Law passed requiring faster compliance from social media companies regarding warrants; Polis signs expansion of red flag law, allowing more to seek gun removals

Headlines Tuesday, April 7, 2026

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    Law passed requiring faster compliance from social media companies regarding warrants; Polis signs expansion of red flag law, allowing more to seek gun removals KGNU News

Law passed requiring faster compliance from social media companies regarding warrants

A bill was signed into law on Monday requiring certain social media platforms to respond faster to warrants from Colorado law enforcement.

The law goes into effect this August and will penalize social media companies by up to $5,000 for each violation if they don’t comply with the warrant in 72 hours, amongst other criteria.

Companies used to have at least a month or more to respond, but after the shooting at Evergreen High School and other tragedies, advocates are finally seeing a change they have been pushing for. 

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Polis signs expansion of red flag law, allowing more to seek gun removals 

Gov. Jared Polis signed an expansion of Colorado’s red flag law on Monday afternoon, broadening the state’s 2019 red flag law. 

The law allows certain people to petition the courts for a temporary restraining order to prohibit people, considered a danger to themselves or others, from possessing firearms.

The newest addition to the list of people is health care and educational institutions.

Polis said, “This updated legislation builds on our strong law to promote safe gun ownership.”

The new law takes effect immediately.

Polis signed the original red flag bill into law during his first year in office. This expansion was passed during this, his final legislative session.

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Colorado budget writers opt to contract new private prison

This week, the Joint Budget Committee (JBC) opted to contract with a private prison company to reopen and operate one of their shuttered facilities in Colorado in order to handle a projected increase in inmates.

The JBC voted to allow the state to spend roughly $115 per inmate per day at this new facility, which is about double the current per-inmate rate they pay CoreCivic, Colorado’s only private prison provider.

The state estimates it will cost $6 million to get the new private prison running, and about $40 million each year afterward to operate it. The prison is expected to house roughly 700 inmates. 

It is unclear which shuttered private prison in Colorado could be reopened and which private prison provider the state will contract with.

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New Front Range passenger train named “CoCo”

After more than 25,000 votes, Colorado’s future Front Range passenger train has a name: the Colorado Connector, or, as it will soon be known on platforms and schedules across the state, CoCo. 

The Front Range Passenger Rail District’s naming contest drew thousands of early votes, with CoCo narrowly beating out finalists Front Range Express Destinations, or FRED, Colorado Ranger and RangeLink.

The overall goal of the train is to reduce traffic on I-25, connect the state’s growing population, and give Coloradans another way to move between cities.

The line is expected to run from Fort Collins to Pueblo, with stops in cities and regions like Loveland, Boulder, Louisville, Westminster, Denver, Littleton, Colorado Springs and Trinidad. It will use existing tracks shared with freight railroads and could eventually connect Colorado to parts of Wyoming and New Mexico.

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You can hear daily headlines on the Morning Magazine, KGNU’s weekday morning show, with coverage of local and regional public affairs and news with headlines and commentary. Click here to listen to full episodes of the Morning Magazine.

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