THE INDEPENDENT

The Latest

Breaking News: Shot Fired on 8th Street, Saturday

Breaking News: Shot Fired on 8th Street, Saturday

Story by Deanna Atkins and Aimee Gardere

Author: Bodine, James/Monday, April 8, 2013/Categories: Home

Rate this article:
No rating

On Saturday, April 6th at 1:49 a.m., a gunshot was fired on Eigth Street outside of Colorado Ponga’s and Joel’s Bar.

According to the police report, there were at least four individuals participating in a physical fight in the street when the shot was fired. Police arrived on the scene within seconds afterward. No fatalities were reported.

Four men fled the scene in a white van and were caught on Santa Rita Drive, said Lt. Ray Shupe of the Durango Police, in a phone interview.

Two of the four men in the vehicle were identified. Serafin Carter, 23, from New Mexico and Jeremiah Wiggins III, 28, from Texas, were arrested and charged with a Class 5 Felony.

According to the report and the Colorado Revised Statutes, this charge included menace through endangerment of people and prohibited possession and use of a firearm under the influence of intoxication.

A Class Five Felony consists of a minimum of an 18 month sentence and a maximum of 25 months in jail.

Carter and Wiggins were checked in that night and held at the La Plata County jail with an unknown bond amount set. They will not be released if the bond is not paid.

There were at least five or six fights in the street that night, said Joel Devin, owner of Joel’s Bar, in a phone interview.

According to the police, there were several people in the street either participating in the physical fight or spectating.

The fighting started between dozens of people, and when the shot was fired everyone scattered, said Orion Chapman, the doorman at Joel’s Bar, in a phone interview.      

The cause of the fight is still unknown because a full report is still being filed and processed.

 
Print

Number of views (13009)/Comments (0)

Please login or register to post comments.

All News

Fall Sports Without a Season

By Will Charles Indy Staff Writer

Almost all of the fall sports at Fort Lewis College have been put on hold for the 2020 season due to the circumstances surrounding COVID-19.

Almost all of the fall sports at Fort Lewis College have been put on hold for the 2020 season due to the circumstances surrounding COVID-19. Golf and cross-country are the only two sports competing in regular season meets and tournaments for the fall season. Both are considered as low-threat sports by the NCAA. Coaches are focused on making sure that athletes stay academically strong and...

Doorknob licks for clicks

By Dorothy Elder Indy Staff Writer

Accusations of people licking doorknobs on the Fort Lewis College campus have left many puzzled amid the coronavirus pandemic. 

Accusations of people licking doorknobs on the Fort Lewis College campus have left many puzzled amid the coronavirus pandemic.  The first mention of doorknob licking happened at 11:42 a.m. on August 24, the first day of classes for the Fall semester. It was posted by second-year FLC student, Robert Dennett, on the Fort Lewis College app, a new tool available to students that features a...

Chains, Whips and Nipple Clamps: BDSM meets Colonialism

By Amber Labahe Indy Staff Writer

This year, the Sundance Film Festival previewed a script about a Native dominatrix for hire finding healing by whipping white supremacists and having them apologize for racism, sexism, and most importantly for colonization.

This year, the Sundance Film Festival previewed a script about a Native dominatrix for hire finding healing by whipping white supremacists and having them apologize for racism, sexism, and most importantly for colonization. Peshawn Bread, filmmaker and director, created the script and short film “The Daily Life of Mistress Red.” Both Bread and Jhane Myers, producer and...

COVID-19 impacts FLC students

Indy Staff Collaboration

As we know, for many, COVID-19 has turned the world completely upside down. Fort Lewis College students have had many changes to their jobs, classes and social life. Here’s the inside scoop on what’s going on in the life of an FLC student. 

As we know, for many, COVID-19 has turned the world completely upside down. Fort Lewis College students have had many changes to their jobs, classes and social life. Here’s the inside scoop on what’s going on in the life of an FLC student.  Curriculum adjustments for classes dependent on campus resources  On Thursday, March 19th, President Stritikus announced that...

Sustaibably cultivating a garden: a student’s guide to growing their own food

By Coya Pair Indy Staff Writer

Students can grow their own food, whether it is indoors, outdoors or through volunteering at community gardens. Though giving space, time or money can sound intimidating, there are several ways to work around these issues.

Students can grow their own food, whether it is indoors, outdoors or through volunteering at community gardens. Though giving space, time or money can sound intimidating, there are several ways to work around these issues. How to grow food outdoors  In order to have an outdoor garden, students often run into issues with their landlords, Maggie Magierski, campus growing spaces...

First1718192022242526Last