Colorado Code § 16-13-504

Forfeiture of vehicle, fixtures and contents of building, personal property, or contraband article - exceptions
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(1) Any vehicle or personal property, including
fixtures and contents of a structure or building, as defined in section 16-13-301 (2), currency,
securities, or negotiable instruments, which has been or is being used in any of the acts specified
in section 16-13-503 or in, upon, or by means of which any act under said section has taken or is
taking place; or any currency, negotiable instruments, securities, or other things of value
furnished or intended to be furnished by any person in exchange for any of the acts listed in
section 16-13-503; or any proceeds traceable to the acts listed in section 16-13-503; or any
currency, negotiable instruments, or securities used or intended to be used to facilitate any of the
acts listed in section 16-13-503 are contraband property and shall be seized, as well as any
contraband article. Any peace officer or agent of a seizing agency may seize and hold such
property or articles if there is probable cause to believe that such property or articles are
contraband and the seizure is incident to a lawful search. All rights and interest in and title to
contraband property shall immediately vest in the state upon seizure by a seizing agency, subject
only to perfection of title, rights, and interests in accordance with this part 5. Neither replevin
nor any other action to recover any interest in such property shall be maintained in any court
except as provided in this part 5.
(1.5) If a rental motor vehicle is seized pursuant to this part 5, the seizing agency shall
notify the motor vehicle rental company of the seizure if the motor vehicle is identified as a
rental motor vehicle. The motor vehicle rental company may appear at the seizing agency and
request the return of the rental motor vehicle. The rental motor vehicle shall be returned to the
motor vehicle rental company unless the motor vehicle must be maintained in the custody of the
seizing agency for evidentiary purposes or if the seizing agency has probable cause to believe the
motor vehicle rental company, at the time of rental, had knowledge or notice of the criminal
activity for which the rental car was used.
(2) (a) In any action seeking forfeiture of property pursuant to this part 5, any person,
including a lienholder, who seeks to contest the forfeiture shall establish by a preponderance of
the evidence such person's standing as a true owner of the property or a true owner with an
interest in the property.
(b) To establish standing, the person shall first prove that the person has a recorded or
registered interest in the property, or a bona fide marital interest in the property, if the property is
of a type for which interests can be, and customarily are, recorded or registered in a public
office.
(c) The person shall also prove that the person is a true owner of the property or a true
owner of an interest in the property. The factors to be considered by the court in determining
whether a person is a true owner shall include, but need not be limited to:
(I) Whether the person had the primary use, benefit, possession, or control of the
property;
(II) How much of the consideration for the purchase or ownership of the property was
furnished by the person, and whether the person furnished reasonably equivalent value in
exchange for the property or interest;
(III) Whether the transaction by which the person acquired the property or interest was
secret, concealed, undisclosed, hurried, or not in the usual mode of doing business;
(IV) Whether the transaction by which the person acquired the property or interest was
conducted through the use of a shell, alter ego, nominee, or fictitious party;
(V) Whether the person is a relative, a co-conspirator, complicitor, or an accessory in the
public nuisance act or acts or other criminal activity, a business associate in a legal or illegal
business, one who maintains a special or close relationship with, or an insider with respect to the
perpetrator of the alleged public nuisance act or acts;
(VI) Whether the person is silent or fails to call parties to testify or to produce available
evidence explaining the acquisition of the property or factors which may be badges of fraud or
deceit, or show lack of true ownership;
(VII) Whether the timing of the transaction by which the person acquired the property
was during the pendency or threat of litigation, or during any time when the person knew, should
have known, or had notice of the public nuisance act or acts or the threat of a forfeiture action;
(VIII) Whether the placing of the title in the name of, or the putative ownership in, or
transfer to, the person was done with intent to delay, hinder, or avoid a forfeiture, or for some
purpose other than ownership of the property;
(IX) Whether the perpetrator of the alleged public nuisance act or acts has absconded or
is a fugitive from justice and the conveyance occurred after the flight, or before the flight, in any
of the circumstances set forth in subparagraph (III) of this paragraph (c);
(X) Whether the subject matter property is of a kind in which property or ownership
rights can legally exist;
(XI) Any other badge or indicia of fraud under article 8 of title 38, C.R.S., or the general
law of fraudulent transfers or conveyances.
(d) The court shall consider the totality of the circumstances in determining whether a
person is a true owner. A person contesting the forfeiture does not necessarily have to show that
all of the factors enumerated in paragraph (c) of this subsection (2) support the claim of true
ownership, nor does the person necessarily establish true ownership by showing the absence of
fraudulent intent or badges of fraud.
(e) No private sale or conveyance of a used motor vehicle shall be deemed to make a
party eligible to assert standing to contest the forfeiture thereof, unless the title to the motor
vehicle, with transfer duly executed to the party, has been filed with the division of motor
vehicles in the department of revenue prior to the physical seizure of the vehicle and the
recording of a notice of seizure, or the party attempting to assert standing has exclusive
possession of the vehicle at the time of seizure. A party eligible to assert standing under this
paragraph (e) must nevertheless establish that the party is a true owner of the vehicle or has an
interest therein pursuant to paragraph (c) of this subsection (2).
