Colorado police chief on leave amid probe into teen’s alleged rape at home

A Colorado police chief has been placed on administrative leave after his stepson and three men were accused of raping a 17-year-old girl in his home while he slept upstairs.

The city of Ouray announced Monday that Police Chief Jeff Wood would remain on leave “pending the outcome of the criminal proceedings of the alleged rape” during a May 2023 party the stepson threw at Wood’s home.

The city did not clarify the exact reason why Wood was asked to step down, but the move comes more than a week after a man unsuccessfully tried to smother a local newspaper’s reporting on the alleged crime by stealing stacks of papers from its racks, instead amplifying the story to nation-wide attention.

The city had previously stated that it had been monitoring the case and Wood’s familial ties to it since Wood was first made aware of the investigation in July 2023.

Wood did not immediately respond to The Post’s request for comment.

His stepson, Nate Dieffenderffer, 18, was arrested in December along with Gabriel Trujillo, 20, and Ashton Whittington, 18, with felony sexual assault, a case that is being handled by the Colorado Bureau of Investigation.

Dieffenderffer is accused of initiating a night-long gang rape horror after a 17-year-old guest at a party he was throwing at Wood’s home passed out from intoxication.

The alleged rape took place in Police Chief Jeff Wood’s home during a party thrown by his stepson. City of Ouray County

The police chief’s stepson restrained her when she tried to fight back and scream before he and Trujillo dragged her into the bathroom and took turns violently abusing her, according to an arrest affidavit.

Whittington allegedly did not participate but did not intervene.

The next morning, the survivor woke up naked and grabbed a sweatshirt from a pile of laundry, which turned out to belong to Wood. His DNA turned up in a subsequent investigation, but not in a significant amount to reflect wrongdoing.

Accused rapist Nathan Dieffenderffer, then 17, is Wood’s stepson. Colorado Bureau of Investigation

According to the victim, the police chief was home the entire time, but slept throughout the hours-long torture.

Wood told The Post last week that he “was first made aware of [the rape allegations] approximately two months after the incident was alleged to have occurred.”

“I anticipate being called as a witness at trial so I feel it is not appropriate to comment on the plausibility of the young lady’s allegations at this time,” Wood said in a statement over email.

Hundreds of newspapers were stolen the morning the Ouray County Plaindealer ran a front-page story on the rape allegations. Ouray County Plaindealer

The charges became widely known when a local restaurant owner stole hundreds of copies of the Ouray County Plaindealer on Jan. 18, the morning it ran a front-page story on the horrifying accusations.

Paul Choate, 41, accused the Plaindealer of attempting to profit off the story and claimed on social media he pulled off the heist to protect the victim.

Shockingly, Choate does not appear to have any ties to the police department, Wood, his stepson or the other three men named in the criminal case.

The upsetting case had triggered intense calls from the community for Wood to resign.

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Colorado firefighters rescue St. Bernard who fell through ice

On Feb. 11, a team of firefighters in Colorado rescued a 155-pound St. Bernard who had fallen through the ice and into freezing waters.

The dog, named Mumford, was struggling to get out of the water and onto the shoreline – leading his owners to make a 911 call, according to the Adams County Fire Rescue team in Denver.

Mumford’s owner was taking the dog for a walk when they decided pick up a rock and skip it across the ice on Jim Baker Reservoir, Captain Jason Seitz of Adams County Fire Rescue told Fox News Digital.

Mumford went after the rock onto the freezing ice leading him 50-75 feet away from the shoreline before falling through, Seitz said.

Seitz and his team were dispatched at 3:22 pm and arrived quickly on the scene at 3:27 pm.

His team arrived at the shoreline and a rescuer was on the ice by 3:31 before rescuing the dog at 3:32 pm., Seitz said.

“The ice rescue process starts at the time of dispatch from the fire station,” Seitz commented.

The firefighter who acts as the rescuer on the scene “dons the ice rescue PPE ‘Mustang Suit’” at the station before leaving. The suit keeps rescuers warm in cold water.

After arriving on the scene, Seitz and his team prepare for the rescue.


Firefighters in Colorado rescued a 155-pound St. Bernard named Mumford after it fell through the ice at a reservoir.
adamscountyfire/Twitter

“The rescuer is then tethered to a rope line that will have two firefighters on shore tending the line. The rescuer then walks or crawls, depending on the thickness of the ice, to the victim in the water,” Seitz shared.

