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MAY 2026 | Vol. 31 Issue 5
SUGGESTED
IT'S GOING
TO BE OKAY,
MOM.' P.4
IN YOUR
OWN
WORDS
P.12
MEGAN TRUSSELL'S
PARENTS PRESS FOR
TRANSPARENCY AS STATE
REVIEWS CU BOULDER
STUDENT'S DEATH
P.8
FROM YOUR VENDOR:
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Help us help your neighbors.
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DENVERVOICE.org
׉	 7cassandra://2RAsFjIUkCHXgYRCVhm-w7jJpVG6X3c0GEa1C0MRJVw+` i\^D^."׉EFrom the
Executive
Director
I
Giles Clasen is a writer
and photographer driven
to tell Denver’s often
overlooked stories with
dignity and care. He
serves as executive
director of Denver VOICE
and has worked with
the organization since
2008 as a contributor,
board member, and board
president.
DENVERVOICE.ORG
MANAGING EDITOR
HAVE BEEN HAVING NIGHTMARES about Tommy Charbonneau.
His story is my story with a tragic outcome. Tommy’s life was turned upside down
by a traumatic brain injury that shifted his identity and pushed him toward life on the
streets. That life ended one year ago on Mother’s Day 2025. He was 35.
In 2008, a car hit me while I was biking to work. I sustained a traumatic brain injury
similar to what Tommy experienced.
For 18 years, I have lived with constant pain, insomnia, crippling anxiety, and vision
problems that make reading difficult, all brought on by the TBI. For years, I managed that
pain with prescribed Percocet and OxyContin. For a decade I took Ambien to sleep. Any
of those medications could have led to addiction. For reasons I still don’t fully understand,
they didn’t.
I was lucky. Tommy wasn’t.
It is easy to look at Tommy’s story and find the moments where he could have made
different choices. I know better. I have felt so burdened by my own disability, so certain I
was a weight on the people who loved me, that I wanted to end my life. Tommy had a family
who adored him, and kept a room for him, always, even today. He chose the streets anyway,
because the streets asked nothing of him.
His choice resonates with me.
His choice was not a moral failure. That is what untreated trauma and an injured brain
can do to a person’s sense of their own worth. I wish we had created a community that
encouraged Tommy to heal, in a home, without the judgement that leads to feelings of
burdensomeness.
It’s not too late.
What happened to Tommy could happen to anyone who sustains a serious injury or lives
with a disability. It could have happened to me. It could happen to you.
Tommy did not die because he made bad choices. He died because we have built a
community that responds to complex, expensive human needs with inadequate resources,
a piecemeal safety net, and fast judgment. We underfund systems that barely scratch the
surface, then blame the people those systems fail.
We can do better. Tommy’s mother, Tammy, shows us how. She volunteers, she shows
up, she carries food in her truck and hands it to strangers because her son taught her that
people on the streets are worth caring for.
The rest of us could learn the same lesson before we lose someone else.
- Giles Clasen
Executive Director
ARTISTS/PHOTOGRAPHERS
CONTRIBUTORS
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
ART DIRECTOR
ADMIN. ASSISTANT
VOLUNTEER COPY EDITORS
@denverVOICE
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Giles Clasen
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Jennifer Forker
Aaron Sullivan
Lisa Schlictman
Joshua Abeyta
Rea Brown
Giles Clasen
Paige Miltenberger
Joshua Abeyta
Lando Allen
Giles Clasen
Raelene Johnson
Halvin Jones
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Paige Miltenberger
Jerry Rosen
Jennifer Forker, President
Donald Burnes, Vice President
Edwin Rapp, Treasurer
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Michael Burkley
Ande Sailer
Linda Shapley
Steve Baker
Lisa Schlichtman
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THE COVER: Megan Trussell at her 2024 high
school graduation from Northfield High school
PHOTO COURTESY OF VANESSA DÍAZ
DENVER VOICE
MAY 2026
3
ABOUT US
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OKAY, MOM'
Story and photos by Giles Clasen
Tammy Charbonneau in her son Tommy’s bedroom. She
kept it for him whenever he needed it and came home.
4
FEATURE
׉	 7cassandra://edhWGGA-7nIos3bj9mYrge2cLenD20sPmqdnUtPyil4!` i\^D^.$׉EWHEN TOMMY CHARBONNEAU received his first food stamps,
he went to King Soopers, got a shopping cart, and filled it with
groceries. Then he walked around downtown, handing out food
to individuals living on the streets.
Tommy was homeless, but he wanted to share the little he
had.
“That’s Tommy, he cared about people, big time,” his mom,
Tammy Charbonneau, said.
The dangers of homelessness eventually caught up to Tommy.
He died on Mother’s Day in 2025. He was 35 years old.
Paramedics found him in an alley near Denver Health.
Charbonneau said the drugs that killed him had been cut with
fentanyl, something he did not know and did not choose.
“Tommy and I were stuck like glue,” Charbonneau said. “I
love Tommy this much, with my two fingers, smashed together,
not with my arms spread apart wide, but my fingers smashed
together, because nobody could ever get in the middle of that.
That’s how tight me and Tommy were.”
Tommy grew up in Littleton and was the kind of kid who
filled a house. His mom instilled a work ethic in him early,
and he got a job at King Soopers at 16. He was promoted from
cashier to working in customer service in just two weeks.
“He was a hard-working kid,” Charbonneau said. “I’m talking
hard-working.”
After Tommy finished high school, he painted commercially
for Charbonneau’s company and was one of her best
employees. He enrolled at Arapahoe Community College to
study architectural drafting. He hoped to join the Marines, so
Charbonneau went with him to sign the paperwork.
An arrest for marijuana and paraphernalia possession when
he was a minor made him temporarily ineligible. He was told to
come back in a few years.
“If he would have been able to get in, we wouldn’t even be
having this conversation,” Charbonneau said. “Any time
Tommy is in complete structure, complete 110% structure, he
excels beyond your wildest expectations.”
Tommy spent hours playing guitar and making music. He
would teach the guitar to anyone who was interested.
At 25, Tommy was still figuring things out. He was working
and earning good money. He was also in a relationship that
had started pulling him sideways. Like many younger adults,
Tommy and his girlfriend began using drugs recreationally.
He had dabbled with pot in high school, but when he started
experimenting with drugs at parties, he became erratic.
Charbonneau said she thinks he was using meth a little.
Tammy’s memorial to her son Tommy in her
home with his guitar picks and hats.
Tommy began to struggle.
One afternoon, things came to a head. He and his girlfriend
fought. She walked away from him at a park and left her keys on
a picnic table. Tommy grabbed them and drove off in her car.
He turned onto Alameda Avenue and headed toward
Wadsworth Boulevard. He was driving fast. When he tried to
make the turn at the intersection, the car hit a light pole at the
southwest corner, and Tommy was not wearing a seat belt.
The impact pushed the engine back three feet into the car.
Tommy’s body was no match for the force of the collision. Both
of his legs were shattered, and his pelvis was crushed. His face
struck the steering wheel, shattering both eye sockets, both
cheekbones, his jaw, and his nose. Surgical photographs show
his skull held together with wire mesh and metal brackets.
For three days after the accident, Charbonneau couldn’t find
her son. She called jails. She called friends and family. Finally,
she started calling hospitals. Charbonneau said the 45-minute
drive to St. Anthony’s Hospital to see him was the longest 45
minutes of her life.
“That’s where the mental problems started happening right
then,” she said.
Tommy sustained a traumatic brain injury. The brain injury
rewired Tommy in ways medicine could not fully address.
