Category Archives: US

Cleveland police officer shot dead in off-duty carjacking; suspect nabbed: reports

A Cleveland police officer was shot dead early Friday evening in a carjacking incident while he was off duty, according to reports.

Responding officers soon located the stolen vehicle and took a suspect into custody, FOX 8 of Cleveland reported.

Neither the slain officer – who was shot twice — nor the suspect were immediately identified.

ILLINOIS POLICE OFFICER’S DEATH: ONE SUSPECT NABBED IN INDIANA, ANOTHER SURRENDERS, AUTHORITIES SAY

The shooting happened in the city’s Kamm’s neighborhood and the officer died at a hospital after being transported there by ambulance, Cleveland.com reported, citing law enforcement sources.

The officer was a relatively new member of the city’s force who worked in the 5th District on the city’s northeast side, sources told FOX 8.

Condolences came swiftly from the city’s incoming police chief, a police union leader and the mayor-elect, the station reported.

“My heart is aching for the family, for our officers. Senseless. It just doesn’t make any sense,” incoming police Chief Wayne Drummond said.

“We are devastated by this news and are asking for prayers,” Cleveland Police Union President Jeff Follmer said.

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“This evening is about the family of this slain officer that we lost today. I just ask the residents of Cleveland to keep the family in their prayers,” Mayor-elect Justin Bibb said. “Let’s all stay vigilant this evening. Stay safe and healthy. I also want to thank all members of law enforcement who supported us this evening.”

It was the first fatal shooting of a Cleveland police officer since September 2020, Cleveland.com reported.

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Record-Setting Colorado Fires Destroyed More Than 500 Homes

LOUISVILLE, Colo. — It took only a few hours for the flames to cut an unimaginable path of destruction across the drought-starved neighborhoods between Denver and Boulder.

By Friday morning, as smoke from the most damaging wildfire in state history cleared, more than 500 homes, and possibly as many as 1,000, had been destroyed. Hundreds of people who had hastily fled returned to ruins, everything they owned incinerated in the fast-moving blaze. Entire neighborhoods had been reduced to ashes.

“It felt like the apocalypse,” said Ruthie Werner, a resident of Louisville, Colo., who had gone to shop at a Target store on Thursday but arrived to find the parking lot ablaze.

Despite the astonishing destruction, no deaths were immediately recorded, a figure that Gov. Jared Polis said would be a “New Year’s miracle” if it held.

It turned out that people had just enough time to evacuate, with some grabbing passports and pets, toothbrushes and clothing, as the fast-moving flames, fueled by 110-mile-an-hour winds, leapfrogged highways and strip malls and bore down on their homes.

It “wasn’t a wildfire in the forest; it was a suburban and urban fire,” said Mr. Polis, a Democrat who lives in Boulder County and who described receiving texts and voice mail messages from friends describing what they had lost.

“The Costco we all shop at, the Target we buy our kids’ clothes at — all surrounded and damaged,” he said.

As subdivisions remained blocked off on Friday, the streets empty and hushed as the charred wreckage continued to smolder, residents told of harrowing escapes. In contrast to fires in mountain wilderness, which often burn over the course of weeks, the destruction on Thursday played out in minutes and hours, as fierce wind gusts threw flames across suburban landscapes with virtually no warning.

“We were home, and it was a bright, sunny day, and all of a sudden it wasn’t bright and sunny anymore,” said Laurie Draper, who lost the Louisville house where she had lived with her husband since 1994 and raised two children. “We could smell fire, and then there was smoke coming through the neighborhood.”

Ms. Draper said the wind had been blowing so hard that it was difficult even to open the car doors. They escaped with little more than some Persian rugs, their German shepherd and the clothes they were wearing. On Friday, she lamented that she had not saved items that belonged to her late mother.

“I didn’t take the right things,” she said.

Colorado is no stranger to wildfires, but Thursday’s came at an unseasonable time. Indeed, over the years, wildfires in the American West have been worsening — growing larger, spreading faster and reaching into mountainous elevations that were once too wet and cool to have supported fierce fires. What was once a seasonal phenomenon has become a year-round menace, with fires burning later into the fall and into the winter.

Recent research has suggested that heat and dryness associated with global warming are major reasons for the increasing prevalence of bigger and stronger fires, as rainfall patterns have been disrupted, snow melts earlier and meadows and forests are scorched into kindling.

Peter Goble, a service climatologist at the Colorado Climate Center, said the Boulder region had experienced a wet spring followed by months that were “extremely dry, since about the middle of summer.” He added that “an event like this puts into context how dangerous and how potentially deadly winter season fires that occur primarily over grassland can be.”

As the fire raged and raced toward them, shocked residents of Boulder County desperately tried to save what they could. Liz Burnham, whose apartment in Louisville was narrowly spared by the blaze, grabbed clothes, toiletries, important documents and letters from her mother.

