUCTION REPORT 06/04/2022

YEAR MAKE V.I.N. —— —— ——————————

WBAAV53451JR79301

ownership of this land and control of the groundwater in this aquifer underlying this property. The groundwater from these allocations is proposed to be used on the described property for the following beneficial uses: single family residence, including in home use; domestic animal and livestock watering; and irrigation of not more than 1 acre of lawn and garden.

In accordance with section 37-90-107(7), the Colorado Ground Water Commission shall allocate groundwater from the above aquifers based on ownership of the overlying land. A preliminary evaluation of the application finds the volume of water available for allocation from the aquifers underlying the above-described property to be 355 acre-feet for the Upper Arapahoe aquifer. These amounts are subject to final evaluation, and subsequent to issuance of the determinations, adjustment to conform to the actual local aquifer characteristics.

In accordance with section 37-90-107(7) (a), well permits issued pursuant to subsection 107(7) shall allow withdrawals on the basis of an aquifer life of one hundred years.

In accordance with Rule 5.3.6 of the Designated Basin Rules preliminary evaluation of the application finds the replacement water requirement status for the aquifers underlying the above-described property to be nontributary for the Upper Arapahoe aquifer.

Upon Commission approval of determinations of rights to the allocations, well permits for wells to withdraw the allocations shall be available upon application, subject to the conditions of each determination, the Designated Basin Rules, and approval by the Commission. Such wells must be completed in the aquifer for which the right was allocated and must be located on the 19.9 acres of above described property.

Any person wishing to object to the approval of these determinations of rights to allocations must do so in writing, briefly stating the nature of the objection, the name of the applicant, a general description of the property, and the specific aquifers that are the subject of the objection. The objection, including a required $10 fee per application being objected to, must be received by the Colorado Ground Water Commission by close of business June 25, 2022. Objections should be sent via email to DWRpermitsonline@state.co.us, upon which the objector will be emailed an invoice for paying the fee online. If the objector is unable to provide the objection via email please contact 303-866-3581.

First Publication: May 19, 2022

Final Publication: May 26, 2022

Sentinel

BEFORE THE COLORADO GROUND WATER COMMISSION DETERMINATIONS OF WATER RIGHT LOST CREEK DESIGNATED GROUNDWATER BASIN AND LOST CREEK GROUND WATER MANAGEMENT DISTRICT - ARAPAHOE COUNTY

TAKE NOTICE that pursuant to section 37-90-107(7), C.R.S., and the Designated Basin Rules, 2 CCR 410-1, Gary G. and Jodette M. Bryan has applied for determinations of rights to allocations of designated groundwater from the Lower Arapahoe and Denver aquifers underlying 39.9 acres generally described as the SE1/4 of the SW1/4 of Section 2, Township 4 South, Range 64 West, 6th P.M. The applicant claims ownership of this land and control of the groundwater in these aquifers underlying this property. The groundwater from these allocations is proposed to be used on the described property for the following beneficial uses: single family residence, including in home use, domestic animal livestock watering, and lawn and garden irrigation.

In accordance with section 37-90-107(7), the Colorado Ground Water Commission shall allocate groundwater from the above aquifers based on ownership of the overlying land. A preliminary evaluation of the application finds the volume of water available for allocation from the aquifers underlying the above-described property to be 407 acre-feet for the Lower Arapahoe aquifer and 1,100.0 acre-feet for the Denver aquifer. The amount in the Denver aquifer represents a reduction in the volume of water available for allocation due to the existence of a small capacity well, permit no. 261334, withdrawing water from beneath the described property. These amounts are subject to final evaluation, and subsequent to issuance of the determinations, adjustment to conform to the actual local aquifer characteristics.

tions of rights to the allocations, well permits for wells to withdraw the allocations shall be available upon application, subject to the conditions of each determination, the Designated Basin Rules, and approval by the Commission. Such wells must be completed in the aquifer for which the right was allocated and must be located on the 39.9 acres of above described property.

Any person wishing to object to the approval of these determinations of rights to allocations must do so in writing, briefly stating the nature of the objection, the name of the applicant, a general description of the property, and the specific aquifers that are the subject of the objection. The objection, including a required $10 fee per application being objected to, must be received by the Colorado Ground Water Commission by June 18, 2022. Objections should be sent via email to DWRpermitsonline@ state.co.us, upon which the objector will be emailed an invoice for paying the fee online. If the objector is unable to provide the objection via email please contact 303866-3581.

