logo
#

Latest news with #MontroseCountySheriff'sOffice

Watch: 'Firenado' caught on video in Utah during Deer Creek Fire
Watch: 'Firenado' caught on video in Utah during Deer Creek Fire

USA Today

time18-07-2025

  • Climate
  • USA Today

Watch: 'Firenado' caught on video in Utah during Deer Creek Fire

A "firenado," a large wildfire caught up in a swift tornado, was spotted in eastern Utah, near the Colorado border, last weekend. The fire-induced tornado developed within the Deer Creek Fire just after 1 p.m. MT on Saturday, July 12, according to the National Weather Service (NWS). The "firenado," which was given an EF-2 rating, lasted for about 12 minutes. Tornados ranked as an EF-2 are deemed "significant" and exhibit a wind speed of 111-136 miles per hour. No injuries were reported by fire personnel, but buildings in the area did sustain fire and wind damage, according to the NWS. "In a state built by pioneers who prepared for hard seasons, we must meet this moment with the same resolve," Utah Sen. John Curtis wrote in an X post on Thursday, July 17. "I urge every Utahn to take seriously the fire restrictions currently in place." Watch 'firenado' form amid Utah wildfire More news: Man charged with impersonating a firefighter; fire truck reportedly seized What is the Deer Creek Fire? Deer Creek Fire started on Thursday, July 10 and as of Friday, July 18, had burned more than 15,600 acres, according to Utah Fire. The cause of the fire remains undetermined. The fire is located within Deer Creek State Park, along the border of Utah and Colorado. Is the Deer Creek Fire contained? As of Friday, July 18, 11% of Deer Creek Fire was contained, according to Utah Fire. Evacuation notices issued for Deer Creek Fire The Montrose County Sheriff's Office has issued pre-evacuations for areas around Deer Creek State Park. Residents in the affected areas are encouraged to check for local updates, prepare go-kits of supplies, put animal evacuation plans into place, inform loved ones of evacuation plans and leave areas that feel unsafe. To sign up for emergency alerts, visit the Montrose County Sheriff's Office at Greta Cross is a national trending reporter at USA TODAY. Story idea? Email her at gcross@

Watch: 'Firenado' caught on video in Utah during Deer Creek Fire
Watch: 'Firenado' caught on video in Utah during Deer Creek Fire

Indianapolis Star

time18-07-2025

  • Climate
  • Indianapolis Star

Watch: 'Firenado' caught on video in Utah during Deer Creek Fire

A "firenado," a large wildfire caught up in a swift tornado, was spotted in eastern Utah, near the Colorado border, last weekend. The fire-induced tornado developed within the Deer Creek Fire just after 1 p.m. MT on Saturday, July 12, according to the National Weather Service (NWS). The "firenado," which was given an EF-2 rating, lasted for about 12 minutes. Tornados ranked as an EF-2 are deemed "significant" and exhibit a wind speed of 111-136 miles per hour. No injuries were reported by fire personnel, but buildings in the area did sustain fire and wind damage, according to the NWS. "In a state built by pioneers who prepared for hard seasons, we must meet this moment with the same resolve," Utah Sen. John Curtis wrote in an X post on Thursday, July 17. "I urge every Utahn to take seriously the fire restrictions currently in place." Deer Creek Fire started on Thursday, July 10 and as of Friday, July 18, had burned more than 15,600 acres, according to Utah Fire. The cause of the fire remains undetermined. The fire is located within Deer Creek State Park, along the border of Utah and Colorado. As of Friday, July 18, 11% of Deer Creek Fire was contained, according to Utah Fire. The Montrose County Sheriff's Office has issued pre-evacuations for areas around Deer Creek State Park. Residents in the affected areas are encouraged to check for local updates, prepare go-kits of supplies, put animal evacuation plans into place, inform loved ones of evacuation plans and leave areas that feel unsafe. To sign up for emergency alerts, visit the Montrose County Sheriff's Office at

Montrose County Jail upgraded after survey finds inadequacies
Montrose County Jail upgraded after survey finds inadequacies

Yahoo

time09-04-2025

  • Yahoo

Montrose County Jail upgraded after survey finds inadequacies

MONTROSE, Colo. (KREX) — The Montrose County Jail recently got an upgrade after a survey found several inadequacies. The process behind the upgrade began seven years ago. Funds for the project came from the Public Safety Sales Tax and Capital Improvement funds. The total project cost was $8 million. Geo Commander for the Montrose County Sheriff's Office Dean McNulty talked with WesternSlopeNow about the improvements made to the jail. 'We found out we had some pretty good deficiencies with the holding area. We were only able to hold about 15 inmates down there. With the new expansion remodel project, we increase that to 44. So, with an increased booking area, we also examined our video courtroom and found that that was inadequate. So, that's been expanded as well. We've got some administrative offices, and our kitchen was added on too.' The project took one year to complete. Breaking ground in March 2024 and was completed in March 2025. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Nearly 200 cows disappeared. The case remains cold.
Nearly 200 cows disappeared. The case remains cold.