“At a certain point, the smoke became so thick, I couldn’t breathe anymore — I decided to get a bag ready,” Ms. Burnham said. She added: “I have this video of flames right across the street. I just panicked. That freaked me out so badly. I grabbed everything I had packed and my dog, and we just ran to the car.”

Others had no homes to return to and had no opportunity to save their belongings.

David Hayes, the police chief in Louisville, a suburb with about 20,000 residents, lost the four-bedroom house where he had lived for 30 years. When he attended a news conference on Thursday, he did not know the status of his home. He drove by later that night and saw the flames.

“I didn’t want to take advantage of my status, so I didn’t even go up the driveway,” Chief Hayes said. “So, I just watched it burn from there for a little while, and went back to the office. Now, it’s just ashes.”

It had already been a miserable 2021 in Boulder County, marred by a relentless pandemic that is surging again and a mass shooting at a grocery store in March that left 10 people dead. As residents took stock of the fire damage, some expressed a sense of resignation that what had happened on Thursday was a frightening new part of what it means to live in a landscape scarred by the warming earth.

“I’m seeing my future,” said Angelica Kalika, 36, of nearby Broomfield. “I grew up in Colorado, and this is a place where I’ve had snowy Christmases and a nice 60-degree summer. But for me, this is a moment of deep reckoning of climate change when there is a wildfire outside my door.”

Colorado had the three largest wildfires in its history in the summer of 2020, each burning more than 200,000 acres, Mr. Polis said. But those fires burned federally owned forests and land, he said, while the fire on Thursday destroyed suburban developments and shopping plazas.

Boulder County officials said the cause of the fire remained under investigation. Though they initially suspected that downed power lines might have played a role, they said on Friday that there were not any such instances in the area where the fire started.

Whatever the cause, the flames quickly roared across open grasslands toward the tiny century-old mining town of Superior and then burst into the commercial center and pricey subdivisions of adjacent Louisville, a fast-growing city that is a perennial pick on lists of the country’s most livable smaller communities.

“I was thinking, How does this happen, in the suburbs?” said Tamara Anderson, who fled her home in Louisville on Thursday afternoon as firefighters drove down her street yelling for people to get out. “And then I’m like, Oh, yeah, 100-mile-per-hour winds, and it’s been bone dry. And that’s because of climate change.”

Ms. Anderson, who spent Thursday night at a hotel, said that her house had been spared but that three others on her block had been destroyed, part of what officials described as a “mosaic” of destruction.

Flames destroyed some buildings but left others untouched, seemingly at random.

Video published by a local television station showed a cul-de-sac where one house had been destroyed, while the others appeared to be intact. In one neighborhood, a line of about 10 still-smoldering rubble piles was situated next to other houses that appeared to have escaped severe damage.

“I think it’s indicative of our future,” said Laurie Silver, a resident of a nearby suburb who on Friday morning stood near the smoking remnants of her cousin’s townhome in Louisville. “And I don’t know what it’s going to take for people to take it seriously. Maybe, when it directly affects people right where they live.”

Ms. Silver said her cousin had been traveling in Tennessee. His only remaining possessions were what he had packed in his carry-on.

On New Year’s Eve, with the fire mostly contained and an intensifying snowstorm promising to help limit additional damage, displaced residents faced another uncertain night at shelters or in the homes of friends or relatives, some still waiting to learn whether their property had been damaged.

“If our place is smoke damaged, who determines that?” said Ben Sykora, who rushed out of his rental home in Superior, Colo., after grabbing a backup computer hard drive and a couple of changes of clothes. “I don’t want to get thinking too materially, but we’re kind of all waiting, seeing how much is this going to flip our lives upside down. As of right now, we just don’t know.”

Boulder County and surrounding areas on Colorado’s Front Range live with the frequent threat of wildfires, although those concerns have historically been associated more with the summer and autumn months and the forested hillsides west of the cities. Few people were prepared for the sudden onslaught on Thursday.

“You think you’re safe here — these things happen in the mountains,” said Steve Sarin, whose apartment narrowly escaped destruction. “Out here, we think we’re relatively protected from the dangers of wildfires. Yesterday was a big wake-up call.”

Dana Goldstein, Isabella Grullón Paz, Michael Levenson and Alyssa Lukpat contributed reporting.

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New York City ushers in 2022 with ball drop in Times Square

NEW YORK (AP) — New York City welcomed the new year — and bid good riddance to 2021 — as confetti and cheers spread across Times Square as a New Year’s Eve tradition returned to a city beleaguered by a global pandemic.

The new year marched across the globe, time zone by time zone, and thousands of New Year’s revelers stood shoulder to shoulder in a slight chill to witness a 6-ton ball, encrusted with nearly 2,700 Waterford crystals, descend above a crowd of about 15,000 in-person spectators — far fewer than the many tens of thousands of revelers who usually descend on the world-famous square to bask in the lights and hoopla of the nation’s marquee New Year’s Eve event.

