Colorado town used to spotlight

Reporters have flocked to Eagle before

? If Kobe Bryant goes on trial here, it won’t be the first time this rural town of 3,500 has been overrun by reporters. Still, no one is looking forward to it.

Residents of the one-time ranching community are used to seeing celebrities and dealing with big news.

Its proximity to Vail and Beaver Creek draws reporters who cover famous faces and newsworthy events in those resort towns, such as the annual World Forum that included participants like Margaret Thatcher and Vice President Dick Cheney, said Jack Lewis, a developer for Vail Resorts.

The town’s most recent high-profile cases included skier Nathan Hall’s conviction of criminally negligent homicide after colliding with another skier at Vail, and former stripper-turned-mayor Kolleen Brooks, who was convicted of staging an attack on herself during a recall election.

In 1997, TV satellite trucks filled the airport parking lot for three weeks to cover the mysterious crash of an Air Force A-10 Warthog whose pilot flew 800 miles off course from Arizona and crashed on a 13,000-foot mountain.

All that doesn’t mean, however, that residents will just ignore Bryant’s case.

“This is a small community. It’s going to have an impact if it lands right here,” mayor Roxie Dean said.

Bryant, one of the NBA’s most popular players, was charged Friday with sexually assaulting a 19-year-old woman at a nearby resort. His attorneys said they would consider asking a judge to move the trial out of Eagle County to ensure a fair trial.

Eagle County District Attorney Mark Hurlbert wants the case to be tried here.

Bryant, 24, denied the charge, saying he was guilty only of adultery.

Eagle, founded in the late 1800s, has grown with an economy largely dependent on tourism. Many residents moved here for its quiet, family oriented lifestyle and more affordable housing, and work in Vail and Beaver Creek, about 30 miles east of Eagle.

The population is economically diverse, said defense lawyer Scott Robinson of Denver.

The case already has had an effect on Eagle. In the two weeks between Bryant’s arrest and the prosecutor’s decision to file charges, traffic increased, TV trucks took up spaces in the courthouse parking lot and some reporters stayed in Eagle’s five hotels.

“We definitely are getting more business, especially from the news media people. On the other hand it is bad that whatever happened, happened,” said Robert Hermosillo, manager of Salsas Mexican Restaurant.

Bryant’s admission that he had sex with his accuser probably would turn the attention to her and her background, something that may be easier to learn in a small town, said Robert Pugsley, a criminal law professor at Southwestern University in Los Angeles who monitored the O.J. Simpson trial.

“They’re really going to set her on trial here,” he said, referring to defense lawyers.

Town council member Paul Witt worries about a trial’s effect on the woman, a former cheerleader at Eagle Valley High School.

“There are going to be a lot more lives affected by this before it is over,” Witt said.