Colorado Code § 24-31-902

Incident recordings - release - tampering - fine
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(1) (a) (I) By July 1,
2023, all local law enforcement agencies in the state and the Colorado state patrol shall provide
body-worn cameras for each peace officer of the law enforcement agency who interacts with
members of the public. Law enforcement agencies may seek funding pursuant to section 24-
33.5-519.
(II) (A) Except as provided in subsection (1)(a)(II)(B) or (1)(a)(II)(C) of this section, a
peace officer shall wear and activate a body-worn camera or dash camera, if the peace officer's
vehicle is equipped with a dash camera, when responding to a call for service, entering into a
premises for the purposes of enforcing the law or in response to a call for service, during a
welfare check except for a motorist assist, or during any interaction with the public initiated by
the peace officer, whether consensual or nonconsensual, for the purpose of enforcing the law or
investigating possible violations of the law. The body-worn camera or dash camera does not
need to be on when en route to a call for service, but should be turned on shortly before the
vehicle approaches the scene.
(B) A peace officer may turn off a body-worn camera to avoid recording personal
information that is not case related; when working on an unrelated assignment; when there is a
long break in the incident; and in administrative, tactical, and management discussions when
civilians are not present.
(C) A peace officer does not need to wear or activate a body-worn camera if the peace
officer is working undercover.
(D) The provisions of this subsection (1)(a)(II) do not apply to jail peace officers or staff
of a local law enforcement agency working in any place in the jail that has functioning video
cameras; except that this subsection (1)(a)(II) applies to jail peace officers when performing a
task that requires an anticipated use of force, including cell extractions and restraint chairs. The
provisions of this subsection (1)(a)(II) also do not apply to the civilian or administrative staff of
the Colorado state patrol or a local law enforcement agency, the executive detail of the Colorado
state patrol, and peace officers working in a courtroom.
(III) If a peace officer fails to activate a body-worn camera or dash camera as required
by this section or tampers with body-worn- or dash-camera footage or operation when required
to activate the camera, there is a permissive inference in any investigation or legal proceeding,
excluding criminal proceedings against the peace officer, that the missing footage would have
reflected misconduct by the peace officer. If a peace officer fails to activate or reactivate his or
her body-worn camera as required by this section or tampers with body-worn- or dash-camera
footage or operation when required to activate the camera, any statements or conduct sought to
be introduced in a prosecution through the peace officer related to the incident that were not
recorded due to the peace officer's failure to activate or reactivate the body-worn camera as
required by this section or if the statement or conduct was not recorded by other means creates a
rebuttable presumption of inadmissibility. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, this
subsection (1)(a)(III) does not apply if the body-worn camera was not activated due to a
malfunction of the body-worn camera and the peace officer was not aware of the malfunction, or
was unable to rectify it, prior to the incident, provided that the law enforcement agency's
documentation shows the peace officer checked the functionality of the body-worn camera at the
beginning of his or her shift.
(IV) (A) In addition to any criminal liability and penalty under the law, if a court,
administrative law judge, hearing officer, or a final decision in an internal investigation finds
that a peace officer intentionally failed to activate a body-worn camera or dash camera or
tampered with any body-worn or dash camera, except as permitted in this section, the peace
officer's employer shall impose discipline up to and including termination, to the extent
permitted by applicable constitutional and statutory personnel laws and case law.
(B) In addition to any criminal liability and penalty under the law, if a court,
administrative law judge, hearing officer, or a final decision in an internal investigation finds
that a peace officer intentionally failed to activate a body-worn camera or dash camera or
tampered with any body-worn or dash camera, except as permitted in this section, with the intent
to conceal unlawful or inappropriate actions or obstruct justice, the P.O.S.T. board shall suspend
the peace officer's certification for a period of not less than one year and the suspension may
only be lifted within the period of the suspension if the peace officer is exonerated by a court,
administrative law judge, or internal affairs investigation.
(C) In addition to any criminal liability and penalty under the law, if a court,
administrative law judge, hearing officer, or a final decision in an internal investigation finds
that a peace officer intentionally failed to activate a body-worn camera or dash camera or
tampered with any body-worn or dash camera, except as permitted in this section, with the intent
to conceal unlawful or inappropriate actions, or obstruct justice, in an incident resulting in a
civilian death or serious bodily injury, the P.O.S.T. board shall permanently revoke the peace
officer's certification and the revocation may only be overturned if the peace officer is
exonerated by a court, administrative law judge, or internal affairs investigation.
(b) A local law enforcement agency and the Colorado state patrol shall establish and
follow a retention schedule for body-worn camera recordings in compliance with Colorado state
archives rules and direction.
