#kktv
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Text
#kktv#news#us politics#Colorado#gov. Jared Polis#HB24-1164#gender affirming care#women's rights#equality#equal rights#2024#reproductive health#reproductive rights#feminism
14 notes
·
View notes
Text
《詐欺獵人》介紹與分集劇情:專吃詐欺師的詐欺師
《詐欺獵人》(日語:クロサギ)是在2006年由山下智久主演的漫改劇,該劇於2022年翻拍,是TBS電視台的週五劇,改編原作夏原武、作畫黑丸的同名漫畫,由平野紫耀主演,類型為懸疑犯罪的日劇,有10集,主要語言是日語,在KKTV、Friday影音播出。
這個世界存在3種職業詐欺師,分別是詐騙財物的白鷺、欺騙感情的紅鷺,以及專門獵食白鷺與紅鷺的黑鷺。 而黑崎便是一名以復仇為名,將白鷺趕盡殺絕的黑鷺。
更多內容: https://www.yeswatchandtalk.com/2023/01/kurosagi-details.html
0 notes
Text
THEATER OF BLOOD (1973) on Ch. 11 on KKTV, LA. in 1978
69 notes
·
View notes
Text
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (KKTV) - Move over, Marvel -- wolverines are making two big comebacks this summer!
Gov. Jared Polis announced the good news Monday.
Wolverines once made their homes in Colorado but were wiped out more than a century ago, with the last confirmed sighting in 1919. Colorado Parks and Wildlife says a series of surveys from 1979-1996 found no trace of the animal.
The Center for Biological Diversity, one of the backers of the reintroduction bill signed by Polis Monday, says 30 female and 15 male wolverines will be introduced into the state over the next three years.
“Coloradans are excited to see these furry, fierce creatures return to their native range on our snowy peaks,” said Alli Henderson, southern Rockies director at the Center for Biological Diversity, in a statement on the Center for Biological Diversity website. “... We only have about 325 wolverines left in the lower 48 states, so this bill is a vital lifeline for these tenacious animals. We’re hopeful that wolverines will soon be thriving in their native high alpine habitat.”
Colorado will be the first state to reintroduce wolverines.
29 notes
·
View notes
Text
Excerpt from this story from KKTV:
Wolverines once made their homes in Colorado but were wiped out more than a century ago, with the last confirmed sighting in 1919. Colorado Parks and Wildlife says a series of surveys from 1979-1996 found no trace of the animal.
The Center for Biological Diversity, one of the backers of the reintroduction bill signed by Polis Monday, says 30 female and 15 male wolverines will be introduced into the state over the next three years.
“Coloradans are excited to see these furry, fierce creatures return to their native range on our snowy peaks,” said Alli Henderson, southern Rockies director at the Center for Biological Diversity, in a statement on the Center for Biological Diversity website. “... We only have about 325 wolverines left in the lower 48 states, so this bill is a vital lifeline for these tenacious animals. We’re hopeful that wolverines will soon be thriving in their native high alpine habitat.”
Colorado will be the first state to reintroduce wolverines.
9 notes
·
View notes
Text
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (KKTV) - The former UCCS student accused of killing his roommate and a woman inside a dorm returns to court Tuesday as the case against him continues to move ahead.
Nicholas Jordan’s defense has slowed the proceedings down by arguing multiple that the 26-year-old is incompetent to stand trial for the double murder. Two competency evaluations conflicted on their findings, with the first finding him incompetent, and the second finding him mentally stable, with the forensic psychiatrist conducting that exam stating that the suspect admitted to exaggerating mental illness symptoms in his first competency test.
The judge ruled over that Jordan was “competent enough” to stand trial.
The bodies of Samuel Knopp, 24, and Celie Rain Montgomery, 26, were found in a dorm room on the morning of Friday, Feb. 16, after campus police were called to investigate reports of gunshots. The campus was locked down for about an hour and a half while law enforcement made sure there wasn’t an active shooter situation, before later determining it was an isolated incident between the suspect and two victims. Jordan was identified as the alleged gunman later on the 16th, though he wouldn’t be arrested until the following Monday.