First Publication: May 12, 2022

Final Publication: May 19, 2022 Sentinel

IN THE HAMILTON SUPERIOR COURT ROOM NO. 1

CAUSE NO. 29D01-2205-AD-675 STATE OF INDIANA COUNTY OF HAMILTON

NOTICE OF ADOPTION

IN THE MATTER OF THE ADOPTION OF BRENDAN TEITSORT, a minor child Casey Horn and Daniel Teitsort are notified that a petition for adoption of a child, named Brendan Teitsort, born on July 27, 2020 (the “Child”), was filed in the office of the Clerk of the Hamilton Superior Court, Room No. 1, One Hamilton County Square, Noblesville, Indiana. The petition for adoption alleges that the consents to adoption of Casey Horn and Daniel Teitsort are not required pursuant to Indiana Code § 3119-9-8(a)(2), because Casey Horn and Daniel Teitsort have failed, without justifiable cause, to communicate significantly with the Child when able to do so for a period of one year or more; has knowingly failed to provide for the care and support of the Child when able to do so as required by law or judicial decree for a period of one year or more; and the consents of Casey Horn and Daniel Teitsort are not required pursuant to the provisions of Indiana Code § 31-19-9-8 (a)(11) because they are unfit to be parents, and the best interests of the child sought to be adopted would be served if the court dispensed with their consents.

If Casey Horn or Daniel Teitsort, or both, seeks to contest the adoption of the child, the contesting person must file a motion to contest the adoption in accordance with IC 31-19-10-1 in the above named court not later than thirty (30) days after the date of service of this notice.

If Casey Horn or Daniel Teitsort does not file a motion to contest the adoption within thirty (30) days after service of this notice the above named court will hear and determine the petition for adoption. The consents to adoption of Casey Horn and Daniel Teitsort will be irrevocably implied and Casey Horn and Daniel Teitsort will lose the right to contest either the adoption or the validity of their implied consents to the adoption.

No statement made to Casey Horn or Daniel Teitsort relieves Casey Horn or Daniel Teitsort of their obligations under this notice.

This notice complies with IC 31-19-4.5-3 but does not exhaustively set forth a person’s legal obligations under the Indiana adoption statutes. A person being served with this notice should consult the Indiana adoption statutes.

Steven M. Kirsh

KIRSH & KIRSH, P.C. 2930 East 96th Street Indianapolis, IN 46240 (317) 575-5555

Attorney No. 5223-49

Attorney for Petitioners

First Publication: May 19, 2022

Final Publication: June 2, 2022

Sentinel INVITATION TO BID

TAH CONSOLIDATED LANDSCAPING

NOTICE that pursuant to section 37-90-107(7), C.R.S., and the Designated Basin Rules, 2 CCR 410-1, Gary G. and Jodette M. Bryan has applied for determinations of rights to allocations of designated groundwater from the Upper Arapahoe aquifer underlying 19.9 acres generally described as a portion of the SE1/4 of SW1/4 of Section 2, Township 4 South, Range 64 West of the 6th P.M. The applicant claims

In accordance with section 37-90-107(7) (a), well permits issued pursuant to subsection 107(7) shall allow withdrawals on the basis of an aquifer life of one hundred years.

In accordance with Rule 5.3.6 of the Designated Basin Rules preliminary evaluation of the application finds the replacement water requirement status for the aquifers underlying the above-described property to be nontributary for the Lower Arapahoe aquifer and not-nontributary (4% replacement) for the Denver aquifer.

Upon Commission approval of determina-

JHL Constructors on behalf of the Aerotropolis Area Coordinating District (AACMD), a quasi-municipal corporation and political subdivision of the State of Colorado, notifies all qualified persons/ companies that proposals will be received for contracting work and services in connection with the Consolidated Landscaping at The Aurora Highlands in Aurora, CO. Scope of work under this Request for Proposal includes plantings, landscaping, hardscapes, irrigation, and site amenities. Electronic submission of proposals must be submitted and received by JHL at AuroraHighlandsInfo@jhlconstructors. com on or before 2:00 p.m. MST on June 17th, 2022.