“[As the] rescuer [makes] their way to the victim, they are communicating with the victim or animal by calling it by name,” he added. “The rescuer then enters the water to the side of the victim, proceeding the get behind the victim, assists them out of the water and onto the shore.”

After Mumford was rescued, the team did not report any signs of injury.

Mumford getting dried after the rescue.
adamscountyfire/Twitter
The dog chased a rock the owner threw over the ice and fell through about 50-75 feet away from the shoreline.
adamscountyfire/Twitter


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The Adams County Fire Rescue team in Denver was able to get to the scene and rescue Mumford within minutes of arriving.
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The dog did not have any signs of injury.
adamscountyfire/Twitter


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“We dried Mumford off and the owner walked Mumford home without any signs of trauma from the incident,” Seitz recalled.

The Adams County Fire Rescue team praised Mumford’s owners for their response to the incident, according to social media posts announcing the rescue.

What to do if a person or animal falls through ice

Seitz shared with Fox News Digital the best way to respond if an individual or pet has fallen through ice on a body of water.

“If you witness a victim or animal that falls through the ice, find a landmark around or behind the victim of where they were last seen. Then, call 911 for help. Do not attempt to rescue yourself,” he advised.

He added, “This could cause the rescue to involve two or more victims that are needed to be rescued. The safest plan is to remain on shore and in verbal contact, if possible, with the victim or animal.”

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Colorado Walmart kidnapping stopped by bystanders

Brave bystanders lept into action Thursday to stop a woman from kidnapping a child from a Colorado Walmart, police said.

Shoppers restrained alleged kidnapper Kimberli Jones, 50, until police arrived, the city of Alamosa said.

Jones allegedly snatched “a young child” from a shopping cart inside a Walmart just before 1 p.m., cops said.

Bystanders quickly stopped Jones from stealing the kid and held her until police arrived.


Bystanders spring into action to stop a would-be kidnapper from taking a child from a Colorado Walmart.
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The innocent child was reunited safely with their parents.

Jones was slapped with kidnapping, felony menacing, child abuse and disorderly conduct,

“The Alamosa Police Department would like to thank the brave citizens, Wal-Mart staff, and community for the quick response and for being alert,” police said.

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13-year-old girl leads Nebraska troopers on 100-mph chase

A 13-year-old girl led Nebraska state troopers on a 100-mph chase with an 11-year-old boy riding shotgun in the SUV — where cops later found a gun and marijuana, authorities said.

The incident began unfolding around 9:35 p.m. Monday, when a Nebraska State Patrol (NSP) trooper spotted a Nissan Pathfinder traveling eastbound on Interstate 80 at 35 mph.

The trooper tried to pull the SUV over near Kearney, but the Nissan’s pint-sized driver accelerated and sped away, triggering a pursuit, according to a statement from NPS.

The Nissan reached speeds of more than 100 mph as it fled east. As it reached mile marker 288, another trooper deployed stop sticks to slow down the SUV, which then took an exit at the Shelton interchange and began traveling north at slower speeds.  

A few minutes later, the trooper was able to perform “a tactical vehicle intervention,” according to the agency, which brought the Nissan to a stop.

Nebraska State Patrol troopers stopped a Nissan Pathfinder driven by a 13-year-old girl after a high-speed pursuit near Kearney.
Nebraska State Patrol

From start to finish, the chase lasted about 16 minutes.

The 13-year-old driver and her 11-year-old passenger, who are both from Colorado, were taken into custody without incident.

When troopers searched the SUV, they allegedly discovered a gun, a small amount of marijuana and drug paraphernalia.

The two youngsters, who have not been named, were placed in protective custody. It was not immediately known if they will face charges.

No information has been released about the relationship between the children, the whereabouts of their parents or how the two minors from Colorado ended up traveling alone in an SUV in central Nebraska.    

The Post reached out to the NSP for comment.

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Judge warned in 2021 of gay bar attacker’s shootout plans of Colorado gay nightclub shooter

A judge dismissed the 2021 kidnapping case against the Colorado gay nightclub shooter even though she had previously raised concerns about the defendant stockpiling weapons and explosives and planning a shootout, court transcripts obtained Friday by The Associated Press reveal.