According to arrest papers, witnesses told police that Knopp and Jordan were roommates and had clashed numerous times, with “multiple instances” where Jordan was reported for unsafe living conditions and smoking marijuana and cigarettes in the room.
The witness claimed a few weeks before the murders. Knopp and Jordan had a blowout over a bag of trash.
“Mr. Knopp collected [the bag of trash] and placed [it] near Mr. Jordan’s door,” the arrest papers read. “Mr. Jordan threatened Mr. Knopp and told him that he would ‘kill him’ and there would be consequences if Mr. Jordan was asked to take out the trash again.”
The incident frightened other students on campus, resulting in a petition calling upon campus officials to increase security.
Jordan’s preliminary hearing begins at 1:30 p.m.
4 notes
·
View notes
Text
[ENG] Missing 9 - Chanyeol
Teaser
Episodes
Special Episode 0
Episode 1
Episode 2
Episode 3
Episode 4
Episode 5
Episode 6
Episode 7
Episode 8
Episode 9
Episode 10
Episode 11
Episode 12
Episode 13
Episode 14
Episode 15
Episode 16
Chanyeol cut [RAW]
Other
Behind the Scenes [1] [2]
Press Conference - Chanyeol Cuts [1] [2]
Drama Talk
Greeting Video
Special Message from Chanyeol
KKTV Message [RAW]
Interview Chanyeol Cut
Entertainment Today Report
Section TV Interview [RAW]
Heyo TV Interview [RAW]
WOWOW Interview [RAW]
Punch - When My Loneliness Calls Out To You OST MV
Chen - I'm Not Okay OST
6 notes
·
View notes
Photo
好的,我也加入了#cancelnetflix 的行列,來去Disney+ (哪裡香哪裡去🙃
反正本來就覺得時間不夠,斷了N就能把火力集中在Disney跟KKTV😌
最近看了一本講串流媒體的書,Cindy Holland是Netflix當初創始元老之一,在2020年9月被開除,她是前任的內容採購及原創系列副總經理,原因疑似是與Sarandos(Netflix共同執行��)在節目策略上有摩擦,如此無情的開除一起打拼18年的夥伴震驚好萊塢及某些Netflix供應商,許多資深員工嗅到風向不對,也跟著Holland一起離職。Holland是一位LGBTQ人士,當初是她選擇冒險製作OITNB,最終大獲成功,與紙牌屋並列打響了Netflix的名號也奠定了原創劇的重要地位。她曾經在一次OITNB的訪問中講到
"It has certainly encouraged us to take more risks and to really think big about the types of content that we could program for an audience willing to try new things and discover different things,"
"And also to push into making sure that we're programming for underrepresented audiences and really try to serve all audiences."
看得出她有在關心represented的重要性
“在節目策略有摩擦“
ummm.... 😐
7 notes
·
View notes
Video
youtube
221209 "Happy Ending Outside the Fence" #LEO #ParkHyunChul #HaJongWoo exclusive interview | KKTV Online
#taekwoon#leo#jung taekwoon#vixx leo#vixx#221209#happy ending outside the fence#happy ending romance#*yt#*v:p#🖤
5 notes
·
View notes
Text
KKTV: Arrest papers for Colorado ranchers who believe they are victims of racism made public
EL PASO COUNTY, Colo. (KKTV) - For several weeks, KKTV 11 News viewers have been sharing videos from social media showcasing a man in El Paso County claiming he is being terrorized.
Viewers have also been sharing an article from the “Ark Republic” titled “Get out. ‘I stood naked with my shotgun.’ Black ranchers say white residents terrorize their Colorado farm to push them off of their land.” The online article details allegations tied to Courtney and Nicole Mallery. The Mallerys reportedly run a 1,000-acre ranch in El Paso County, according to the online publication. KKTV 11 News has reached out to the author of the article and the organization; you can read their response to the national attention in our previous coverage by clicking here. KKTV obtained arrest papers that are likely connected to the incident involving the shotgun, they can be read at the bottom of this article. The response from the sheriff’s office to the online articles is also at the bottom of this article or is available by clicking here.
