Colorado Code § 21-2-105

Contracts with attorneys and other legal services providers
Open in Lexace · Ask the AI about this section
(1) On and
after January 1, 1997, the office of alternate defense counsel shall contract, where feasible,
without prior approval of the court, for the provision of attorney services for cases described in
section 21-2-103 (1). To provide for adequate legal representation of persons who are indigent,
the office of alternate defense counsel may contract, where feasible, without prior approval of
the court, for the provision of necessary legal services commensurate with those available to
persons who are not indigent for cases described in section 21-1-103 (1). The office of alternate
defense counsel shall establish, where feasible, a list of approved contract attorneys to serve as
counsel and a list of approved legal services providers to provide services in such cases. As a
condition of placement on the approved list, the contracting attorney or legal services provider
shall agree to provide services based on the terms to be established in a contract, at either a fixed
fee established by the office of alternate defense counsel or the hourly rate for reimbursement set
by the supreme court. Terms of the contract must be negotiated between the alternate defense
counsel and the contract attorney or legal services provider. Contracts made pursuant to this
section must specify that the services must be provided subject to the Colorado rules of
professional conduct.
(2) (a) Contracts made pursuant to this section must provide for reasonable
compensation and reimbursement for expenses necessarily incurred, to be fixed and paid from
state funds appropriated therefor. The office of alternate defense counsel shall review the bills
submitted for reimbursement by any contractor and may approve or deny the payment of such
bills in whole or in part based on the terms set forth in the contract negotiated between the
alternate defense counsel and the contractor.
(b) The rate contracted for attorney time pursuant to subsection (2)(a) of this section for
fiscal year 2023-24 is one hundred dollars per hour for cases involving a type B felony as
referenced in attachment D to chief justice directive 04-04 and as modified by the gradations
found in attachment D to chief justice directive 04-04. That hourly rate must be increased
annually by no more than five dollars each year until the hourly rate is at least seventy-five
percent of the rate set pursuant to the federal "Criminal Justice Act Revision of 1986", 18 U.S.C.
sec. 3006A, as amended, for indigent representation in federal court. That hourly rate may be
adjusted in subsequent fiscal years to maintain the hourly rate at or above seventy-five percent of
the rate set pursuant to the federal "Criminal Justice Act Revision of 1986", 18 U.S.C. sec.
3006A, as amended, for indigent representation in federal court.
(3) Colorado relies primarily on an independent contractor model of legal representation
for court-appointed adult and youth representation in accordance with this section when the
public defender's office has a legal conflict of interest. While the office of the alternate defense
counsel provides some legal representation for indigent individuals on some cases through state
employees and will continue to explore the use of state employee staff model solutions where
feasible, Colorado's need for conflict-free indigent defense counsel cannot be filled or provided
statewide by direct employees of the office of the alternate defense counsel. For the purpose of
determining eligibility for federal public service loan forgiveness, any independent contractor,
including, but not limited to, a resource advocate, an investigator, a case assistant, an attorney, a
social worker, a paralegal, or a legal researcher, who is currently providing or has previously
provided legal services or services through an interdisciplinary legal team has a conflict in
providing these services as a state employee. The director of the office of the alternate defense
counsel or the director's designee is authorized to sign a certification for any current or past
independent contractor that certifies that the contractor appears to be eligible for federal public
service loan forgiveness as allowed by federal law or regulations. With the authorization of an
independent contractor, the director of the office of the alternate defense counsel or the director's
designee may share information, including the contractor's name, social security number or
federal employer identification number, and the total number of hours billed by the contractor by
calendar year, with other independent judicial agencies for the purpose of certifying apparent
past, current, and future eligibility for public service loan forgiveness allowed by federal law or
regulations.

‹ 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.