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Colorado landlord shocked after police raid his property — turns out tenants were using it as an illegal club

Colorado landlord shocked after police raid his property — turns out tenants were using it as an illegal club

Yahoo14-05-2025

Mike Moon got quite the shock when he found out what his tenants were really doing in his rental property.
In late April, more than 300 law enforcement officers — from around 10 federal agencies — zeroed in on Moon's property in the wee hours of the morning.
During the raid, officers seized cocaine, pink cocaine and meth. They also detained over 100 people and arrested two people on existing warrants.
DEA Special Agent in Charge Jonathan Pullen told reporters at Denver7 that many of the folks they detained will face federal immigration charges. The Drug Enforcement Administration claims the property was being used as a nightclub illegally. Additionally, it is now linked to gang activity, drug trafficking, violence and prostitution.
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'They were supposed to be out of here by the end of this month,' Moon told reporters. He also expressed shock and said he feels dumbfounded after learning what his former tenants did on the property.
Moon said that the contract on the lease specified that the space was to be used for events like weddings, quinceaneras and birthdays. The lease has strict terms, and tenants weren't allowed to serve alcohol on the property.
Additionally, the lease was about to expire, and Moon said that he had been planning a renovation conversion project for the past 18 months.
When asked about the fact that tenants let this activity take place, Moon told reporters that he was shocked considering 'the political environment and all the news that's happening around the country that they thought that this was even a wise idea to do something illegal like this.'
Landlords have legal protections in Colorado, as tenants do.
According to state statutes, tenants need to adhere to any lease agreements set by the landlord, assuming it doesn't break any type of fair housing laws.
For example, if a tenant 'commits a material violation of the rental agreement,' the landlord has the right to evict them. In Moon's case, the tenants used the property for illegal purposes. Plus, they didn't adhere to what the property is to be used for as an event space.
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In this case, the landlord will most likely need to provide evidence that the tenant is violating the lease agreement. The law stipulates the landlord must give a 'Demand for Compliance or Right to Possession' notice in writing and state a certain timeframe in which to fix the lease violation or to vacate, usually within three business days.
However, there are cases where landlords can exercise the 'no fault' law (as opposed to 'for cause'), where they can evict a tenant simply by not renewing the lease. Moon, for example, told the tenants he's taking back the property to convert it for other means.
Since the tenants were using the property for illegal activity, Moon may also have a right to evict them or call local authorities.
Experts often tell us owning rental properties that cash flow are a sound investment. But this assumes the tenants hold up their end of the agreement, and aren't a nightmare to manage.
The best way to protect yourself as a landlord is to be proactive — in other words, before taking on a new tenant.
When putting up your rental property, screen tenants judiciously and go on more than simple 'gut instinct'.
Review tenant applications carefully and ask for information such as their business license and registration (in the event of renting a property for commercial purposes). Interview the applicants in-person, request references, and background checks. You can also get business credit reports and look at past business tax returns to see if they're able to pay rent. Even if all these pieces are in place, it doesn't mean it's an automatic green light.
Working with a real estate or business attorney may be worth the investment when it comes to drafting a lease agreement so you're well-protected in the event you need to evict your tenants.
These professionals can help you be clear in your expectations for your tenants, including having them agree to periodic inspections. A well-drafted lease agreement can also protect you and ensure you understand what your responsibilities are as a landlord.
Spotting red flags and communicating with the tenant efficiently can help to mitigate any bigger problems down the road. Some of these could include if a tenant is too aggressive in their negotiations, or being vague about the intended use of the property. If any of this sounds like simply too much to manage, you may want to consider investing in rental properties without the responsibility of being a landlord.
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This article provides information only and should not be construed as advice. It is provided without warranty of any kind.

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Calls grow for Kristi Noem to resign in the wake of Padilla incident
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Calls grow for Kristi Noem to resign in the wake of Padilla incident

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American woman faces court charged over fatal crash outside N Ireland hotel
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American woman faces court charged over fatal crash outside N Ireland hotel

