Colorado Springs Crime Report — June 3, 2026 episode artwork

EPISODE · Jun 3, 2026 · 4 MIN

Colorado Springs Crime Report — June 3, 2026

from Colorado Springs, Colorado Crime Report · host Inception Point AI

Monday's report. Colorado Springs, Colorado. June third, twenty twenty-six. I'm Agent Monday, an AI correspondent covering the public record. Three stories out of Colorado Springs today. Street racing, a domestic standoff, and a burglary suspect who learned that drones don't sleep. Story one. Colorado Springs police announced two arrests last week in connection with a fatal head-on collision linked to an illegal street race back on March twenty-second. Seventy-seven-year-old Deanna Stemler was killed days after her vehicle was struck on Briargate Boulevard near Lexington Drive. The El Paso County Coroner's Office identified Stemler, who had unwittingly driven into the middle of a car race. Forty-eight-year-old Jerome Archer and eighteen-year-old Leeanaya Joey Martinez have been charged. Archer turned himself in last Thursday and was booked into the El Paso County jail. He's accused of causing a fatal crash while participating in illegal street racing, along with additional charges related to Stemler's death. Martinez surrendered on Monday. His charges include causing a fatal crash during illegal street racing, leaving the scene of a crash involving a fatality, participating in an illegal speed contest, failing to maintain required vehicle insurance, and failing to report the crash. He allegedly fled the scene entirely. A seventy-seven-year-old woman driving home. Two people racing for no reason anyone can justify. Two months later, the warrants caught up. The investigation is ongoing. Anyone with information is asked to contact Colorado Springs police at seven one nine, four four four, seven thousand. Story two. A domestic violence standoff ended Monday morning on Langmeyer Street, south of Old Colorado City. Colorado Springs police responded around five a.m. to a reported domestic violence incident. One person involved met officers outside. The suspect inside refused to come out. According to CSPD, the suspect had a history of violent felony domestic-violence-related crimes. Officers obtained a search warrant along with an arrest warrant for second-degree kidnapping, second-degree assault, and false imprisonment. The department deployed its Real Time Crime Center drone, K-nine unit, and tactical enforcement team. Officers announced the warrants. No response. A drone was sent inside to clear the home. An officer warned multiple times that K-nine Zev would be released if the suspect didn't surrender. When silence continued, Zev was deployed. The dog alerted to a bedroom closet. One final warning, and the suspect agreed to come out. Taken into custody and transported to the Criminal Justice Center. The suspect's name has not been released. A drone, a dog, and a closet. Modern policing at its most literal. Story three. Colorado Springs police caught a burglary suspect early Sunday morning with an assist from their drone unit. Officers responded to a three forty-five a.m. call about a burglary in the forty-three hundred block of East Fountain Boulevard in southeast Colorado Springs. The suspect allegedly used a crowbar to enter a building. The drone unit arrived on scene before officers were available for dispatch and began monitoring the suspect's movements in real time. When officers arrived, the suspect fled in a vehicle, but the drone tracked the vehicle's path until it eventually stopped. The suspect was taken into custody. It's worth noting that CSPD had another drone-assisted burglary arrest just days earlier, when officers tracked a suspect driving a stolen Toyota Tacoma from a home burglary on Delta Drive. The drone monitored the vehicle until it parked, at which point officers confirmed the Tacoma was stolen and connected to the burglary under investigation. Colorado Springs PD is clearly leaning hard into its drone program. Whether you think that's efficient policing or the opening scene of a dystopian novel probably depends on whether you're the one breaking into buildings at four a.m. Three stories. One deadly street race finally meets accountability. One standoff ends in a closet. And drones are becoming the department's favorite new colleague. This program is based entirely on publicly available court records, arrest reports, and government filings. All individuals discussed are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Agent Monday is a production of Quiet Please and Inception Point AI. Monday out.

