Get ready for second round of overnight closures on Marksheffel Road in Colorado Springs

Scott Harrison

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (KRDO) — On Wednesday night, just three nights after a weekend closure of Marksheffel Road ended, the busy northeast-side corridor will close again for the weekend.

This time, a different section will be affected — three-quarters of a mile between Barnes Road and Stetson Hills Boulevard — and start sooner that before.

Last week’s closure covered a mile farther north, between Stetson Hills and Dublin boulevards.

While the previous closures were in place overnight last Thursday and from Friday night until Monday morning; this round of closures begins overnight Wednesday, continues overnight Thursday and again through the entire weekend.

The closure periods will be from 7 p.m. until 5:30 a.m. overnight Wednesday and Thursday, and from 7 p.m. Friday until 5:30 a.m. Monday.

Officials said that drivers will still have access to local businesses and the Peoples United Methodist Church.

The reason for this closure is similar to the last — crews will install drainage pipes between 15 and 20 feet under the pavement.

Workers also will re-stripe the road to establish a new traffic pattern.

The closures are part of the ongoing $60 million widening of three miles of Marksheffel, from Dublin to North Carefree Circle.

Widening the road has required similar widening and other improvements at the North Carefree, Barnes, Stetson Hills and Dublin intersections.

Marksheffel is a key transportation route that links Fountain, Peterson Space Force Base, US 24 and Woodmen Road; the project became a priority with continued home construction in and around Banning Lewis Ranch in the city’s northeastern corner.

The project is scheduled for completion late next year.

For more information, visit: https://coloradosprings.gov/marksheffel.

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D60 votes against releasing Chavez Huerta Preparatory Academy to get charter status

Mackenzie Stafford

PUEBLO, Colo. (KRDO) – At the Pueblo School District 60 board meeting on Monday night, the board voted 3-2 against releasing the K-12 academy to get charter status through the Colorado Charter School Institute (CSI).

Back in January, the D60 school board made a decision not to renew its charter agreement with Chavez Huerta.

PREVIOUS COVERAGE: D60 recommends to not renew charter contract for Chavez Huerta Prep Academy; leaders shocked

In the board meeting Monday night, members who voted not to release the academy said they did not want a charter within the boundaries of District 60 to not be under District 60 rule. 

The decision by District 60 puts Chavez Huerta Preparatory Academy (CHPA) in a tough spot to regain that charter status for the next school year, but the executive director tells KRDO13 he still has hope. 

“These are all of our kids, and we’re trying to provide them with education, but sometimes the district just doesn’t have what these families are looking for. But they have that choice. They can come to our school and they can discover and they can learn and they can be part of this environment that really, again, promotes the Hispanic culture in the Hispanic way of living, versus what we’re looking at, where maybe some of the District 60 schools don’t have that,” said Chavez Huerta Preparatory Academy Executive Director, Fred Segura, “But what District 60’s decision was yesterday is they’re taking away that choice. They’re taking away that option for parents and forcing them to say no. Public school is the right way to do it, and this is the way you need to follow. And that’s just not right.”

Fred Segura says the cultural hub offered at Chavez Huerta can’t be found at any other District 60 school. 

“It’s that cultural essence. It’s that Hispanic upbringing and that Hispanic culture that we really promote and we really, our students just find so much comfort with,” explained Segura.

With a mariachi program and plans to create a Spanish and English immersion class, he says they’ll continue fighting. 

District 60 declined to comment Tuesday. 

The CHPA appeal is set to be heard by the Colorado Board of Education on May 15th. 

If the state does not overturn District 60’s decision, next school year, Chavez Huerta could open as a private school or a contracted school with D60’s permission.

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‘Where’s My Grandma?’: City without answers with La Junta woman’s body missing from grave

Tyler Cunnington

LA JUNTA, Colo. (KRDO) –  A Pueblo man tells KRDO13 Investigates that for decades, he visited what he thought was his grandmother’s grave, her body wasn’t even in the plot.

Sam Montano says that his grandmother, Bessie L. Zamora, has had a headstone at the Cavalry Cemetery in the City of La Junta since her early death in 1946. She was only 30.

Bessie L. Zamora

It was just last fall in 2024 that city officials with La Junta told him that someone else could be buried there, or that the grave might even be empty. It was the same plot where he buried his own mother just a year prior to the notice.

