Archive for Monday, May 24, 2004

Also from May 24

All stories

Better than the lottery’
Craig man wins special bull hunting license
May 24, 2004
Brent Nations thinks he is the luckiest hunter in Colorado.
Judge dismisses drug charge
May 24, 2004
The drug distribution charge against James Pogline resulting from an early morning police raid has been dismissed by Moffat County Judge Mary Lynne James.
Democrats attend state assembly
County residents travel to Pueblo convention, support Salazar
May 24, 2004
Four Craig residents made the trip to Pueblo on Saturday to represent Moffat County at the Colorado Democratic State Assembly.
Water literacy’ goal of forum
May 24, 2004
In Northwest Colorado, water is an issue even in wet years. But 2004 is proving to be another drought year, as forecasters predict the low snowpack could result in conditions similar to the record breaking dryness of 2002.
Former addict counsels youth
May 24, 2004
After nearly three decades of methamphetamine use, Dena Harper has the battle scars to prove it.
If it burns, we’ll put it out’
Craig HazMat team trained, equipped to handle meth-lab explosions in four-county area
May 24, 2004
Law enforcement officials have busted a handful of working methamphetamine labs in Craig, but they haven’t yet had to respond to an explosion caused by a meth lab.
Police Blotter for May 25
May 24, 2004
Mike Voloshin
May 24, 2004
John Peroulis
May 24, 2004
Jessica Willingham
May 24, 2004
Garrett Schopper
May 24, 2004
Shawn W. Taylor
May 24, 2004
Earl and Beulah Kline
May 24, 2004
Traffic stop yields drugs
May 24, 2004
The Colorado State Patrol confiscated six different illegal drugs after stopping a vehicle for speeding south of Craig on Saturday.
Seeking ‘old west’ spirit
Events galore scheduled for Grand Ole West Days
May 24, 2004
The “old west” tradition conjures images of muscular horses ridden by trail-worn cowboys working large herds of dusty cattle, women with narrow waists wearing wide skirts and guns hanging overtly on nearly every man’s hip.
A toxic trail
Contamination caused by cooking is wide-spread
May 24, 2004
The potential for an explosion is only one of the risks of cooking methamphetamine. Other repercussions can last years and impact property values, health and the environment.
Chemical burns
Toxic household products are key ingredients in ‘cooking’ meth
May 24, 2004
They call it a lab, but an average site where methamphetamine is manufactured doesn’t resemble the pristine conditions and equipment found in a scientific laboratory.
Mark Samuelson and Susan Chenoweth
May 24, 2004
Jessie Dilbeck
May 24, 2004

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