(2) (a) For all incidents in which there is a complaint of peace officer misconduct by
another peace officer, a civilian, or nonprofit organization, through notice to the law
enforcement agency involved in the alleged misconduct, the local law enforcement agency or the
Colorado state patrol shall release, upon request, all unedited video and audio recordings of the
incident, including those from body-worn cameras, dash cameras, or otherwise collected through
investigation, to the public within twenty-one days after the local law enforcement agency or the
Colorado state patrol received the request for release of the video or audio recordings.
(b) (I) All video and audio recordings depicting a death must be provided upon request
to the victim's spouse, parent, legal guardian, child, sibling, grandparent, grandchild, significant
other, or other lawful representative, and such person shall be notified of his or her right,
pursuant to section 24-4.1-302.5 (1)(j.8), to receive and review the recording at least seventy-two
hours prior to public disclosure. A person seventeen years of age and under is considered
incapacitated, unless legally emancipated.
(II) (A) Notwithstanding any other provision of this section, any video that raises
substantial privacy concerns for criminal defendants, victims, witnesses, juveniles, or
informants, including video depicting nudity; a sexual assault; a medical emergency; private
medical information; a mental health crisis; a victim interview; a minor, including any images or
information that might undermine the requirement to keep certain juvenile records confidential;
any personal information other than the name of any person not arrested, cited, charged, or
issued a written warning, including a government-issued identification number, date of birth,
address, or financial information; significantly explicit and gruesome bodily injury, unless the
injury was caused by a peace officer; or the interior of a home or treatment facility, shall be
blurred to protect the substantial privacy interest while still allowing public release. Unblurred
footage shall not be released without the written authorization of the victim or, if the victim is
deceased or incapacitated, the written authorization of the victim's next of kin. A person
seventeen years of age and under is considered incapacitated, unless legally emancipated. This
subsection (2)(b)(II)(A) does not permit the removal of any portion of the video.
(B) If blurring is insufficient to protect the substantial privacy interest, the local law
enforcement agency or the Colorado state patrol shall, upon request, release the video to the
victim or, if the victim is deceased or incapacitated, to the victim's spouse, parent, legal
guardian, child, sibling, grandparent, grandchild, significant other, or other lawful representative
within twenty days after receipt of the complaint of misconduct. In cases in which the recording
is not released to the public pursuant to this subsection (2)(b)(II)(B), the local law enforcement
agency shall notify the person whose privacy interest is implicated, if contact information is
known, within twenty days after receipt of the complaint of misconduct, and inform the person
of his or her right to waive the privacy interest.
(C) A witness, victim, or criminal defendant may waive in writing the individual privacy
interest that may be implicated by public release. Upon receipt of a written waiver of the
applicable privacy interest, accompanied by a request for release, the law enforcement agency
may not redact or withhold release to protect that privacy interest.
(III) Any video that would substantially interfere with or jeopardize an active or ongoing
investigation may be withheld from the public; except that the video shall be released no later
than forty-five days from the date of the allegation of misconduct; except that in a case in which
the only offenses charged are statutory traffic infractions, the release of the video may be
delayed pursuant to rule 8 of the Colorado rules for traffic infractions. In all cases when release
of a video is delayed in reliance on this subsection (2)(b)(III), the prosecuting attorney shall
prepare a written explanation of the interference or jeopardy that justifies the delayed release,
contemporaneous with the refusal to release the video. Upon release of the video, the
prosecuting attorney shall release the written explanation to the public.
(c) If criminal charges have been filed against any party to the incident, that party must
file any constitutional objection to release of the recording in the pending criminal case before
the twenty-one-day period expires. Only in cases in which there is a pending criminal
investigation or prosecution of a party to the incident, the twenty-one-day period shall begin
from the date of appointment of counsel, the filing of an entry of appearance by counsel, or the
election to proceed pro se by the defendant, receipt of the criminal complaint, and the
defendant's receipt of the video in discovery in the criminal prosecution made on the record
before a judge. If the defendant elects to proceed pro se in the criminal case, the court shall
advise the defendant of the twenty-one-day deadline for the defendant to file any constitutional
objection to release of the recording in the pending criminal case as part of the court's
advisement. The court shall hold a hearing on any objection no later than seven days after it is
filed and issue a ruling no later than three days after the hearing. The hearing is considered a
critical stage as defined in section 24-4.1-302 and gives victims the right to be heard pursuant to
section 24-4.1-302.5.
(3) Subsection (1)(a)(III) of this section, as it relates to only an officer tampering with
body-worn or dash-camera footage or operation, and subsection (2) of this section apply on and
after July 6, 2021, when a peace officer is wearing a body-worn camera or the officer's vehicle is
equipped with a dash camera. If a peace officer is wearing a body-worn camera or the officer's
vehicle is equipped with a dash camera, the remaining portions of this section apply on and after
July 1, 2022. This section does not require a law enforcement agency to provide its law
enforcement officers with body-worn cameras prior to July 1, 2023.

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