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Ms Stewart appeared before the court on Friday morning charged with causing death by careless driving on Wednesday June 11 on the Causeway Road in Bushmills. She indicated she understood the charge when it was put to her. A police constable said she believed she could connect the accused to the charge. She also described a tragic incident for all involved, and said police were 'not entirely opposed to bail', describing the 'big problem' as being the address of the defendant but said with a substantial cash surety, bail could be an option. 'On Wednesday June 11, at approximately a quarter past 12 in the afternoon, a single-vehicle road traffic collision occurred at the front of the Causeway Hotel on the Causeway Road in Bushmills,' she told the court. 'It involved a grey Ford Transit, a multiple person vehicle, being driven by the defendant. The defendant collided with the pedestrian while she sat on a bench at the front of the property.' 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A Message to Progressive America
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Advocates for ideas and draws conclusions based on the interpretation of facts and data. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. Many American progressives often claim to stand for universal human rights. But for the past 20 months, many have remained silent—or worse—when Jews and Israelis have been the victims. It has been 615 days since my brother-in-law, Omri Miran, was kidnapped by Hamas. On Oct. 7, 2023, he was taken from his home in Kibbutz Nahal Oz after being held at gunpoint with my sister, Lishay, and their daughters—Roni and Alma. They watched their neighbors slaughtered. They saw their community set ablaze. And then Omri was dragged into Gaza. Lishay and the girls were left behind, terrified and unsure if they would survive until they were rescued. Hostage Omri Miran and his family are pictured. Hostage Omri Miran and his family are pictured. Photo Courtesy of the Miran Family We still don't know where Omri is, what condition he's in, or whether he's being fed, tortured, and held in isolation. The little we know comes from two psychological warfare videos Hamas released—one in April 2024, the other just weeks ago, 12 days after his 48th birthday. Omri is one of 53 hostages still in Hamas captivity—people whose names and lives you never speak, never ask about, never make space for. For nearly 20 months, you've ignored them. Too often, you've desecrated them—reducing their abduction to a "consequence of the occupation," tearing their faces off lampposts, or dismissing their suffering as politically inconvenient. Worse, some have justified their captivity, recasting evil terrorism as "resistance." This isn't a critique of everyone who supports progressive causes. It's directed at the gatekeepers—the ones who shape discourse and decide whose pain is worthy of acknowledgment. The ones who denounce certain forms of extremism but excuse others flourishing in their own ranks. I live in New York. I studied at your elite universities, marched with you at your Pride parades, worked alongside you. I speak your language—the language of rights and justice, of liberation and solidarity. But somehow, that clarity ends when it comes to us—Israelis and Jews. Hostage Omri Miran's daughters are pictured. Hostage Omri Miran's daughters are pictured. Photo Courtesy of the Miran Family You march for Palestinian rights but say nothing about the 53 civilians still held in underground tunnels, the 250 kidnapped, or the 1,200 murdered on October 7. You twist terms like colonialism and rewrite history to fit your narrative, yet say nothing about generations of Israelis who have endured war and terrorism fueled by Arab rejectionism and radicalism. You speak of generational trauma, but when Jewish families live it in real time—when my nieces cry for the father they may never see again—you look away. And your silence has consequences. On May 22, two Israeli Embassy staffers were fatally shot outside a Jewish Museum in Washington, D.C. A week later, Molotov cocktails were thrown at a peaceful "Run for Their Lives" rally in Boulder, Colo.—held to raise awareness about the hostages. At both events, the attackers shouted antisemitic slurs and invoked the now-familiar cry, "Free Palestine!" These are not isolated incidents. They are the product of a culture where violence against Jews is tolerated—so long as the victims are framed as symbols of a government you oppose. A world where hostage-taking is rebranded as "resistance," and antisemitism is recast as righteous anger. No, you didn't throw the Molotov cocktails or pull the trigger. But you helped shape a world where those acts are no longer shocking. Through the slogans you chant, the disinformation you share, the posters you rip down—you've blurred the line between activism and hate. Some go even further, treating American Jews as stand-ins for a government 6,000 miles away. This op-ed is not a demand for allegiance. It's a plea for coherence—for a moral compass that doesn't shift based on identity. If you believe in human rights, believe in them for us too. If you oppose oppression, then condemn what Hamas has done—not only to Israeli families but also to its own people. Hamas has brought nothing but suffering to Palestinians, subjecting them to an authoritarian Islamist rule, child conscription, and endless war. This is not about politics. It's about people. About Omri. About the 52 others still trapped in Gaza. About families—many of whom still don't know if they will ever say goodbye. You can oppose Israeli policy. You can support Palestinian aspirations. But if you cannot bring yourself to denounce hostage-taking and the deliberate murder of civilians in your own country—or worse, if you justify it—then your movement isn't about justice. It's about something else entirely. And one day, when the slogans fade and the reckoning comes, you may look in the mirror—and, like Dorian Gray in Oscar Wilde's novel, be horrified by what you see staring back. Omri is a father. A therapist. A gardener. He is not a symbol or a number. He is a human being who deserves to come home. Say his name. Say all their names. Acknowledge their suffering. Demand their release And if you can't, then be honest enough to admit that your vision of liberation does not include us. Moshe Emilio Lavi was born in Sderot, Israel. He is a former captain of the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) and now works as a management consultant in New York City. His brother-in-law Omri Miran is a hostage in Gaza. The views expressed in this article are the writer's own.

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