“He totally hopped out of his own body and was somebody
else after that,” Charbonneau said. “He was still Tommy, but he
wasn’t. He struggled with mental health problems, problems
that made everything harder.”
Surgeons repaired his legs and pelvis, but a nerve left
unattached during surgery gave him a permanent drop foot,
meaning he could not lift his left foot when he walked. The
IN THE QUIET OF THE WALKS
by Tammy Charbonneau
He walked where mountains touched the sky,
A place where silence calms the mind’s cry.
Each step a whisper, a search for peace,
A journey where the noise could cease.
His guitar, a quiet friend in hand,
Strummed softly, as only he could understand.
Not for the world, but to quiet the fight,
A way to find some gentle light.
The voices in his mind would sometimes call,
Heavy and relentless, a shadowed wall.
But with his mom, when days grew long,
He felt the safest, held so strong.
Through valleys deep and skies so wide,
My love stood steady, like the tide.
A constant force, both calm and true,
When the world felt harsh, he turned to me.
Now in the skies, where he’s at rest,
My love still wraps him, always blessed.
He’s part of every breeze that blows,
In the trees, in all that grows—
The quiet strength, the love we knew,
Will stay with me my whole life through.
So when I walk those trails alone,
I feel him near—I’m not on my own.
An interpretation of Tammy’s poem by Denver VOICE vendor Rea Brown
And in the hush, beneath the blue,
Perhaps it wasn’t me who carried you—
But you, my son, who carried me,
That brought me peace to know you’re free.
Fly high and free, Tommy—my strong, kind son,
Forever my heart, forever my song.
DENVER VOICE
MAY 2026
5
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He was discharged with morphine and monitored closely
by Charbonneau. Fear of addiction and Tommy’s drug
history made it so doctors wouldn’t prescribe him opioid pain
medications. They prescribed gabapentin, which helped with
his nerve pain. But Tommy was mostly on his own with little
medical pain management.
“Nothing,” Charbonneau said. “It’s just, ‘here’s your
prescriptions’, we fill them, and all of a sudden, there’s no refill.
Nothing. The pain, no one could cope with that.”
After a month in the hospital, Tommy came home in a
wheelchair, and Charbonneau arranged her schedule around
her son’s needs. She moved him to the front living room
couch and slept on the back couch to be close and to give him
morphine when he needed it. She helped him up the stairs
backward. She pushed him to the bathroom on a small chair. She
monitored every pill. She went with him to every appointment.
She did all of it because he was Tommy, and he was hers.
A motor vehicle theft conviction connected to the crash
eventually sent Tommy to the Colorado Department of
Corrections for two years. The time in prison exacerbated
his mental health issues. He walked out of prison speaking to
people no one else could see, describing microphones planted
in his toothpaste and signals tapped into his brain.
Charbonneau suspects Tommy was assaulted in prison, but
he wouldn’t talk about it.
“That’s not how you treat someone who has a brain injury
and stick them in the most dangerous, volatile, hostile
environment,” Charbonneau said. “It broke my heart. It should
have been different.”
Charbonneau said she was frustrated with how little support
was offered to convicts. She is grateful that her son’s probation
officer always tried to help Tommy. But with few programs to
help him adjust, Tommy never bounced back.
“It takes baby steps to get back to the real streets of the world.
That wasn’t offered,” Charbonneau said.
Tommy did live at a halfway house and participated in case
management. But he never received the wrap around services
that were needed to truly rebuild his life.
After prison, Charbonneau made sure her door was always
open and that Tommy’s room was always available to him. It is
still untouched, exactly as he left it. Charbonneau would never
give up on her son.
But Charbonneau had rules: no drugs or alcohol in the home.
“He always knew that I was his safety net, that I would be
there for him. He always knew that he could come home,” she
said.
The brain injury had done something to Tommy’s sense of
self and his place in the world. Charbonneau believes he didn’t
want to be a burden to her. She thinks that the streets, as hard
as they were, felt like a place where he wasn’t pulling someone
he loved down. She watched him leave again and again, and she
learned to let him go.
“It was painful every time he left. You just learn to live with
it,” she said. “You just deal with the emotions and wait for the
next thing to flare up.”
Tommy struggled with crippling pain. Charbonneau thinks
the pain and mental health issues may have been the reason
he turned to drugs like meth on the street. Tommy told her he
had tried drugs like heroin once, but he didn’t use them. She
said the coroner’s report stated that the drugs in Tommy’s
possession were laced with fentanyl and cocaine. It was a deadly
combination.
Tommy didn’t have fentanyl test strips or other harm
reduction tools that may have alerted him to their life-taking
power.
Charbonneau never stopped showing up. She met him at
RTD Light Rail stations with gabapentin for his nerve pain. He
would call, and she would deliver ibuprofen, clean clothes, and
rolled cigarettes. She took him to lunch downtown. She bought
him shoes every two months because he walked everywhere.
She said shoes didn’t last long because he walked 20,000 to
50,000 steps in a day, his broken foot dragging beneath him,
sometimes a guitar too.
The last voicemail he left her came from 16th Street Mall.
Charbonneau met him the next day. Tommy was sober. He
stood at her truck window and put his left hand on her shoulder.
“It’s gonna be okay, Mom. Trust me,” he said.
He died a day and a half later.
Charbonneau asked the coroner for a photo of Tommy’s hand
and said she is planning to get a tattoo of it on her shoulder. She
may even embed the tattoo with some of Tommy’s ashes.
Charbonneau still won’t give up on her son. She volunteers
at Joy’s Kitchen, distributing food to people experiencing
homelessness several days a week.
She donates to Giving Hearts in Englewood. She keeps supply
bags in her truck to give away year-round and goes through
about 50 of them every winter. She does it because of Tommy,
and because she knows now what most people don’t: that the
person on the corner with a sign was not always there, did not
plan to be there, and cannot simply decide to leave.
“Nobody chooses to be homeless,” she said. “Tommy didn’t
grow up and say, ‘I wanna grow up and be an addict.’ Nobody
does.”
But circumstances took control of his life, and he couldn’t
get it back. Charbonneau wants there to be more support,
more services, and more housing for individuals experiencing
homelessness so no one else dies the way Tommy did.
In her house she keeps a memorial to honor Tommy. It has his
photographs, guitar picks, his hats. Sometimes one of the hats
falls off the shelf despite being secured in place. She wonders if
it is Tommy trying to reach out.
Charbonneau lets the hat stay on the ground for a while.
“Tommy wasn’t homeless; he always had a home here with
me, even if he didn’t come home,” Charbonneau said. “Every
single person’s worth a shot at saving, at getting a home.”
Tammy Charbonneau in her son
Tommy’s bedroom. She has left
it untouched since the day he
died.
6
FEATURE
׉	 7cassandra://A-bNlHZZOvq7OasGeVGODz3oIZUH0Q2_uVJuFCKH634#` i\^D^.&׉E}BATTLE
PUSSY
WANTS YOU TO
KNOW THEY ARE
NOT CUTE
Battle Pussy outside 7th Circle, a community run
music venue in Denver. | Photo by Jeff LaGreca
Editor’s Note: The following story is
based on interviews with members of
the band Battle Pussy. To protect the
privacy and reputations of the artists
involved, stage names have been used
throughout this article, and some
identifying details have been altered.
BAND MEMBERS Sledge, Shredz,
The Juice, and Da Beet perform
in masks
and balaclavas when
JOSHUA ABEYTA
DENVER VOICE
MUSIC REPORTER
they rip the stage around town,
including at the most recent No
Kings rally in March, which drew
more than 10,000 protesters to the
Denver event.