Relatives, including the grandparents who claimed to have been kidnapped, had also told Judge Robin Chittum in August last year about Anderson Aldrich’s struggles with mental illness during a hearing at which the judge said Aldrich needed treatment or “it’s going to be so bad,” according to the documents.

Yet no mention was made during a hearing this July of the suspect’s violent behavior or the status of any mental health treatment.

And Chittum, who had received a letter late last year from relatives of Aldrich’s grandparents warning the suspect was certain to commit murder if freed, granted a defense attorney’s motion to dismiss the case as a trial deadline loomed and the grandparents had stopped cooperating.

The revelation that Chittum regarded the defendant as a potentially serious threat adds to the advance warnings authorities are known to have had about Aldrich’s increasingly violent behavior and it raises more questions about whether the recent mass shooting at Club Q in Colorado Springs could have been prevented.

Anderson Lee Aldrich surrenders to police at a home where his mother, Laura Voepel, was renting a room in Colorado Springs.
AP

Five people were killed and 17 wounded in the Nov. 19 attack. Aldrich was charged last week with 305 criminal counts, including hate crimes and murder. Aldrich’s public defender has declined to talk about the case, and investigators have not released a motive.

Harvard law professor Alan Dershowitz said transcripts of court hearings in the case confirmed his view that “more could have been done to prevent the violence.”

Dershowitz acknowledged that he didn’t know every detail in front of Chittum during the hearings but said that while judges are typically supposed to be umpires, “judges are usually more aggressive in cases like this, when the handwriting is on the wall.”

In many cases, Dershowitz said, prosecutors can overreach to get a conviction, but “here, you have the legal system failing.”

Chittum’s comments in Aldrich’s kidnapping case had previously been under a court seal that was lifted last week at the request of prosecutors and news organizations including the AP. Chittum’s assistant, Chad Dees, said Friday that the judge declined to comment.

Mugshot of Aldrich after being arrested for the Club Q shooting.
AP

“You clearly have been planning for something else,” Chittum told Aldrich during the August 2021 hearing, after the defendant testified about an affinity for shooting firearms and a history of mental health problems.

“It didn’t have to do with your grandma and grandpa. It was saving all these firearms and trying to make this bomb, and making statements about other people being involved in some sort of shootout and a huge thing. And then that’s kind of what it turned into,” the judge said.

Aldrich — whose defense lawyers say is nonbinary and uses they/them pronouns — spoke to Chittum in court that day about repeated abuse as a young child by their father and longtime struggles with severe post-traumatic stress disorder and bipolar disorder, the transcript shows.

(The vast majority of people with mental illnesses are not violent, studies show, and experts say most people who are violent do not have mental illnesses. Additionally, nonbinary people and advocates warn against making assumptions about people with nontraditional gender identities.)

Aldrich, who was largely raised by their grandparents, wanted to join the military as a teenager but decided it wasn’t going to happen, the transcripts show. The suspect described refusing to take medications and then “getting on track” after moving to Colorado, obtaining a medical marijuana license and starting college, according to the transcripts.

Mourners gather outside Club Q to visit a memorial, which has been moved from a sidewalk outside of police tape that was surrounding the club.
AP

“I also went to the (shooting range) as often as I could since the age of 16,” Aldrich testified, the transcripts show. “My mom and I would go … sometimes multiple times a week and have fun shooting. This is a major pastime for me. Going to school, working and then relaxing at the shooting range.”

Aldrich said they went to Dragonman’s shooting range east of Colorado Springs, where the dirt driveway was lined by mannequins that looked bloodied Friday. Nearby were rusted vehicles, some peppered in bullet holes. Two people who appeared to work at the range said they did not know Aldrich and declined further comment.

Shooting at the range “was highly therapeutic for me, and was a great way to spend spare time,” Aldrich told Chittum.

When Aldrich’s grandparents made plans to move to Florida, the suspect became despondent. Leading up to the 2021 confrontation with authorities, Aldrich started drinking liquor regularly and smoking heroin, dropped out of school and quit working, the transcript shows.

The charges in that case against Aldrich — who had stockpiled explosives and allegedly spoke of plans to become the “next mass killer” before engaging in an armed standoff with SWAT teams — were thrown out during a four-minute hearing this past July at which the prosecution didn’t even argue to keep the case active.

