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Posted November 6, 2011, 8:01 pm

College student’s remains dumped near Strasburg sunflower field

 

It started as a missing person’s case.

The parents and family of Jennifer Sue “Jenny” Larsen desperately sought clues in her inexplicable disappearance.

 Jennifer Sue "Jenny" Larson

  Jennifer Sue “Jenny” Larson

Larsen was a reliable 21-year-old Metropolitan State College student who had a summer job working at the same plant that her father Earl worked at.

Her father told reporters of the Rocky Mountain News that he was nervous when she didn’t show up for work. When he went to her condominium and discovered that her cats had not been watered it confirmed his worst fears. She loved animals.

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Posted November 6, 2011, 5:51 am

Candle light vigil for engineer gunned down in racial attack

While a grand jury receives evidence in a racially motivated murder in 2009 that was connected to attacks in , friends and family plan to hold a candle-light vigil.

Candle light vigil remembering Andrew "Stitches" Graham

The grand jury is determining whether sufficient evidence exists to file charges against several persons of interest in the murder of 23-year-old graduate student Andrew Graham, said Bruce Isaacson, investigator for the Sheriff’s office.

On Saturday, the second anniversary of Graham’s murder, a candlelight walk will commence at 6 p.m. at Willow Creek Clubhouse II, 8500 Mineral Dr., in Centennial.

Isaacson said on the night he was killed, Graham had travelled by bus and from where he was making housing arrangements for attending CU to the Park Meadows Mall, where he arrived about 11:40 p.m. on Nov. 5.

He was walking to his home, which was less than a mile away, when he crossed paths with several teens and young adults, Isaacson said. The same suspects had been involved in a series of racially motivated robberies and assaults in LoDo that year.

“We know who was there,” Isaacson said, referring to various suspects.

When asked whether the suspects had spoken to authorities, Isaacson answered indirectly, saying that often when multiple people are involved in a crime at least one of them speaks out.

He declined to say what evidence led authorities to identify the suspects.

“It was a ,” said his mother Cyndi Gelston-Graham.  “They attacked him because he was white and it looked like he had money. If they would have given him half a chance he probably would have given them his money.”

She said although no formal charges have been brought, five black youths have been under suspicion since shortly after the crime.

“I can only imagine that his last moments were horrific,” Gelston-Graham said.

His was found at about 5:30 a.m. the next morning on Nov. 6 lying in the front yard of a home on the 8700 block of East Phillips Place in Centennial by a homeowner awakened by his barking dogs.

“He was in the back,” Isaacson said. “It was pretty cowardly.”

Kirk Mitchell: 303-954-1206 or kmitchell@denverpost.com or twitter.com/kmitchellDP

Posted October 30, 2011, 8:20 pm

CU engineering graduate killed in racial attack

Andrew “Stitches” Graham was preparing to attend graduate school after earning a degree at the and working briefly in for an oil exploration company.

Andrew Graham, 23Cyndi Gelston-Graham

Andrew Graham, 23

Though he was gifted and had a promising career to look forward to, he never saw himself as being better than anyone else.

He would often talk to homeless people while waiting to board a train. It wasn’t uncommon that he would buy them a sandwich or a cup of coffee.

On the night he was to death he was targeted by five young strangers.

“It was a ,” said his mother Cyndi Gelston-Graham. “They attacked him because he was white and it looked like he had money. If they would have given him half a chance he probably would have given them his money.”

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Posted October 23, 2011, 7:44 pm

Lowrider enthusiast bushwacked at Aurora apartment

could make pretty much any vehicle dance, even a Suburban.

The system he built made his midnight blue SUV go up and down and rock and roll in rhythm with a stereo system he attached behind the license plate.

David Ray Williams and daughter AshleyFamilies of Victims of and Missing Persons

David Ray Williams and daughter Ashley

 
He called his prized Suburban “Rump Shaker,” which was inscribed on the side.

Rump Shaker brought him fame at numerous low rider competitions. It was featured once on the front page of magazine.

The 35-year-old man checked product inventories at numerous stores in the metro area.

