dui
-

State Supreme Court continues to ponder headaches of DUI ruling
Colorado’s Supreme Court justices this week once again heard about the difficulties they created by upending prosecutions of felony drunk driving cases nearly two years ago. Although driving under the influence in Colorado is typically a misdemeanor, the legislature in 2015 established a felony DUI offense for people who have at least three prior drunk…
-

State Supreme Court to examine foreclosure timeline, narrowly turns down DUI appeals
The Colorado Supreme Court has agreed to review a lower court’s ruling that banks and mortgage lenders argue gives an improper incentive to rapidly foreclose on certain homeowners. On Monday, the justices announced they will hear the case of U.S. Bank National Association v. Silvernagel, which centers on Colorado’s six-year statute of limitations for lenders to foreclose…
-

State Supreme Court OK’s forced blood draws for DUI suspects
By a 6-1 decision on Monday, the Colorado Supreme Court determined state law permits police officers to obtain a warrant and forcibly draw blood from motorists who are suspected solely of driving drunk. Although the law currently enables law enforcement to draw blood in the absence of a warrant and without motorists expressing their consent…
-

Appeals court says man representing himself was not crazy, but ‘sovereign citizen’
While all parties agreed that Charles James Crabtree had acted bizarrely throughout his drunken-driving case, Colorado’s second-highest court determined it was not mental illness, but rather Crabtree’s belief in the “sovereign citizen” movement that motivated his aberrant behavior. The state’s Court of Appeals consequently declined to overturn Crabtree’s conviction for driving under the influence, even…
-

State Supreme Court agrees to interpret felony animal cruelty, sex offender registration laws
Colorado’s Supreme Court has agreed to interpret whether two state laws, criminalizing cruelty to animals and the failure to register as a sex offender, permit convictions to be transformed into felonies upon a judge’s findings alone, or if a jury must make that decision. Both cases came through the state’s Court of Appeals, where separate…
-

Broomfield council member replaces Matt Gray on primary ballot
Democrats picked a Broomfield council member to replace Rep. Matt Gray on the primary ballot. The vacancy committee in House District 33 elected council member William Lindstedt to replace Gray on the ballot, according to Megan Burns, the communications director for the Colorado Democratic Party. “Thank you to Rep. Gray for his service and thank you to…
-

Appeals court says pandemic justified denying DUI breath test to driver
Colorado Springs police were justified when, three months into the COVID-19 pandemic, they offered only a blood draw to a suspected drunk driver in lieu of a breath test, the state’s second-highest court has determined. Under Colorado law, a driver has expressed their consent to taking a blood or breath test when law enforcement has…
-

Appeals court finds no racial discrimination despite excusal of three Black jurors in a row
The state’s second-highest court has decided there was no intentional racial discrimination when an Arapahoe County prosecutor dismissed three Black people in a row from serving on a Black defendant’s jury. The appeal from Shawne Alexander Toney implicated the U.S. Supreme Court’s landmark case of Batson v. Kentucky, which held that intentional racial discrimination in jury…

