
Police in Denver metro area arrest suspect after stabbing early Wednesday morning
When officers arrived, they said the suspect took off in a vehicle. Officers pursued the vehicle, and the pursuit ended near I-76 and I-70 in Arvada when the suspect pulled over and was taken into custody.
Officers said they located a stolen gun inside the vehicle.
The 42-year-old victim was transported to the hospital.
According to investigators, three people were waiting outside Labor Works for it to open when they got into an argument.

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CNN
38 minutes ago
- CNN
Cash, gloves and screenshots: Top investigators detail Bryan Kohberger's unusual behavior after Idaho student murders
In the days after murdering four University of Idaho students in an off-campus home, Bryan Kohberger's behavior shifted dramatically and investigators would later find that he had fixated on news coverage of the killings and began paying for items in cash – often wearing gloves – as he avoided the area of the murders. The details emerged Friday in CNN's wide-ranging, sit-down interview with Idaho State Police Lt. Darren Gilbertson and Moscow Police Chief Anthony Dahlinger. The key investigators shared new insight into Kohberger's unusual behavior and the violent struggles that took place inside the home in November 2022. 'Everything lined up' for investigators once they started looking into Kohberger as a suspect, Gilbertson told CNN. By the time the FBI linked Kohberger to DNA found on a knife sheath left at the scene, the investigation had dragged on for several weeks, with thousands of tips pouring in, he said. Kohberger's name seemed to click everything into place, he added. The former criminology graduate student, who was sentenced to life in prison on Wednesday as part of a controversial plea deal, showed 'very strong changes in behavior' after the killings, Gilbertson said. Though Kohberger returned to the area a few hours after the murders, investigators said they believe he never set foot in Moscow again after that, he said. Here are some of the key revelations from investigators: Though it would take investigators nearly two months to identify and arrest Kohberger at his parents' Pennsylvania home, the killer had spent those weeks taking strange precautions. 'He stops using his debit card, his credit cards. He starts only using cash,' Gilbertson said. '(In) video and surveillance that we would collect and pick up after that, he's often wearing gloves.' Before law enforcement seized his electronic devices, Kohberger had been wiping data from them. Even so, he had kept several screenshots and pictures of news coverage of the killings, according to Gilbertson. However, investigators found no evidence on the devices that Kohberger had known the victims, Gilbertson said, debunking reports that the killer had photos and the social media accounts of some of the victims on his phone. 'To this date, we have never found a single connection – anything – between any of the four victims or the other two surviving roommates with him. No pictures, no texts,' Gilbertson said. Kohberger pleaded guilty earlier this month to the murders of Kaylee Goncalves, Ethan Chapin, Xana Kernodle and Madison Mogen after spending years insisting he was innocent. The deal with prosecutors, which has received polarized reactions from the victims' families, allowed him to skirt a trial and took the death penalty off the table. Though the sentence has allowed police to release a trove of investigative documents that provide desperately-sought insight into the crime, Gilbertson and Dahlinger agreed there is one question that may never be answered: Why did he do it? What is clear to investigators, according to Gilbertson, is that Kohberger was 'very consumed' with criminology and the psychology around murder. Though investigators are confident a knife was used to kill all four victims, Goncalves was struck in the face by an unknown object and the extent of her struggle with Kohberger is still unknown, Gilbertson said. 'It certainly appears something else struck her to cause the marks that we saw that is not consistent with a fist,' Gilbertson said. There is also no evidence she was bound or gagged, he added. A recently released preliminary autopsy report found each of the victims had suffered 'sharp force injuries' – though Goncalves also had 'asphyxial injures' and 'blunt force injuries.' She had been stabbed more than 20 times, the document says, though her father said after the killer's sentencing Wednesday she had been stabbed more than 30 times. The knife, which investigators believe was a Ka-Bar knife, has also not been found. A tan, leather sheath for one such weapon containing Kohberger's DNA was found at the scene of the killings. Goncalves's sister addressed Kohberger during Wednesday's sentencing, telling him, 'If you hadn't attacked them in their sleep, in the middle of the night like a pedophile, Kaylee would have kicked your fucking ass.' As Kohberger was fatally stabbing Goncalves and Mogen on the third floor of the home, prosecutors have said they believe Kernodle was still awake on the floor below. Gilbertson said she was likely eating food she'd had delivered after a late night out. 'We believe that she heard something going on upstairs and at least started in that direction. But we don't know how far she got, or whether she went up the stairs or all the way up the stairs,' Gilbertson said. Kernodle was stabbed more than 50 times, and many of her wounds were defensive, the autopsy said, indicating she tried to fight off her attacker. Chapin, her boyfriend, was asleep in her bedroom and Kohberger killed him as well, prosecutors have said. 'She fought. She fought back and she fought hard,' Dahlinger said. As she resisted Kohberger, 'The fight just continued,' Gilbertson added. Jeff Kernodle, Xana's father, said on Wednesday that he almost went to his daughter's home on the night she was killed. But he had been drinking, and she told him not to drink and drive. Now, he said on Wednesday, he wishes that he had. 'You would have had to deal with me,' he told Kohberger in court. Before her death, Goncalves had expressed fears that she was being followed, and investigators have said her death elicited hundreds of tips and pieces of information about her having a stalker. Gilbertson confirmed her fears were correct. 'Somebody had followed her, and I know Kaylee absolutely felt that it was real. We investigated that heavily, we tracked down every bit of it,' Gilberson said. 'Fortunately, it was not what we would term or think of as stalking.' Someone had followed Goncalves but never contacted her, he said. 'It ended up being an instance where somebody saw a very pretty girl and was hoping to maybe be able to talk to her, or maybe be able to get a date or something,' Gilbertson said. In December 2022, police said investigators had identified an incident in October in which two men were seen at a business and one man appeared to follow Goncalves inside and as she exited to her car. The man did not make contact with her. Investigators contacted both men and learned they were trying to meet women at the business. Detectives said they believe this was an isolated incident and not a pattern of stalking. There was no evidence to suggest the men were involved in the killings, they said. CNN's Eric Levenson, Dakin Andone, Maureen Chowdhury and Antoinette Radford contributed to this report.