But he was also a father of a 15-year-old daughter. His mother Anna B. Davis, who lives in Atlanta, Ga., was proud of how he doted over his daughter.

“They were always together,” Davis said. “He took her to all the low rider competitions.”

Williams loved to play basketball and had a collection of shoes that stacked up to the ceiling in his apartment.

He tinkered with .

On May 4, 2005, Williams was talking to his girlfriend on his cellular phone when he drove up to the parking lot of his apartment on the 1900 block of Delmar Parkway. He had stopped at and was carrying his dinner into his house while continuing to talk to his girlfriend, Davis said.

The girlfriend later told police he heard him get out of his car. As soon as he turned a corner to go to his apartment door someone jumped out of bushes.

His girlfriend heard two pops and then she could tell the phone dropped to the ground.

Williams was twice in the “upper torso,” Davis said.

“They just shot him and left him there,” she said. “They didn’t take his jewelry or money from his pocket. It was just a senseless death.”

Davis was hysterical when she heard the news. She said she couldn’t believe her son was dead.

Police found at the shooting scene they believe was tied to the killer. In the past six years the has not been linked to anyone arrested for other crimes.

Davis has called every year to check with the Aurora homicide detective in charge of her son’s case.

This year she flew to Colorado to attend the 10th Annual Conference of Families of Victims of Homicide and Missing Persons.

Howard Morton, president of the group, said the organization helped pay for Davis to fly to the event at the Cheyenne Mountain Resort in Colorado Springs on Oct. 8.

There she met with detectives investigating her son’s case and attended seminars on how criminal investigations work.

This year, the keynote speaker was Renny Cushing, executive director of Murder Victims’ Families for Human Rights, an international organization based in Cambridge, Ma.

Cushing, a member of the New Hampshire Legislature, whose father was murdered in his home in 1988, wrote a bill that created a state-level cold case squad that investigates cold cases.

He also shepherded a bill through the legislature making families of homicide victims eligible for compensation as long as their family’s case was unsolved.

Morton said his group would like to duplicate Cushing’s initiatives in Colorado.

Davis said its still very painful.

“I’m still hoping and praying that something will come up on the DNA,” she said.

Contact information: The Aurora Police Department can be reached at 303-739-6151. Denver Post reporter Kirk Mitchell at 303-954-1206 or kmitchell@denverpost.com

Posted October 16, 2011, 8:18 pm

Young man gunned down while walking home

David Fierro had dropped out of high school when he was 17.

But two years later he started studying so that he could take a general equivalency exam, according to an article by Marilyn Robinson, a former Post reporter.

David , and dreamed of becoming a , his father Antonio had told Robinson.

He also liked boxing, body building and helped care for his severely disabled 1 1/2-year-old half brother.

He was the oldest boy in his family and his father often relied on him.

On July 14, 1986, at about 3:45 p.m. Fierro was taking a short-cut across a field on his way home and was just south of the Holy Trinity Church and just behind a strip mall, when he was was confronted by a gunman.

The killer Fierro in the chest, according to a Westminster police report. The young man collapsed. Bystanders called 911.

The young man was rushed by helicopter to a hospital where he was pronounced dead.

Witnesses came forward and reported that shortly after the shooting they saw a brown 1970s car thought to have been a darting out of the area in an erratic manner.

The witness reported a partial car plate number of PAF.

The man driving the car was estimated to be between 25 and 35 years old with medium length brown, curly hair. He had a closely cropped beard with no mustache.

His hair and beard had a reddish tint with some gray. The driver was wearing a baseball cap.

According to Robinson’s story, police were investigating whether the shooting was and possibly connected to another shooting.

Just two hours later on the same day, someone shot in the back while he was fishing in in Denver.

The 42-year-old man had lived in foster homes and assisted living facilities and had been living in an apartment on . He had worked as a dish washer and janitor.

Contact information: Denver Post reporter Kirk Mitchell at 303-954-1206 or kmitchell@denverpost.com

Anyone with information that could help solve the case is asked to contact Det. Joe Hastings at 303-658-4242.

 

 

Posted October 9, 2011, 7:11 pm

Random sniper guns down developmentally disabled fisherman

lived a simple life.