(f) Unless the standing of a particular party is conceded in the complaint initiating the
public nuisance action, a party must assert standing in the answer and fully describe the party's
interest in the property which is the subject matter of the action, and submit a verified statement,
supported by any available documentation, of the party's ownership of or interest in the property.
(2.1) (a) In any action to forfeit property pursuant to this part 5, the plaintiff, in addition
to any other matter which must be proven in the plaintiff's case in chief, shall prove by clear and
convincing evidence that possession of the property is unlawful, or that the owner of the
property or interest therein was involved in or knew of the subject act. The plaintiff shall also
prove by clear and convincing evidence that the property was instrumental in the commission or
facilitation of the crime or the property constitutes traceable proceeds of the crime or related
criminal activity.
(a.5) (I) The claimant in an action brought pursuant to this part 5 may petition the court
to determine whether a forfeiture was constitutionally excessive. Upon the conclusion of a trial
resulting in a judgment of forfeiture in an action brought pursuant to this part 5, if the evidence
presented raises an issue of proportionality under this paragraph (a.5), the defendant may petition
the court to set a hearing, or the court may on its own motion set a hearing to determine whether
a forfeiture was constitutionally excessive. This determination shall be made prior to any sale or
distribution of forfeited property.
(II) In making this determination, the court shall compare the forfeiture to the gravity of
the public nuisance act giving rise to the forfeiture and related criminal activity.
(III) The defendant shall have the burden of establishing by a preponderance of the
evidence that the forfeiture is grossly disproportional.
(IV) If the court finds that the forfeiture is grossly disproportional to the public nuisance
act and related criminal activity, it shall reduce or eliminate the forfeiture as necessary to avoid a
violation of the excessive fines clause of the eighth amendment of the United States constitution
or article II, section 20, of the Colorado constitution.
(V) and (VI) (Deleted by amendment, L. 2003, p. 890, § 2, effective July 1, 2003.)
(b) As used in paragraph (a) of this subsection (2.1), an owner was "involved in or knew
of the subject act" if it is established that:
(I) The owner was involved in the subject act; or
(II) (A) The owner knew of the subject act or had notice of the acts facilitating the
criminal activity or prior similar conduct and failed to take reasonable steps to prohibit or abate
the illegal use of the property;
(B) Notwithstanding the provisions of sub-subparagraph (A) of this subparagraph (II), if
the plaintiff proves by clear and convincing evidence that the owner knew or had notice of the
unlawful use of the property, the owner must prove by a preponderance of the evidence that the
owner took reasonable steps to prohibit or abate the unlawful use of the property for the court to
find the owner was not a party to the offense or related criminal activity.
(2.2) (a) With respect to a partial or whole ownership interest in existence at the time the
conduct subjecting the property to seizure took place, the term "innocent owner" means any
owner who:
(I) Did not have actual knowledge of the conduct subjecting the property to seizure or
notice of an act or circumstance facilitating the criminal activity or prior similar conduct, notice
being satisfied by, but not limited to, sending notice of an act or circumstance facilitating the
criminal activity by certified mail; or
(II) Upon learning of the conduct subjecting the property to seizure, took reasonable
steps to prohibit the conduct. An owner may demonstrate that he or she took reasonable action to
prohibit such conduct if the owner:
(A) Timely revoked or attempted to revoke permission for those engaging in such
conduct to use the property; or
(B) Took reasonable actions to discourage or prevent the use of the property in conduct
subjecting the property to seizure.
(b) With respect to a partial or whole ownership interest acquired after the conduct
subjecting the property to seizure has occurred, the term "innocent owner" means a person who,
at the time he or she acquired the interest in the property, had no knowledge that the illegal
conduct subjecting the property to seizure had occurred or that the property had been seized for
forfeiture, and:
(I) Acquired an interest in the property in a bona fide transaction for value;
(II) Acquired an interest in the property through probate or inheritance; or
(III) Acquired an interest in the property through dissolution of marriage or by operation
of law.
(c) An innocent owner's interest in property shall not be forfeited under any provision of
state law. An innocent owner has the burden of proving by a preponderance of the evidence that
he or she has an ownership interest in the subject property. Otherwise, the burden of proof under
this subsection (2.2) shall be as provided in subsection (2.1) of this section.
(d) A person who is convicted of a criminal offense arising from the same activity giving
rise to the forfeiture proceedings in accordance with section 16-13-505 (1.5) shall not be eligible
to assert an innocent owner defense.
(2.3) The prosecuting attorney shall set forth in the petition initiating the forfeiture
action pursuant to this part 5 the existence of any liens and whether forfeiture of any liens will be
sought. If forfeiture of a lien is not sought, the lienholder does not need to appear to preserve any
interest in the property which is the subject of the forfeiture action which such lienholder may
possess.
(3) (Deleted by amendment, L. 93, p. 627, § 2, effective July 1, 1993.)

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