It did so as an uneasy nation tried to muster optimism that the worst days of the pandemic are now behind it — even as public health officials cautioned Friday against unbridled celebrations amid surging COVID-19 infections from the omicron variant.

Last year’s ball drop was closed to the public because of the pandemic.

As the ball dropped and euphoria filled the streets, Maya Scharm, a dog trainer visiting from New Jersey, felt 2021 slide away.

“It’s symbolic of getting back to normal,” she said, just minutes after the stroke of midnight.

“Hopefully it’s different this year,” said her companion, Brandon Allen. “We already have that sense of stability. We know what’s going on — there’s a new strain going around now — but it’s like we’ve kind of been through it for two years at this point.”

Though the crowds were smaller, the throngs nevertheless stretched for blocks to soak in the celebration, with many traveling from afar to take part. Confetti lit up by electronic billboards swirled in a light wind on a mild winter night in New York City.

Mary Gonzalez stood a few feet behind a crowd, wanting to keep her distance from anyone unwittingly carrying the virus.

“I’m happy that 2021 is over because it caused a lot of problems for everybody,” said Gonzalez, who was visiting from Mexico City and wanted to take in an American tradition. “We hope that 2022 is much better than this year.”

The annual ball drop took place as the clock ticked into midnight and ushered in the new year, an occasion usually commemorated with the uncorking of Champagne, clinking of pints, joyous embraces and renewed hope for better times ahead.

Times Square is often referred to as the crossroads of the world, and city officials insisted on holding the marquee New Year’s Eve event to demonstrate the city’s resiliency even amid a resurgence of the coronavirus.

But 2022 begins just as the year prior began — with the pandemic clouding an already uncertain future.

Doubts swirled about whether the city would have to cancel this year’s bash, as the city posted record numbers of COVID-19 cases in the days leading to it, even as some cities like Atlanta had decided to cancel their own celebrations.

COVID-19 cases in the U.S. have soared to their highest levels on record at over 265,000 per day on average. New York City reported a record number of new, confirmed cases — nearly 44,000 — on Wednesday and a similar number Thursday, according to New York state figures.

Officials required those attending the spectacle would have to wear masks and show proof of vaccination. Organizers had initially hoped that more than 50,000 revelers would be able to join in, but plans were dramatically scaled back because of widespread infections.

Rap artist and actor LL Cool J was supposed to be among the performers taking the stage in Times Square on Friday night, but announced he would pull out of the event because he had tested positive for COVID-19.

But Mayor Bill de Blasio, who relinquished oversight of the nation’s most populous city at the stroke of midnight, said the festivities at Times Square would “show the world that New York City is fighting our way through this.”

New York City’s incoming mayor, Eric Adams, took his oath in Times Square soon after the ball drop. He made a brief appearance earlier on the main stage to affirm the city’s resiliency.

“It’s just great when New York shows the entire country how we come back,” he said. “We showed the entire globe what we’re made of. We’re unbelievable. This is an unbelievable city and, trust me, we’re ready for a major comeback because this is New York.”

That hopeful sentiment was shared by ordinary people.

“I look back and I see it as a sort of a stressful year, but it wasn’t a terrible year,” said Lynn Cafarchio, who braved the crowds to attend the festivities with her husband Pete.

A New York City tour guide, she was unemployed for a spell as the economy was shuttered and tourism tanked.

“We’re standing here glad that 2021 will soon be over,” she said, “but really positive about next year.”

Even if the crowds were considerably smaller, people gathered across block after block to witness the ball drop.

Nursing student Ashley Ochoa and her boyfriend, Jose Avelar, traveled from the central valley of California specifically to be at Times Square.

“COVID did hold a lot of stuff back for me,” Ochoa said, “but I mean, I’m here today, so that’s what I’m thankful for.”

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Illinois police officer’s death: One suspect nabbed in Indiana, another surrenders, authorities say

Both suspects linked to Wednesday’s shooting death of a veteran Illinois police officer were in custody Friday after a manhunt of nearly 36 hours, police said.

Killed in the shooting was Bradley police Sgt. Marlene Rittmanic, 49. Her partner, Officer Tyler Bailey, 27, remained in critical condition in a hospital, FOX 32 of Chicago reported.

Both police officers were shot while responding to a noise complaint at a Comfort Inn motel in Kankakee County, south of Chicago.

SLAIN ILLINOIS POLICE OFFICER CALLED FAMILY’S ‘BACKBONE’; 2 SUSPECTS BEING SOUGHT: REPORT

The search for the suspects led law enforcement officers to Indiana, where suspect Darius Sullivan, 25, the alleged gunman, was apprehended without incident at a Manchester home Friday morning, FOX 32 reported.

