judge gilbert roman
-
Heavy docket: Study recommends Colorado’s second-highest court expand by 25% to handle workload | COVER STORY
—
by
In the past two years, Chief Judge Gilbert M. Román has presided over five swearing-in ceremonies for new judges on Colorado’s second-highest court. He has repeatedly opened with the same disclaimer about the 22-member Court of Appeals. “This is considered a heavy-docket court,” Román says. Numerically speaking, that amounted to 1,745 written opinions issued in the last…
-

Heavy docket: Study recommends Colorado’s second-highest court expand by 25% to handle workload | COVER STORY
—
by
In the past two years, Chief Judge Gilbert M. Román has presided over five swearing-in ceremonies for new judges on Colorado’s second-highest court. He has repeatedly opened with the same disclaimer about the 22-member Court of Appeals. “This is considered a heavy-docket court,” Román says. Numerically speaking, that amounted to 1,745 written opinions issued in the last…
-
Heavy docket: Study recommends Colorado’s second-highest court expand by 25% to handle workload | COVER STORY
—
by
In the past two years, Chief Judge Gilbert M. Román has presided over five swearing-in ceremonies for new judges on Colorado’s second-highest court. He has repeatedly opened with the same disclaimer about the 22-member Court of Appeals. “This is considered a heavy-docket court,” Román says. Numerically speaking, that amounted to 1,745 written opinions issued in the last…
-

Appeals judge urges lawmakers to revisit careless driving law
—
by
Colorado’s second-highest court agreed on Thursday that state law only authorized a single criminal sentence for a man whose careless driving resulted in the deaths of two people, and not the two sentences a Larimer County judge originally imposed. Judge Steve Bernard, a member of the three-judge Court of Appeals panel that decided the case,…
-

Colorado appeals court reinstates slip-and-fall lawsuit against Jeffco
—
by
The state’s Court of Appeals last month reinstated a woman’s lawsuit against Jefferson County for allegedly failing to prevent her slip-and-fall inside a county building. The decision in Krista Dozier’s case comes as the Colorado Supreme Court is preparing to hear another appeal involving Jeffco, where a woman injured herself yards away from Dozier’s fall.…
-

Oral arguments, caseloads and bad lawyering: Appellate judges and justices provide peek behind judicial curtain
—
by
Nearly all members of the Colorado Supreme Court and half of the judges on the Court of Appeals convened with attorneys on Friday to give a behind-the-scenes tour of the inner workings of the judiciary, and to voice concern about the escalating number of issues they are being asked to decide in appeals. The topics…
-

Katharine Lum formally sworn in as newest appeals judge, reminds colleagues about plight of self-represented litigants
—
by
When Katharine E. Lum received a ticket for her car accident, she unexpectedly found herself anxious when she showed up to court representing herself, as litigants in legal matters routinely do. “If I was this nervous as a trained attorney, how must they have felt? Especially folks for whom a traffic fine meant the difference…
-

Colorado appeals court finds no racial discrimination in dismissal of Black woman from jury
—
by
Colorado’s second-highest court last week found there was no intentional racial discrimination when Arapahoe County prosecutors removed a Black woman from the jury of two Black defendants because she allegedly “did not seem interested” or think the judicial system was fair. A three-judge panel for the Court of Appeals rejected the claim that the prosecution…
-

Colorado appeals court reverses assault conviction due to Denver prosecutor’s misconduct
—
by
Colorado’s second-highest court on Thursday reversed a woman’s assault conviction and nine-year prison sentence because a Denver prosecutor improperly commented upon Cristina Rogers’ constitutional right not to testify. A three-judge panel for the Court of Appeals explained that even indirect statements about a defendant exercising their right against self-incrimination can trigger reversal if the prosecution…








