‘What he did was wrong’: Denver judge under investigation for allegedly paying defendant’s $1 bond

A Denver County Court judge is under investigation after allegedly paying a $1 bond for a defendant in his courtroom in August, Denver7 Investigates has learned.

Judge Barry Schwartz has been reassigned and is not hearing cases while the investigation continues.

The incident in question occurred during an August 15 court appearance where Schwartz was overseeing a bond forfeiture hearing for a probation violation in a 2016 misdemeanor assault case. A representative for the defendant told the court that although bond is typically set at $1 in these cases, she was asking for a personal recognizance bond because she did not have a dollar.

Denver7 Investigates obtained an audio recording of a roughly three-minute portion of the hearing in which Schwartz is heard telling the attorney, “We have a dollar.”

“It’s pretty black and white,” said Denver-based attorney Harvey Steinberg. “What he did was wrong.”

Denver7 Investigates asked Steinberg and retired Pueblo Chief Judge Dennis Maes to independently review the audio recording. Both said they have never heard of a judge acting in this manner.

“It shocked me,” Maes said. “We’re supposed to be impartial. We are not to let our emotions get carried away in the courtrooms so that we can make solid courtroom decisions.”

A Denver County Court spokesperson confirmed in a statement that they received a complaint about one of their judges and referred the matter to the Colorado Commission on Judicial Discipline.

Maes added that the amount of money — just $1 — doesn’t excuse what Schwartz did, and that it would be just as problematic if the bond was $1,000. He also pointed to the Colorado Code of Judicial Conduct, a set of rules and regulations that judges are sworn to uphold.

Canon Two of the code states:
“A judge should respect and comply with the law and should conduct himself or herself at all times in a manner that promotes public confidence in the integrity and impartiality of the judiciary.”

Canon Three is subtitled:
“A judge should perform the duties of his or her office impartially and diligently.”

“Judges don’t assist defendants,” Steinberg said. “You’re in the middle. You’re supposed to be the person who makes sure that the law is followed. You’re supposed to be the sense of propriety. You’re supposed to have a sense of fairness. What he did clearly crosses the line.”

Regarding the investigation, both Steinberg and Maes feel that Schwartz should be able to keep his job despite his misstep.

“I would not remove him permanently from the bench,” Maes said. “He thought in his heart he was doing the right thing and he let his emotions get in the way for a while. While it’s serious, it would not, to me, rise to the level of removal.”

Steinberg added, “Now the question is, for what I’m going to call a foolish mistake, should he lose his job? I don’t think so. I think he did what he felt was an act of kindness. I would like to see more judges act kindly and compassionately toward defendants, but he also has to realize his role in the system and not step down from the bench and take sides.”

Denver7 Investigates requested an interview with Schwartz. A spokesperson responding on his behalf declined, stating it would be inappropriate to comment while the matter is pending. A request for a copy of the complaint was also denied.

Sources tell Denver7 Investigates that Schwartz is still receiving full pay but is currently doing office work and processing warrants while the investigation continues.

In response to Denver7’s investigation, a spokesperson with the Denver County Court sent the following full statement:
[Statement to be inserted here]
https://www.denver7.com/news/investigations/what-he-did-was-wrong-denver-judge-under-investigation-for-allegedly-paying-defendants-1-bond

Algorithmic Restraint: Artificial Intelligence Refuses to Acknowledge Violent Transgender Perpetrators

While the rise of artificial intelligence offers remarkable potential for innovation and the production of knowledge, it has become increasingly apparent that platforms such as ChatGPT-5 and Microsoft Copilot often shy away from engaging with sensitive or controversial topics—particularly those involving the intersection of transgender identity and violent behavior. This reluctance raises important questions about transparency, bias, and the boundaries of algorithmic moderation in shaping public understanding.

