Christian overnight camp says it will be shut down under Colorado's gender identity rules
Camp IdRaHaJe, named for the hymn 'I'd Rather Have Jesus,' filed a lawsuit last week that seeks to 'uphold its religious and commonsense beliefs about biological sex,' after Colorado changed rules allowing children to use bathrooms, sleep and dress in facilities assigned to their gender identity.
Lyft asks Gov. Polis to veto rideshare safety bill as companies threaten to leave Colorado
IdRaHaJe said it requested to run the camp in line with its beliefs — i.e., requiring campers to use facilities determined by their biological sex.
Those regulations are made by the Colorado Department of Early Education. The camp says that it will be inspected for compliance in June or July, and will not 'violate its religious beliefs and exercise and will thus face revocation or suspension of its license and fines in June.'
The rules that the camp is taking issue with were adopted in December 2024 and became effective in February this year. The rule discusses the facilities that are to be provided at licensed camps and how they are treated. For example, the rule discusses separate staff and children's toilet facilities and further says that 'school-age children must be allowed to use the toilet facilities that correspond with their gender identity.'
IdRaHaJe has partnered with the Alliance Defending Freedom to bring this case. ADF lawyers were also involved in arguing a case involving Colorado-based web designer Lorie Smith, in a free speech case after she said she didn't want to create messages for LGBTQ couples; as well as a lawsuit involving a Christian baker from near Denver who refused to bake a cake for a transgender woman.
'The government has no place telling religious summer camps that it's 'lights out' for upholding their religious beliefs about human sexuality,' said ADF Legal Counsel Andrea Dill in a press release concerning the lawsuit.
She said that IdRaHaJe seeks to minister the Bible's message to thousands of children each year as they build character and lifelong memories at the overnight camp.
'But the Colorado government is putting its dangerous agenda—that is losing popularity across the globe—ahead of its kids,' Dill continued. 'We are urging the court to allow IdRaHaJe to operate as it has for over 75 years: as a Christian summer camp that accepts all campers without fear of being punished for its beliefs.'
Kelly Loving Act signed into Colorado law
The camp is located in Bailey and says it has maintained a resident camp license since 1995, but has been in operation since 1948. In its lawsuit, the camp says that 'children who struggle with gender dysphoria are welcome to attend IdRaHaJe's summer camps so long as the child's parents or guardians agree that the child will follow the Camp's policies like all other campers and everyone agrees that attending camp will be a positive experience for the child.'
The camp is also arguing, through the ADF legal team, that it has received exemptions for certain requirements, such as the requirement that playground equipment not exceed six feet.
'IdRaHaJe has requested a religious exemption from the resident camp regulations that require camps to allow campers to use shower, dressing, and sleeping facilities based on chosen gender identity,' the lawsuit states.
The lawsuit said that the department denied the request and told the camp that a special school or class in religious instruction exemption would not apply to IdRaHaJe.
The camp is asking the court to grant an exemption from the Colorado Department of Early Childhood's rules on gender and facilities.
FOX31 reached out to the Colorado Department of Early Education for comment on the lawsuit and received a brief statement in return.