Instruction to Respondent documents may be obtained from the CMaR Contractor,

MAY 19, 2022 | SENTINELCOLORADO.COM | 21 Public Notices www.publicnoticecolorado.com
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08 BMW WBANW13508CN55782 02 BMW WBAEW53402PG19871 16 BMW 5UXKU6C51G0R33812 07 BMW WBAVC93547KX56211 09 BMW 5UXFG83579LZ92353 75 BROU SA9865021 15 BUIC 1G4PP5SK5F4106821 02 CADI 1G6KD54Y22U297443 98 CADI 1G6KY5491WU908226 03 CADI 1G6KD54Y53U129815 02 CHEV 1GNEK13T62R155718 85 CHEV 1G1BN69H8FX106307 01 CHEV 1G1NE52JX16131406 07 CHEV 2G1WK15K579416767 11 CHEV 2G1WF5EK3B1162639 04 CHEV 1GNFK16Z44J118172 17 CHEV 1G1ZH5SX5HF151652 08 CHEV 1GNDT13S082194984 02 CHEV 1GNFK16Z32J215148 00 CHEV 1GCEK19TXYE261508 14 CHEV 1G1PA5SH5E7174908 00 CHEV 1G1NE52J2Y6113072 98 CHEV 1GNDT13W0W2233671 03 CHEV 1G1ND52J33M629755 12 CHEV 1G1ZD5E04CF197850 06 CHEV 1GCHG35UX61237271 12 CHEV 2G1WF5E36C1272207 03 CHEV 1GNDT13S832341819 01 CHEV 1GNEK13T61R141977 03 CHEV 1GNES16S536115359 06 CHEV 1GCHK23D56F238228 99 CHEV 1GNDT13W5X2183769 11 CHEV 1G1ZB5E1XBF282074 00 CHEV 3GNFK16T9YG172327 07 CHEV 1GCEK19V37E175831 01 CHEV 1GNEC13V51J278213 07 CHEV 3GNFK12377G136012 11 CHEV 2G1WF5EK5B1319555 01 CHRY 2C3HE66G31H534915 04 CHRY 3C4FY58B14T221234 07 CHRY 1A8HW58217F546164 04 CHRY 1C3EL75R64N208362 10 DODG 2D4RN5D10AR444126 06 DODG 1D4GP25R26B663535 76 DODG F34BF6V079163 05 DODG 1D7HU18D65S313186 00 DODG 1B7GG22N9YS538047 14 DODG 2C4RDGCG6ER122887 07 DODG 1D8HB48N07F502634 01 DODG 1B7HG2AZ11S269184 05 DODG 1D4GP24R65B340542 06 DODG 2B3LA43H56H459999 00 DODG 1B3ES46C0YD784016 12 FORD 1FMCU9DG1CKA29623 06 FORD 1FMEU74E66UA95864 13 FORD 1FMCU9HX1DUC68511 03 FORD 1FMZU73W73ZA70398 98 FORD 1FTZX172XWKA73521 02 FORD 1FMDU73W12ZB76595 98 FORD 1FMZU34E2WZC23319 18 FORD 1FT7W2B69JEB22211 11 FORD 1FAHP2JW1BG118460 10 FORD 3FAHP0JA7AR316797 81 FORD 1FTDE04F7BHA19845 01 FORD 1FMNU41S11EB76881 03 FORD 1FMDU74W53ZB32289 94 FORD 1FTHX26K8RKA65232 06 FORD 1FTSS34L66DB35266 99 FORD 1FDRE1425XHA40799 03 FORD 1FMPU15L03LA89711 18 FORD 1FA6P8TH0J5172397 07 FORD 1FAFP34N07W284272 06 FORD 1FAFP53U16A189350 00 FORD 1FTRF17W5YKA64668 98 FORD 1FTZX176XWNA96153 99 FORD 1FTWW33F1XEF05164 78 GMC TCL248J503579 01 GMC 1GTHK23U61F196547 16 GMC 3GTU2NEC4GG348465 04 GMC 1GKEK13Z14J262548 05 GMC 1GKEK63U05J258137 97 GMC 1GTGK24R2VZ537341 95 GMC 2GTEK19K0S1505523 04 GMC 1GKEK63U94J158164 04 GMC 1GDGG31V141913142 18 HAUL 575PB1224JT363169 05 HD 1HD1BTY155Y046735 98 HMDE 1EF5E292XW2947967 14 HOMD RFGB51HE6KXAW2280 05 HOND 1HGCM716X5A015962 96 HOND 2HGEJ6606TH539950 99 HOND 2HGEJ6615XH518005 03 HOND JH2RC44043M703170 18 HOND JHMZC5F35JC022104 07 HOND JHLRE48727C113820 98 HOND JHLRD1862WC106812 91 HOND JHMCB7652MC008168 00 HOND 4S6DM58WXY4417323 95 HOND 2HGEJ112XSH561444 05 HOND 