MLK marade at 10 A.M, CO digital portal for ICE misconduct as residents protest ICE in Denver, Friday State of the Tribes address calls for more action from CO lawmakers

Headlines Monday January 19, 2026

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    MLK marade at 10 A.M, CO digital portal for ICE misconduct as residents protest ICE in Denver, Friday State of the Tribes address calls for more action from CO lawmakers KGNU News

MLK Marade at 10 A.M. 

Today is Martin Luther King Junior Day, celebrated in the United States to commemorate the life and work of one of America’s foremost spiritual and civil rights leaders. In his civil rights campaigns, King made several stops in Colorado, notably in neighborhoods throughout Denver. Celebrating King’s legacy in the mile high state, there are several events kicking off today, most notably Denver’s MLK Day Marade – that’s one part march one part parade. Kicking off at 10 a.m. starting from in front of the statue of Dr. King in City Park and traveling to Lincoln Veterans Memorial Park.

Today’s commemorations come as the first year the National Park Service will not be offering free entry to National Parks on M-L-K day. The Trump administration rolled back free entry to the U.S. National parks, including Rocky Mountain National park, on M-L-K Day and Juneteenth in place of Flag Day, which is Trump’s birthday.

 

CO Digital Portal for ICE Misconduct as Resident Protest ICE in Denver

Colorado is opening an online portal next week where the public can log misconduct by Immigration and Customs Enforcement. The Attorney General’s Office says the portal will be used to review documented ICE activity in the state and address any concerns. According to Denver 7, Attorney General Phil Weiser referenced the current situation in Minnesota and said he wants to keep Coloradans safe. ICE activity in Minnesota has surged since Renee Good was killed by an agent a week ago.

This comes as hundreds of protestors took to Denver’s capitol building to protest recent moves by the Trump administration, including ICE’s increased presence in cities across the country. The “One Year is Enough” protest was smaller than similar protests which took place across the nation, but advocated for onlookers to rally against the Trump administration as “ for 362 days we have watched our gravest fears materialize – violence corruption and betrayal.” Signs from rally-goers stood against everything from ICE, to the capture of Venezuela president Nicolas Maduro and the administration’s handing of documents related to convicted sex offender Jeffery Epstein.

 

Friday State of the Tribes Address Calls for More Action from CO lawmakers

Leaders from the Ute Mountain Ute and Southern Ute Tribes gave the fourth-annual State of the Tribes address Friday in front of a joint session of the Colorado Legislature. Southern Ute chairman Melvin J. Baker called on lawmakers to collaborate more on public safety, environmental contamination cleanups and illegal construction of power lines on tribal land. Ute Mountain Ute tribal council member Marilynn House urged lawmakers to consult with tribes more often.

House and Baker also highlighted housing, healthcare, Colorado River water rights and sports betting as other key issues for the tribes. The Ute Mountain Ute and Southern Ute reservations are in Southwest Colorado, but they lived for generations across much of the state. Other tribes, like the Arapaho and the Cheyenne, also called Colorado home.

 

Denver Police Send Out Shelter in Place, Then take barricaded person into Custody 

The alert intended for a two-block radius near 2495 South Vine Street, just south of the University of Denver was sent to a “ broader area than intended” according to the Denver Public Safety Department. CBS News Colorado verified that some people as far as 8 miles from the location of the incident received the alert. The alert instructed people to the Denver Police Department’s X account but updated information for the log-in-required site was not posted for another 40 minutes. Denver Public Safety Department oversees Denver Police Department, the Denver Fire Department, and the Denver Sheriff Department. The shelter-in-place order was lifted early Sunday morning after the suspect was in custody.

Sunday evening, Kelly Jacobs, director of communications and strategy for Denver’s Department of Public Safety said the department hopes to have better information to share once a root cause of the widespread alert is identified. They are willing to change procedures to ensure communication accuracy in the future.

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Class Action Lawsuit of Celestial Seasonings Over Citric Acid Ingredient Disclosure

A class-action lawsuit was filed in the U.S. District Court in Colorado last week alleging Celestial Seasonings misrepresented some of their tea ingredients saying that some of their offerings use manufactured citric acid, or MCA. The complaint against the Boulder tea company says the MCA chemical used is “subject to significant chemical processing.”

The complaint takes issue with packaging from some of Celestial Seasonings teas which include labeling such as, “teas from the finest ingredients, with no artificial flavors or colors.” The lawsuit says the plaintiffs would not have bought the teas if they were aware of the use of synthetic critic acid in the teas. This report comes from the Daily Camera, who says Celestial Seasonings’ parent company Hain-Celestial group incorporated did not respond to requests for comments at the time of publishing.

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