'This matter concerns pending litigation, and CDEC will address it through the appropriate legal channels. We have no further comment at this time,' the agency stated.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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Axios
38 minutes ago
- Axios
Beijing's hackers are playing the long game
Chinese hackers are targeting more sensitive U.S. targets than ever — not to smash and grab, but to bide their time. Why it matters: Beijing is investing in stealthy, persistent access to U.S. systems — quietly building up its abilities to disrupt everything from federal agencies to water utilities in the event of escalation with Washington. Even the most routine spying campaign could leave China with backdoors to destruction for years to come. Driving the news: At least three China-based hacking groups exploited vulnerable SharePoint servers in the last month, according to Microsoft. Researchers at Eye Security, which first discovered the SharePoint flaws, estimates that more than 400 systems were compromised as part of the SharePoint attacks. In this case, hackers also stole machine keys. That means the attackers can regain access whenever they want — even after the system is patched — unless admins take rare manual steps to rotate keys. The big picture: China's state-linked hackers have been growing in sophistication over the last few years as they focus more on targeting technology and software providers with hundreds of customers, often including government agencies. By the numbers: More than 330 cyberattacks last year were linked to China, double the total from 2023, according to CrowdStrike data shared with the Washington Post. Those numbers continued to climb in early 2025, according to CrowdStrike. Between the lines: At least three major Chinese government teams have been targeting U.S. networks in recent years. Volt Typhoon has focused on breaking into endpoint detection tools to burrow deep into U.S. critical infrastructure, including pipelines, railways, ports and water utilities. Their goal is to maintain persistent access and be prepared to launch destructive attacks in the event of contingencies such as a war over Taiwan, experts say. Salt Typhoon, known for its compromises of global telecom networks, has focused on traditional espionage and spying. This group tapped cell phones belonging to President Trump, Vice President Vance and other top government officials. The FBI believes that threat is now "largely contained." Silk Typhoon — which has been linked to a recent breach of the U.S. Treasury Department and is known for the global 2021 Microsoft Exchange hacks — has been ramping up its work in recent months. The group uses previously undetected vulnerabilities, known as zero-days, to break into networks. Zoom in: Researchers at cybersecurity firm SentinelOne have uncovered more than 10 patents tied to Silk Typhoon's work — a rarity among nation-state hackers. The patents — detailed in a report published Thursday — suggest the group was at one point developing new offensive tools, including to encrypt endpoint data recovery, conduct phone and router forensics and decrypt hard drives. The researchers also found that Silk Typhoon has links to at least three private sector companies. The intrigue: Beijing's growing reliance on private contractors adds another layer of complexity — shielding state involvement while expanding capability. A DOJ indictment released last month details how the Shanghai State Security Bureau directed employees at tech companies to hack into computers across U.S. universities and businesses to steal information. A trove of leaked documents stolen from private Chinese contractor I-Soon early last year also highlighted how hired hackers targeted several U.S. government agencies, major newspapers and research universities. State of play: China's growing cyber prowess comes as the Trump administration has diminished resources for its own cyber defenses. At least a third of the workforce at the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency has left through voluntary buyouts, early retirements or layoffs. The Trump administration also wants to cut its budget. Yes, but: The administration is expected to invest heavily in its own offensive cyber powers — with $1 billion from the "One Big Beautiful Bill" heading to the Pentagon for just that purpose.


CNN
an hour ago
- CNN
Trump and his allies mount a pressure campaign against US elections ahead of the midterms
A few weeks ago, Republican election officials in Colorado began receiving unsolicited calls and texts from a GOP consultant who said he was working with the Trump administration on 'election integrity.' In a text to one of the officials, the consultant, Jeff Small, indicated he was acting on a request from Stephen Miller, the White House deputy chief of staff. In a phone call with another clerk, Small said he was coordinating with the White House and the Justice Department to 'implement' an elections executive order signed by President Donald Trump, recalled Justin Grantham, the top election official in Fremont County. Grantham and Carly Koppes, who oversees elections in Weld County in northern Colorado, told CNN that Small made a specific request: Would they give a third party access to their election equipment? Both declined. 