The prosecution was the responsibility solely of the district attorney, said Ian Farrell, associate professor at the University of Denver Sturm College of Law, noting that judges like Chittum have no power to force charges.

A couple hugs at a makeshift memorial near the Q Club.
AP

“Since a deadline for proceeding with (Aldrich’s) trial was coming up and the prosecution clearly was not ready to proceed … the trial judge had no choice but to dismiss the case,” Farrell said.

Judges can appoint special prosecutors in extreme situations, such as when a decision not to prosecute is done in bad faith, Farrell said. But the 2021 case did not appear to rise to that bar, he said, because witnesses in the case were unavailable.

Howard Black, spokesperson for the district attorney’s office, has said he cannot share information about the kidnapping case because it’s part of the current investigation. El Paso County District Attorney Michael Allen has said his office did everything it could to prosecute the case, including trying to subpoena Aldrich’s mother, but has repeatedly declined to elaborate.

During the 2021 standoff, Aldrich allegedly told the frightened grandparents about firearms and bomb-making material in the basement of the home they all shared. Aldrich vowed not to let the grandparents interfere with plans to “go out in a blaze.”

Aldrich livestreamed on Facebook a subsequent confrontation with SWAT teams at the house of their mother, Laura Voepel, where the defendant eventually surrendered, was arrested and had weapons, ammunition and more than 100 pounds (45 kilograms) of explosive materials seized.

The FBI had received a tip on Aldrich a day before the threat but closed out the case just weeks later with no federal charges filed.

By August 2021, when Aldrich bonded out of jail, the grandparents were describing the suspect as a “sweet young” person, according to the transcripts. At two subsequent hearings that fall, defense attorneys described how Aldrich was attending therapy and was on medications, the transcripts show.

In an October 2021 courtroom exchange, Chittum told Aldrich to “hang in there with the meds.”

“It’s an adjustment period for sure,” Aldrich replied, to which the judge replied, “Yeah it will settle, don’t worry. Good luck.”

The case had been headed toward a plea agreement early this year but fell apart after family members stopped cooperating and prosecutors failed to successfully serve a subpoena to testify to Aldrich’s 69-year-old grandmother Pamela Pullen, who was bedridden in Florida.

There is scant discussion in the transcripts of efforts by prosecutors to subpoena other potential witnesses — including Aldrich’s mother, grandfather and a fourth person who is listed in court documents but not identified.

Although authorities missed some warning signs about Aldrich’s capability for violence, the opposite happened across the country in Minnesota this week, where a man who said he idolized Aldrich was arrested after trying to buy grenades from an FBI informant and building an arsenal of automatic weapons to use against police, according to charges.

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Alleged Colorado gunman Anderson Lee Aldrich evaded red flag law

The gunman who allegedly opened fire inside a Colorado LGBTQ club Saturday night, killing five people, had prior run-ins with the law including reportedly threatening his own mother with a homemade bomb.

Anderson Lee Aldrich — who was recovering in a hospital after the attack — had been arrested and charged with menacing and first-degree kidnapping in June 2021 for allegedly making a threat to detonate an explosive, according to police records.

Aldrich had “multiple weapons” and ammunition in his possession when he allegedly threatened to unleash carnage — causing ten homes in the area to be evacuated.

People hold a vigil at a makeshift memorial near the Club Q nightclub on Nov. 20, 2022 in Colorado Springs.

A little girl is spotted holding a candle near a makeshift memorial created for the Club Q nightclub victims on Nov. 20, 2022 in Colorado Springs, Colo.

A message to visitors sits at a makeshift memorial near the Club Q nightclub on Nov. 20, 2022 in Colorado Springs, Colo.

Police did not find any homemade explosives.

His mother had refused to cooperate with investigators in the case. Aldrich was not prosecuted, according to local Fox-affiliate station KDVR.

The records were sealed, helping him evade any “red flag” laws and potential seizure of weapons, according to the Associated Press.

Aldrich himself said the case was dropped in a voicemail he left to the paper after calling an editor asking for the story to be removed or updated.

“There is absolutely nothing there, the case was dropped, and I’m asking you either remove or update the story,” he said in a voice message to The Gazette. “The entire case was dismissed.”

A spokesperson for the district attorney’s office said its investigation into the night club shooting will also include a probe of the bomb threat.