Thomas Lane, 43 Police Department
Thomas Lane, 43

At a young age he was diagnosed as , according to an article by former Denver Post staff writer Marilyn Robinson.

When he was only 5 he went to a home to live.

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Posted October 2, 2011, 7:30 pm

Killer scurries after shooting man in Denver strip mall

In a tiny strip mall at the northwest corner of Alameda Avenue and Zuni Street is a car stereo equipment store that also sold “wholesale bling bling.”

Arthur Maes, 20Courtesy Police Department
, 20

Next door to the stereo store was .

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Posted September 25, 2011, 9:26 pm

Gas station attendant last seen hitchhiking

Way back before a customer could rapidly insert their credit card into a machine at a gas pump to pay for gasoline, there were gas pump attendants like Jennie Marie Moore.

Jeannie Marie Moore, 18Families of Victims of and Missing Persons
, 18

The 18-year-old woman worked at a gas station at West 13th Avenue, according to newspaper reports.

When someone drove up to a gas pump, she would go to the driver, find out how much gas they needed and take their money and fill up the customer’s gas tank.

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Posted September 18, 2011, 6:37 pm

Fox hunters find body of girl on Valentine’s Day

’s last day of work at a convenience store at 2001 Coronado Parkway was going to work on Christmas day, 1987.

Heiderose Ursula McGuire, 18Tina McGuire
Heiderose Ursula McGuire, 18

 

Heide’s brother Oliver had warned the 18-year-old graduate that her job wasn’t safe.

Workers at convenience stores get robbed, raped and , he had told her.

So Heide had recently found a day job as a seamstress. She was attending on scholarship and was studying accounting.

She was an outgoing girl who had a lot of friends and liked to attend social events. She was a trusting person who was eager to help people in need.

On Dec. 23, 1987, two days before her last day at the Circle K, Heide disappeared. It was a snowy night, her sister Tina McGuire said.

, a frequent Circle K customer, had asked for a ride home. Witnesses would see him walking to Heide’s car.

Vennell would later tell Adams County sheriff’s deputies that Heide did drive him to his house in the 1800 block of East 83rd Place.

He claimed she came inside the house for a short time and he gave her a soft drink.

Then she left and he didn’t know what had happened to her.

Heiderose Ursula McGuire, 18Tina McGuire
Heiderose Ursula McGuire, 18

 

Five days after Heide vanished, her car, a 1978 Chevrolet Monza, was found in a ditch near East 112th Avenue and Riverdale Road.

Snow tracks indicated that the driver of the car had made a U-turn on 112th and slid into the ditch.

Investigators had told a Post reporter in 1988 that if she would have had car trouble she likely would have walked to a house that was 50 yards away. But no one had knocked at the house that night.

Heide normally would have locked the car doors. But the driver’s side door was left unlocked.

When her brother Oliver saw the car, he noted that it was spotlessly clean, which was unusual. The front seat was moved forward, not in the position the tall girl normally set the seat.

On Valentine’s Day, two fox hunters discovered McGuire’s in a field at 89th Avenue and Riverdale Road. Her was left about 50 yards off the road, only 2 miles from where she lived with Oliver.

An autopsy revealed that someone had struck her in the head with some type of blunt object.

Vennell, who died several years later, was never arrested. Nor was anyone else.

Tina McGuire said that over the years, investigators have reopened the investigation to pursue new leads.

A few years ago they performed tests on cigarette butts found near her body.

The tests have not brought closure though.

Posted September 3, 2011, 12:24 pm

Girl hitchhiking home from Nederland high school tied up and murdered

Melanie “Suzi” Cooley was an adventurous girl.

Melanie "Suzi" Cooley, 18, in 1975

The 18-year-old girl, who grew up during the 1970s, loved living with her family in the foothills halfway between Nederland and on .

One time she camped for three days by herself in a tent in the mountains.

While she was hiking during the day a bear raided her camp, overturning a log teaming with ants, shredding a plastic container that had contained beef jerky and left huge footprints.

Suzi was so excited about the experience she brought her mother, Nina, to the site.

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