My guess is +/- 70%
Between characterizing deaths as COVID when they weren't, and the sloppy way States handle reporting deaths, I have no doubt we are over 10 times the actual deaths.
Here is a Denver news story:
New COVID-19 Death Dispute: Colorado Coroner Says State Mischaracterized Death
"CORTEZ, Colo. (CBS4) When police in Cortez, Colorado were called to Cortez City Park early on the morning of May 4, they found Sebastian Yellow, 35, lying on the ground and called it out as a code Frank, meaning Yellow had died, according to a police report obtained by CBS4.
Within a week, local Montezuma County Coroner George Deavers determined Yellow had died of acute alcohol poisoning, his blood alcohol measured at .55, nearly twice the lethal limit.
It was almost double what the minimum lethal amount was in the state, said Deavers, during an interview with CBS4.
But Deavers said that before he even signed the death certificate, the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment had already categorized Yellows death as being due to COVID-19 and it was tabulated that way on the states website.
I can see no reason for this, said Deavers.
Yellows death is the latest in Colorado raising eyebrows over the way the CDPHE is reclassifying deaths that runs contrary to what doctors and coroners initially ruled.
Last month, a CBS4 Investigation revealed the state health department reclassified three deaths at a Centennial nursing home as COVID-19 deaths, despite the fact attending physicians ruled all three were not related to coronavirus.
In each case, the residents had tested positive for COVID-19, but in each case, on-scene doctors ruled the deaths were not related to the virus. Still, in their official tally, the state increased the number of coronavirus deaths at the Someren Glen facility from four to seven, based on the disputed deaths."