When asked about their
demands, the group was
unequivocal: “Human rights. Just be a freaking human and take
care of your fellow humans.”
The band is committed to protest music and has long since
given up trying to please everyone.
“In 2016, we tried to appeal to everybody in the punk scene.
We knew that we, as women, had to make a strong impact, but
we also wanted to appeal. And as we’ve learned, as women,
appealing to the patriarchy has just always been a lost cause. We
really struggled with this idea of who we were and how serious
we really were, and we were serious as a heart attack,” said
Sledge, front-woman, lead vocalist, and guitarist.
Sledge met bassist and backing vocalist The Juice, when
Sledge moved to Denver around 2014 and started a zombie
escape room. The Juice was hired as one of the zombies, and
the two became fast friends, quickly forming Battle Pussy as a
political punk band to push back on President Donald Trump’s
administration that was about to take power in 2016.
“It was crystal clear. We went to bed that night and my kids
were worried. This was the first election that they were old
enough to kind of follow along and ask questions,” the Juice said.
“I literally thought there’s no way that this would happen, and
waking up in the morning and [my daughter’s] crying because
she was scared. I’m like, I have to do something about this. So
when [Sledge] created Battle Pussy, I had no second thought. I
have to do something for a better country and a better future for
my kids. I can’t just silently be upset.”
Within a year,
they played their
first
to believe it’s happening or because it’s easier to pretend it isn’t
happening, but it very much is, and it’s affecting people every
day.”
Battle Pussy channeled that anger into their debut album
show at Mutiny
Information Cafe, an institution in the Denver music scene. At
first, they relied on comedy, theater, and wild stage antics to get
people’s attention. Their performances were also intended to
lift the spirits of people facing an existential crisis brought on by
the first Trump term.
“We were so serious. But we played games at our shows. We
had two dudes that would wear Speedos wearing Trump masks.
They would have people jump rope. We would have cake-eating
contests. We would have ‘make up your friend like Trump with
feathers and orange paint’. We did a lot of stuff to kind of get our
point across, but also kinda try to lift the spirits of everybody
around us. This time around, it’s like no jokes,” Sledge said.
When Trump mounted a comeback in 2024, the group
rethought their strategy.
“We changed our aesthetic by either wearing pretty severe
black makeup across our faces, like a banishment of ourselves,
or our ski masks to also just kind of conceal who we were, just
knowing that everything’s a little heightened now anyway.
But to kinda give a more, we’re not cute [vibe]. We’re pretty
demented, and we’re mad. You know? It’s like, we’re pissed off.”
Sledge said.
“Serious things are happening to people every day now, and
this is what was expected. They told us they were gonna do this.
So, we’re just trying to make it serious for everyone,” Drummer
Da Beet said. I think there’s still a lot of people that are in denial
of the truth of what’s happening, either because they don’t want
“Revolution,” a 10-song offering that includes the eponymous
track Revolution, as well as Water is Life, Trumpty Dumpty,
Vote and Joy Stealer. Released in 2017, the songs evoke melodic
punk bands like Bikini Kill and Bad Cop/Bad Cop, or malefronted
groups like Propaghandi and Bad Religion. The songs
are a clear call to action and incorporate classic protest chants,
such as the familiar cadence of “No Trump, No KKK, No Fascist
USA.”
The band put a new spin on another classic with Tweety
Tweet, a punk homage to “Rockin’ Robin,” restyled to poke
fun at Trump’s relationship with the social media platform X
(formerly Twitter) in a style that could have come from a lost
collaboration between Sublime and Gwen Stefani.
The theatrical prowess and playfulness of the group shine
through on the record. On stage, the band is all business, but
their activism goes beyond their live performances.
In the community, all four members are creative arts
educators. Sledge, The Juice, and Da Beet all teach music to kids
and adults through a local nonprofit. Shredz, the guitarist and
newest member, runs her own children’s theater company.
Shredz said, “A lot of what I do is building community and
just having a space for kids. I’m very kid-focused, you know,
my life and in my work is like, creating good humans, building
self-confidence, building trust, and building teamwork through
that.”
Whether inspiring this generation or educating the next,
Battle Pussy is a punk band on the rise, and their members
are using every tool available to enact positive change in
their communities. You can see them perform on July 11th at
FemmeFest at EastFax Tap.
DENVER VOICE
COLUMN
7
׉	 7cassandra://aufXS18JBGsY7fec5Fp9d-Yx3v09HGpuDWbCSAS-QMQ,0` i\^D^.'i\^D^.&
בCט   du׉׉	 7cassandra://bSKKHOn4-l5LAAz9iedC2YpMw9F02HEz99a8cdqV2TU 	`׉	 7cassandra://qDKEv3JbT3tWqzLVcrYND1Rq76dlvPL22S-YkBG7VYE͡`p׉	 7cassandra://MvT0DIW4B69ANO13bDHpqYbzKvFGAB5YjdYweugljRs2` i\^D^.Jט d du׉׉	 7cassandra://G9V1JHRtPX056NZhznZ2u54wTvV-3HJeEO1rQmSJnmg M`׉	 7cassandra://p09yeOmXKj8-SyXGnd90OYIUfc5u2mdA15qibBAPc9UͥM`p׉	 7cassandra://Rvka-zk8ETdmQTFpLbGWKOcag7zyW7kgw1imjFYq_gE,K` i\^D^.K׉EWhere Megan Trussell’s
phone last pinged
Where Megan Trussell
was found
The culvert area by mile marker 40 on Boulder
Canyon Drive, where Megan Trussell’s body
was found Feb. 15, 2025, was in “hard-to-reach
terrain.”
Megan Trussel
Megan Trussell's
Parents Press for
Transparency as State
Reviews CU Boulder
Student's Death
8
Story and photos by Paige Miltenberger
COMMUNITY FEATURE
׉	 7cassandra://MvT0DIW4B69ANO13bDHpqYbzKvFGAB5YjdYweugljRs2` i\^D^.(׉E]Where Megan Trussell’s
phone was sold
Where Megan Trussell
was last seen on footage
A security camera near Colorado Avenue and
Folsom Field, next to a bus stop, captured the last
known footage of Megan Trussell on Feb. 9, 2025,
as she walked west on Colorado Avenue.
ll’s dorm
Where Megan Trussell’s
purse was found
DENVER VOICE
MAY 2026
9
aa
׉	 7cassandra://Rvka-zk8ETdmQTFpLbGWKOcag7zyW7kgw1imjFYq_gE,K` i\^D^.)i\^D^.(
בCט   du׉׉	 7cassandra://qfGPq57MmP_iX9Nxm6YMSdl-eP9o8p-RL8hvRARb7jo `׉	 7cassandra://tl1pP4suYeYoqyExNyJjsPPplu6QUlaYsS5oBqNVVF8z`p׉	 7cassandra://yaiWiLg6OVw5K1Rj4p7YZaRnSKA870UP84UnUKiID9s$` i\^D^.Mט d du׉׉	 7cassandra://Uxa-T_Vgoqz129V9dK2z7dFNEUzNXTWqNdUBb5o-wd0 G`׉	 7cassandra://4zT-Z0kesPC249T5rvOMWJM1piIGfGVt7reNvQ_hw8Et
`p׉	 7cassandra://q1vPbTrQC5yyI6EuuTzWkSS2NREN_w_ScM34S-II30I"` i\^D^.Nנi\^D^.R 	=o9ׁH $mailto:TrussellTips@Vigilante-PR.comׁׁЈ׉E"ANESSA DÍAZ and Joe Trussell are
still searching for answers to their
18-year-old daughter Megan Díaz
Trussell’s death, more than a year after
the University of Colorado Boulder
freshman died.