Also taken into custody was another occupant of the Indiana home, identified as Daniel Acros, 19, according to the station.

Weapons and drugs were also confiscated at the scene, authorities said.

Suspects Darius Sullivan, left, and Xandria Harris were taken into custody Friday after Wednesday’s fatal shooting of an Illinois police officer. (Kankakee County Sheriff’s Office)

The second suspect linked to the case, Xandria Harris, 26, surrendered to Bradley, Illinois, police around 4 p.m. Friday, FOX 32 reported.

Arrangements were being made for Sullivan to be extradited back to Illinois to face charges of murder and attempted murder, according to the station.

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Two other people were apprehended in Indiana in connection with the case. Suspects identified as Bryce Baker, 20, and Joshua Adams, 26, both from Kankakee, Illinois, were arrested after authorities searching for Sullivan spotted them in a wrong-way-driving vehicle in Rochester, Indiana, FOX 32 reported.

Their possible connection to Sullivan was being investigated, the report said.

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Watch Chicago New Year’s Eve Countdown Live – NBC Chicago

Watch NBC 5’s New Year’s Eve show beginning at 11:08 p.m. on NBC 5 and in the player above.

Chicago is counting down to 2022 this New Year’s Eve with the biggest-ever fireworks display, and NBC Chicago is counting down with local celebrities, music, games and lots more, all dedicated to our fine city.

Starting at 11:08 p.m., on NBC 5 and right here on NBCChicago.com and in the app, we ring in the New Year with a special show, “A Very Chicago New Year,” hosted by Cortney Hall and Matthew Rodrigues of “Chicago Today.”

Celebrities make guest appearances, including Chicago New Year’s Eve icons Janet Davies and Mark Giangreco. Reuniting Chicago’s unofficial New Year’s Eve couple leads to fun antics the pair have been known for during the past 20 years.

“We’re thrilled to bring this very Chicago ensemble together to start the New Year and provide viewers with an expanded show this year,” said Kevin Cross, president of NBC Universal Local Chicago.

It wouldn’t be New Year’s without a few fun games and reminiscing with celebrities Buddy Guy, Dan Aykroyd, Jim Belushi, Giuliana Rancic and more. Plus, performances by rock legends Chicago and The Blues Brothers.

The show will be broadcast on Friday, Dec. 31 at 11:08 p.m. on NBC 5, streaming on NBCChicago.com and through NBC Chicago’s free apps on Roku, Amazon Fire TV and Apple.

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New Year’s Eve crowd in NYC’s Times Square still parties despite coronavirus limits

Happy New Year! 

2022 arrived in the U.S. as the clock struck midnight Saturday in the Eastern time zone.

The traditonal New Year’s Eve party in Times Square in New York City was scaled back for a second year in a row Friday night because of the coronavirus – but optimism for the new year remained intact.

City officials and NYPD brass were limiting the gathering to 15,000 people for the annual midnight ball drop, a decades-long tradition that normally attracts far greater numbers.

NEW YEAR’S WISHES FROM AMERICANS INCLUDE THIS FERVENT HOPE: ‘NEVER SEE A FACE MASK AGAIN’

As usual, those in crowd in Midtown Manhattan included people who got there early.

“I’ve been waiting since 2:45 p.m.,” Henry Brown, 57, of Manhattan, told the New York Post.

Attendees had to show proof of vaccination, the Post reported.

“They checked my vaccination card four times,” Bryce Steven, 25, of Albany, New York, told the newspaper. “It’s good, though. It means they care about us.”

The Big Apple was seeing relatively mild early-winter weather, with temperatures around 50 degrees as the clock neared midnight. Other years have seen far less comfortable conditions.

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Across the U.S., other celebrations were underway in multiple cities – including Nashville, Tennessee, site of Fox’s “All-American New Year” celebration. Pete Hegseth, Rachel Campos-Duffy and others hosted the event from the famous Wildhorse Saloon in Music City.

Additionally, Fox News contributor Raymond Arroyo and Fox Nation host Abby Hornacek were reporting from New Orleans’ French Quarter, while Fox News congressional correspondent Aishah Hasnie was in Folly Beach in Charleston, S.C.. And Fox Business correspondent Madison Alworth watched revelers ring in the new year from Tampa, Florida.

Fox News’ Cortney O’Brien contributed to this story.

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Virginia attorney general sues town over police treatment of Black people after Caron Nazario investigation

It is the first case brought under a new law that allows the state’s leading law-enforcement officer “to sue to stop systemic violations of Virginians’ rights,” according to a release from Herring’s office.
The suit was spurred by an incident in December 2020, when two Windsor Police Department officers pulled over 2nd Lt. Caron Nazario and repeatedly used pepper spray on him and pointed their guns at him, according to the release.

