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    Colorado - Police quash nude pumpkin run

    Police quash nude pumpkin run


    Many of this year's runners got cold feet over the threat of legal action

    A "zany" annual Halloween tradition has failed to materialise in Boulder, Colorado, with the threat of police action quashing the Nude Pumpkin Run.

    Each year, dozens have run down the city's streets wearing only shoes and a hollowed-out pumpkin on their heads.

    Police said "full" participants this year faced indecent exposure charges.

    Up to 100 officers were deployed around Boulder this Halloween. As of early Sunday, local media reports said only one Halloween-related arrest was made.

    "I have heard people say, 'It's just not worth it. Let's not go down [to the city's mall]'," Boulder's Police Chief Mark Beckner told local newspaper the Daily Camera.

    'Legal threat'

    Local reports say with up to 4,000 people taking part in Halloween revelry, a handful of individuals did take part in the run, but that when police caught up with them they were sufficiently clothed as to be "within the law".

    A Boulder police spokesperson said as of early morning Sunday only one Halloween-related arrest had been made, which was not connected to the Naked Pumpkin Run.

    A charge of indecent exposure could have led to participants being registered as sexual offenders.

    Last year, some 150 people turned out naked for the 10th event of its kind.
    Similar runs have also taken place in other US cities including Seattle, Portland and Arcata.

    On its website, the group had warned potential runners that "the violation of the Western societal more, enforced by law, of unclothed public exposure can indeed land you legal consequences.

    "Furthermore, the decision to participate is yours and yours alone," it added.










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    Colorado - Sex offender roundup nets 106 fugitives

    Sex offender roundup nets 106 fugitives


    Denver, Colorado (CNN) -- Operation Shepard, a four-day sweep for fugitive sex offenders in Colorado, has led to 106 arrests, according to the US Marshals Service.

    Charges against those arrested ranged from failure to register as a sex offender to sex assaults against children, incest and child prostitution. U.S. marshals, who teamed up with other state, local and federal law enforcement agencies, led the operation. Ten-person teams hit the streets.

    The authorities knock on doors, chase down leads and use government databases to track their quarry. According to the Marshals Service, most of those on the wanted list have been convicted of a sex offense and have been released on parole but have failed to register as sex offenders or have failed to meet some other conditions of their parole.

    Leading one group was Deputy U.S. Marshal Erick Helsing. He stands 6 foot 9 inches and weighs nearly 300 pounds. He is soft-spoken in person but carries a pistol on his hip and a shotgun on his back. He's not a guy you want knocking on your door if you are a wanted man.

    "Every contact with an offender is a potentially dangerous situation," Helsing says as he dons his Kevlar vest. "The key is to arrest them safely and go home safely."
    But first the marshals have to find the offenders. Sometimes it's easy.

    Dean Warren, a Colorado Department of Corrections parole officer working on the same team as Helsing, runs the prison records of one of the offenders on their list.

    The man was convicted in 1990 of a sex offense. One of the people who visited the offender in prison was an ex-wife. The officers approach her house from the front while others cover the alley in the rear. The ex-wife answers the door and within minutes the offender is being led out in handcuffs.

    "He's been on the run since 2006, so it's a good snag. Three-and-a-half years he's been on the run," says Warren, adding that the chilly Denver morning can make the search a bit easier. "Cold weather keeps them home. Just like hunting," he says.
    Sometimes it's not so easy.

    The team spends most of the rest of the day tracking two other sex offenders. They try old girlfriends' houses, speak to neighbors at old addresses and the mother of one of the offender's children.

    They interview former employers and check with old landlords. They get nowhere, but they say they'll keep at it until the wanted offenders are in custody.

    In cases like this, the offenders are released from jail on parole and seem to just vanish. The hunt often leads investigators out of state. They forward their information to law enforcement agencies across the country, and sometimes they hit paydirt.

    "We have located and arrested fugitives as far as Washington state," says Robert Rodriquez, sex offender investigations coordinator for the U.S. Marshals Service. "Additional leads have been sent to other parts of the country."

    If the search is frustrating, Helsing doesn't let it show. "I believe that the community is safer," he says. "That's all that matters."

    A list of the top 100 wanted sex offenders in Colorado can be found here.


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