1HGCM668X5A074143 02 HOND 1HGCG16542A064994 97 HOND 2HGEJ6679VH549324 06 HOND 5FNRL38746B061668 99 HOND 1HGEJ8648XL011494 03 HOND 1HGEM22523L072501 96 HOND 1HGCD563XTA202148 20 HYUN 5NPD74LF4LH596435 14 HYUN KMHTC6AD2EU191134 15 HYUN 5NPE24AF5FH140292 20 HYUN KM8J2CA44LU091185 16 HYUN KMHTC6AD6GU289120 04 HYUN KM8SC13D94U658947 15 HYUN KM8JUCAG9FU009072 08 HYUN KMHDU46D68U526849 16 HYUN 5NPE24AFXGH363770 13 HYUN 5NPDH4AE4DH210721 13 HYUN KMHDH4AE8DU947180 14 HYUN 5NPEB4AC3EH892268 11 HYUN 5NPEB4AC2BH250278 05 INFI JNKCV54E45M426497 08 INTL 5RJSXAFH58W547479 05 INTL 1HTMMAAL75H105571 01 ISU JACDJ58X917J02224 00 JAGU SAJDA01C4YFL16065 05 JEEP 1J8HR58225C567823 21 JEEP 1C4HJXFN4MW520801 97 JEEP 1J4GZ78Y5VC529158 15 JEEP 1C4PJMBS1FW598879 08 JEEP 1J4GA39178L526865 04 JEEP 1J4GW58N24C320042 16 KAWK JKAEX8A1XGDA30078 20 KIA KNDPMCAC1L7745767 15 KIA 5XXGM4A75FG368087 14 KIA KNAFX4A8XE5160864 15 KIA KNDPBCAC7F7718633 18 KIA 5XXGT4L31JG273130 04 KIA KNAFE122445037591 17 KIA KNDJN2A22H7479672 12 KIA 5XYKT3A63CG281097 13 KIA 5XYKTDA25DG367029 14 KIA KNDJP3A55E7028841 05 KIA KNALD124055078082 99 LEXS JT6HF10U4X0076123 21 LIFN LXAPKRP6XMX000296 14 LINC 3LN6L2LU7ER830036 04 LINC 5LMFU27R24LJ33922 12 LINC 3LNHL2GC3CR819199 17 LNDR SALWR2FE4HA136676 12 LTGA 1L9BV0914CC245046 15 MAZD 3MZBM1L71FM150858 07 MAZD JM1BK12F371744660 12 MAZD JM1BL1W59C1530720 05 MERC 1MEHM55S25A612957 11 MERC 3MEHM0JGXBR601128 10 MERZ 4JGCB6FE3AA111808 06 MERZ WDBRF52H86A833925 01 MITS 4A3AA46G91E139669 02 NISS 1N4AL11D52C160420 08 NISS 3N1AB61E98L710625 04 NISS 5N1ED28T24C642255 11 NISS JN8AS5MV5BW280116 12 NISS 1N6BA0ECXCN316650 13 NISS JN8AS5MTXDW028668 99 PLYM 2P4GP44G0XR335814 01 PONT 3G7DA03E41S546895 03 SAA YS3FD49Y331051627 08 SCIO JTKKU10428J013191 05 SCIO JTKDE167450047433 06 STRN 5GZCZ63486S842021 10 SUBA 4S3BMCK65A3223764 03 SUBA 4S3BH806X37657775 03 SUBA JF1GD29683G508899 92 SUBA JF1BJ6325NB901355 04 SUBA JF1SG63684H763484 02 SUBA JF1GD67572G503466 99 SUZI JS3TD62V1X4101503 02 TOYT 2T1CE22P42C011077 05 TOYT 5TDZA23C25S308233 02 TOYT 1NXBR12E72Z631588 02 TOYT JTDDR32T020138575 92 TOYT JT2ST87N6N0127559 08 TOYT 1NXBR32E68Z039961 00 TOYT 4T1BF28B3YU024527 07 TOYT 5TFBV54147X023647 06 TOYT JTMZD33V266011026 16 VERM 1VR9071R6G1002174 03 VOLK 3VWCD21C03M423018 98 VOLK WVWMA63B3WE100913 02 VOLK 3VWSB69M42M110154 01 VOLK 3VWSS29MX1M068595 12 VOLK 1VWAP7A33CC073011 13 VOLV YV4952CZ1D1629682 06 WANC 1JJV532W76L015474 73 WIMW B30BF3V017324 ***END OF PUBLIC AUCTION REPORT*** First Publication: May 19, 2022 Final Publication: June 2, 2022 Sentinel BEFORE THE COLORADO GROUND WATER COMMISSION DETERMINATIONS OF WATER RIGHT LOST CREEK DESIGNATED
WATER
CREEK GROUND WATER MANAGEMENT DISTRICT
TAKE
WBXPA93416WG82414
WBAWC735X8E065838
GROUND-
BASIN AND LOST
- ARAPAHOE COUNTY