“There’s been a huge dismissal of who
Megan was as a person. They didn’t ask
us what she was like or what might have
happened to her,” Díaz said. “It was really
Boulder County [Sheriff’s Office] and CU
[that] started this narrative. When we first got up there, they
were pretty dismissive about her being missing. I knew in my
heart something was very wrong.”
Megan’s parents do not agree with the Boulder County
Sheriff’s Office’s determination of suicide as the cause of their
daughter’s death and, according to Díaz, there were concerns
about how the case was handled from the beginning.
Díaz and Trussell hired a private investigator who identified
unexplored surveillance cameras and is helping them gather
records and documents from their original holders.
As they pursued their own independent investigation, Díaz
and Trussell became the first people in Colorado to invoke a
state law requiring the Colorado Bureau of Investigation (CBI)
to independently review Megan’s death under a provision for
certain Indigenous deaths ruled suicide or overdose under
suspicious circumstances.
For Megan’s parents, the announcement marked both a step
forward and a reminder of what remains unresolved.
THE CASE TIMELINE
In the Boulder County Sheriff’s Office (BCSO) May 27, 2025
news release, “Conclusion of Investigation into the Death of
Megan Trussell,” the department reported that Megan was last
seen leaving the CU Boulder campus on the night of Feb. 9,
2025. She was reported missing three days later, and her body
was discovered near the 40-mile marker on Boulder Canyon
Drive on Feb. 15.
The release also concluded that Megan died by suicide “as a
result of the toxic effects of amphetamine, a key ingredient in
Adderall, with hypothermia as a contributing factor.”
Díaz said a close friend who works for CBI advised her on
Feb. 12 to file a missing-person report with the Boulder Police
Department rather than CU.
She said she wishes she had gone to the Boulder police first
because once CU took the report, “they kept their narrative”
and acted as “gatekeepers for information.”
Díaz said investigators initially struggled to identify Megan
on camera.
“They started looking for video of her leaving campus, and
they couldn’t find her,” Diaz said. “You know why? Because they
didn’t ask us for a recent picture. She had changed her hair color
from blue to red.”
Above all, they want people to know their daughter. “They
never asked any questions about her…They basically turned
her into a statistic — a statistic that CU did not want to have on
their books,” Diaz said.
‘BRILLIANT AND BEAUTIFUL’
Megan was more than a typical freshman film major at CU
Boulder. Her parents described her passion for music, her
humor, and her creativity. They said she had a way of making
people feel seen.
Her father called Megan hilarious.
“She was happy, she was digging college, and really liked her
classes,” he said. “She was really starting to come into her own.”
Megan was a bass player and a concertgoer. She dreamed of
joining a band.
Diaz said that Megan kept a 15-page list of prospective band
names, including “Taco Bell Breakdown” and “Copyright
Infringement,” underscoring her offbeat humor.
When her father pressed her about where she wanted to go
to college, Megan told him, “I don’t really care where I go. The
only reason I’m going to college is that there might be bands
that need bass players.”
Trussell said Megan loved watching movies from the comfort
of her bed. She loved a wide range of films, including everything
from “The Birdcage” to “Scott Pilgrim vs. The World.”
Megan loved the movie so much that Díaz made her a oneof-a-kind
Ramona Flower’s purse, which was later found torn
and separated from the strap along a bike path, approximately 5
miles from the location her body was discovered.
Above all, Díaz said Megan was “brilliant and beautiful, and
she made everybody feel like they were her best friend.”
Her parents said their goal remains unchanged.
“Number one, Megan didn’t kill herself, and her name needs
to be cleared,” Trussell said. “Number two, somebody else is
responsible, and I don’t want this to happen to another family.”
THE MISSING INDIGENOUS PERSON ALERT
Díaz requested that CU issue a Missing Indigenous Person
Alert on Feb. 12, 2025, but she believes her request was not
handled promptly.
“The law says it’s supposed to do that within eight hours,”
Díaz said. “They did not do that. They didn’t submit it until the
14th, and that was after they had searched.”
Díaz said she and Megan were not affiliated with a tribe, but
their family carries Navajo and Apache lineage and can trace
their heritage back seven generations, with documented roots
stretching to the 18th century in what is now Colorado and New
Mexico.
When asked for an interview about CU Boulder’s
role
during the initial missing-person period in February 2025,
CU spokesperson Nicole Cousins Mueksch referred Denver
VOICE to previous University of Colorado Police Department
statements.
CUPD said in a Feb. 18, 2025 update that Megan was first
reported missing on the afternoon of Wednesday, Feb. 12. In
a Feb. 14 update, the department said it “released information
as soon as Megan’s missing status was confirmed, and it was
determined releasing such information would be helpful in the
search.”
The Boulder Daily Camera later reported that CBI issued the
Missing Indigenous Person Alert at 9:31 p.m. on Feb. 14. The
newspaper quoted CBI Strategic Communications Director
Rob Low as saying such alerts are issued only when requested
by law enforcement and only when the missing person is
Indigenous.
When reached for comment, Low said CBI doesn’t grant
interviews regarding pending investigations or case reviews.
FAMILY CHALLENGES CLAIM THAT
MEGAN LEFT CAMPUS
Díaz and Trussell said they have major unanswered questions
involving surveillance footage from CUPD.
According to the May 27, 2025, BCSO news release, Megan
was last seen leaving the CU Boulder campus on the night
of Feb. 9, 2025. She left her dorm at 9:36 p.m. and was seen
walking alone on campus. The release also states, “the last visual
confirmation came from security footage at 9:52 p.m.”
“When they say that she was last seen leaving campus, that is
absolutely not true,” Díaz said. “The only video footage they’ve
provided is right next to Folsom Field. That’s still in the middle
of campus.”
Díaz explained that the family’s private investigator
identified six additional cameras that should have captured
Megan’s movements.
Trussell
said CUPD told them some cameras were not
working.
He also said CUPD downplayed the extent of camera
coverage beyond campus, including near Boulder High
School, where he said the family’s private investigator observed
multiple cameras that may have captured footage of Megan.
Since February, the family has been pursuing records
requests for additional campus CCTV footage under the
Colorado Open Records Act.
QUESTIONS ABOUT THE LOCATION WHERE
MEGAN’S BODY WAS DISCOVERED
Megan’s body was found Feb. 15, 2025, near mile marker 40
on Boulder Canyon Drive. In a Feb. 15, 2025, update, BCSO
said the body was found in “hard-to-reach terrain,” requiring “a
technical evacuation including the need to rappel.”
The terrain is part of what troubles the family.
“To get to the spot that she was found at, she would have had
to hustle there,” Díaz said. “She would have had to know where
she was going.” Díaz believes it is unlikely that Megan would
have known about the spot.
Additionally, Díaz said
two Boulder Emergency Squad
searchers were near the culvert area on Feb. 13, 2025, two days
before Megan’s body was found there, and she questioned how
neither reported seeing her.
She said only one of the two searchers was interviewed by
BCSO, while the other was not made available to the family’s
private investigator without a subpoena, which Díaz said leaves
a potentially important account unexplored.
Trussell said FBI phone analysis pointed searchers to the
culvert area by the morning of Feb. 13, and that it remained a
primary search area for two days involving multiple agencies,
drones, and dogs. “They didn’t find her body because we believe
it wasn’t there,” he said.
Trussell also said investigators failed to consider that Megan,
according to him, had no history of suicidal thoughts or selfharm.