Yahoo

time09-04-2025

  • Yahoo

Nearly 200 cows disappeared. The case remains cold.

OLATHE, Colorado - The first report was filed just before Thanksgiving. Twenty-nine cows and calves, a rancher told a state agriculture official, hadn't come home. One week later, three more reports from three other owners: 46, 38 and 31 head of cattle, all gone. Three days after that, rancher Kelly Burch also alerted authorities. She had counted her herd and come up 43 animals short. Subscribe to The Post Most newsletter for the most important and interesting stories from The Washington Post. 'I have this cow, but not this calf. Or I have this calf, but not this cow,' said Burch, whose family has run cattle on the same swath of public land for 106 years. 'Something's not adding up here.' All 187 missing bovines had spent the warmer months grazing thousands of acres on the high Uncompahgre Plateau, rugged country where some animals always fall victim to predators, illness or weather. But never this many and not without leaving lots of carcasses behind. Also unusual: The vast majority were calves. Ranchers and local authorities suspected they might have a modern-day case of cattle rustling on their hands. The disappearances in the fall set off an unprecedented state investigation spurred by Colorado's governor and involving sheriffs, a multiagency task force, search planes, a $10,000 reward and a bull rider turned cowboy who has scouted the area on horseback. The effort cast a spotlight on an enduring way of life in Colorado's more conservative Western Slope, where cattle bulk up in wild forests and canyonlands before eventually being sold to feed Americans' appetites for burgers and steaks. Months later, with much of the possible crime scene still blanketed in snow, the case remains mostly cold. Lost livestock isn't unheard of in this agricultural area famed for its sweet corn. But 'nothing, nothing of this magnitude at all,' said Chuck Searcy, an administrative sergeant for the Montrose County Sheriff's Office who is leading the investigation. Searcy spent the winter fielding tips about suspicious characters and even theories about alien abduction. He has ruled out insurance fraud. He is convinced it's at least partially a theft case, probably carried out by someone deeply familiar with the area and knowledgeable about the industry. 'Say you get a little heifer calf and you breed her and she has five babies for you,' Searcy said. 'Now what is her value?' A lot, officials note. Drought and other pressures have caused the U.S. herd to steadily shrink since 2019, while consumer demand for beef is at a near-record high. The combination has sent cattle prices soaring. At market, the 187 missing cattle could fetch $400,000, maybe more. Even so, the particulars are puzzling. No semitrailer could reach the hardscrabble, unpaved altitude where these cattle were spread, the kind of range even experienced ranch hands don't know by heart. Typically, mother cows separated from their calves would show distress. A mass die-off, perhaps from poison weed, would produce bodies. 'It's a mystery,' said Janie VanWinkle, a former Colorado Cattlemen's Association president whose herd grazes north of here. 'A big one.' The missing animals were reported to local brand inspectors, who play a key role in Colorado, known as a 'brand state.' Branding is not obligatory, but livestock owners who do it must register their brands with the state's Agriculture Department. Any sale or movement of cattle over 75 miles or to another state requires a review by one of the 63 inspectors to verify ownership. (According to Brand Commissioner Todd Inglee, inspectors have also been asked to certify ownership of dinosaur bones and a camel.) In the lower 48, all states from the Rockies west are brand states. But most to the east are not, meaning they do not require proof of ownership to sell livestock. 'Once you get past those borders, they're pretty much gone,' Inglee said. Colorado's inspectors also investigate possible thefts, which began to spike in 2022; last year, 475 cattle were reported missing or stolen in 57 cases. But prosecutions have often taken a back seat to crimes against humans, Inglee said. This time is 'a new game,' Inglee said, thanks to attention from Gov. Jared Polis (D), who has called the case a rural matter of public safety. 'We are committed to holding cattle rustlers accountable,' Polis said in his State of the State address in January. A task force was formed. Led by Inglee, it includes the Colorado Bureau of Investigation, officials from the federal Bureau of Land Management and the U.S. Forest Service, state police, local law enforcement and Colorado Parks and Wildlife, which dispatched a plane in search of cows or clues. 'It's nice to have representation for little Western Colorado,' said Searcy, whose office is a five-hour drive from the capital, Denver. 'Let's just call it like it is: A lot of times, it feels like it's a completely different state, whether it's political views, whether it's just way of life.' For Burch, that life revolves around cattle. Her 400-head herd departs her Olathe ranch in early June for the 80,000-acre allotment of her federal grazing permit. The cows are always eager, she said: They line up at her southern gate, ready to trudge 20 miles up the plateau. Burch and her teenage sons - aided by their cattle dogs and horses - keep loose tabs on the herd all summer, often sleeping in a nearby wooden cabin built by her ancestors in 1939. When the first snowflakes fall, she said, the cows know it's time to go home. As she and the other ranchers do every year, Burch chartered a helicopter in early December to fly over the terrain and peer down into dark canyons for stragglers. She and her older son spotted just one elk and one coyote. Bears might have gotten some of her missing cattle. But she suspects many were lost to thieves who plucked off a few one night, a few another. Whatever the explanation, it was a 'kick in the gut.' Burch sells animals each January, bringing in her sole annual paycheck. This year, it was 20 percent to 30 percent smaller, she said. Her insurance policy does not cover theft or disappearance. She holds out hope a culprit will be nabbed - and punished. 'They don't realize that they're taking it from my kids; they're taking the food off my table,' she said. 'Back in the day, they would have been hung.' The case has raised alarm at sale barns across Colorado. At one of the busiest, Centennial Livestock Auction in Fort Collins, the brands of the missing cattle are posted on the bulletin board of inspector Jesse Phillips's office. Ahead of a morning cattle auction on a sleeting March morning, he and two other inspectors gingerly moved massive bovines around slatted pens, making sure the brands on their hides matched those on their paperwork. 'With the cattle prices the way they are now, there's just crazy, stupid money,' said Phillips, a district supervisor. 'I am super, hyperaware of anything that comes through that's not branded or whatever because there's just too much money.' Out in Montrose County, Searcy is hoping the sheriff might let him purchase a horse to use for exploring the plateau once the snow melts. Any tire tracks will most likely be lost to moisture, any carcasses to predators or bugs. But Searcy figures he might come across a makeshift corral or some other sign. And maybe someone will talk. 'Without evidence, that's probably our biggest hope,' he said. In the meantime, the case got a break of sorts. Tony Mendes, a former pro bull rider, found 17 of the missing cattle. Mendes lives in a neighboring county, and these days, he cobbles together a living helping on ranches, working at a sales barn and operating as a backcountry cowboy. He takes that title seriously. 'My real passion my whole life was being able to gather and catch cattle that nobody else could get,' said Mendes, who grew up in Reno. 'A challenge junkie, I guess you could say.' Over the past few years, he has scoured the plateau for feral cattle, the descendants of animals that never made it home. The state wants them gone, fearing they will spread disease to ranchers' herds. Mendes said he has found about 100, which he has been able to sell. When he heard about the reward in the case of the missing 187, offered by the Uncompahgre Cattlemen's Association and the Rangeland Users Association, Mendes had a new mission. Logging several 20-mile days on horseback, he found two groups in mid-January and another in mid-February. All of the animals belonged to two ranchers who had filed reports. Mendes suspects many more cattle are out there, perhaps unable to descend from cliffs or unwilling because a low-snow year has left enough to eat. A large-scale theft would require a 'mastermind,' in his view. 'I'm thinking, 'Man, is there cattle thieves in my country, or is it just lazy cowboys?'' he said. 'I'm not wanting to point fingers or bad-mouth anyone, but I think it's a bunch of things going on.' He went looking for more bovines a few weeks ago, bouncing in an off-road vehicle up a steep dirt trail studded with sizable rocks and craters. At the top of Winter Mesa, one finger of the plateau, he had placed a game camera near large tires where water collects, and it captured four black cows drinking there days before. If he laid eyes on them, Mendes planned to come back with his horse and dogs to push them down to the flatlands. Cattle tracks surrounded the tires, though they weren't fresh. Mendes surveyed the hillsides' tawny slopes, patches of pinyon-juniper and a deep canyon. 'There could be cattle right now in them clear-cuts over there, and how can you get to them?' he said. 'That sagebrush down there could be holding cattle all day long.' He continued searching for a few hours more, jostling up and down another mesa. A herd of mule deer appeared at one point. But not a single cow. Related Content 'VIP' bettors say sportsbooks keep them playing, no matter the cost Every year, they picnic under the cherry blossoms. This is their story.

