Colorado Code § 13-74-103

List of prospective jurors - selection - membership - term
Open in Lexace · Ask the AI about this section
The state court
administrator, upon receipt of an order of a chief judge of the district court granting a petition to
impanel a judicial district grand jury, shall prepare a list of prospective judicial district grand
jurors drawn from existing jury lists of the several counties within the district. In preparing the
list of prospective judicial district grand jurors, the state court administrator need not include
names of jurors from every county within the district, but the state court administrator may select
jurors from counties near the county in which the chief judge requesting the list presides. The
chief judge granting the order shall impanel the judicial district grand jury from the list compiled
by the state court administrator. A judicial district grand jury shall be composed of twelve or
twenty-three members, as provided in section 13-72-102. The members of the judicial district
grand jury shall be selected by the chief judge with the advice of the district attorney. The chief
judge may close to the public part or all of the selection process when reasonably necessary to
protect the grand jury process or the security of the grand jurors. The length of term served by a
judicial district grand jury shall be as provided in section 13-71-120. The court, upon its own
motion or at the request of the district attorney, shall enter an order to preserve the
confidentiality of all information that might identify judicial district grand jurors when
reasonably necessary to protect the judicial district grand jury process or the security of the
judicial district grand jurors. In the absence of such an order, upon request, the state court
administrator shall make available for inspection by members of the public a list of judicial
district grand jurors containing only the judicial district grand jurors' names and juror numbers.

‹ Prev All Colorado sections Next ›


Lexace provides legal information, not legal advice, and no attorney–client relationship is created. Statute text is provided for general information and may not reflect the most recent amendments; verify against the official state code.