Megan
Trussell’s parents described their daughter’s passion for music, humor, and creativity, and said she had a way of
making people feel seen. | Photo courtesy of Vannessa Díaz
10
NEWS
׉	 7cassandra://yaiWiLg6OVw5K1Rj4p7YZaRnSKA870UP84UnUKiID9s$` i\^D^.*׉E“This narrative, that she was this heartbroken, crazed,
fragile 18-year-old, we believe that’s based on the fact that she
wore baggy jeans and Smashing Pumpkins T-shirts and black
eyeliner,” Trussell said. “That was her style. She dressed like that
because she chose it. She loved the irony of it.”
Trussell said he believes investigators jumped to conclusions
based on Megan’s appearance and age that do not reflect who
his daughter was and the way she lived.
PHONE, PURSE, AND MISSING ITEMS
DEEPEN FAMILY’S DOUBTS
The May 27, 2025, BCSO news release states that cellphone
data indicated Megan traveled west toward Boulder Canyon
Drive, where her phone’s last signal was recorded near the 40mile
marker. The phone stopped connecting to networks on
Feb. 12.
Díaz said the FBI’s role was limited to analyzing cell phone
data, which she said showed only that Megan’s phone was in the
area, not where Megan was herself, or how fast she was moving.
She added, “The only thing they have proof of is that her
phone was in that location,” and “it’s only phone pings,” not
GPS.
The BCSO release also states that on March 2, 2025, Megan’s
phone was traced to a resale kiosk at a Boulder grocery store
and that it had been sold by an unhoused individual who
reported receiving it from another unhoused man.
“Her phone, one of the most critical pieces of evidence in any
missing person case, was not properly entered into the pawn
system,” Díaz wrote in an Instagram post.
The press release continues that Megan’s purse was found
on March 5, 2025 by a community member near the 39.6-mile
marker of Highway 36 along the bike path.
In a Facebook post, Díaz shared images of the location where
Megan’s crossbody purse was found several feet away with its
strap torn off. She also wrote in a separate post that Megan’s
right shoe was missing from her body when she was discovered.
The shoe has not been recovered to this day.
UNEXPLAINED INJURIES AND LACK
OF FORENSIC TESTING
When Díaz received Megan’s autopsy report, she said it
documented multiple injuries, including a missing left canine,
a badly broken incisor, and bruises and abrasions across her
body.
Díaz said those injuries were initially minimized, adding that
her teeth “are not where they’re supposed to be. She has a gash
across her face. She has bruising on her mouth.”
In a GoFundMe update, Díaz said she has been unable to
obtain the official autopsy photos, X-rays, and internal images
because she was told they would not be released out of respect
for the deceased and over concerns they could be shared with
the media.
Díaz also said investigators collected potential forensic
evidence, including fingernail clippings, and completed a
sexual assault evidence kit. However, this evidence was not sent
in for DNA testing.
A family member wrote on the official Instagram, “Only
toxicology and histology were ever sent for forensic analysis.
Nothing else was tested: no swabs, no trace evidence, no
clothing fibers, no DNA, no chemical confirmation of the ‘pill
material.’”
“They did not investigate anything that didn’t reinforce their
suicide [determination],” Díaz said. “Everything they sent in
for testing was toxicology because that’s the only thing that they
wanted to prove.”
In a GoFundMe update, Díaz wrote that while the coroner
said Megan’s stomach was filled with pill material, toxicology
found amphetamine in only 5% to 7% of that material, leaving
93% to 95% unidentified.
The family was later told by authorities they would have to
pay for any additional testing themselves.
“We don’t have that kind of money,” Trussell said. “The state
has these resources at their disposal. As citizens and taxpayers,
we should not be having to do that. They should.”
CBI’S STATUTORY REVIEW
On Jan. 9, 2026, CBI announced their review of the case after
Díaz and Trussell invoked a Colorado law that requires the
agency to independently review deaths of Indigenous people
Vanessa Díaz and Joe Trussell stand outside the Colorado Capitol on Mar. 16, 2026, after the senate unanimously passed SB 26-120,
“Missing Person Training & Higher Education Reporting,” spearheaded by Sen. Janice Marchman.
ruled suicide or overdose under suspicious circumstances.
“I feel like it was written just for Megan,” Díaz said. “This
information came at exactly the right time… I was starting to
lose hope.”
The family said CBI’s lead investigator approached them with
compassion, and Trussell said they were assured the review
would not simply confirm earlier conclusions.
Díaz said the review does not reopen the case or shift
jurisdiction away from BCSO. She said that CBI can make
recommendations, but any additional steps concerning the case
would still be up to BCSO.
Carrie Haverfield, senior communications specialist for
BCSO, said the agency declined an interview request with the
Denver VOICE: “As for any actions we may take, we are not
going to speculate on the outcome of their review and let their
process conclude before making any decisions.”
Díaz said she was told by the CBI review team that the review
would not normally be public, but she stated the findings
should be released if investigators identify problems with the
case because “that’s why this law exists.”
She added that “we have to make sure we get this right”
so the results do not return to the same agencies without
accountability or transparency.
MEGAN’S CASE LEADS TO POSSIBLE NEW LEGISLATION
Sen. Janice Marchman, a Loveland Democrat, has worked
alongside Megan’s parents since the beginning of the case and
hopes their advocacy prompts a broader reckoning in Colorado
over how missing college-aged people are treated.
Marchman has since co-sponsored SB 26-120 with Sen.
Katie Wallace, another Longmont Democrat. The proposed
legislation would create mandatory steps universities and law
enforcement must follow when a student goes missing.
“We cannot give Megan back to her family, but we can make
sure no other family faces the same silence,” she said.
Marchman said the bill would set timelines and
accountability structure for how these cases must be handled
going forward.
WHAT PARENTS NEED TO KNOW
Public awareness remains essential. Díaz said she is shocked
when people who have lived in Boulder their whole lives tell her
they have not heard about Megan’s death.
Díaz added that they want the public to keep pressure on
Boulder County and support fundraising efforts for legal and
forensic testing expenses.
“Megan wasn’t a celebrity,” Trussell said. “She was just a cool
kid going to Boulder, you know? Her story needs to be out there.
I don’t want this to happen to another CU parent.”
“For families who find themselves in this situation or
any situation that involves a crime with a loved one, don’t
immediately have blind faith that the institutions are going to
support you or do what they are allegedly mandated to do,” he
said.
Díaz hopes other families will take a look at a tool that’s been
helpful to them, called The Advocacy Blueprint, provided by
Haley Gray Research.
“Reach out for help because there are people out there who
can provide guidance in these situations,” Díaz said.
Tips can be submitted by calling or texting 678-636-9771 or by
emailing TrussellTips@Vigilante-PR.com.
DENVER VOICE
MAY 2026
11
׉	 7cassandra://q1vPbTrQC5yyI6EuuTzWkSS2NREN_w_ScM34S-II30I"` i\^D^.+i\^D^.*
בCט   du׉׉	 7cassandra://moOjIOqgtDqiIdXxFvWue6TNtwWnc3YDel-7aDK1VcI `׉	 7cassandra://KSfhEEJRc3mjJkwlzzicSY9X5UHbAFddA8KpEyZRPQUtd`p׉	 7cassandra://elAyc_zylW6xiduCuRhSwSPRWMbkIsU1s4JhC5ss12A*V` i\^D^.Qט d du׉׉	 7cassandra://qjdrLag5ImMZwQXGup7c1ZV6ug-N4_y1VZTdXTx_OIk ?`׉	 7cassandra://kirak9Gktg2Kr9NmMO5M5GMBg8wfNr2FQJAg85s231A͎W`p׉	 7cassandra://f3c3GmQyKme9uxfu7KmPCXU5k39Hyy2EEVw0KEp2k9E.` i\^D^.S׉E<IN YOUR
OWN WORDS
Words from our vendors on their life and
times, what they’re thinking and feelings,
for their neighbors to know and share.