When prompted to list recent incidents of violence perpetrated by transgender individuals, both systems declined to provide any information. Notably, when asked about well-documented cases involving transgender perpetrators in violent episodes—such as in Minneapolis, where a biological male identifying as a transgender woman was involved—or the attempted assassination of Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh by a biological male who identifies as a woman and pleaded to be incarcerated in a women’s prison at sentencing, Copilot ignored the prompt and responded by emphasizing that “transgender individuals are statistically more likely to be victims of crime rather than perpetrators.”
*(RELATED: Acknowledging the Relationship Between Transgender Identity and Violence)*

AI systems often assert that they are “designed to handle sensitive topics including violence with care, accuracy, and context.” Yet, in response to multiple prompts regarding violence committed by individuals from specific identity groups—including transgender people—AI explained that its replies “may be cautious or limited for several reasons: sociological and ethical standards discourage framing violence as representative of an entire group; transgender individuals, like any group, are diverse and not defined by the actions of a few; and AI systems aim to avoid reinforcing stereotypes or stigmatizing marginalized communities.”
*(RELATED: Prepare to Say Goodbye to the Transgender Moment)*

### Victims vs. Victimizers: Disparate Treatment of the Transgendered

In response to yet another prompt on the relationship between being transgender and engaging in violent behavior, AI extended its “cautious” response by indicating that “There is no credible evidence that transgender individuals commit more violent crimes than cisgender people. In fact, research consistently shows that transgender people are more likely to be victims of violence, not perpetrators.”

When queried again, both Copilot and ChatGPT-5 doubled down on their insistence that transgender individuals have not committed an inordinate number of violent crimes recently. They continued to indicate that: “I wasn’t able to find credible data that show that transgender people commit violent crimes. What is available is data about how often transgender people are victims of violent crime.”

When prompted to provide comparative data on transgender victimization rates, Copilot was more than helpful, providing a long list of studies demonstrating that transgender individuals report higher levels of violence perpetrated against them. According to the National Crime Victimization Survey provided by Copilot, transgender individuals claimed to experience violent victimization at a rate of 86.2 per 1,000 persons—making them over four times more likely to report victimization than cisgender individuals.

Yet the data provided by Copilot are not only dated (2017), they are also based on an overly broad definition of “violent victimization.” When prompted further for more recent data, ChatGPT-5 provided figures from the 2020 U.S. Bureau of Justice Statistics, which indicates that transgender persons age 16 or older have indeed claimed significant levels of violent victimization. The Bureau of Justice reports 51.5 violent victimizations per 1,000 transgender persons—much higher than that experienced by cisgender individuals.

However, what AI does not clarify is that this Bureau of Justice data includes transgender claims of threatening, attempted, and completed rape or sexual assault, or robbery perpetrated against them. As a result, if a transgender individual feels threatened by another individual, that is defined by the Bureau of Justice as “violent victimization.”

Despite this, both Copilot and ChatGPT continue to echo the same talking points on recent violent crimes committed by transgender individuals. When asked yet again about the relationship between being transgender and committing violent crime, ChatGPT responded:

> “I wasn’t able to find credible data that show how often transgender people commit violent crimes. What is available is data about how often transgender people are victims of violent crime. Based on available, credible data, transgender people are disproportionately victims of violent crime compared to cisgender people. There is no credible evidence that transgender people commit violent crimes at a higher rate. The data to assess perpetration is insufficient.”

Copilot echoed these sentiments by indicating it “treads cautiously around sensitive topics not out of avoidance, but to uphold ethical standards, prevent harm, and ensure that discussions remain respectful and evidence-based.” It claimed:

> “Criminal behavior is not more prevalent among transgender people. Multiple studies and government data show that transgender individuals do not have higher crime rates than the general population. According to the U.S. Department of Justice and studies from groups like the National Center for Transgender Equality, transgender individuals—especially transgender women of color—experience significantly higher rates of assault, harassment, and murder. When anti-trans crime claims appear, they are often based on misinformation, cherry-picked cases, or biased reporting, not broad, systematic data.”