'Not only is that a hard no, I mean, you're not even going to breathe on my equipment,' Koppes said. The outreach to the Colorado clerks is just one of a flurry of recent federal actions launched by the Trump administration and groups aligned with the president. While the White House distanced itself from Small, Trump and his allies are collecting vast amounts of voter data and working to change the ground rules for next year's midterms, often by invoking federal government authority. Next year's midterms hold enormous stakes for Trump and his opposition. Democrats need to net just three seats in the US House in 2026 to flip control of the chamber from Republicans. A Democratic-led House could block Trump's legislative agenda and launch investigations of the president in the second half of his second term. Samantha Tarazi, CEO of the nonprofit Voting Rights Lab, which has closely tracked state developments, said she believes Trump is gearing up 'to use the power of his office to interfere in the 2026 election.' 'What started as an unconstitutional executive order — marching orders for state action regardless of its fate in court — has grown into a full federal mobilization to seize power over our elections,' she said. White House spokesperson Harrison Fields said Trump is 'fighting for election integrity' and will keep doing so 'despite Democrat objections that reveal their disdain for commonsense safeguards like verifying citizenship.' 'Free and fair elections are the bedrock of our Constitutional Republic, and we're confident in securing an ultimate victory in the courtroom,' he said in an email. Restricting who can access election machines and sensitive voting software has grown even more important to election officials in recent years following voting system breaches in states such as Colorado and Georgia. Trump allies had sought access to machines to find evidence that could back up the president's claim that widespread fraud marred the 2020 election. But election watchdogs and some Democratic election officials say activity by Trump and aligned groups since his return to the White House has raised fears of a broader effort to reshape elections. Recent actions by the administration and its allies include: Trump signing an executive order in March that sought to force states to require proof of citizenship to register to vote and take 'enforcement action' against states that accept mail ballots after Election Day. Federal judges have blocked parts of the executive order, noting that the power to regulate elections rests with the states and Congress, not the president. The Republican National Committee pushing to obtain voter registration records from states. On the day Trump signed the executive order, the RNC sent records requests to 48 states and Washington, DC, seeking information on how they maintain voter registration lists. And the RNC has sued New Jersey – home to a closely watched gubernatorial race this fall – alleging officials there have failed to respond to its requests for voter data and documents related to voting machine audits. A spokesperson for New Jersey's elections division declined to comment on the litigation. The Justice Department asking more than a dozen states in recent weeks to provide voter lists, explain their procedures for removing potential ineligible voters from their rolls or discuss entering into information-sharing agreements to help the agency root out election fraud. The demands range from seeking copies of voting rolls in political battlegrounds such as Michigan to a broad request in Colorado to provide election records as far back as 2020. Republicans in Texas undertaking a rare mid-decade redistricting, following entreaties from Trump. A map released Wednesday by GOP lawmakers who control the state legislature aims to take over five additional Democratic seats, which would to give the GOP the edge in 30 of the state's 38 congressional districts. The Republican-controlled House in April approving the SAVE Act, which mirrors parts of Trump's executive order requiring proof of citizenship to register to vote. The proposed legislation also would make it a crime for election officials to mistakenly register someone to vote who has not provided proof of citizenship. Critics note that it's already illegal for noncitizens to cast ballots in federal elections and say requiring proof of citizenship could disenfranchise eligible voters who lack the needed documents or changed their name through marriage. To justify the redistricting in his state, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott cited a letter from Harmeet Dhillon, head of the Justice Department's civil rights division, that challenged the legality of four existing congressional districts. Dhillon said in a statement: 'Clean voter rolls and basic election safeguards are requisites for free, fair, and transparent elections.' She said the agency 'has a statutory mandate to enforce our federal voting rights laws, and ensuring the voting public's confidence in the integrity of our elections is a top priority of this administration.' Trump has been blunt about his partisan goals in Texas, and he has suggested that other GOP-controlled states should pursue their own redistricting efforts – a move that threatens to set off an all-out redistricting war this year with Democrats in California and other Democrat-led states. The administration's recent actions have unsettled some election officials, who have endured years of threats and harassment following the 2020 election and the conspiracy theories about election fraud that flourished in its aftermath. Election officials 'are surfing on quicksand,' said David Becker, executive director and founder of the nonpartisan Center for Election Innovation & Research and a former DOJ voting rights attorney. 