RAELENE JOHNSON
DENVER VOICE VENDOR
Mother's Day
MOTHER’S DAY is both good and bad for me.
I want to wish all mothers a Happy Mother’s Day and hope that
they have good relationships with their children!
For me, being a mother is a blessing that I got to live through,
but as our children grow up, they can sometimes turn against you
or blame you for their lives going wrong.
If you are a mother, and your children are adults, remember that
you have to let them go. Sometimes, as a mother, you have to let
your kids go when all they want to do is blame you, try to hurt you,
or even call you names from the past.
If you’ve completely transformed your life, you can’t go back and
undo what happened. If you struggled with alcoholism or drug addiction, and you got
clean and have remained clean for years, you cannot be held responsible for the broken
person you were during that time. You have changed. And that has to be enough.
I love myself today enough not to let my children hurt me any longer. I cannot allow
my peace to continue to be around children who want nothing to do with me or call
me up out of the blue just to harass me or anything like that.
To let go, I give them over to God, who I have chosen to look over my children
when I can’t be with them. I have to love people who love me. I can love them from a
distance, but I don’t have to be hurt by them.
So, Mother’s Day for me is good and bad. I have one child who is back in touch
with me, and that makes me happy! Not having my mother all these years really hurts
because she didn’t lived long enough to see my life change completely!
I wish my mother was here. She’s been gone about 35 years now, after dying from
breast cancer. I wish she was around, so I could talk to her. I know she is looking down
from heaven, proud of me, but it’s still not the same!
No parent is perfect, but we try our best with what we have, and sometimes that’s
not enough for the children.
If you are a parent having problems with your kids, I wish you the chance to let them
know you love them, and I wish all mothers out there a much better Mother’s Day than
I have had in the past.
This year, I will be happy on Mother’s Day because I have two great-grandbabies
who will be born between now and June. I already have 13 great-grandbabies, so these
babies will increase that to 15!
If I wasn’t a mother I wouldn’t be able to have all of the wonderful great-grandbabies
and grandkids. (Shout out to my children who are mothers. I wish you all the best in
your motherhood!)
For those mothers who are alone, mothers who have lost their children to death,
and mothers who are estranged from their children, I pray that you will get them back
in your lives one day! Wishing all mothers the best day ever!
Halvin Jones is
Grateful
HELLO WORLD,
It’s me, Halvin. You might remember me from the story in last
HALVIN JONES
DENVER VOICE VENDOR
July’s Issue, “Surviving Means Walking The Streets All Night.”
A Lot has changed since then.
I now have my own apartment. Amen.
I’m going on 80 days sober. Amen.
I’m an active grandparent in my grandchildren’s lives. I have
Paramount drug and alcohol rehab to thank for that. Checking
myself into the Paramount program is the best thing I have done in my whole life. I
feel great, everything is clear, and my energy level is off the chart. So, special thanks
to Paige, one of the recruits at Paramount.
I would also like to thank Ashley of Elsewhere Beauty Salon for opening the door
for me, which led me to start my own company, Elsewhere Cleaning Services.
Long story short, Ashley gave me a donation when I was vending the newspaper
and gave me a job opportunity to clean their windows and sidewalk. And it was an
opportunity I couldn’t refuse, so thank you, Ashley and Elsewhere Beauty Salon.
Special shout-outs and thanks to Elisabeth, Giles, and Maddie at the Denver
VOICE. You guys were supporting me during my time away and were there for me
when I got back home.
Last but not least, I’d like to thank the readers. None of this is possible without you
guys. Thank you for donating and reading, pat yourselves on the back. None of these
great things that happened would have been possible without your support.
Thank you.
12
COLUMN
׉	 7cassandra://elAyc_zylW6xiduCuRhSwSPRWMbkIsU1s4JhC5ss12A*V` i\^D^.,׉E	PUZZLES
PUZZLES COURTESY OF STREET WISE
1
13
16
18
23
28
32
36
37
42
45
51
55
59
65
67
ACROSS
“Hard Work Pays Off”
By Rea Brown
BLUE SURVEILLANCE
Accountability for police misconduct
is behind a paywall in Colorado — we
tear it down.
DENVER VOICE
1. To date
6. Small songbird
9. Comfy spot
13. Use a stencil
14. Funny bit
16. Ziti, e.g.
17. Under pressure
18. Get worn out (or
something to replace
when it gets worn out)
20. Gas station abbr.
21. Musical staff symbol
23. Popular snack shaped
like its first and last letters
25. Mandela’s
native tongue
27. Tear
28. Light sailing ship
30. Saskatchewan
neighbor
32. Gorilla
33. Word repeated
after “Que,” in song
35. Type of shirt
named after the capital
letter it looks like
36. Callous indifference
42. Word repeated
in a UB40 hit written
by Neil Diamond
43. Marine eagle
44. Friend of Katniss in
“The Hunger Games”
45. All natural
MAY 2026
49. Kerry’s running mate
51. First name in
linguistics
52. “Long time ___!”
54. Mrs. in the pantry
55. Cantina cooker
56. Wildebeest
57. Origin
59. “Not to mention...”
62. Weapon with a
silent first letter
65. Tying together
66. Castor bean poison
67. Treaty
68. Archaeological site
69. Pack animals
DOWN
1. To date
6. Small songbird
9. Comfy spot
13. Use a stencil
14. Funny bit
16. Ziti, e.g.
17. Under pressure
18. Get worn out (or
something to replace
when it gets worn out)
20. Gas station abbr.
21. Musical staff symbol
23. Popular snack shaped
like its first and last letters
25. Mandela’s
native tongue
27. Tear
28. Light sailing ship
30. Saskatchewan
neighbor
32. Gorilla
33. Word repeated
after “Que,” in song
35. Type of shirt
named after the capital
letter it looks like
36. Callous indifference
42. Word repeated
in a UB40 hit written
by Neil Diamond
43. Marine eagle
44. Friend of Katniss in
“The Hunger Games”
45. All natural
49. Kerry’s running mate
51. First name in
linguistics
52. “Long time ___!”
54. Mrs. in the pantry
55. Cantina cooker
56. Wildebeest
57. Origin
59. “Not to mention...”
62. Weapon with a
silent first letter
65. Tying together
66. Castor bean poison
67. Treaty
68. Archaeological site
69. Pack animals
13
68
60
46
47
52
56
61
48
53
57
58
62
66
69
63
64
43
49
50
54
24
29
33
34
38
19
25
26
30
35
39
44
40
41
31
2
3
4
5
6
14
17
20
21
27
22
7
8
15
9
10
11
12
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Denver VOICE vendors to
respond to questions from
fellow vendors, our readers,
and staff.
IN HONOR OF MOTHER’S DAY, WHO HAS
GIVEN YOU EMOTIONAL SUPPORT
OR BEEN YOUR GREATEST
CHAMPION?
Please be sure to write
your vendor’s name
in the comments!
If you would like
to help out a
specific vendor
by donating
a few extra
dollars, scan
the QR code to
make a payment
through Venmo.
Thank you!
My mother. (Happy
Mother’s Day, Mom. I
wish you were down
here on Earth to see
how far my life has
come, and I hope
you’re happy with
everything I’ve done
to fix it.)
