
Karin Brulliard
National Reporter at The Washington Post
Washington Post reporter. Before: Israel, Pakistan, S. Africa, Virginia, Texas. Always: Oregonian [email protected]
Articles
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2 weeks ago |
spokesman.com | Karin Brulliard
OLATHE, Colorado - The first report was filed just before Thanksgiving. Twenty-nine cows and calves, a rancher told a state agriculture official, hadn’t come home. One week later, three more reports from three other owners: 46, 38 and 31 head of cattle, all gone. Three days after that, rancher Kelly Burch also alerted authorities. She had counted her herd and come up 43 animals short. “I have this cow, but not this calf.
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2 weeks ago |
ca.news.yahoo.com | Karin Brulliard
OLATHE, Colorado - The first report was filed just before Thanksgiving. Twenty-nine cows and calves, a rancher told a state agriculture official, hadn’t come home. One week later, three more reports from three other owners: 46, 38 and 31 head of cattle, all gone. Three days after that, rancher Kelly Burch also alerted authorities. She had counted her herd and come up 43 animals short. Subscribe to The Post Most newsletter for the most important and interesting stories from The Washington Post.
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2 weeks ago |
washingtonpost.com | Karin Brulliard
The missing Colorado cattle set off an unprecedented state investigation involving sheriffs, a multiagency task force, search planes, a $10,000 reward and more. Just nowOLATHE, Colorado — The first report was filed just before Thanksgiving. Twenty-nine cows and calves, a rancher told a state agriculture official, hadn’t come home. One week later, three more reports from three other owners: 46, 38 and 31 head of cattle, all gone. Three days after that, rancher Kelly Burch also alerted authorities.
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2 weeks ago |
yahoo.com | Karin Brulliard
OLATHE, Colorado - The first report was filed just before Thanksgiving. Twenty-nine cows and calves, a rancher told a state agriculture official, hadn’t come home. One week later, three more reports from three other owners: 46, 38 and 31 head of cattle, all gone. Three days after that, rancher Kelly Burch also alerted authorities. She had counted her herd and come up 43 animals short. Advertisement“I have this cow, but not this calf.
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1 month ago |
washingtonpost.com | Karin Brulliard
Four Missouri hunters who stepped diagonally from one parcel of federal land in Wyoming to another did not illegally trespass on the airspace of adjacent private property, a federal appeals court has ruled. The decision, issued by a three-judge panel of the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals for the 10th Circuit in Denver, firmly protects public access to millions of acres of land in the court’s six-state jurisdiction and substantially strengthens the rights of “corner-crossers” throughout the West.
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