'They don't know what the executive order means, if it has any meaning whatsoever,' he said. 'They don't know if they will be investigated just for having done their jobs. They don't know if the vast power of the federal government is going to be weaponized against them. They don't know if the Department of Justice is going to be suing them.' A recent survey of 858 local election officials by the liberal-leaning Brennan Center for Justice at New York University's Law School bears that out. It found more than half of local election officials – 59% – say they are concerned about political leaders engaging in efforts to interfere with how election officials do their jobs. And 46% said they were concerned about politically motivated investigations of their work or that of their fellow election officials. In early July, as previously reported by The Washington Post and media outlets in Colorado, Republican election clerks began receiving calls and texts from Small. Small, who has worked for Colorado GOP Rep. Lauren Boebert and for the US Interior Department during Trump's first term, now is a principal with a Denver public affairs firm. County officials interviewed by CNN said Small told them he was reaching out specifically to Republican clerks in blue states in a push to help advance Trump's executive order. Grantham, the election clerk in Fremont County, said Small's outreach to only Republican officials was an early red flag during their conversation. Another concern arose, he said, when Small mentioned gaining access to the county's election equipment. 'My response was, 'I didn't believe that the president had the authority in the Constitution to write executive orders to affect elections and that until the Supreme Court found that he could, I would not let anybody access my voting equipment.' CNN reached out to Small, and his attorney, Suzanne Taheri, responded to CNN's inquiry. In a text, Taheri said Small's outreach 'supported efforts by allies in the administration to encourage officials to participate in President Trump's election security executive order.' He undertook the activity 'on a volunteer basis, during his own free time, while on paternity leave,' she added. Neither Small nor Taheri answered questions about who exactly in the administration asked him to contact the clerks. The White House distanced itself from Small's actions in a statement. 'Jeff Small does not speak for the White House nor was he ever authorized to do official business on behalf of the White House,' a White House spokesperson said in an email to CNN. Miller did not respond to CNN requests for comment. In Colorado, election officials say, there is heightened sensitivity around who can access election equipment, after the high-profile prosecution of former Mesa County elections clerk, Tina Peters. She became a celebrity among pro-Trump activists who have advanced false claims that voting machines had been rigged to flip votes from Trump to then-candidate Joe Biden in the 2020 election. Many state laws set strict security standards for voting machines to prevent tampering with elections. Colorado has specifically barred third parties from accessing election equipment. Last year, a judge sentenced Peters to nine years in prison after she was convicted on state charges for her role in a breach of her county's election system as part of an unsuccessful hunt for fraud. Trump and his administration have taken up Peters' cause, however. Earlier this year, the Justice Department said it was reviewing her case as part of a broad mandate from Trump to counter prosecutions it said were aimed at 'inflicting political pain than toward pursuing actual justice.' And in a social media post in May, the president weighed in personally, calling Peters an 'innocent Political Prisoner' and directing the Justice Department to 'to take all necessary action to help secure' her release. Colorado Secretary of State Jena Griswold told CNN that her office has provided recent voter data to the Justice Department that's generally available to the public. But she said she declined to comply with a request related to records from the 2020 election because the federal government has no 'legal basis' to seek it. Federal law only requires the preservation of election data in federal races for 22 months. Griswold, a Democrat, said Trump's recent actions demonstrate the president 'is using the power of the federal government to undermine American elections and undermine voter confidence in them.' In Colorado, a state Trump lost in all three of his White House bids, tensions over election administration remain high. Koppes, the Republican clerk of Weld County, said she faced so many threats for her outspoken defense of the 2020 election results – and her county's use of Dominion Voting machines – that she began to vary her routes to and from work, a practice she continues today. Crane, the head of the clerk's association, said it took a 'lot of courage' for county clerks to rebuff the recent overtures, given the climate of suspicion and harassment that still persists. He noted that an elections office in southern Colorado housing Dominion machines was firebombed recently. No one was injured in the after-hours incident. 'The threats against election officials are very real,' he added.


