Complete Colorado

Northglenn drops charges over city park religious gatherings

NORTHGLENN—Charges against a local-area pastor and church members have been dropped by the City of Northglenn, while a related federal lawsuit filed against the city over barring religious gatherings heads into the discovery process.

Northglenn, with around 38,000 residents, is a home rule municipality in the north-metro Denver area.

As previously reported by Complete Colorado, The American Center for Law and Justice (ACLJ), a public interest law firm specializing in religious freedom, filed a federal lawsuit on behalf of several church members after local officials shut down their religious gatherings in a city park.

Starting in 2020, Brave Church and The Crossing Church, located in Westminster, along with Next Step Church in Thornton, hosted religious ministry gatherings in E.B. Rains Jr. Memorial Park. Every Tuesday and Thursday church members would use the park on a first-come-first-serve basis for Bible study, worship, prayer, and feeding the homeless.

In the summer of 2024, the church leaders were approached by the Northglenn chief of police who shut down the church gathering. Northglenn city officials then hosted a private meeting with church members describing their meetings as too big and disruptive.

City council then unanimously passed amendments to Ordinance CR54, prohibiting recurring groups of five or more people from gathering in the park.

On Sept. 18, Northglenn police issued criminal citations to Pastor Dustin Mackintosh, and church members Brent Denny and David McCamish. Pastor David Baca, while not cited, was at the event and is a plaintiff in the lawsuit.

The ACLJ filed three separate motions on Jan 7, asking the citations be dismissed, and on Jan. 16, the the city dropped all charges.

“The City of Northglenn dismissed the criminal charges against the pastors and church members we represent,” ACLJ attorney Liam R. Harrell wrote in a press release. “After being charged as criminals for their worship, prayer, fellowship, and charity, they can now breathe easier knowing these charges are behind them.”

While the ACLJ considers the dismissal of the charges a major victory, the legal fight is far from over.

The lawsuit is now moving into the pre-trial discovery process. Both parties will request and exchange information and evidence.

One of the ACLJ lawyers in the case, Garrett Taylor, says the legal team plans to iron out specific deadlines at the upcoming scheduling conference,

“During that scheduling conference we will discuss future deadlines for this case. Specifically, deadlines for the discovery phase of the case, which is the phase in the case where we will gather all the facts and evidence. Discovery includes requesting various documents and sitting city officials down in depositions to shed light on exactly what happened here,” Taylor told Complete Colorado.

The scheduling conference is set for March 17, at 11am in the United States District Court of Colorado.

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