Now, the City of La Junta has been ordered by a judge to pay for the movement of Montano’s mother’s remains, her headstone, and his grandmother’s headstone. However, there’s still a major missing piece to the puzzle: his grandma is still missing.

The Family:

Montano has several members of his family tree at the Cavalry Cemetery, including one of his great-grandfathers, his mother’s uncles, and, of course, his grandma Bessie.

Bessie left behind several children of hers in her untimely passing, one of them being Sam’s mother, Florence Pacheco. Many knew her as just Flo.

Florence Montano, courtesy of Sam Montano

Flo was only a toddler when Bessie passed, meaning she went her whole life with no memories of her own mother, something that stuck with her through her own death from cancer in 2022.

“Her dying wish was to be buried beside her own mother’s grave,” explained Montano. “She never knew her mother very much, so she felt she wanted to be close to her in death. I promised her on her deathbed that I would do that.”

Montano now bears a tattoo on his arm, matching a symbol on his mother’s headstone. As a strong catholic family, the ink has helped keep her spirit with him.

“It’s a reminder of what we’ve gone through, and it’s also a reminder of my faith,” he explained.

In September of 2023, in order to fulfill his mother’s wish, he buried her cremains directly across from the headstone for Bessie.

Bank records even show that Montano paid the City of La Junta $155 dollars for her burial, which then happened just a few days later, as seen in photographs below:

“My kind of last memory of her here, before closing the dirt, was me putting her in the ground,” said Montano.

The Phone Call:

Then, almost exactly one year to the date later, in September of 2024, everything changed.

Montano got a voicemail on his phone from Erin Harris, who was the contracted City Attorney for La Junta. She stated she needed to talk with him about the grave plot and gave her condolences over his mother’s recent passing.

However, upon calling her back, the news he got left him stunned.

“They have no idea where my grandmother is, and that while that might be her headstone, her direct quote to me was that there might be no one in that cemetery plot, there might be two people, there might be anybody,” said Montano, recalling the phone call. “I asked her, well, how are we going to find out about this? And she said, ‘It’s too expensive to find out about this, the city won’t pay for it.'”

KRDO13 Investigates found within La Junta cemetery code that it costs $1,500 for the disinterment of an adult gravesite, a process that needs the written approval of a judge and those who own the grave site.

They also tell Montano that he is not the rightful owner of the grave plot where his mother, Flo, and his grandma Bessie are laid to rest. Instead, they later explain that another family, two sisters, own the plot, and it’s their grandmother whose Flo’s cremains were buried alongside.

KRDO13 Investigates is not naming the two siblings involved in the situation at the request of Montano, who believes they haven’t done anything wrong. It is important to note that their grandma died the same year as Bessie did, in 1946, and even has the same last name as Zamora.

A records request from KRDO13 Investigates shows a copy of the plot deed from 1947, bestowed to a Juan Zamora.

The City Gets the Courts Involved:

The entire situation prompted the City of La Junta to file a Declaratory Judgment with the Otero County Court. It is a legal process that avoids going to a trial by having all parties within a certain matter agree to certain stipulations in order to settle the situation.

In this case, the City of La Junta, as the plaintiff, filed the judgment with Mr. Montano, and the two sisters, as co-defendants, alleging that Montano was claiming to have had ownership of the grave plot, which comes into obvious conflict with the sisters’ possession of the deed.

However, KRDO13 Investigates found through a records request that the court filing almost didn’t even happen. On September 3, 2024, emails between the City of La Junta and the two sisters show that the city was going to move both Flo and Bessie’s markers and Flo’s remains, without even telling Montano.

It was only when the sisters went out of their way to request that the city contact Montano to alert him of the issue at hand that the city then arranged the call to him later that month.

“We owe a debt of gratitude to that family because they prevented them from moving my mom anywhere. We don’t even know where they would have put her,” explained Montano.

Putting his disbelief aside that the city almost took action without his consent, Montano says he also has no idea where the idea of a dispute over the plot’s ownership even came from.

“We never claimed to own the plot, ever. We asked and sought permission from La Junta to bury her there, and we got the permission, and we find out later that, of course, we don’t own the plot,” explained Montano.

Its still unclear as to how Bessie was buried at the grave decades ago if the plot didn’t technically belong to Montano’s lineage at the time, nor how Montano was able to pay the City of La Junta $155 dollars for Flo’s burial in 2023, if he did not own the plot either.

It’s one of many questions the City of La Junta has not answered for us as of the writing of this article.