According to jail records, Courtney Wayne Mallery was booked into the El Paso County Jail Monday afternoon. A video posted to Instagram on Monday by “blackfarmlandownersmatter” shows Mallery being taken into custody. According to online court records, Mallery is suspected of stalking, causing emotional distress. You can read arrest papers obtained by KKTV 11 News tied to this incident at the bottom of this article.
A temporary protection order was granted by a judge against Mallery for one of his neighbors Tuesday morning. KKTV 11 News was at the jail when Mallery was in the process of being released on bond Tuesday night just after 7:45. The Mallerys spoke to KKTV 11 News briefly about their situation and we will be sharing what they had to say in future coverage, likely Friday night.
In the arrest papers below, Courtney Mallery is accused of stalking, causing emotional distress. The charge is a felony. 11 News spoke with the victim in that case and we plan on sharing her side of the story in future coverage, likely Friday night. The Mallerys believe they are the target of racism in El Paso County.
There is a record of Nicole Mallery’s past incidents. In one El Paso County case involving Nicole Mallery, she was accused of assaulting a police officer. According to online court records, Nicole pleaded guilty on July 15, 2022 to assaulting a peace officer.
In a separate case, Nicole was accused of menacing, a weapons charge and false reporting. According to online records, the menacing and weapons charge were dismissed while Nicole pleaded guilty to false reporting, providing false identification. She had been arrested on April 21, 2021 and pleaded guilty on June 15 of 2022. The case was reopened Dec. 20, 2022.
This is a very complex story and KKTV 11 News is choosing not to report all of the information we have gathered at once. Expect updates on KKTV.COM as well as during our newscasts. The coverage gained national attention following the articles by The Ark Republic. For more on what the Mallerys had to say:
Click here for part one “Get out. Black Colorado ranchers face domestic terrorism by local whites who they say are trying to steal their land”
Click here for part two “Get out. ‘I stood naked with my shotgun.’ Black ranchers say white residents terrorize their Colorado farm to push them off of their land”
For more from the El Paso County Sheriff’s Office denying the allegations:
Click here for the response from the sheriff’s office on the coverage by the Ark Republic.
ALL OF THE DOCUMENTS BELOW ARE PUBLIC RECORDS AND CAN BE OBTAINED BY MEMBERS OF THE PUBLIC.
AFFIDAVIT FOR COURTNEY MALLERY, STALKING CASE:
AFFIDAVIT FOR INCIDENT INVOLVING NICOLE MALLERY AND A SHOTGUN:
AFFIDAVIT FOR NICOLE MALLERY INVOLVING ASSAULT OF A PEACE OFFICER:
Arrest papers for Colorado ranchers who believe they are victims of racism made public
#Karen Act#colorado#Mallery Family#Black and Ranching in colorado#Arrest papers for Colorado ranchers who believe they are victims of racism made public
2 notes
·
View notes
Text
Chilling final messages teen girl sent her best friend minutes before she was 'killed by man she met on Snapchat' in El Paso
Jorge Meza Alarcon Jr, 26, is accused of strangling her with a jujitsu-style chokehold.
He has a history of alleged strangulation attacks, having been charged with assault in December in a case before the Fourth Circuit, according to KKTV.
Then in March, a woman was granted a restraining order against him.
Alarcon was also accused of strangling a dog to death in February, then throwing its body into a dumpster at The Vineyards apartments in Colorado Springs.
He was charged with animal cruelty and criminal mischief, according to KOAA.