DOWN

1) In favor of

2) Arm-over-arm swinger

3) Make a motor roar

4) Teacher or preacher, e.g.

5) Sudden outpourings

6) out (made a successful putt)

7) "National Velvet" author Bagnold

8) Wood-dressing tool (Var.)

9) Change course suddenly

10) Artificial

11) Restore to a particular state

12) For all to hear

13) Draws, as a line on a graph 18) Chatterbox

22) Turned a horse right

23) Pretentious sort

24) Carry away, in a way 25) Returned to life 28)

Case No. 22C100258

PUBLIC NOTICE is given on April 29, 2022, that a Petition for a Change of Name of an Adult has been filed with the Arapahoe County Court. The Petition requests that the name of Samuel Dean Elliott be changed to Samuel Dean Colwell.

Public Notices

www.publicnoticecolorado.com

PUBLIC NOTICE is given on April 29, 2022, that a Petition for a Change of Name of an Adult has been filed with the Arapahoe County Court.

The Petition requests that the name of Ashley Lauren Elliott be changed to Ashley Lauren Colwell.

/s/ Clerk of Court/ Deputy Clerk First Publication: May 19, 2022 Final Publication: June 2, 2022 Sentinel

PUBLIC NOTICE OF PETITION FOR CHANGE OF NAME OF AN ADULT ARAPAHOE COUNTY COURT, COLORADO Case No. 22C100258

PUBLIC NOTICE is given on April 29, 2022, that a Petition

FOR CHANGE OF NAME OF AN ADULT ARAPAHOE COUNTY COURT, COLORADO Case No. 21C100724

PUBLIC NOTICE is given on March 22, 2022, that a Petition for a

PUBLIC

/s/ Clerk of Court/ Deputy Clerk

First Publication: May 19, 2022

Final Publication: June 2, 2022 Sentinel

PUBLIC NOTICE OF PETITION FOR CHANGE OF NAME OF AN ADULT ARAPAHOE COUNTY COURT, COLORADO Case No. 21C100724

PUBLIC NOTICE is given on March 22, 2022, that a Petition for a Change of Name of an Adult has been filed with the Arapahoe County Court.

The Petition requests that the name of Daphne Barbara Bravo be changed to Wysteria Fawn Budinoff.

/s/ Anne Marie Ollada, Judge

First Publication: May 5, 2022

Final Publication: May 19, 2022 Sentinel

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Publication: May 19, 2022 Sentinel