Search underway for Colorado man in Black Canyon of the Gunnison National Park
Search underway for Colorado man in Black Canyon of the Gunnison National Park

Fox News

time26-02-2025

  • Fox News

Search underway for Colorado man in Black Canyon of the Gunnison National Park

A search is underway in Black Canyon of the Gunnison National Park in Colorado for a Denver man who vanished nearly two weeks ago, officials said Monday. Jordan Marsters, 31, was traveling through Grand Junction on Feb. 11 and was in Montrose, a city near the park, on Feb. 12 and Feb. 13, the National Park Service (NPS) said in a news release. One of Marsters' last known locations was at the park around 7:20 a.m. on Feb. 13, NPS said. Park officials did not specify where Marsters was last seen in the park. It was unclear when exactly Marsters was reported missing. NPS said Monday that park staff and the Montrose County Sheriff's Office were now searching for the missing man. Marsters was described as a White man with blonde hair and blue eyes, weighing about 140 pounds and standing 5-feet-7-inches tall. He was last seen wearing a tan jacket and black hoodie and was driving a white Kia Fuente rental car with Texas license plates. The park in western Colorado is known for its rugged landscape that surrounds part of a deep canyon carved by the Gunnison River. Trails and roads run along parts of the rim. The park's website shows that three major roads have remained closed for winter, while conditions at the park were described as icy and slippery, with "packed snow and ice" reported on multiple trails. Authorities asked anyone with information or who was in contact with Marsters in the days leading to his disappearance to contact Black Canyon of the Gunnison National Park at 970-249-1914 ext. 436.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store