KUNC Flowers line the fence surrounding the King Soopers in South Boulder where 10 people died in a mass shooting on March 22, 2021.
The Table Mesa King Soopers in Boulder where a gunman killed 10 people on March 22 will reopen by late fall, parent company Kroger announced
“We know that the building is just part of what makes this store so special,” said Jessica Trowbridge, a corporate affairs manager for King Soopers. Restoring it is just another step in the journey as we continue to heal.”
The building will undergo a complete interior and exterior renovation before opening, Trowbridge said. She offered no specifics for the plan, but pledged the company will listen to community members’ input for the redesign. People can email
Neguse introduces bill to rename Boulder post office after Officer Eric Talley
Boulder Police Department
and last updated 2021-05-13 15:13:15-04
DENVER â Rep. Joe Neguse introduced a measure to rename a Boulder post office after Boulder Police Officer Eric Talley, who was killed in the King Soopers shooting.
The bill has the support of all seven of Coloradoâs U.S. House members, according to Neguseâs office. Neguse, a Democrat, represents the district that includes Boulder.
If passed, the bill would designate the post office located at 1905 15
th Street as the âOfficer Eric H. Talley Post Office Building.â Talley was among the first officers to respond to the shooting at King Soopers on March 22.
The first of three new gun safety bills, in part a response to the March shooting at the south Boulder King Soopers, was approved on a party-line 7-4 vote by the House Judiciary Committee Wednesday evening.
But what a difference there was between the angry crowds that filled the Capitol over gun laws in 2013 compared to the hearing Wednesday.
House Bill 1298 would change state law on background checks for firearms transfers as well as close what’s known as the Charleston loophole that refers to the 2015 shooting at the Emanuel AME Church in Charleston, South Carolina, which resulted in the murders of nine African American parishioners. The shooter obtained a firearm without a background check, because under South Carolina law the same as Colorado s if a background check doesn’t come back within three days, the dealer has to transfer the firearm to the buyer without it.
The first of three new gun safety bills, in part a response to the March 22 shooting at the south Boulder King Soopers, was approved on a party-line 7-4 vote by the House Judiciary Committee.
But what a difference there was between the angry crowds that filled the Capitol over gun laws in 2013 compared to the hearing Wednesday evening.
House Bill 1298 would change state law on background checks for firearms transfers as well as close whatâs known as the Charleston loophole. That refers to the 2015 shooting at the Emanuel AME Church in Charleston, South Carolina, which resulted in the murders of nine African American parishioners. The shooter obtained a firearm without a background check, because under South Carolina law â the same as Colorado s â if a background check doesnât come back within three days the dealer has to transfer the firearm to the buyer without it.