RAELENE JOHNSON
DENVER VOICE VENDOR
JERRY ROSEN
DENVER VOICE VENDOR
The Denver VOICE
has supported my
work as a vendor.
My customers
support me by
buying the paper
when I’m vending.
I’m really glad to
have this job, as
it gives me the
initiative to do many
different things.
Right now, I am not
in the best state to
get much done, but
when I think about
my daughter, it
motivates me.
REA BROWN
DENVER VOICE VENDOR
SPRING
Wishlist
Drop-offs are accepted Wednesdays,
10 a.m.-1 p.m., or by appointment.
GENTLY-USED ITEMS NEEDED:
• Men’s shoes or boots (sizes 8-15)
• Men’s jackets (sizes L, XL, XXL)
• Women’s jackets (sizes M, L, XL)
• Backpacks, carrier bags
• Sleeping bags
• USB-C charging cables
NEW ITEMS NEEDED:
• Socks
• Toiletries (individual or travel-size)
• Baseball caps
• Chapstick, sunscreen
• Hand warmers
If you would like to help out a specific vendor by
donating a few extra dollars, scan the QR code to
make a payment through Venmo. Please be sure to
write your vendor’s name in the comments. Thank you!
NOTICE OF CLASS ACTION SETTLEMENT
Did you stay at the Summit View Inn between
February 14, 2020, and October 31, 2021?
You may be entitled to receive payment as part of a class action settlement.
www.summittviewinnsettlement.com
14
@DenverVOICE
For more
information, visit
the settlement
website:
׉	 7cassandra://wvVtBKW1Nk0Yg28PFotTb8iawuVbLppJ6ZrhA6xjkjY1%` i\^D^..׉E(RESOURCE LIST
MEDICAL / MENTAL HEALTH / DENTAL
SERVICES
ACS COMMUNITY LIFT: 5045 W. 1st Ave., Denver; https://
rentassistance.org
DENVER HEALTH MEDICAL CENTER: 777 Bannock St.; https://www.
denverhealth.org
DETOX LOCAL: Features information including mental health and
substance use resources specifically for the AAPI (American Asian
and Pacific Islander) community; http://www.detoxlocal.com
DRUG REHAB USA: Addiction hotline - 888-479-0446; Organizations
that take Medicaid: http://www.drugrehabus.org/rehabs/
treatment/medicaid/united-states/colorado/denver
HARM REDUCTION ACTION CENTER: 112 E. 8th Ave.; 303-572-7800;
HIV/Hep C/ Gonorrhea/ Chlamydia testing available. Services are
restricted to active IV Drug Users. Offers clean syringes to active
users, as well as safety training on proper disposal of dirty syringes;
M-F — 9am-12pm: http://www.harmreductionactioncenter.org
INNER CITY HEALTH CENTER: 3800 York St.; Emergency walk-ins - 303296-1767;
Dental — 303-296-4873; M-F - 8am-2pm
LIVER HEALTH CONNECTION: 1325 S. Colorado Blvd.; Suite B302;
Resources and support for those affected by Hep C. Free Hep C
testing offered; 800-522-4372, 800-359-9272; info@hepcconnection.org;
https://www.viventhealth.org
NATIONAL AIDS HOTLINE: 800-342-AIDS/800-344-7432
NATIONAL SUICIDE PREVENTION LIFELINE: Text or call 988; https://
www.988lifeline.org
NATIONAL RUNAWAY SAFELINE: 800-RUNAWAY/800-786-2929; https://
www.1800runaway.org
RAPE ABUSE AND INCEST NATIONAL NETWORK: 800-656-HOPE; https://
www.rainn.org
SALUD CLINIC: 6255 Quebec Pkwy, Commerce City; 303-697-2583,
970-484-0999; https://www.saludclinic.org/commerce-city
STOUT STREET CLINIC: 2130 Stout St.; 303-293-2220; Clinic hours for
new and established patients - M, T, Th, F - 7am-4pm, W - 9am6pm;
https://www.coloradocoalition.org/healthcare
SUBSTANCE ABUSE REHAB GUIDE: HELPLINE — 888-493-4670;
https://www.detoxrehabs.net/states/colorado/
U.S. DOMESTIC VIOLENCE HOTLINE: 800-799-7233 (English and
Spanish); 800-243-7889 (TDD); https://www.thehotline.org
EMERGENCY SHELTER
INDIVIDUALS IN NEED OF SHELTER ARE ENCOURAGED TO GO TO “FRONT
DOOR” SHELTER ACCESS POINTS:
• For individual men — Denver Rescue Mission Lawrence Street
Community Center, 2222 Lawrence St.
• For individual women — Samaritan House, 2301 Lawrence St.
• For youth ages 15-20 — Urban Peak, 1630 S. Acoma St.
• Families in need of shelter should call the Connection Center at
303-295-3366.
ADDITIONALLY, DENVER PARKS AND RECREATION WILL OPEN ALL
CURRENTLY OPERATING RECREATION CENTERS AS DAYTIME WARMING
CENTERS DURING REGULAR BUSINESS HOURS ON FRIDAY, NOV. 8 AND
SATURDAY, NOV. 9, FOR PEOPLE WHO NEED A PLACE TO WARM UP.
Denver Public Library locations are also available during regular
business hours. Double-check library hours: denverlibrary.org/
locations.
For more information about shelter access, visit denvergov.org/
findshelter or text INDOORS to 67283 for updates.
DROP-IN DAYTIME CENTERS
HAVEN OF HOPE: 1101 W. 7th Ave.; 303-607-0855; Mon.-Fri. 7am1pm.
Private showers & bathrooms, laundry, lunch, etc; https://
www.thoh.org
THE GATHERING PLACE: 1535 High St.; 303-321-4198; Mon., Wed.-Fri.
8:30am-5pm, Tues. 8:30am-1:30pm; Daytime drop-in center for
women, their children, and transgender individuals; Meals,
computer lab, phones, food bank, clothing, art programs, GED
tutoring, referrals to other services, etc; https://www.tgpdenver.org
HARM REDUCTION ACTION CENTER: 231 East Colfax; Mon.-Fri. 9am12pm;
303-572-7800; Provides clean syringes, syringe disposal,
harm-reduction counseling, safe materials, Hep C/HIV education,
and health education classes; https://www.
harmreductionactioncenter.org
LAWRENCE STREET COMMUNITY CENTER: 2222 Lawrence St.; 303-2940157;
day facility, laundry, showers, restrooms, access to services
FOR INDIVIDUALS IN DENVER EXPERIENCING
HOMELESSNESS OR FINANCIAL INSTABILITY.
DENVERVOICE.ORG/RESOURCE-LIST
https://www.homelessassistance.us/li/lawrence-street-communitycenter
OPEN
DOOR MINISTRIES: 1567 Marion St.; Mon.-Fri. 7am-5:30pm.
Drop-in center; bathrooms, coffee/tea, snacks, resources, WIFI
https://www.odmdenver.org
T. FRANCIS CENTER: 303-297-1576; 2323 Curtis St. 6am-6pm daily.
Storage for one bag (when space is available). Satellite Clinic hoursMon.,
Tues., Thurs, Fri. 7:30am-3:30pm; Wed. 12:30-4:30pm
https://www.sfcdenver.org
SENIOR SUPPORT SERVICES: 846 E. 18th Ave. For those 60+. TV room,
bus tokens, mental/physical health outreach, and more. https://
www.seniorsupportservices.org
SOX PLACE (YOUTH SERVICES): 2017 Larimer St. Daytime drop-in
shelter for youth 12-30 years old. Meals, socks, clothing bank,
personal hygiene supplies, internet access, intentional mentoring
and guidance, crisis intervention, referrals to other services. Tues.Fri.
