The Department of Justice has filed lawsuits against Colorado's gun laws, including Denver's assault weapons ban and the state's 15-round magazine restriction, using a civil rights statute originally created after the 1992 Rodney King riots to investigate police misconduct. The DOJ argues that enforcing Colorado's magazine ban through state troopers and CBI agents may violate constitutional rights under the Second Amendment, seeking a permanent injunction and court-supervised policy reforms similar to police consent decrees used in cities like Los Angeles and Baltimore. This represents an unprecedented expansion of how federal civil rights law is being applied to challenge state-level gun regulations.
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DOJ Takes On Colorado Gun Laws, TABOR Refund Fight & ICE Lawsuit Bill | Mountain Minute: 5/12/26Added:
Hey everyone, welcome back to the Mountain Minute. If you've been following along, you know that Colorado is becoming ground zero for some of the biggest fights in America right now. Gun rights, immigration enforcement, taxpayer refunds, school leadership, and the growing question of whether government still answers to voters, or just itself. Let's dive into it all.
Here's your Mountain Minute from May 12th all the way from NYC. You guys, I'm traveling this week, so don't mind the background. Hopefully, you can't hear the music and the hustle and bustle.
First, in a major Rocky Mountain Voice original from Jen Schuman, the Department of Justice is taking an unprecedented legal approach in its fight against Colorado's gun laws. The DOJ has now filed lawsuits targeting both Denver's assault weapons ban and Colorado's 15 round magazine restriction. But what makes this different is the law they're using to do it. The federal government is relying on a civil rights statute created after the Rodney King riots in 1994, one historically used to investigate police misconduct and constitutional abuses by law enforcement agencies. According to the lawsuit, the DOJ argues that enforcing Colorado's magazine ban through state troopers and CBI agents may itself violate constitutional rights under the Second Amendment. The filing seeks a permanent injunction blocking enforcement and even calls for court supervised policy reforms similar to police consent decrees used in cities like Los Angeles and Baltimore. The legal strategy marks a dramatic expansion of how federal civil rights law is being used and Colorado is now at the center of that national test case.
We'll keep you updated. Meanwhile, another battle over government power is unfolding at the capital. Governor Jared Polus is now deciding whether to sign Senate Bill 5, legislation allowing Colorado residents to sue federal immigration agents in state court over alleged constitutional violations.
Supporters say the bill creates accountability if ICE agents violate someone's rights during enforcement actions. While critics warn it could create legal chaos and discourage federal immigration enforcement in Colorado altogether. And while lawmakers debate new legal protections, many taxpayers are focused on their wallets.
Right now, Senate Democrats are advancing a plan that would redirect roughly $36 million in taper refunds over the next two years. Republicans and outside groups are already preparing legal challenges, arguing the refunds belong to taxpayers, not the state. A related Rocky Mountain Voice commentary warns lawmakers are increasingly building workarounds to voter approved initiatives before voters even cast ballots. The piece argues that government is shifting from representing the public to managing and containing it. A warning the author says should concern every voter regardless of party.
Colorado families are also seeing affordability debates play out in real time through new fees quietly added to insurance bills. A Colorado Accountability Project commentary points to recently created homeowner insurance fees tied to disaster mitigation and fair plan subsidies, arguing lawmakers claim costs are going down while families continue paying more. The article questions whether statewide fees programs are fairly benefiting the people paying into them. And in education news, Jefferson County Schools Superintendent Tracy Dorland has announced her resignation after five years leading Colorado's second largest school district. Her departure comes shortly after the teachers union issued a vote of no confidence, citing what it called a disconnect between district leadership and educators, families, and communities. And at DIA, serious security concerns are also growing after new surveillance video showed just how quickly a trespasser was able to reach an active runway before being struck and killed by a departing Frontier Airlines flight. Officials confirmed the aircraft carrying 231 people hit the individual during takeoff Friday night. The incident is now raising major questions about airport parameter security and response protocols. Nationally, the Department of Justice also announced efforts to revoke citizenship from 12 naturalized individuals accused of concealing serious criminal backgrounds during the immigration process. The allegations include ties to terrorism, child sexual assault, and fraud. DOJ officials say individuals who lied during naturalization proceedings should face the fullest extent of the law. And finally, a new federal report found government agencies failed to stop nearly $186 billion in improper payments last year alone. The report includes incorrect payments, missing documentation, and fraud vulnerabilities across major federal programs, fueling renewed concerns about oversight, waste, and accountability in Washington. You can find all these stories and more at rocky mountains.com. As always, we have new speaker announcements coming today.
Usually we announce them Tuesday and Thursday for Freedom Fest. So stay tuned for that. Make sure you're either on our priority list or social media to be in the know. And that's all I got for you guys today. Stay sharp, stay bold, stay in the fight. I'm going to go stay safe in New York City.
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