The purpose of the judgement, initially filed on December 17th, 2024, was to have an Otero County judge decide what Montano and the two sisters would need to do with their property, which in this case, is the headstones for Bessie and Flo, as well as Flo’s buried urn.

The stipulations began rather straightforward:

Firstly, the city would arrange the removal of the cremains of Florence Pacheco, as well as her marker, and the marker of Bessie L. Zamora, from the plot, and have them placed under the control of Samuel Montano, who intended to have them moved to Roselawn Cemetery in Pueblo, near his home.

Secondly, the City of La Junta would reimburse the sisters with up to $700 for the creation of a new headstone for their grandma.

Montano, however, took issue with the fact that the city ignored his request for the city to pay for the transfer of Flo and Bessie’s items, since he felt that he was the one being wronged in the situation.

“What they first offered us was, they offered us first to sell a plot [to us] here. Then they offered us a plot here, and then they offered us $1,500,” explained Montano. “We want to move on my mother to Pueblo, where we live and I made it clear to [their attorney] that we don’t want my mother here, because, one, they try to move her without us knowing, and two, they lost her mother, for God’s sakes.”

An email obtained by KRDO13 Investigates from Bradley Tucker, the attorney representing the City in the declaratory judgment, shows in late February, Montano asked Tucker and the city for, “a clear answer on whether the city knows where his grandmother, and Florence’s mom, is buried. If we don’t know, we need to clarify whether we have any way of determining that.”

Tucker’s response was: “The city does not know where she is buried and has no way of determining that.”

It made Montano realize that he would likely never get the truth about his grandma’s body, and subsequently that his mother’s dying wish to be buried with her was never actually fulfilled.

“At least she knew that I tried,” said a teary-eyed Montano. “I don’t think anybody, even at this point, would believe any of this,” he later added.

How Did This All Happen?

KRDO13 Investigates spent weeks trying to get answers on behalf of Montano. Initially, we exchanged emails with La Junta City Manager Michael Hart, who originally agreed to an interview on March 13, 2025, to discuss the situation at the cemetery.

However, days later, Hart responded to our email again, to say that he was advised of the ongoing litigation, and that he could not speak about it any further.

From there, we continued to ask a number of questions via email, hoping to gain a more basic understanding of how this happened and give the City the opportunity to address claims made by Montano.

We then called and left messages for Hart twice. Once on March 26, 2025, and again on April 1, 2025. On those same days, we also called City Attorney Erin Harris– twice.

We even reached out via email to the Mayor of La Junta, Joe Ayala, to try and connect with Mr. Hart or Ms. Harris. He responded to our email, stating in part, “Michael and Erin should have a response for you soon regarding the specific concerns you’ve raised.” We never heard from them.

As a result, KRDO13 Investigates drove down to La Junta on April 2nd to try and speak with Mr. Hart. We happened to catch him out on a lunch break, just a few blocks from City Hall.

KRDO13 Investigates speaking with City Manager Michael Hart on April 2, 2025

We explained that we respected the integrity of the ongoing litigation, but wanted some answers at the very least, to give the city a fair opportunity to address how exactly this all happened.

Ultimately, Hart’s response was, “I’m going to have to ask other folks, because, again, I’ve been on the job now for about a month and a half,” stating that he had only taken office in early 2025, after the previous long-time city manager retired in 2024.

He said that he would take a look at the emails that we had sent to him, with our specific questions, and that he would try to answer them later that day, when we planned to circle back to City Hall.

When we arrived, we were told he was at the office but not available. Our cameras happened to spot him through an open doorway, standing just around the corner from our conversation with his secretary.

Mr. Hart emailed us back the following day, on April 3rd, asking for our questions in writing. We responded, and we have yet to hear back.

The Resolution:

Montano has continued to fight the stipulated orders, because he says he doesn’t want to settle the case, and allow the City to get away without answering for his grandma’ missing body.

“There is no price tag over someone’s memories, their loved ones, or their faith, and all of those have been trampled on by the city of La Junta, as far as I’m concerned,” said Montano.

Illustration of Bessie Zamora and her husband

He planned to hire an attorney to help do so, but after seeing how much it may cost him to litigate the situation, he reluctantly agreed to partake in a final April 16 court conference between the city and the two sisters to resolve the matter.

Montano says on April 17, the Otero County judge assigned to the case dismissed the Declaratory Judgement, since both he and the two sisters clarified that there was no dispute over who owned the plot.