“While our investigation was spurred by the egregious treatment against Lt. Nazario that we all saw in bodycam footage, we discovered that this incident was indicative of much larger problems within the department,” Herring said in the statement.

“Our months-long investigation uncovered huge disparities in enforcement against African American drivers, and a troubling lack of policies and procedures to prevent discriminatory or unconstitutional policing,” Herring said. “We even discovered evidence that officers were actually being trained to go ‘fishing’ and engage in pretextual stops.”

The suit was filed Thursday in Isle of Wight Circuit Court. It alleges Windsor “violated the Virginia Human Rights Act (‘VHRA’) and the Virginia Public Integrity and Law Enforcement Misconduct Act (‘VPLEM’) in its provision of law enforcement services through the Windsor Police Department.”

CNN reached out to the Windsor Police Department and town officials but did not hear back.

The suit says the Windsor Police Department “lacks adequate policies to ensure that it is using force in a non-discriminatory manner, that it is performing traffic stops in a constitutional, non-pretextual, and bias-free manner, and that members of the public are able to submit and have their complaints heard in a transparent way that upholds the principles of due process.”

The attorney general’s investigation found that Black drivers made up around 42% of the department’s traffic stops from July 2020 through September 2021, the statement said. Black people were stopped 200% to 500% more often than would be expected based on the town’s population.

The officers who pulled over Nazario said they thought he was missing a license plate on his SUV.

Town Manager William Saunders confirmed to CNN in April that one officer had been fired and the other remained on the job.

Nazario filed a lawsuit in April in federal court for $1 million in compensatory damages, claiming the officers violated his rights under the First and Fourth Amendments.

The officers have denied the claims and the case is ongoing.

CNN’s Madeline Holcombe, Ray Sanchez and Kaanita Iyer contributed to this report.

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Texas AG gains federal injunction against another Biden vaccine mandate

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Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton scored what he considered to be a “win for the children of Texas” after a federal judge ruled against vaccine and mask mandates for Head Start programs initiated by the Biden administration.

The ruling from Judge James “Wesley” Hendrix of the U.S. District Court Northern District of Texas orders a halt in required COVID-19 protocol conditions for the funding of Head Start programs.

TWENTY-FIVE STATES SUE BIDEN ADMIN OVER MASK MANDATE FOR KIDS IN HEAD START

The new rules issued last month require children over 2 in Head Start programs to wear masks, while the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services is requiring staff, contractors and volunteers in the program to be vaccinated by the end of January.

“This is a win for the children of Texas for sure, given that parents should be making these decisions, not the Biden administration,” Paxton told Fox News.

“We didn’t think that was right,” Paxton said of the rules implemented by the Biden administration. “We thought that was a parental choice, not a Joe Biden choice, so we sued them, arguing that he didn’t have the authority – statutory or constitutional – to do this.”

“The agency’s rule requires Head Start staff to be vaccinated and near universal masking of children and adults,” an opinion from the court states. “It is undisputed that an agency cannot act without congressional authorization. Thus, the question here is whether Congress authorized HHS to impose these requirements.”

Asked whether he expected backlash from opposition, Paxton said, “I think parents are going to be glad they get to make the decision. This is a victory for freedom in America.”

A nurse gives a girl a dose of the Pfizer vaccine at a COVID-19 vaccine clinic at Lyman High School in Longwood on the day before classes begin for the 2021-22 school year.
(Paul Hennessy/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images)

“Hopefully, the Biden administration will lay down their sword and stop jabbing at parents and kids and just let this thing stand,” Paxton added. “I’m sure they won’t. … They think they should make the choice for these children and for these parents.”

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The court also noted that it “concludes that there is a substantial likelihood that the mandates do not fit within the Head Start Act’s authorizing text, that HHS failed to follow the APA in promulgating the mandates and that the mandates are arbitrary and capricious,” and stated that it “preliminarily enjoins their enforcement in Texas.”

Texas Gov. Gregg Abbott celebrated the ruling on social media, tweeting: “Texas just beat Biden again. Another of Biden’s vaccine & mask mandates was just halted by a federal judge in Texas.”

Last week, 25 states announced lawsuits against the Biden administration over mask mandates for children and vaccine requirements for staff Head Start programs.

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Colorado wildfire: No deaths have been reported. It may be a ‘New Year’s miracle,’ governor says

“We might have our very own New Year’s miracle on our hands if it holds up that there was no loss of life,” Gov. Jared Polis said. One person who was unaccounted for has been found and several others treated for injuries, authorities said.

“In the blink of an eye,” the governor said Friday at a news conference, “many families having minutes, minutes to get whatever they could, their pets, their kids into the car and leave.”

