Colorado Code § 27-81-111

Emergency commitment
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(1) (a) When a person is under the influence of
or incapacitated by substances and is clearly dangerous to the health and safety of the person's
self or others, law enforcement authorities or an emergency service patrol, acting with probable
cause, shall take the person into protective custody in an approved treatment facility. If no such
facilities are available, the person may be detained in an emergency medical services facility, or
jail, but only for as long as may be necessary to prevent injury to the person's self or others or to
prevent a breach of the peace. A law enforcement officer or emergency service patrol officer, in
detaining the person, is taking the person into protective custody. In so doing, the detaining
officer may protect the officer's self by reasonable methods but shall make every reasonable
effort to protect the detainee's health and safety. Taking a person into protective custody
pursuant to this section is not an arrest, and an entry or other record shall not be made to indicate
that the person has been arrested or charged with a crime. Law enforcement or emergency
service personnel who act in compliance with this section are acting in the course of their official
duties and are not criminally or civilly liable. Nothing in this subsection (1) precludes a person
intoxicated by alcohol, under the influence of drugs, or incapacitated by substances who is not
dangerous to the health and safety of the person's self or others from being assisted to the
person's home or like location by the law enforcement officer or emergency service patrol
officer.
(b) (Deleted by amendment, L. 2024.)
(c) A law enforcement officer or emergency service patrol officer who takes a juvenile
into protective custody pursuant to subsection (1)(a) of this section shall not detain the juvenile
in jail.
(2) A law enforcement officer, emergency service patrol officer, physician, spouse,
guardian, or relative of the person to be committed or any other responsible person may make a
written application for emergency commitment under this section, directed to the administrator
of the approved treatment facility. The application must state the circumstances requiring
emergency commitment, including the applicant's personal observations and the specific
statements of others, if any, upon which the applicant relies in making the application. A copy of
the application must be furnished to the person to be committed.
(3) If the administrator approves the application, the administrator shall commit,
evaluate, and treat the person for a period not to exceed five days. A peace officer, the
emergency service patrol, or any interested person shall bring the person to the facility. If
necessary, the court may be contacted to issue an order to the police, the peace officer's
department, or the sheriff's department to transport the person to the facility.
(4) If the administrator determines that the application fails to sustain the grounds for
emergency commitment as set forth in subsection (1) of this section, the administrator shall
refuse the commitment, immediately release the detained person, and encourage the person to
seek voluntary treatment, if appropriate.
(5) When the administrator determines that the grounds for commitment no longer exist,
the administrator shall discharge the person committed under this section. A person committed
under this section must not be detained in any treatment facility for more than five days; except
that a person may be detained for longer than five days at the approved treatment facility if, in
that period of time, a petition for involuntary commitment has been filed pursuant to section 27-
81-112. A person must not be detained longer than ten days, excluding weekends and holidays,
after the date of filing of the petition for involuntary commitment unless a valid medical reason
exists for detaining a person longer.
(6) Whenever a person is involuntarily detained pursuant to this section, the
administrator shall, within twenty-four hours after detainment, advise the person who is
involuntarily detained, both orally and in writing, of the person's right to challenge the detention
by application to the courts for a writ of habeas corpus, to be represented by counsel at every
stage of any proceedings relating to commitment and recommitment, and to have counsel
appointed by the court or provided by the court if the person wants the assistance of counsel and
is unable to obtain counsel.
(7) Any law enforcement officer, emergency service personnel, physician, spouse,
guardian, or relative of any person to be committed; any treatment facility administrator or the
administrator's designee; or any other employee or person acting on behalf of an approved
treatment facility, participating in or carrying out the emergency commitment or treatment as
described in this section, whether acting individually or in his or her official capacity, is not
criminally or civilly liable therefor.
(8) (a) On or before July 1, 2024, and each July 1 thereafter, each local law enforcement
agency that has taken a person into protective custody pursuant to this section shall provide an
annual report to the BHA that includes only disaggregated and nonidentifying information
concerning persons who were taken into protective custody in an approved treatment facility or
detained in an emergency medical services facility or jail. The report must comply with section
24-1-136 (9) and is exempt from section 24-1-136 (11)(a)(I). The report must contain the
following:
(I) The names and counties of the facilities and jails;
(II) The total number of persons taken into protective custody pursuant to this section,
including a summary of demographic information;
(III) A summary regarding the different reasons for which persons were taken into
protective custody pursuant to this section; and
(IV) The length of time each person was held under protective custody.
(b) Each emergency medical services facility that detains a person under protective
custody or detains or holds a person on an emergency commitment shall provide a quarterly
report to the BHA with the following information:
(I) The total number of persons detained under protective custody and the total number
of persons held in the emergency medical services facility on an emergency commitment;
(II) The total number of days each person was detained or held;
(III) Whether each person was transferred to another facility, released, or placed on an
involuntary commitment; and
(IV) Whether the emergency medical services facility transferred each person to the
local jail to be detained under protective custody or for an emergency commitment and the
reason for the transfer.
(c) Any information disaggregated and provided to the BHA pursuant to this subsection
(8) is privileged and confidential. The BHA shall not make the information available to the
public except in an aggregate format that cannot be used to identify an individual facility. The
information is not subject to civil subpoena and is not discoverable or admissible in any civil,
criminal, or administrative proceeding against an approved treatment facility, emergency
medical services facility, jail, law enforcement officer, or emergency service patrol officer. The
BHA shall only use the information to assess statewide behavioral health services needs and
withdrawal management needs and to plan for sufficient levels of statewide behavioral health
and withdrawal management services. In collecting the data pursuant to the requirements of this
subsection (8), the BHA shall protect the confidentiality of patient records, in accordance with
state and federal laws, and shall not disclose any public identifying or proprietary information of
any approved treatment facility or emergency medical services facility. This subsection (8)(c)
does not apply to information that is otherwise available from a source outside of the data
collection activities required pursuant to subsection (8)(a) of this section.

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