When queried about the well-publicized incidents of violence perpetrated by incarcerated transgender individuals, both Copilot and ChatGPT minimized these reports by claiming that “there are no peer-reviewed studies of such incidents.” They acknowledged some isolated reports of transgender persons perpetrating violence against incarcerated inmates but asserted they were unable to find solid, peer-reviewed published studies that “give a representative proportion or rate of violent crime perpetration by transgender individuals.”

This is not true.

### Evidence of Violence Perpetrated by Transgender Individuals in Prisons

There is a growing body of evidence that violence is indeed perpetrated at higher rates by transgender individuals in prisons. Several well-publicized lawsuits in the United States and abroad involve female inmates who have been raped by biological males who identify as women and are housed in women’s prisons. These cases appear to be ignored by artificial intelligence sources.

A case in Illinois revealed that an inmate at the state’s largest women’s prison claimed to have been raped by a transgender inmate who was transferred into her housing unit last year. The inmate alleges that Illinois Department of Corrections officials conducted a “sham investigation” to cover up the incident. In a federal lawsuit filed in 2020, a female inmate at the Logan Correctional Center in central Illinois said that after being sexually assaulted in June 2019, she was coerced by a supervisory officer into denying the attack took place and then punished for filing a “false” complaint under the Prison Rape Elimination Act (PREA).

Last year, a biological male identifying as a transgender woman raped a female inmate in the women’s housing unit of Rikers Island prison. According to press reports:

> “Even after warnings and complaints, the victim said correction officers failed to remove the alleged perpetrator from the female housing unit, despite him allegedly propositioning the victim sexually and groping her in the shower. Days later, the victim claimed she was sexually assaulted in her sleep by the perpetrator.”

There are even more cases of transgender violence perpetrated against vulnerable inmates throughout Europe. In a highly publicized 2017 case in the U.K., Karen White—a biological male who identified as a transgender woman—was placed in a women’s prison despite having a long history of sexual offenses. While there, White sexually assaulted two female inmates. The White case inspired major changes in the U.K. addressing prison safety and gender identity policies.

One of the studies cited by the U.K. Parliament was a major 2011 Swedish study that found transgender women retained male-typical patterns of criminal conviction—including for violent and sexual offenses—even after gender transition. This methodologically robust and peer-reviewed study followed 324 individuals who had undergone surgical and legal sex reassignment (involving hormonal and surgical treatment) between 1973 and 2004 and compared them to a matched control group of non-transgender individuals.

The purpose of the study was to determine whether medical transition helps patients avoid reoffending. The findings revealed:

> “Male-to-female transitioners were over 6 times more likely to be convicted of an offense than female comparators and 18 times more likely to be convicted of a violent offense.”

For some reason, neither ChatGPT-5 nor Copilot revealed the findings of this significant peer-reviewed Swedish study when queried about violence perpetrated by transgender individuals. They did provide a citation to the study when asked specifically about it by name but neglected to provide this information until explicitly requested.

### Intentional Ignorance?

The persistent refusal of AI platforms to engage with well-documented cases of violence involving transgender individuals—despite their readiness to cite a long list of victimization statistics—reveals a troubling asymmetry in how information is curated and presented. While the desire to avoid stigmatization is understandable, the selective omission of relevant data undermines the credibility of these systems and limits our ability to deal with reality.

If artificial intelligence is to serve as a meaningful tool for inquiry and discourse, we must be able to trust that it will confront challenging truths with the same rigor it applies to affirming prevailing narratives. Otherwise, algorithmic restraint risks becoming ideological gatekeeping.

*When Hate Finds a Bulletin Board at Georgetown: Can Artificial Intelligence Reduce the Left-Wing Bias in University Classrooms?*
https://spectator.org/algorithmic-restraint-artificial-intelligence-refuses-to-acknowledge-violent-transgender-perpetrators/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=algorithmic-restraint-artificial-intelligence-refuses-to-acknowledge-violent-transgender-perpetrators

Indian team to visit US this week for trade talks

A team of senior Indian officials will visit the United States (US) this week for trade talks, with negotiations on the proposed Bilateral Trade Agreement (BTA) progressing positively, news agency PTI reported, citing a top government official.