0 notes
Text
Colorado police officers rescue dog trapped in storm drain for several days
New Post has been published on https://petn.ws/VuWqk
Colorado police officers rescue dog trapped in storm drain for several days
DELTA, Colo. (KKTV) – A dog in one Colorado community is out of danger after a few heroic police officers freed it from a 15-foot storm drain. The Delta Police Department was alerted Sunday that a dog was trapped in the sewer — and may have been so for several days. With a flood watch […]
See full article at https://petn.ws/VuWqk #DogNews
0 notes
Text
Bird flu in the United States: Is it safe to eat chicken? [ Avian influenza ]
Bird flu in the United States: Is it safe to eat chicken? [News Summary] STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. — With bird flu outbreaks continuing to be reported in U.S. cows and poultry, consumers should be sure to cook chicken,… The fragile, consolidated factory farm system has created the conditions for bird flu to flourish. To protect our food, health, and… COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (KKTV) – The bird flu…
View On WordPress
0 notes
Text
The 13 victims in the April 20, 1999, shooting massacre included 12 high school students and a teacher. More than 20 others were injured. The two gunmen took their own lives.(MGN/Columbine Wiki)
By Lindsey Grewe Published: Apr. 20, 2023 at 3:10 AM PDT
LITTLETON, Colo. (KKTV) - On April 20, 1999, a pair of Columbine High School students opened fire on their classmates, killing 12 students and a teacher and injuring more than two dozen before taking their own lives.
More than two decades later, it remains one of the deadliest school shootings in U.S. history.
These are the lives lost on that day 24 years ago:
Cassie Bernall
Steve Curnow
Corey DePooter
Kelly Fleming
Matt Kechter
Daniel Mauser
Daniel Rohrbough
Dave Sanders
Rachel Scott
Isaiah Shoels
John Tomlin
Lauren Townsend
Kyle Velasquez
Copyright 2023 KKTV. All rights reserved.
1 note
·
View note
Text
Lot owner stunned to find $500K home accidentally built on her lot. Now she’s being sued
A woman is headed to court after a Hawaii construction company built a half-million-dollar house on the wrong property, The Associated Press reported.
Annaleine Reynolds says she was shocked to find a home built on a lot she purchased in Puna, Hawaii, and told Hawaii News Now that she doesn’t want the house there and has had to deal with problems like higher taxes and squatters.
Reynolds said she purchased a lot in 2018 at a county tax auction for about $22,500. She had intended to use the land for meditative healing women’s retreats.
“There’s a sacredness to it and the one that I chose to buy had all the right qualities,” she said.
Reynolds was planning how to use the property when the COVID-19 pandemic hit, keeping her in California.
While in California, the lot was bulldozed, and a house was built there. Reynolds knew nothing about the three-bedroom, two-bath home, now valued at $500,000, being built, she said.
She found out about the home when she got a call last year from a real estate broker.
“He told me, ‘I just sold the house, and it happens to be on your property. So, we need to resolve this,’” Reynolds said. “And I was like, what? Are you kidding me?”
Local developer Keaau Development Partnership hired PJ’s Construction to build about a dozen homes on the properties the developer bought in the subdivision. But the company accidentally built one on Reynolds’ lot.
According to KKTV, the lots are identified by information on telephone poles.
To add insult to injury, Reynolds is being sued by the property’s developers. The developers say they offered to swap Reynolds a lot that is next door to hers or to sell her the house at a discount.
Reynolds has refused both offers.
“It would set a dangerous precedent if you could go onto someone else’s land, build anything you want, and then sue that individual for the value of it,” James DiPasquale, Reynold’s attorney, told Hawaii News Now.
Reynolds has filed a counterclaim against the developer, saying she was unaware of the “unauthorized construction.”
Also being sued by the developers are the construction company, the home’s architect, the family who previously owned the property, and the county, which approved the permits.
The home remains empty, except for some squatters, according to neighbors.
The $500,000 mistake is headed to a courtroom to be settled.
1 note
·
View note
Text
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (AP) — A judge unsealed a dropped bomb threat case Thursday against the Colorado gay bar shooting suspect who threatened to become the “next mass killer” over a year before allegedly killing five people and wounding seventeen others at the LGBTQ enclave Club Q.
