Title 16 · CRS Title 16
Duty of officers to admit attorney
Citation: C.R.S. § 16-3-404
Section: 16-3-404
16-3-404. Duty of officers to admit attorney. (1) All peace officers or persons having in custody a person committed, imprisoned, or arrested for any alleged cause shall forthwith admit an attorney-at-law in this state or the attorney's authorized representative, upon the demand of the confined person or of a friend, relative, spouse, or attorney of the confined person, to see and consult the confined person, alone and in private, at the jail or other place of custody, if the confined person expressly consents to see or to consult with the attorney or the attorney's authorized representative. (1.5) In addition to in-person communication, a peace officer or person employed at a place of confinement shall provide an attorney-at-law in this state or the attorney's authorized representative the ability to initiate communication with the confined person through telephone calls, interactive audiovisual conferencing, or any other reasonable method of electronic communication, as determined by the jail or correctional facility administration, that allows the confined person and the attorney or authorized representative to speak to each other. The communication must be private, unrecorded, and without cost to the confined person and attorney or the attorney's representative. Peace officers or persons having custody of the confined person shall allow the communication described in this section on a forthwith basis, subject to all reasonable administrative and operational procedures and in the manner as determined by the facility administration. (2) Any peace officer or person violating the duty imposed by this section or section 16-3-403 shall forfeit and pay not less than one hundred dollars nor more than one thousand dollars to the person imprisoned or to his attorney for the benefit of the person imprisoned, to be recovered in any court of competent jurisdiction. Source: L. 72: R&RE, p. 203, � 1. C.R.S. 1963: � 39-3-404. L. 2025: (1) amended and (1.5) added, (HB 25-1049), ch. 331, p. 1717, � 4, effective August 6. Cross references: For the crime of official oppression for denial of opportunity to consult an attorney, see � 18-8-403 (1)(b).