CNN
2 hours ago
- CNN
Trump and his allies mount a pressure campaign against US elections ahead of the midterms
Donald Trump US elections State & local races Election securityFacebookTweetLink Follow A few weeks ago, Republican election officials in Colorado began receiving unsolicited calls and texts from a GOP consultant who said he was working with the Trump administration on 'election integrity.' In a text to one of the officials, the consultant, Jeff Small, indicated he was acting on a request from Stephen Miller, the White House deputy chief of staff. In a phone call with another clerk, Small said he was coordinating with the White House and the Justice Department to 'implement' an elections executive order signed by President Donald Trump, recalled Justin Grantham, the top election official in Fremont County. Grantham and Carly Koppes, who oversees elections in Weld County in northern Colorado, told CNN that Small made a specific request: Would they give a third party access to their election equipment? Both declined. 'Not only is that a hard no, I mean, you're not even going to breathe on my equipment,' Koppes said. The outreach to the Colorado clerks is just one of a flurry of recent federal actions launched by the Trump administration and groups aligned with the president. While the White House distanced itself from Small, Trump and his allies are collecting vast amounts of voter data and working to change the ground rules for next year's midterms, often by invoking federal government authority. Next year's midterms hold enormous stakes for Trump and his opposition. Democrats need to net just three seats in the US House in 2026 to flip control of the chamber from Republicans. A Democratic-led House could block Trump's legislative agenda and launch investigations of the president in the second half of his second term. Samantha Tarazi, CEO of the nonprofit Voting Rights Lab, which has closely tracked state developments, said she believes Trump is gearing up 'to use the power of his office to interfere in the 2026 election.' 'What started as an unconstitutional executive order — marching orders for state action regardless of its fate in court — has grown into a full federal mobilization to seize power over our elections,' she said. White House spokesperson Harrison Fields said Trump is 'fighting for election integrity' and will keep doing so 'despite Democrat objections that reveal their disdain for commonsense safeguards like verifying citizenship.' 'Free and fair elections are the bedrock of our Constitutional Republic, and we're confident in securing an ultimate victory in the courtroom,' he said in an email. Restricting who can access election machines and sensitive voting software has grown even more important to election officials in recent years following voting system breaches in states such as Colorado and Georgia. Trump allies had sought access to machines to find evidence that could back up the president's claim that widespread fraud marred the 2020 election. But election watchdogs and some Democratic election officials say activity by Trump and aligned groups since his return to the White House has raised fears of a broader effort to reshape elections. Recent actions by the administration and its allies include: Trump signing an executive order in March that sought to force states to require proof of citizenship to register to vote and take 'enforcement action' against states that accept mail ballots after Election Day. Federal judges have blocked parts of the executive order, noting that the power to regulate elections rests with the states and Congress, not the president. The Republican National Committee pushing to obtain voter registration records from states. On the day Trump signed the executive order, the RNC sent records requests to 48 states and Washington, DC, seeking information on how they maintain voter registration lists. And the RNC has sued New Jersey – home to a closely watched gubernatorial race this fall – alleging officials there have failed to respond to its requests for voter data and documents related to voting machine audits. A spokesperson for New Jersey's elections division declined to comment on the litigation. The Justice Department asking more than a dozen states in recent weeks to provide voter lists, explain their procedures for removing potential ineligible voters from their rolls or discuss entering into information-sharing agreements to help the agency root out election fraud. The demands range from seeking copies of voting rolls in political battlegrounds such as Michigan to a broad request in Colorado to provide election records as far back as 2020. Republicans in Texas undertaking a rare mid-decade redistricting, following entreaties from Trump. A map released Wednesday by GOP lawmakers who control the state legislature aims to take over five additional Democratic seats, which would to give the GOP the edge in 30 of the state's 38 congressional districts. The Republican-controlled House in April approving the SAVE Act, which mirrors parts of Trump's executive order requiring proof of citizenship to register to vote. The proposed legislation also would make it a crime for election officials to mistakenly register someone to vote who has not provided proof of citizenship. Critics note that it's already illegal for noncitizens to cast ballots in federal elections and say requiring proof of citizenship could disenfranchise eligible voters who lack the needed documents or changed their name through marriage. To justify the redistricting in his state, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott cited a letter from Harmeet Dhillon, head of the Justice Department's civil rights division, that challenged the legality of four existing congressional districts. Dhillon said in a statement: 'Clean voter rolls and basic election safeguards are requisites for free, fair, and transparent elections.' She said the agency 'has a statutory mandate to enforce our federal voting rights laws, and ensuring the voting public's confidence in the integrity of our elections is a top priority of this administration.' Trump has been blunt about his partisan goals in Texas, and he has suggested that other GOP-controlled states should pursue their own redistricting efforts – a move that threatens to set off an all-out redistricting war this year with Democrats in California and other Democrat-led states. The administration's recent actions have unsettled some election officials, who have endured years of threats and harassment following the 2020 election and the conspiracy theories about election fraud that flourished in its aftermath. Election officials 'are surfing on quicksand,' said David Becker, executive director and founder of the nonpartisan Center for Election Innovation & Research and a former DOJ voting rights attorney. 