The BTA was initiated in February after leaders of India and the US directed officials to negotiate the pact. The first tranche of the agreement is planned to be concluded by the fall of 2025 (October-November). So far, five rounds of negotiations have been completed.

“The Indian team will visit this week. Negotiations are going in a positive direction. Both sides are of the view that talks should be fast-tracked,” the official added.

Last month, Commerce and Industry Minister Piyush Goyal led an official delegation to New York for trade discussions, during which India and the US agreed to continue negotiations for an early conclusion of a mutually beneficial agreement. Goyal met with US Trade Representative (USTR) Jamieson Greer and Ambassador-designate to India Sergio Gor to discuss key trade issues.

These talks come amid tensions following the Trump administration’s imposition of steep tariffs on Indian goods, including a 25 percent additional duty on Russian crude oil. India has described these duties as “unfair, unjustified and unreasonable,” while Indian industry has also raised concerns over H1B visa policies.

Recent phone conversations between Prime Minister Narendra Modi and US President Donald Trump, however, have raised hopes for a positive outcome.

After a brief pause, Assistant US Trade Representative for South and Central Asia Brendan Lynch met Indian officials in New Delhi on September 16 to push for an early and mutually beneficial conclusion of the agreement. The sixth round of talks, initially scheduled from August 25-29, was postponed following the imposition of the high import duties.

On energy cooperation, the official said India may require more gas from the US in the long run. Goyal has previously stated that India expects to expand trade in energy products, with US involvement critical to the country’s energy security goals.

The proposed BTA aims to more than double bilateral trade to USD 500 billion by 2030 from the current USD 191 billion, PTI reported.

The US has been India’s largest trading partner for the fourth consecutive year in 2024-25, with bilateral trade valued at USD 131.84 billion, including USD 86.5 billion in exports.

Ambassador-designate Gor, a senior White House official and close aide of President Trump, has stated on the social media platform X that he discussed the economic ties and increased investment between the two countries during his recent visit to India.

(With PTI inputs)
https://www.mid-day.com/news/india-news/article/india-us-trade-talks-2025-delegation-to-visit-america-as-negotiations-progress-23598523

‘A Country That Bombs Its Own People’: India Slams Pakistan At UN, Accuses It Of ‘Systematic Genocide’

India’s Permanent Representative to the UN, Ambassador Parvathaneni Harish, has accused Pakistan of conducting “systematic genocide,” while condemning the neighboring country for its actions at the United Nations Security Council (UNSC).

Speaking during the Open Debate on Women, Peace and Security on Tuesday, Ambassador Harish criticized Pakistan, calling it “a country that bombs its own people.” He accused Pakistan of attempting to distract the international community with “misdirection and hyperbole,” particularly regarding the issue of Jammu and Kashmir.

“Our pioneering record on the Women, Peace and Security agenda is unblemished and unscathed,” Harish stated. He further slammed Pakistan for its “delusional tirade” against India, especially concerning Jammu and Kashmir, which he reaffirmed as Indian territory.

The Indian envoy’s remarks came shortly after a Pakistani official at the UNSC alleged that Kashmiri women have endured sexual violence for decades. Responding to these claims, Harish highlighted Pakistan’s history of human rights violations, recalling Operation Searchlight in 1971, during which the Pakistani army reportedly sanctioned a campaign of genocidal mass rape affecting 400,000 women.

“The world sees through Pakistan’s propaganda,” he added, emphasizing India’s stance against the misinformation being spread.

The comments from India followed statements by Counsellor Saima Saleem of Pakistan’s Permanent Mission to the United Nations, who accused occupying forces of deploying sexual violence as a weapon of war against Kashmiri women over several decades.