Gun control activists wondered if the red flag law had been utilized if the deadly tragedy could have been prevented or if it could at least have flagged Aldrich to authorities.

“We need heroes beforehand — parents, co-workers, friends who are seeing someone go down this path,” said Colorado state Rep. Tom Sullivan, whose son was killed in the Aurora theater shooting and sponsored the state’s red flag law passed in 2019. “This should have alerted them, put him on their radar.”

Law enforcement personnel stand outside Club Q following the shooting in Colorado Springs, Colo., on Nov. 20, 2022.
AP

Aldrich allegedly entered Club Q in El Paso County with a long gun just before midnight and immediately opened fire on patrons and employees — until several customers were able to stop the bloodshed and subdued him.

Five people died and 18 were injured — seven critically, police said. Investigators are looking into a possible motive and if hate crime charges are appropriate. The FBI is assisting in the investigation.

With Post wires.

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JonBenet Ramsey case may have link to unsolved 1997 Boulder rape: dad

A Colorado father claims Boulder cops may have missed an opportunity to catch JonBenet Ramsey’s killer — by ignoring an attack on his own young daughter which happened months after the infamous murder.

The dad claims a masked man dressed in black broke into his home on Sept. 14, 1997, snuck into his then-12-year-old’s daughter’s room, threatened and raped her.

The terrifying incident was foiled only because the girl’s mother heard voices, and came into the room to investigate, prompting the mysterious man to flee.

JonBenet, just 6, had been killed nearly nine months earlier. She lived less than two miles away, and the two girls went to the same dance studio, the father said.

In a chilling interview with The U.S. Sun, the dad recalled how the same type of cigarette butts — Camel Blue — were found outside both homes and said he begged local police to investigate.

But Boulder cops weren’t interested, he charged. Neither case has been solved.

The girl is only identified by The Sun with the pseudonym “Amy.”

The man said an intruder broke into his home and raped his daughter “Amy” nine months after Ramsey was killed in the same city.
Photo by Barry Williams/Getty Images
The man said he hired a private investigator that found links to the Ramsey case — including the same type of cigarette butts outside of both homes.
ZUMA Press

“There are so many similarities between the two cases that I think there’s a very good chance it was the same person,” Amy’s dad told the outlet.

“The only difference is my daughter survived,” he added.

Boulder police were “dismissive” and “disinterested,” the dad alleged.

“They were completely uninterested,” he claimed. “They didn’t care about this at all … they would just lie, telling us they’d look into this or that — but they hadn’t.

The father said that Boulder police were “dismissive” of the potential link between both cases.
AP Photo/David Zalubowski, File
JonBenet’s parents John and Patsy Ramsey at a press conference in 2000.
Getty Images

JonBenet Ramsey, a child beauty queen, was found dead in her family’s home on Dec. 26, 1996. Authorities said earlier this month they would launch a new probe into her killing with cold case investigators.

Amy awoke to see the stranger standing over her bed. He kept calling her name.

“I know who you are,” he repeated, before warning, “I’ll knock you out, shut up.”

He then sexually attacked her, her father recounted.

The dad hired a private investigator, who discovered the cigarette butts and found other possible links between the two cases — including nearly two dozen burglaries or trespassing reports in the area and background checks which showed possible suspects in Amy’s case once worked in JonBenet’s home — but police allegedly took no action.

“They were completely uninterested … they didn’t care about my daughter’s case and they didn’t even really care about the Ramsey case either,” he said.

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Colorado GOP official Hugh McKean dead at 55

A leading Colorado Republican lawmaker died on Sunday at the age of 55, according to statements from his party. 

House Minority Leader Hugh McKean died in his home just days after turning 55, an aide said. No cause of death was provided. 

Funeral services are being planned and details will be made public once finalized. 

McKean was elected to represent Colorado House District 51 in 2016. Four years later he was elected as Leader of the Colorado House Republican Caucus. 

In a Twitter post announcing McKean’s death, Colorado House Republicans said he was “fiercely passionate about serving the great state of Colorado and will be missed dearly.”

Colorado GOP Chairwoman Kristi Burton Brown called McKean “kind” and “positive,” adding that he “took the time to invest in so many lives, including my children.” 

McKean leaves behind his family members Aiden McKean, 21, Hanna McKean, 23, and his “dearest partner and friend Amy Parks,” Colorado House Republicans said. 



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