Man who died in the Las Vegas Cybertruck probably shot himself before the explosion, authorities say Authorities believe they've identified the driver of the Tesla Cybertruck that exploded outside a Trump hotel.Matthew Alan Livelsberger, 37, of Colorado Springs, was likely the person who died in the ... 01/2/2025 - 6:12 pm | View Link
Man who died in Cybertruck explosion outside Las Vegas Trump hotel ID'd as Army special ops soldier The truck was rented to Matthew Alan Livelsberger, two senior law enforcement officials told NBC News. An Army spokesperson said Livelsberger was on approved leave. 01/2/2025 - 11:37 am | View Link
Man in Las Vegas Cybertruck explosion had gunshot wound to the head: sheriff The man who drove a Tesla Cybertruck that exploded outside of a Las Vegas, Nevada hotel has been identified as Matthew Livelsberger, an Army soldier from Colorado, a law enforcement source told ... 01/2/2025 - 6:53 am | View Link
Las Vegas Cybertruck bombing subject positively ID'd by coroner Authorities have reportedly identified the suspect who set off an explosion inside a Tesla Cybertruck outside Trump International Hotel in Las Vegas. 01/2/2025 - 2:16 am | View Link
Las Vegas man accused of stabbing, killing son said victim ‘fell on knife,’ report says A father was arrested for allegedly fatally stabbing his son with a kitchen knife and the weapon was found behind an ice cooler outside their Las Vegas apartment, according to police. On Dec. 22, at ... 12/31/2024 - 12:16 pm | View Link
The official state funeral for former President Jimmy Carter will take place on Jan. 9 in Washington, D. C., following days of services and ceremonies to honor the 39th President.
President Joe Biden declared Jan. 9 a National Day of Mourning, and ordered all executive departments and agencies of the federal government to close out of respect for the former President, who died on Dec.
Americans, myself included, have a contradictory relationship with retirement. The whole thing is supposed to be relaxing. It’s a decade or two of well-deserved leisure time at life’s end, devoted to family, friends, and voluntary pursuits. It’s an actual right: one of the few that we have as Americans, and one guaranteed by Social Security, our most popular and well-functioning social program.
Patchy, dense fog is forecast in Denver before 8 a.m. today, followed by a chilly weekend, with up to a few inches of snow possible Saturday night, according to the National Weather Service.
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The gloom will give way to partly sunny skies and temperatures near 50 on Friday, falling to 23 overnight.
Fog could return Friday night and early Saturday morning, and clouds will gather throughout the day Saturday, with a high of 39 and a low of 17 forecast.
A chance of snow was also forecast Sunday and Monday in Denver, with highs in the 30s and lows around 16.
Dozens and dozens of restaurants will open their doors for the first time in 2025 — most of which we don’t even know about yet (although their owners are surely planning away). But we do have details of some of them, and it makes us hungry. Here is a list of eight of the most anticipated openings of 2025 — along with two more without addresses that are in the works.
Amorina
Chef Max Mackissock of the Culinary Creative Group plans to open Amorina, a cocktail bar and small-plates restaurant in Cherry Creek, on Jan.
The U. S. military’s mountain bunker along Colorado’s Front Range, built during the Cold War to survive a Soviet nuclear attack, now must withstand scrutiny by lawmakers who see it as a costly relic.
They question the need for a not-so-secret command post cocooned in 2,000 feet of granite. It sits inside Cheyenne Mountain, where North American Aerospace Defense (NORAD) crews in front of a large map can scan skies and track missile and satellite launches around the planet, along with potentially disruptive space junk.
The bunker also houses, behind 23-ton blast doors, a power plant, water supply, food stores, a health clinic, a barber shop, and a chapel.
Military crews at the Buckley Space Force Base east of Denver and at Peterson Space Force Base east of Colorado Springs perform the same missions at a lower cost.
Apple has agreed to pay $95 million to settle a lawsuit accusing the privacy-minded company of deploying its virtual assistant Siri to eavesdrop on people using its iPhone and other trendy devices.
The proposed settlement filed Tuesday in an Oakland, California, federal court would resolve a 5-year-old lawsuit revolving around allegations that Apple surreptitiously activated Siri to record conversations through iPhones and other devices equipped with the virtual assistant for more than a decade.
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The alleged recordings occurred even when people didn’t seek to activate the virtual assistant with the trigger words, “Hey, Siri.” Some of the recorded conversations were then shared with advertisers in an attempt to sell their products to consumers more likely to be interested in the goods and services, the lawsuit asserted.
The allegations about a snoopy Siri contradicted Apple’s long-running commitment to protect the privacy of its customers — a crusade that CEO Tim Cook has often framed as a fight to preserve “a fundamental human right.”
Apple isn’t acknowledging any wrongdoing in the settlement, which still must be approved by U.