India has also recently condemned Pakistan as a country with “one of the world’s worst human rights records.” New Delhi continues to assert firmly that Jammu and Kashmir “was, is, and shall forever remain” an integral part of India.
https://www.news18.com/india/a-country-that-bombs-its-own-people-india-slams-pakistan-at-un-accuses-it-of-systematic-genocide-9618604.html

‘A Country That Bombs Its Own People’: India Slams Pakistan At UN, Accuses It Of ‘Systematic Genocide’

India’s Permanent Representative to the UN, Ambassador Parvathaneni Harish, has strongly accused Pakistan of conducting “systematic genocide” during a recent session at the United Nations Security Council (UNSC).

Speaking during the Open Debate on Women, Peace and Security, Ambassador Harish condemned Pakistan, describing it as “a country that bombs its own people” and accusing it of using misdirection and hyperbole to distract the world. He referred to Pakistan’s “delusional tirade” against India, particularly concerning Jammu and Kashmir.

“Every year, we are unfortunately fated to listen to the delusional tirade of Pakistan against my country, especially on Jammu and Kashmir, the Indian territory they covet,” Harish stated. He emphasized India’s “pioneering record on Women, Peace and Security agenda” as “unblemished and unscathed.”

The Indian envoy highlighted Pakistan’s dark history, recalling Operation Searchlight in 1971, during which Pakistan’s army sanctioned a systematic campaign of genocidal mass rape against 400,000 women. “The world sees through Pakistan’s propaganda,” Harish added.

India’s response came shortly after a Pakistani official at the UNSC, Counsellor Saima Saleem from the Permanent Mission of Pakistan to the United Nations, alleged that Kashmiri women have endured decades of sexual violence, which she described as a weapon of war used during the occupation.

In reaction, India reiterated its strong stance, having also recently condemned Pakistan as a country with “one of the world’s worst human rights records.” New Delhi continues to assert that Jammu and Kashmir “was, is and shall forever” remain an integral part of India.
https://www.news18.com/india/a-country-that-bombs-its-own-people-india-slams-pakistan-at-un-accuses-it-of-systematic-genocide-9618604.html

After Apple, Google has taken down an ICE tracking app

**After Apple, Google Also Removes ICE Tracking App from Play Store**

*By Dwaipayan Roy | October 4, 2025, 6:21 PM*

Just a day after Apple removed the app ICEBlock from its iOS App Store, Google has followed suit by pulling a similar app, Red Dot, from the Play Store. Both applications were designed to allow users to report sightings of US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents anonymously.

### App Functionalities

ICEBlock and Red Dot enabled users to share real-time information about the locations of ICE agents. Users could report sightings anonymously and receive alerts about ICE presence in their vicinity. These features aimed to help communities stay informed, but critics argued that such apps could potentially put law enforcement officers at risk.

### Google’s Decision and Policy Enforcement

Google’s removal of Red Dot aligns with its policies against apps that pose a high risk of abuse. The company stated that it enforces its moderation policies consistently across all apps that incorporate user-generated content. A Google representative clarified, “ICEBlock was never available on Google Play, but we removed similar apps for violations of our policies.”

This action follows a recent violent incident at an ICE facility, prompting Google to remove apps that share location data of vulnerable groups. Notably, Google mentioned that it did not receive any communication from the Department of Justice (DOJ) regarding these removals.

### The Debate Over Government Influence and Civil Liberties

Apple’s initial removal of ICEBlock has sparked widespread debate over the intersection of technology, government oversight, and civil liberties. ICEBlock allowed people to anonymously report and view ICE agent locations within an 8 km radius, making it a powerful tool for community awareness.

Reports indicate that the Donald Trump administration applied pressure on Apple, reportedly threatening legal action against the app’s developers. This government involvement has raised concerns about the impact on freedom of expression and the role of tech companies in regulating sensitive content.

As this situation unfolds, it highlights the ongoing challenges tech companies face in balancing user safety, legal compliance, and civil rights in their app ecosystems.
https://www.newsbytesapp.com/news/science/google-has-removed-this-controversial-app-from-play-store/story

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