Still, hundreds have lost homes and perhaps everything they own. Entire subdivisions burned, Boulder County Sheriff Joe Pelle said. “The west side of Superior, Old Town Superior … are totally gone. That accounts easily for 500 homes,” he said after he and the governor flew over the area to assess the damage.

And the tally could rise, Pelle acknowledged. In addition to the devastation in Superior, a town about 10 miles southeast of Boulder, the sheriff said they saw dozens of homes burned in other areas.

“I would estimate it’s going to be at least 500 homes,” Pelle said. “I would not be surprised if it’s a thousand.”

The wildfire began Thursday morning and swallowed at least 1,600 acres in a matter of hours, prompting orders for people across two communities to evacuate. Some 370 homes were destroyed in a single subdivision just west of the town of Superior, while another 210 homes may have been lost in Old Town Superior, the Boulder County sheriff said Thursday.

Superior Mayor Clint Folsom told CNN’s Poppy Harlow the hurricane-force winds were unusual.

“We get these strong winds occasionally, but it’s rare when it really moves soil like this one did, and then you combine it with the fire element and then our extremely dry — extremely dry conditions that we’ve had over the last several months. It was just a recipe for disaster,” he said Friday.

As quickly as the winds began, they subsided overnight and the weather started a quick swing to the other extreme: The fire-ravaged area was under a winter weather warning Friday, with 5 to 10 inches of snow expected to fall by Saturday, CNN meteorologist Robert Shackelford said.

Fire officials do not anticipate much more fire growth. Containment remains at 0% because fighting the Marshall Fire is different from battling other blazes, the fire’s incident commander, Michael Smith, told reporters Friday.

“This is about working around the perimeters of homes and working our way through the process,” he said. “We’re having to kind of change our thought process on what containment looks like as far as a percentage, but I do think that our forward progress is going to be very minimal from this point on.”

Downed power lines are suspected as the cause of the Marshall Fire, Pelle said, though authorities continue to investigate.

But, according to a Boulder Office of Emergency Management statement, power company Xcel Energy said it found no downed power lines in the area where the fire started.
About 17,000 customers had no power Friday in Colorado, most of them in Boulder County, after the blaze grew to 6,200 acres overnight, Michelle Kelly with the Boulder Incident Management Team told CNN affiliate KUSA.

“We do still have active burning within the fire perimeter both in the communities of Superior and Louisville,” she said.

‘The winds were going crazy strong’

Thursday’s event was a “truly historic windstorm,” with gusts over 100 mph in Jefferson and Boulder counties fueling the blazes, the National Weather Service said.

Folsom “witnessed houses just exploding right before our eyes” on Thursday evening, he told CNN.

“It was one of the most disturbing situations I have ever been in,” Folsom said Friday.

“One minute, there was nothing. Then, plumes of smoke appeared. Then, flames. Then, the flames jumped around and multiplied,” said Boulder Heights resident Andy Thorn, who’d always worried about wildfires during periods of high wind. He watched the flames and smoke spread Thursday from his home in the foothills.

Wind gusts Thursday pushed the blaze “down a football field in a matter of seconds,” Polis said Thursday.

“There’s no way,” he said, “to quantify in any financial way, the price of a loss — of losing the chair that was handed down to you from your grandmother, of losing your childhood yearbooks, of losing your photos, of losing your computer files — which hundreds of Colorado families have experienced today with no warning.”

Among them is a University of Colorado assistant football coach who said his family lost “every material possession” Thursday in the wildfire.

“Our home, cars, and everything we had in our home lost to the fires that ripped through our community,” Mark Smith tweeted. “Thank you to those who reached out. Processing how to completely start over and grateful for our health.”

Former Boulder Mayor Sam Weaver evacuated animals Thursday afternoon from the home of his brother, who with his family is out of the country, he told CNN on Friday.

“The winds were going crazy strong. We saw two different flame fronts near their house about half a mile away,” said Weaver, who’s also the former fire chief for the community of Sugarloaf.

“We spent a couple hours loading the animals into trailers and trucks and taking them away, pulling out the computer and photo albums as the flames got closer and closer,” he said. “By the time we left, say around 4, the flames were a few hundred yards away — maybe 300, 400 yards away. So, we had to leave.

“We hope the house is OK,” Weaver added, “but have no word yet today.”

‘It was just apocalyptic-feeling’

Evacuation centers were opened, including one for evacuees who have Covid-19, Polis said. In line with a nationwide explosion of cases, Colorado on Thursday recorded its highest ever daily coronavirus case count, with 5,427 cases per day on average statewide over the prior week, according to a CNN analysis of Johns Hopkins University data.

Overall, “We had 300 people overnight in shelters,” Kelly said.

On Thursday at a Costco in Superior, Hunt Frye was shopping for soup for his wife when a worker told customers to evacuate. People initially were calm as they left the store, Frye said, but then took off like “antelope, running all over the place.”