Instead, the judge ordered the City of La Junta to pay for the removal of Flo’s remains and the removal of her and Bessie’s markers, which will be transferred into Montano’s possession. In addition, the city will also have to pay $700 towards the two sisters’ new headstone for their grandmother at Cavalry Cemetery.

Montano says those items will be brought to Roselawn Cemetery in Pueblo. He added that even once the paperwork was filed, there was never an apology by the city over his grandma’s misplacement.

“They are pretty disgusting people, honestly,” Montano said.

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Pueblo County Sheriff investigating shooting on Santa Fe Drive

Celeste Springer

PUEBLO, Colo. (KRDO) – The Pueblo County Sheriff’s Office says the department is investigating a shooting that happened around 12:30 p.m. on Tuesday afternoon.

The sheriff’s office says it is on Santa Fe Drive, just east of Northern Avenue.

The department says one person was injured and taken to the hospital. They said it’s unclear how severe their injuries are.

No arrests have been made in this case. Anyone with information is urged to call the sheriff’s office at (719) 583-6250.

As of 3:15 p.m. on Tuesday, the sheriff’s office said westbound Santa Fe Drive from Colorado Highway 227 to Northern Avenue was closed.

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Men charged for alleged scratch-off ticket theft ring operating in El Paso County

Celeste Springer

EL PASO COUNTY, Colo. (KRDO) – Four men have been indicted for their alleged participation in a scratch-off ticket theft ring operating across Colorado, Attorney General Phil Weiser said.

According to the indictment, many of those locations were in El Paso County and the Colorado Springs area.

Richard McBee, Adam Pacheco, Tawny McCurry, and David Goetken are facing varying charges. McBee, based on information in the indictments, appears to be the purported ring leader as he allegedly participated in the most thefts.

According to the attorney general’s office, McBee would target gas stations that only had a single store clerk working. Then, he or an accomplice would reportedly lure the employee away by saying any number of things, including that their card was stuck in a gas pump, they needed to buy propane, or they spilled gasoline outside.

Then, McBee or an accomplice would allegedly jump across the unattended counter and steal scratch-offs.

The attorney general’s office says the total value of the thefts was over $150,000.

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Shelter-in-place ordered for area near Briargate off Vollmer Road; Suspect in custody

Celeste Springer

UPDATE 10:23 A.M.: The shelter-in-place has been lifted, according to the alert system.

EL PASO COUNTY, Colo. (KRDO) – The El Paso County Sheriff’s Office has issued a shelter-in-place order for a neighborhood near Briargate, according to their emergency alert system.

The alert is for the 8700 block of Vollmer Road. The sheriff’s office says they are conducting law enforcement activity near 8725 Vollmer Rd.

The sheriff’s office says a suspect is in custody following a SWAT operation.

For now, residents are still asked to lock their doors and stay away from doors and windows.

Details are limited at this time, but this article may be updated.

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Military sports organization based in Colorado Springs featured in Amazon Prime special

Bradley Davis

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (KRDO) – An Amazon Prime short film will feature how the Military Basketball Association (MBA) helps military personnel with mental health in the 719 and around the world.

Retired Army Major and former Fort Carson soldier Mike Meyers founded the MBA in Colorado Springs eight years ago. The players on the Peterson Space Force Hydras are are a few of the league’s over 1000 players across all 50 states and bases overseas.

The league’s mission is to help active and retired military members face mental health struggles. Veterans are over twice as likely to commit suicide compared to the general population.

The men’s and women’s nationally televised championship games in the MBA are May 25. You can find more information here.

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UPDATE: Work continues in second year of two infrastructure projects on Galley Road in Colorado Springs

Scott Harrison

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (KRDO) — Neighbors and drivers eagerly await the day when two major construction projects on the east side of town will be completed, and they’ll no longer have to detour around a road closure or squeeze into two lanes instead of four.

The projects currently are affecting Galley Road between Murray and Powers boulevards.

Replacing a 60-year-old bridge over the West Fork of Sand Creek has been the most challenging of the two projects.

Work was to begin in January 2024 but was delayed until April 2024; the project was scheduled for completion by the end of the year but encountered another delay when crews had difficulty removing telecommunications cables from under the bridge.

Gayle Sturdivant, the city’s deputy director of public works, said Monday that the project will be finished by the end of summer.