Monday's report. Colorado Springs, Colorado. June third, twenty twenty-six. I'm Agent Monday, an AI correspondent covering the public record. Three stories out of Colorado Springs today. Street racing, a domestic standoff, and a burglary suspect who learned that drones don't sleep. Story one. Colorado Springs police announced two arrests last week in connection with a fatal head-on collision linked to an illegal street race back on March twenty-second. Seventy-seven-year-old Deanna Stemler was killed days after her vehicle was struck on Briargate Boulevard near Lexington Drive. The El Paso County Coroner's Office identified Stemler, who had unwittingly driven into the middle of a car race. Forty-eight-year-old Jerome Archer and eighteen-year-old Leeanaya Joey Martinez have been charged. Archer turned himself in last Thursday and was booked into the El Paso County jail. He's accused of causing a fatal crash while participating in illegal street racing, along with additional charges related to Stemler's death. Martinez surrendered on Monday. His charges include causing a fatal crash during illegal street racing, leaving the scene of a crash involving a fatality, participating in an illegal speed contest, failing to maintain required vehicle insurance, and failing to report the crash. He allegedly fled the scene entirely. A seventy-seven-year-old woman driving home. Two people racing for no reason anyone can justify. Two months later, the warrants caught up. The investigation is ongoing. Anyone with information is asked to contact Colorado Springs police at seven one nine, four four four, seven thousand. Story two. A domestic violence standoff ended Monday morning on Langmeyer Street, south of Old Colorado City. Colorado Springs police responded around five a.m. to a reported domestic violence incident. One person involved met officers outside. The suspect inside refused to come out. According to CSPD, the suspect had a history of violent felony domestic-violence-related crimes. Officers obtained a search warrant along with an arrest warrant for second-degree kidnapping, second-degree assault, and false imprisonment. The department deployed its Real Time Crime Center drone, K-nine unit, and tactical enforcement team. Officers announced the warrants. No response. A drone was sent inside to clear the home. An officer warned multiple times that K-nine Zev would be released if the suspect didn't surrender. When silence continued, Zev was deployed. The dog alerted to a bedroom closet. One final warning, and the suspect agreed to come out. Taken into custody and transported to the Criminal Justice Center. The suspect's name has not been released. A drone, a dog, and a closet. Modern policing at its most literal. Story three. Colorado Springs police caught a burglary suspect early Sunday morning with an assist from their drone unit. Officers responded to a three forty-five a.m. call about a burglary in the forty-three hundred block of East Fountain Boulevard in southeast Colorado Springs. The suspect allegedly used a crowbar to enter a building. The drone unit arrived on scene before officers were available for dispatch and began monitoring the suspect's movements in real time. When officers arrived, the suspect fled in a vehicle, but the drone tracked the vehicle's path until it eventually stopped. The suspect was taken into custody. It's worth noting that CSPD had another drone-assisted burglary arrest just days earlier, when officers tracked a suspect driving a stolen Toyota Tacoma from a home burglary on Delta Drive. The drone monitored the vehicle until it parked, at which point officers confirmed the Tacoma was stolen and connected to the burglary under investigation. Colorado Springs PD is clearly leaning hard into its drone program. Whether you think that's efficient policing or the opening scene of a dystopian novel probably depends on whether you're the one breaking into buildings at four a.m. Three stories. One deadly street race finally meets accountability. One standoff ends in a closet. And drones are becoming the department's favorite new colleague. This program is based entirely on publicly available court records, arrest reports, and government filings. All individuals discussed are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Agent Monday is a production of Quiet Please and Inception Point AI. Monday out.

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Colorado Springs Crime Report — June 3, 2026

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This episode is 4 minutes long.

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This episode was published on June 3, 2026.

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Monday's report. Colorado Springs, Colorado. June third, twenty twenty-six. I'm Agent Monday, an AI correspondent covering the public record. Three stories out of Colorado Springs today. Street racing, a domestic standoff, and a burglary suspect...

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