Judge Robin Chittum said the “proufound” public interest in the case outweighed the privacy rights of defendant Anderson Lee Aldrich. The judge added that scrutiny of judicial cases is “foundational to our system of government.”
“The only way for that scrutiny to occur is for this to be unsealed,” she said.
Aldrich, 22, was arrested in June 2021 on allegations of making a bomb threat that led to the evacuation of about 10 homes. Aldrich, who uses they/them pronouns and is nonbinary according to their attorneys, had threatened to harm their own family and boasted of having bomb making materials, ammunition and multiple weapons, according to law enforcement documents. They were booked into jail on suspicion of felony menacing and kidnapping.
The case was later dropped and officials to date have refused to speak about what happened, citing a state law that calls for dismissed cases to be sealed.
The judge’s order to release the records comes after news organizations, including The Associated Press, sought to unseal the documents.
Aldrich’s alleged statements that they intended to become “ the next mass killer ” foretold last month’s mass shooting and have raised questions over why authorities did not seek to seize Aldrich’s guns under Colorado’s “red flag” law.
Aldrich also was the subject of a tip received by the FBI a day before the bomb threat. Agents closed out the case just weeks later.
Under Colorado law, records are automatically sealed when a case is dropped and defendants are not prosecuted as happened in Aldrich’s 2021 case. Once sealed, officials cannot acknowledge that the records exist and the process to unseal the documents initially happens behind closed doors with no docket to follow and an unnamed judge.
“This is one of the strangest hearings I think I’ve ever had,” said Chittum. “I’m having a hearing about a case that none of us is to recognize.”
It was unknown when unsealed documents will be posted online. Chittum ruled despite objections from the suspect’s attorney and mother.
Public defender Joseph Archambault argued that while the public has an interest in the case, Aldrich’s right to a fair trial was paramount.
“This will make sure there is no presumption of innocence,” said Archambault.
Aldrich sat at the defense table looking straight ahead or down at times and did not appear to show any reaction when their mother’s lawyer asked that the case not be unsealed.
An attorney for Aldrich’s mother argued that unsealing the case would increase the likelihood that Laura Voepel would suffer harm harassment, intimidation or retaliation.
Aldrich’s attorneys told the judge the defense filed a contempt of court motion against the sheriff’s office over an AP story that detailed what was in some of the sealed documents. The documents were obtained by Colorado Springs TV station KKTV and verified as authentic to the AP by a law enforcement official who was not authorized to discuss the sealed case and kept anonymous. Judge Chittum did not rule on the motion but said she would not let it hold up her decision about unsealing the case.
The Associated Press verified a copy of the sealed documents with a law enforcement official that described Aldrich telling frightened grandparents of firearms and bomb-making material in their basement, vowing not to allow them to interfere in plans to kill on a mass scale.
Aldrich then pointed a Glock handgun at the grandparents as they pleaded for their lives and said, “You guys die today … I’m loaded and ready.”
The documents say the grandparents ran out of the house while Aldrich stepped away and called 911. Aldrich then holed up in a home nearby where the mother was living while a SWAT team and bomb squad stood outside with rifles raised and bomb sniffing dogs. At one point, Aldrich yelled that he would set off a bomb if law enforcement tried to enter before finally surrendering.
The law enforcement official who confirmed the documents to the AP was not authorized to talk about them and so was given anonymity.
Aldrich was formally charged Tuesday with 305 criminal counts including hate crimes and murder in the Nov. 19 shooting at Club Q, a sanctuary for the LGBTQ community in mostly conservative Colorado Springs.
Investigators say Aldrich entered just before midnight with an AR-15-sytle semiautomatic rifle and began shooting during a drag queen’s birthday celebration. The killing was stopped when patrons wrestled the suspect to the ground, beating Aldrich into submission, they said.
Conviction on murder charges would carry the harshest penalty — likely life in prison — but prosecutors said they also were pursuing the hate crime charges to show the community bias motivated crimes are not tolerated.
18 notes
·
View notes