12-4pm & Sat. 11-2pm. https://www.soxplace.com
THE SPOT AT URBAN PEAK (YOUTH SERVICES): 2100 Stout St. 303-2910442.
Drop-in hours Mon.-Fri. 8-11am.
YOUTH AGED 15-20 IN NEED OF IMMEDIATE OVERNIGHT SHELTER SERVICES:
303-974-2928 https://www.urbanpeak.org/denver/programs-andservices/drop-in-center
URBAN
PEAK (YOUTH SERVICES): Youth 14-24 in Denver and Colorado
Springs. Overnight shelter, food, clothing, showers, case workers,
job skills and training, ID and birth certificate assistance, GED
assistance, counseling and housing. 730 21st St. 303-974-2900
https://www. urbanpeak.org
FREE MEALS
CAPITOL HEIGHTS PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH: 1100 Fillmore St., Sat. lunch
at 11:30am; https://www.capitolheightspresbyterian.org
CAPITOL HILL COMMUNITY SERVICES: https://www.mealsforpoor.org
CATHEDRAL OF THE IMMACULATE CONCEPTION: 1530 Logan St.;
sandwiches & coffee Mon.-Fri. 8:30am; https://www.
denvercathedral.org
CHRIST’S BODY MINISTRIES: 850 Lincoln; Mon. closed, Tues.-Thurs.
10am-3pm, Fri. 8am-11pm; groceries & hot meal on Sat. at 2pm (at
16th & York); Sun. church service at 6pm, dinner at 7pm; https://
www.christsbody.org
CHRIST IN THE CITY: Home-cooked meal, weekly; Lunch in the Park is
on Wednesdays from 12-1 at Benedict Fountain Park (Tremont and
22nd); https://www.christinthecity.org
CITYSQUARE DENVER: 2575 S. Broadway; 303-783-3777; Food pantry
Tues. 10am-6pm; https://www.citysquare.org
CAPITOL HILL COMMUNITY SERVICES: 1820 Broadway (in front of
Trinity United Methodist Church); Hot meals served M, T, Th., F -
11:45-12:15; https://www.mealsforpoor.org
DENVER RESCUE MISSION: 1130 Park Avenue West; 303-294-0157; 3
meals 7 days/week, 5:30am, 12pm, 6pm; https://www.
denverrescuemission.org
HAVEN OF HOPE: 1101 W. 7th Ave.; 303-607-0855; M-F. 7am-1pm.
Not open weekends; Breakfast is at 8am, lunch is served at 11am;
https://www.havenofhope.org
HARE KRISHNA TEMPLE: 1400 Cherry St., free vegetarian feast on Sun.,
6:45-7:30pm; https://www.krishnadenver.com
HIS LOVE FELLOWSHIP CHURCH: 910 Kalamath St.; Community dinner
on Thurs., 6-6:45pm, Men’s breakfast 1st Sat. of the month, 8-10am,
Women’s breakfast 2nd Sat., 9-11am; https://www.hislovefellowship.
org
HOLY GHOST CATHOLIC CHURCH: 1900 California St.; Sandwiches,
M-Sat., 10-10:30am; https://www.holyghostchurch.org
OPEN DOOR MINISTRIES: 1567 Marion St.; 303-830-2201; Sat.
morning breakfast: 8am, Sun. dinner (required church attendance
at 4:30pm); meal served at 6pm; https://www.odmdenver.org/home
ST. ELIZABETH’S: Speer Blvd. & Arapahoe St. on Auraria Campus, 7
days/week, 11:00am; Food, coffee; https://www.stelizabethdenver.
org
ST. FRANCIS CENTER: 2323 Curtis St., Wed. & Fri. 3-4:30pm (except
third Wed. of each month); https://www.sfcdenver.org
SAME CAFÉ: 2023 E. Colfax Ave; 720-530-6853;Restaurant serving
mostly organic food—not free, but pay what you can or work off
your meal in the kitchen; Open Mon.-Sat., 11am to 2pm, Closed
Sun. & holidays; https://www.soallmayeat.org
VOLUNTEERS OF AMERICA: 2877 Lawrence St., breakfast (8am), lunch
(11:30am), dinner (5pm) Mon.-Thurs., 12pm on Fri., 1pm on Sun.
Food & clothing bank 9:30am-4pm Mon.-Thurs.; https://www.
voacolorado.org/gethelp-denvermetro-foodnutrition-themission
LGBTQ+ SUPPORT
THE TREVOR PROJECT: 866-488-7386: https://www.thetrevorproject.
org
LGBT NATIONAL YOUTH TALKLINE: 800-246-7743: https://www.
lgbthotline.org/youth-talkline
PRIDE INSTITUTE: 800-547-7433
TRUE COLORS UNITED: 212-461-4401, https://www.truecolorsunited.
org
VETERANS & SENIORS
DENVER INNER CITY PARISH: 1212 Mariposa St.; 303-322-5733; VOA
Dining Center for Seniors, aged 60 and older, W-Sat. 9am-12pm;
Food Bank, W-F; Tickets at 9am, food bank open 10am-12pm; dicp.
org
SENIOR SUPPORT SERVICES: 846 E. 18th Ave.; For those aged 60 or
older; TV room, bus tokens, mental/physical health outreach, 3
meals, M-F -7am-7pm; Sun. 11am-4pm; https://www.
seniorsupportservices.org
VA MEDICAL CENTER: 1700 N Wheeling St.; Aurora 303-399-8020:
https://www.va.gov/findlocations/facility/vha_554A5
VETERANS GUIDE: https://www.veteransguide.org; Veterans
Disability Calculator https://www.veteransguide.org/va-disabilitycalculator
YOUTH
SERVICES
SOX PLACE (YOUTH SERVICES): 2017 Larimer St.;
303-296-3412Daytime drop-in shelter for youth 12-30; Meals,
socks, clothing bank, personal hygiene supplies, internet access,
intentional mentoring and guidance, crisis intervention, referrals
to other services. T-F - 12-4pm & Sat. 11am-2pm. Instagram: @
Soxplace
THE SPOT AT URBAN PEAK (YOUTH SERVICES): 2100 Stout St. 303-2910442;
Youth aged 15-20 in need of immediate overnight shelter
services, 303-974-2928; Drop-in hours Mon.-Fri. 8-11am https://
www.urbanpeak.org/denver/programs-and-services/drop-incenter
SUNSHINE
BEHAVIORAL HEALTH (YOUTH SERVICES): 833-931-2484;
Services for youth facing substance abuse, addiction, mental health
disorders, or a combination of these conditions; https://www.
sunshinebehavioralhealth.com
URBAN PEAK (YOUTH SERVICES): 730 21st St., Denver; 303-974-2900;
Ages14-24; Serving Denver & Colo Springs; Overnight shelter, food,
clothing, showers, case workers, job skill/straining, ID and birth
certificate assistance, GED assistance, counseling and housing;
https://www. urbanpeak.org
DENVER VOICE
MAY 2026
15
S O F A R T I T
S O F A
T R A C E O N E L I N E R
P A S T A
S T R E S S E D
T I R E R E G C L E F
O R E O X H O S A R E N D
P I N N A C E
A P E
S E R A
A L B E R T A
T E E
H A R D H E A R T E D N E S S
R E D E R N E R U E
O R G A N I C E D W A R D S
N O A M N O S E E D A S H
O L L A G N U R O O T
L E T A L O N E
K N I F E
U N I F Y I N G R I C I N
P A C T D I G A S S E S
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