MAY 19, 2022 | SENTINELCOLORADO.COM | 23
Change of Name of an Adult has been filed with the Arapahoe County Court. The Petition requests that the name of Daphne Barbara Bravo be changed to Wysteria Fawn Budinoff. /s/ Anne Marie Ollada, Judge First Publication: May 5, 2022 Final Publication: May 19, 2022 Sentinel VEHICLES FOR SALE 1976 Pontiac Color White Vin# 2W87W6N520773 1991 Chevrolet Color Blue Vin# 1GCCS19Z0M8276751 2003 Freightliner Color White Vin# 1FVABKAL03HL75433 2012 Audi Color Blue i �
1) Transit charge 5) Bind, as grass stalks 11) Grammy category 14) Newspaper essay page 15) Give thought to 16) Wing not for flying 17) Restores strength to 19) Sweet murmur 20) In the cards 21) Well-seasoned stew 23) Endangered 26) Inclines 27) Makes shiny and smooth 28) Stoked 31) Tsunami kin 32) Without moisture 33) Potluck choice 36) One for the off-road 37) New versions of old films RECHARGED 2 3 4 14 17 23 24 25 27 31 36 7 40) Early afternoon 41) Nick's cousin? 43) Basks at the beach 44) Alaskan craft 46) Goes off volcanically 48) Larry or Shemp 49) Deep-six 5 l) Nonsense 52) Exerts no effort 54) Delaware city 55) Make a decision 56) Livens up 61) Function 62) " falls_ on the plain" 63) Apple variety 64) Cabernet, e.g. 65) Breastplates (Var.) 66) TV prize 8 9 10 12 13
FreeDailyCrosswords.com ACROSS-----------�
Casual pair 29) Big boats 30) Scrabble IO-pointer 32) Salacious stuff 34) Tool for bending cold metal 35) Cornball 38) Clairvoyant's claim, for short 39) Supplier to an army 42) Caroler's syllables 45) Marina charge 47) Computer-is-working period 48) Crinkly leaved cabbages 49) Use elbow grease on 50) Small woods 51) Goblin or bugbear 53) Pantyhose woe 54) Rackets 57) Seven, on a grandfather clock 58) It's on some Scottish locks 59) "A Nightmare on_ Street" 60) State 10th May B Oscar Puma RECHARGED 1F 2A 3R 4E s 5 s H 1 E a A 9v i: 1R 1� 1P 1 b p E D 1 R EV 1 P ON I A I N G I s R L E R L y E s R A 6t; 61: 1: L L 00 w 0 K E '" SE � A L A M M y 32) 34) Tool for bending cold metal 35) Cornball 38) Clairvoyant's claim, for short 39) Supplier to an army 42) Caroler's syllables 45) Marina charge 47) Computer-is-working period 48) Crinkly leaved cabbages 49) Use elbow grease on 50) Small woods 51) Goblin or bugbear 53) Pantyhose woe 54) Rackets 57) Seven, on a grandfather clock 58) It's on some Scottish locks 59) "A Nightmare on_ Street" 60) State
Public www.publicnoticecolorado.com PUBLIC NOTICE OF PETITION FOR CHANGE OF NAME OF AN ADULT ARAPAHOE COUNTY COURT, COLORADO Case No. 22C100259
Puzzles
for a Change of Name of an Adult has been filed with the Arapahoe County Court. The Petition requests that the name of
Elliott be changed to
Court/ Deputy Clerk First Publication: May 19, 2022 Final Publication: June 2, 2022 Sentinel PUBLIC NOTICE OF PETITION FOR CHANGE OF NAME OF AN ADULT ARAPAHOE COUNTY COURT, COLO Case No. 21C100724
Samuel Dean
Samuel Dean Colwell. /s/ Clerk of
NOTICE is given
22, 2022, that a Petition for a Change of
of an Adult has
Arapa-
County Court. The Petition requests that the name of Daphne Barbara Bravo be changed to Wysteria Fawn Budinoff. /s/ Anne Marie Ollada, Judge First Publication: May 5, 2022 Final Publication: May 19, 2022 Sentinel VEHICLES FOR SALE 1976 Pontiac Color White Vin# 2W87W6N520773 1991 Chevrolet Color Blue Vin# 1GCCS19Z0M8276751 Get the most out of your lawn this spring. SCHEDULE YOUR APPOINTMENT TODAY! 1-855-723-9333 *Requires purchase of annual plan. Special price is for first Lawn application only. Requires purchase of annual plan, for new residential EasyPay or PrePay customers only. Valid at participating TruGreen locations. Availability of services may vary by geography. Not to be combined with or used in conjunction with any other offer or discount. Additional restrictions may apply. Consumer responsible for all sales tax. †Purchase of annual lawn plan required for Healthy Lawn Analysis, which is performed at the first visit. ◆Guarantee applies to annual plan customers only. BBB accredited since 07/01/2012. ©2022 TruGreen Limited Partnership. All rights reserved. In Connecticut, B-0153, B-1380, B-0127, B-0200, B-0151. 50% OFF* Save now with Your First Application FROM $1,949 $1,699 * 1-866-943-9321 promo code N7017 * Prices are per person based on double occupancy plus $199 in taxes & fees. Single supplement and seasonal surcharges may apply. Add-on airfare available. Offers apply to new bookings only, made by 6/30/22. Other terms & conditions may apply. Ask your Travel Consultant for details. Las Vegas • Grand Canyon • Bryce Canyon • Zion • Capitol Reef • Arches & Canyonlands • and more — Experience the red rocks of these 6 iconic national parks. Travel through deserts, forests, mountains, and to the very edge of the Grand Canyon on this tour. 10 days, departs May - September 2022 CRIMSON CANYONS & MESAS NATIONAL PARKS TOUR Honest Journalism
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Name
been filed with the
hoe
24 | SENTINELCOLORADO.COM | MAY 19, 2022

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