CBS News
43 minutes ago
- CBS News
Man charged in NYC shooting of U.S. Customs and Border Protection agent appears in federal court
Days after an off-duty U.S. Customs and Border Protection agent was shot in New York City, one of the two suspects appeared before a federal judge. Christian Aybar-Berroa entered the courtroom, which was packed with about 40 officers, in handcuffs with his head down and wearing a T-shirt with "Godspeed" printed on the front. He used an interpreter to answer questions. Both suspects are in the U.S. illegally from the Dominican Republic and subject to removal orders, according to law enforcement. Only one appeared in court Friday because the other remains hospitalized. The 22-year-old from the Dominican Republic was arrested Thursday, five days after a 42-year-old Customs and Border Protection agent was shot in Upper Manhattan's Fort Washington Park. According to the criminal complaint, Aybar-Berroa and Miguel Francisco Mora Nunez were riding a motorbike after allegedly stealing a woman's cellphone. A few minutes later, the report alleges, they drove past two people sitting near the Hudson River. Mora Nunez, who was wearing a mask and has multiple arrests in New York, pulled out a gun and fired at least twice, investigators said. The off-duty agent was shot in the face and right arm. He returned fire with his service weapon and shot Mora Nunez in the leg and groin, according to law enforcement. Both suspects took off. Aybar-Berroa drove Mora Nunez to the hospital before allegedly giving his bloody clothes to Mora Nunez's relative in exchange for new ones. Aybar-Berroa is charged with accessory after the fact, which carries a maximum sentence of seven and a half years in prison. No application for bail was made at Friday's court hearing, but a preliminary hearing was scheduled for August 8. Aybar-Berroa's attorney asked the judge to remind the government and agencies not to make extrajudicial statements.


Associated Press
43 minutes ago
- Associated Press
Hearing for accused killers of American and Australian surfers delayed again in Mexico
ENSENADA, Mexico (AP) — Four Mexicans facing charges in relation to the killing of one American and two Australian surfers last year had yet another preliminary hearing delayed Friday as relatives of the victims looked on via video. The hearing in the Baja California beach city of Ensenada reset hearing dates for the four – two of whom were present, while the other two watched via video from their respective prisons. Brothers Jake and Callum Robinson from Australia and American Jack Carter Rhoad had apparently stopped to surf the breaks between Punta San José, about 50 miles (80 kilometers) south of Ensenada, and La Bocana, further north on the coast in April of last year. They were attacked at their campsite and their bodies were dumped into a well about 4 miles (6 kilometers) away. The hearing did confirm that the cases of the four accused will advance separately. The man facing the most serious charges had his hearing rescheduled for Aug. 9, while the other three were set for Nov. 13, to give them more time to try to reach deals with prosecutors.