'They don't know what the executive order means, if it has any meaning whatsoever,' he said. 'They don't know if they will be investigated just for having done their jobs. They don't know if the vast power of the federal government is going to be weaponized against them. They don't know if the Department of Justice is going to be suing them.' A recent survey of 858 local election officials by the liberal-leaning Brennan Center for Justice at New York University's Law School bears that out. It found more than half of local election officials – 59% – say they are concerned about political leaders engaging in efforts to interfere with how election officials do their jobs. And 46% said they were concerned about politically motivated investigations of their work or that of their fellow election officials. In early July, as previously reported by The Washington Post and media outlets in Colorado, Republican election clerks began receiving calls and texts from Small. Small, who has worked for Colorado GOP Rep. Lauren Boebert and for the US Interior Department during Trump's first term, now is a principal with a Denver public affairs firm. County officials interviewed by CNN said Small told them he was reaching out specifically to Republican clerks in blue states in a push to help advance Trump's executive order. Grantham, the election clerk in Fremont County, said Small's outreach to only Republican officials was an early red flag during their conversation. Another concern arose, he said, when Small mentioned gaining access to the county's election equipment. 'My response was, 'I didn't believe that the president had the authority in the Constitution to write executive orders to affect elections and that until the Supreme Court found that he could, I would not let anybody access my voting equipment.' CNN reached out to Small, and his attorney, Suzanne Taheri, responded to CNN's inquiry. In a text, Taheri said Small's outreach 'supported efforts by allies in the administration to encourage officials to participate in President Trump's election security executive order.' He undertook the activity 'on a volunteer basis, during his own free time, while on paternity leave,' she added. Neither Small nor Taheri answered questions about who exactly in the administration asked him to contact the clerks. The White House distanced itself from Small's actions in a statement. 'Jeff Small does not speak for the White House nor was he ever authorized to do official business on behalf of the White House,' a White House spokesperson said in an email to CNN. Miller did not respond to CNN requests for comment. In Colorado, election officials say, there is heightened sensitivity around who can access election equipment, after the high-profile prosecution of former Mesa County elections clerk, Tina Peters. She became a celebrity among pro-Trump activists who have advanced false claims that voting machines had been rigged to flip votes from Trump to then-candidate Joe Biden in the 2020 election. Many state laws set strict security standards for voting machines to prevent tampering with elections. Colorado has specifically barred third parties from accessing election equipment. Last year, a judge sentenced Peters to nine years in prison after she was convicted on state charges for her role in a breach of her county's election system as part of an unsuccessful hunt for fraud. Trump and his administration have taken up Peters' cause, however. Earlier this year, the Justice Department said it was reviewing her case as part of a broad mandate from Trump to counter prosecutions it said were aimed at 'inflicting political pain than toward pursuing actual justice.' And in a social media post in May, the president weighed in personally, calling Peters an 'innocent Political Prisoner' and directing the Justice Department to 'to take all necessary action to help secure' her release. Colorado Secretary of State Jena Griswold told CNN that her office has provided recent voter data to the Justice Department that's generally available to the public. But she said she declined to comply with a request related to records from the 2020 election because the federal government has no 'legal basis' to seek it. Federal law only requires the preservation of election data in federal races for 22 months. Griswold, a Democrat, said Trump's recent actions demonstrate the president 'is using the power of the federal government to undermine American elections and undermine voter confidence in them.' In Colorado, a state Trump lost in all three of his White House bids, tensions over election administration remain high. Koppes, the Republican clerk of Weld County, said she faced so many threats for her outspoken defense of the 2020 election results – and her county's use of Dominion Voting machines – that she began to vary her routes to and from work, a practice she continues today. Crane, the head of the clerk's association, said it took a 'lot of courage' for county clerks to rebuff the recent overtures, given the climate of suspicion and harassment that still persists. He noted that an elections office in southern Colorado housing Dominion machines was firebombed recently. No one was injured in the after-hours incident. 'The threats against election officials are very real,' he added.