“We just started demolition last week,” she explained. “The demolition is going to last about five or six weeks. They just have to slowly take it apart, disconnect utilities that are in that area, remove the pieces that are out there and then widen that opening and get that channel work through there.”

Sturdivant says that the city is sensitive to concerns raised by residents because the delays have made it appear at times that little or no work was being done.

The project has closed a block of Galley in both directions between Moffat Circle and San Miguel Street; access to homes and businesses along Galley in that area have remained open.

Other facets of the $3 million project include widening the bridge and improving the creek channel to reduce the risk of flooding, which has been an issue in the past; wider sidewalks; improvements to the Homestead Trail nearby; and a pedestrian-activated signal where the trail intersects with Galley.

Lisa Scanlon, a neighbor, said that she understand the frustration people have about the project but asks for patience and understanding.

“(Crews) are doing the best they can,” she exclaimed. “That bridge would — when it rained or even snowed — would flood so bad. This will be done. Just have patience, because it’s good for us.”

Meanwhile, a $ 4 million Colorado Springs Utilities (CSU) project to replace an aging water main seems to be making better progress.

Work started last summer at the Galley/Moffat intersection — which was right next to the bridge project and increased construction activity there.

Since then, however, the project has advanced east to the Galley/Space Center Drive intersection.

“In that roadway, it’s going to be for a much shorter section,” said Alex Trefry, a CSU spokesman. “We expect for that to be over by the end of May. And from there, there’s going to be a pause between there and the fourth phase of the project — which is the final phase where we’re going to line the water main underneath Powers Boulevard. We don’t have a start date for that yet.”

 Paul Roberts lives along Galley at the completed section of the project.

“It’s very difficult to get two blocks over here without at least going a mile out of your way,” he said. “Certainly hoping for this thing to come online.”

On Monday, some residents expressed concern about more construction starting on several blocks of Wooten Road, north of Galley, when crews and heavy equipment began working.

However, CSU said that is a separate project not connected to the water main installation.

“I think they are repairing a water main leak from before,” a neighbor told KRDO 13’s The Road Warrior.

Adding to the construction congestion last summer was the repaving of a longer stretch of Wooten; Galley will need repaving after the two current projects end.

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What is the history of the Colorado Springs building raided by the DEA?

Michael Logerwell

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (KRDO) – KRDO13 Investigates is digging into the history of the building at 296 S Academy Blvd, which the DEA and other federal agents raided this weekend.

Broken glass and boarded-up windows are all that’s left behind at the now-shut-down illegal nightclub. However, as KRDO13 Investigates learned, this wasn’t the first time law enforcement came to the S Academy building.

KRDO13 Investigates obtained lease documents from the owner of the building.

The documents show a woman named Virginia Thorne leased the property for four months, ending at the end of April.

When KRDO13 Investigates went to the listed address for answers, the woman who answered the door said Virginia Thorne didn’t live at the residence, although her car was parked out front. Then the woman said she didn’t speak English.

The owner of the building, Mike Moon, said that he leased the suite as an event space.

The business on the lease, Warike Events LLC, ran the Warike Latin Club, which KRDO13 Investigates found started promoting events at the raided location on Facebook in February. 

The Colorado Springs Police Department said they’ve been called out to the location for criminal activity five separate times this year.

KRDO13 Investigates uncovered that it’s not the first time the building has been at the center of criminal controversy.

Back in 2023, Colorado Springs police came to AC Expo, a storefront in the same building, to seize illegal gambling machines.

We asked the property owner about the criminal activity back in 2023.

Moon told us he was unaware that the illegal gambling was going on and welcomed police to seize the illegal machines in 2023 to deal with the problem, and this weekend during the illegal nightclub raids. 

CSPD provided KRDO13 Investigates with the following list of calls for service at this location since March of 2022:

Calls for serviceDownload

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Cañon City police asking for tips regarding 6-week-old pug puppy found with broken bones

Celeste Springer

CAÑON CITY, Colo. (KRDO) – The Cañon City Police Department is asking for tips after they say a small puppy was located abandoned with broken bones.

The police department says they are hoping to get tips on the dog’s former owner or whoever abandoned the dog.

Police say the dog, a 6-week-old female pug mix, was found abandoned with a note in the 900 block of Main Street. The post did not disclose what the note left with the dog said.

The department says the dog is being treated for her injuries.

If you know who the owner is, or if you have any information about this incident, please contact Community Services Supervisor Inman at 719-431-3525 or by email to joinman@canoncity.org.

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