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When asked about the strange "at-risk" rationale for keeping the owner's moniker under wraps, Post managing editor Gary Clark expressed concern. "This is a new one for us," he wrote via e-mail. "To my knowledge, we have never seen a police agency withhold the name of somebody because of his age." He added, "To withhold his name but identify him as the owner of a specific liquor store is, frankly, pointless. We are contacting officials in Colorado Springs to protest the decision and to determine what legal authority they have for withholding the name."
The CSPD rep who could presumably solve these mysteries is Lieutenant Skip Arms, the department's public-information officer. But during an interview on December 5, he was notably short of answers. Arms said the definition of an at-risk adult as a crime victim over age sixty "has been in our records-release manual for years," adding, "It's the district attorney's interpretation of the statute. The identity of at-risk adults is protected, similar to sexual-assault victims." Yet this argument had been contradicted two days earlier, when the Colorado Springs District Attorney's Office named the owner — Charles Kellogg — in a press release announcing that DA John Newsome had ruled out any charges against him. Arms speculated that Kellogg's name was included in the release because "it was already out there," just as the business's address had been. "The media was swarming all over that store," he recalled.
At any rate, Arms said that Deputy DA Denise Minish was researching the naming matter and should be able to render a verdict on whether or not the CSPD did the right thing by holding back Kellogg's handle. Minish confirmed that she was looking into the procedure, but she subsequently said she couldn't make a final determination until she consulted with Arms and CSPD attorneys, who weren't getting back to her on the topic in the wake of the New Life assault.
That's a good excuse, at least for now. Let's see how long it lasts.
Give me a libertarian or give me death: In the meantime, the Colorado Springs media is about to greet a strong new voice: Wayne Laugesen, who's leaving the Boulder Weekly, where he's toiled on and off since 1994, to become the editorial-page editor of the Colorado Springs Gazette.
For several months, the Gazette advertised for "a libertarian thinker who can consistently write distinctive, persuasive editorials for our daily newspaper and online in tune with our philosophy of (a) respect for the individual, (b) limited government, (c) free markets, and (d) free trade." At first blush, someone who's spent most of the past decade-plus at a progressive weekly wouldn't seem to fit the bill. But Laugesen, whose credits include a stint at Soldier of Fortune, never espoused the views shared by most of his Weekly colleagues. "It's always been heated and tense, politically," he allows. "I don't know how many times I've written some right-wing thing for the Weekly, which is owned by a left-wing publisher [Stewart Sallo] and has a liberal editor [Pamela White], and somebody has called up and said, 'You're fired.' It's definitely happened — but generally we were back on good terms within a few days."