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It’s the 21st anniversary of Killdozer

Fraser Winter Park Police Chief Glen Trainor was the Grand County undersheriff at the time of the attack on June 4, 2004. He climbed on top of the bulldozer to try and stop it. He believes the attack was an act of domestic terrorism.
Sky-Hi News archive photo

Wednesday, June 4, was the 21st anniversary on the bulldozer attack in Granby. The attack was carried out by Marvin Heemeyer, a Granby business owner, in armored Komatsu D355A bulldozer.

Several buildings were damaged in the rampage, including the Sky-Hi News office, a bank, a hardware store, a concrete company, a utility service center, the town hall, the police department, and a former mayor’s home. He targeted those who he felt had dealt him an injustice, the crux of which was a zoning dispute.

The rampage lasted two hours and seven minutes, ending when the bulldozer got stuck attempting to go through the alleyway of Gambles Hardware Store.



Heemeyer then killed himself with a handgun. No other deaths occurred, but an estimated $7 million in damage was done.

Granby rebuilt itself even better after Marvin Heemeyer’s rampage, as the town of Granby came together to construct a new library, town hall and several other buildings. In the 21 years since the attack, the community has come a long way, but is still healing in many ways.



Read past Sky-Hi News coverage of the bulldozer attack below:

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