“It was pretty scary. It was kind of like a life beyond a dream,” he said. “It was just apocalyptic-feeling.”

As he drove away through the haze, Frye was “trying to get out of there in a safe manner.”

“But people were running from their houses with their pet cats and, you know, everybody was very panic-stricken,” he said. “The thing that really struck me was the fear in the police officers’ face(s) who were trying to kind of get traffic going. They were legitimately scared.”

A notification Thursday morning from their daughters’ day care in nearby Louisville pinged Chris Smith and his wife, of downtown Superior, to “come pick up the girls,” he told CNN affiliate KCNC. “Please act quickly,” city officials there had urged in their evacuation order.

“I called my wife, and she started collecting valuables and clothes to evacuate,” Smith said. He drove through smoke on his way there and on his way back.

Across the fire zone, roads were blocked by smoke and traffic gridlock as people tried to make their way out.

The situation on the ground was “unbelievable,” Weaver told CNN.

“When you talk about what’s going on on the ground, it was really about trying to stay away from the front of the fire that was being pushed forward and get everything out that we could,” he said. “The focus was on life safety.”

Julie Tanous, an employee at a Home Depot in Louisville, watched from the store as wind and smoke blew through the area.

“It was like a disaster movie,” Tanous told CNN on Friday. She was back at the store cleaning up. Ash is everywhere, she said.

Winds made battle against fire difficult

Strong wind would make battling the fire head on a challenge, Weaver told CNN’s “New Day.”

“The high wind speeds were driving embers and other flames forward so quickly,” he said, adding, “There is no way to attack it head on, that’s absolutely true. Even from the sides, you have to be careful with the swirling winds that are nearby.”

Winds had dropped by early Friday to below 20 mph, and the area is under a winter weather warning, with heavy snowfall expected by sunrise, CNN meteorologist Shackelford said.

Friday’s anticipated snowfall “comes at a good time,” Shackelford said, “since 100% of the state is under some sort of drought, and this snowfall will also help to contain the Marshall Fire.”

Much of the western US has been mired in serious and historic drought, with warmer temperatures and drier conditions consequences of climate change. Denver has seen just over 1 inch of precipitation in the past six months — a record low for the second half of the year. Boulder and its surrounding counties are classified as under an “extreme drought,” per the US Drought Monitor.
The wildfires plaguing Colorado close out a year in which more than 58,000 wildfires burned more than 7.8 million acres across the United States — just above the 10-year average — according to the National Interagency Fire Center. The national wildfire preparedness ranking stood at its highest level for a record 68 consecutive days this summer as the Northern Hemisphere’s summer of wildfires let off record-breaking carbon emissions.

But while snow Friday in Colorado will help halt the wildfire’s advance, “for some people that’s going to be a problem for trying to retrieve belongings from any burned home,” Weaver said.

“If the snow falls too quickly,” he added, “it can do further damage to property.”

Recovery plans are already underway

Boulder’s Office of Emergency Management asked residents to stay out of evacuation zones Friday morning, though some had already begun the recovery process. A search party was scheduled on Facebook for the weekend. On another Facebook page, dozens posted about animals they’re looking for or found in and around the burned areas.

Polis and President Joe Biden spoke Friday, the governor said, and Biden approved an expedited major disaster declaration which would be finalized later in the day.

“What that means is, it allows those who suffered loss — small businesses and homeowners — they won’t have to wait for the preliminary damage assessment for housing and small business assistance,” Polis said. “So that will be forthcoming very soon.

“And the President sends his regards to the people of Colorado and those who are directly impacted.”

At least six people had been treated for injuries related to one of the fires, a UCHealth spokesperson told CNN. A law enforcement officer suffered a minor eye injury from blowing debris.

Polis on Thursday declared a state of emergency, allowing the state to access emergency disaster funds to help the response.

CNN’s Christina Zdanowicz, David Williams, Carma Hassan, Natalie Andes, Derek Van Dam and Monica Garrett contributed to this report.



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Disaster Declared in Colorado After Fire That ‘Felt Like the Apocalypse’

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No Reported Deaths in Colorado Wildfires

The fast moving fire on Thursday scorched more than 6,000 acres and forced thousands of residents to evacuate.

“Overnight, firefighters continued mitigation efforts. Good news, we still have no reports of casualties or fatalities. The one missing person we had last night has been accounted for and is well. So that’s awesome news and actually, I think, given the events that we had yesterday, pretty miraculous. We do know we had power lines down in the area of the origin of the fire. The origin of the fire hasn’t been confirmed. It’s suspected to be power lines. But we are investigating that today and we have folks on the ground as we speak trying to pinpoint that cause.” “This hit close to home for so many of us, literally in some cases, for those of us who live nearby. But also in terms of this being a fire that wasn’t a wildfire in the forest, it was a suburban and urban fire. The Costco, we all shop at, the Target we buy our kids clothes at, all surrounded, damaged. Nearly 1,000 homes in two very tight knit, beautiful communities that our state has are gone.”

