June 3, 2021
FREE
DOUGLAS COUNTY, COLORADO
A publication of
LoneTreeVoice.net
INSIDE: VOICES: PAGE 12 | LIFE: PAGE 14 | CALENDAR: PAGE 17 | SPORTS: PAGE 24
VOLUME 20 | ISSUE 15
Narratives differ as STEM trial opens Devon Erickson is accused of killing classmate in 2019 school shooting BY JOHN INGOLD, THE COLORADO SUN AND ELLIOTT WENZLER, COLORADO COMMUNITY MEDIA EWENZLER@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
Local sisters, Jenna and Amanda Revell, published a children’s book, “Tango’s Teddy.” The book is now available on Amazon. COURTESY PHOTO
Local sisters publish children’s book ‘Tango’s Teddy’ is being sold via Amazon BY THELMA GRIMES TGRIMES@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
Looking to make something positive in a year of COVID-19, two local sisters came together to fulfill a childhood dream of writing a book. The children’s book, “Tango’s
Teddy,” is now available for sale on Amazon. Jenna Revell of Lone Tree and sister Amanda Revell of Castle Rock are excited the book became reality. Jenna said she has always had a passion for writing, dating back to grade school. “I always said I would write a book, but like so many things, life just gets in the way,” Jenna said. “I knew I wanted to write a children’s
OUT AND ABOUT
Activities are on the upswing all around P14
book, and with the pandemic, we suddenly had the time to do it.” While Jenna did the writing for “Tango’s Teddy,” Amanda is the artist behind the book’s illustrations. Jenna said she came up with the idea for the book in 2010, drawing on experiences from childhood. The Revell sisters said they were part of a military family, which SEE BOOK, P18
The trial of one of two former STEM School Highlands Ranch students accused of attacking the school in 2019, killing one classmate and injuring six others, opened May 27 with the sound of a teacher’s frantic breathing. “There’s a shooting at STEM School Highlands Ranch!” the teacher, Erin Christian, cried in a call to 911 on the day of the attack, May 7, 2019, as she huddled next door to the classroom where the shots were fired. Her voice echoed across a Douglas County courtroom on the first day of the trial, as prosecutor George Brauchler played the audio recording for jurors during his opening statement. “Erin,” the 911 operator calmly told the teacher, “I want you to do exactly what you’ve been trained to do.” Questions about what led to that moment and who is to blame for the shooting in Room 107 will be debated over the next month in District Court Judge Theresa Slade’s courtroom. But already on opening day, as prosecutors and defense attorneys SEE TRIAL, P6
PREP SPORTS MOVING ALONG A look at baseball, volleyball and lacrosse P24