The fast moving fire on Thursday scorched more than 6,000 acres and forced thousands of residents to evacuate.CreditCredit…Erin Schaff/The New York Times

BOULDER, Colo. — A wind-swept wildfire that tore through suburban neighborhoods between Denver and Boulder on Thursday, forcing the evacuation of thousands of people, may have destroyed between 500 and 1,000 homes, the authorities said Friday morning, making it the most destructive blaze in state history.

The fire, as intense as it was sudden, sent tens of thousands of residents of Boulder County scrambling to leave department stores and houses on Thursday as fire trucks swarmed the area. Though wildfires are seen as less of a threat in suburban areas, especially in December, a period of intense drought had created the conditions for the flames to spread, destroying houses, a shopping complex and a hotel.

“It felt like the apocalypse,” said Ruthie Werner, a resident of Louisville, Colo., who had gone to shop at a Target store but arrived to find the parking lot ablaze.

Gov. Jared Polis said at a news briefing that President Biden had approved an expedited major disaster declaration, which allows those who lost their homes or small business to get assistance before the preliminary damage assessment is done. He said schools and major hospitals in the area were spared.

As Mr. Polis toured the damage by helicopter on Friday, video published by a local television station showed how the flames had struck seemingly at random. One house on a cul-de-sac would be destroyed, while the others looked to be intact. In one neighborhood, a line of about 10 still-smoldering rubble piles was next to other houses that had appeared to escape severe damage.

Despite the destruction, no deaths had been recorded, a figure that Mr. Polis said at the news conference would be a “New Year’s miracle” if it held.

“It wasn’t a wildfire in the forest, it was a suburban and urban fire,” said Mr. Polis, a Democrat who lives in Boulder County. “The Costco we all shop at, the Target we buy our kids’ clothes at — all damaged.”

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A period of intense drought created the conditions for the flames to spread on Thursday in areas between Denver and Boulder, destroying houses, a shopping complex and a hotel.CreditCredit…Erin Schaff/The New York Times

The fire, which began late Thursday morning, burned in a “mosaic” fashion, encouraged by 105 mile-an-hour winds. It torched about 6,000 acres, said Sheriff Joe Pelle of Boulder County, who added that damage assessments were still being done on Friday. The authorities suspect the fire was caused by a downed power line, but that has not been confirmed, he said.

Much of the fire has been contained, with only a few parts of Boulder County still smoldering, he said. Heavy snowfall was in the forecast for Friday, which would help tamp down the fire but could also lead to freezing pipes, officials said.

Louisville and Superior, both about nine miles east of Boulder, suffered the most “catastrophic” losses, he said. Residents of those cities were ordered to evacuate on Thursday, along with residents of nearby Broomfield and Westminster.

While there was no immediate official count of how many people were ultimately displaced, an estimated 200 people are currently staying at emergency shelters in the county, Mr. Polis said.

Evacuees fled the fire zones under plumes of smoke that clouded the sky for miles on Thursday, not knowing if their houses would make it through the night. Roads and highways in the Denver metro area were jammed with thousands of residents trying to flee.

“It took us almost an hour to get out of our neighborhood — it was complete gridlock,” said John Stein, who was walking his dog in Superior when he saw smoke in the area and heard sirens.

Thomas Maxwell, 25, said he did not know on Thursday if his parents’ house in Louisville was still standing. Mr. Maxwell, who lives in California, had been dog-sitting for them while they vacationed in Spain. He woke them with a midnight call to say that he had evacuated to a hotel with their two dogs.

“It was crazy how fast it happened,” Maxwell said. “I read about wildfires in California all the time. Now I’m experiencing it. It’s so different.”

Wildfires in the American West have been worsening — growing larger, spreading faster and reaching into mountainous elevations that were once too wet and cool to have supported fierce fires. What was once a seasonal phenomenon has become a year-round menace, with fires burning later into the fall and into the winter.

Recent research has suggested that heat and dryness associated with global warming are major reasons for the increase in bigger and stronger fires, as rainfall patterns have been disrupted, snow melts earlier and meadows and forests are scorched into kindling.

Colorado had the three largest wildfires in its history in the summer of 2020, each one burning more than 200,000 acres, Mr. Polis said. But those fires burned federally owned forests and land, he said, while the fires on Thursday destroyed suburban developments and shopping plazas.

“As a millennial, I’m just looking outside and I’m seeing climate change,” said Angelica Kalika, 36, of Broomfield. “I’m seeing my future. I grew up in Colorado, and this is a place where I’ve had snowy Christmases and a nice 60-degree summer. But, for me, this is a moment of deep reckoning of climate change when there is a wildfire outside my door.”

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