Colorado Code § 44-3-901

Unlawful acts - exceptions - definitions
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(1) Except as provided in section
18-13-122, it is unlawful for any person:
(a) To sell, serve, give away, dispose of, exchange, or deliver, or permit the sale, serving,
giving, or procuring of, any alcohol beverage to a visibly intoxicated person or to a known
habitual drunkard;
(b) (I) To sell, serve, give away, dispose of, exchange, or deliver or permit the sale,
serving, giving, or procuring of any alcohol beverage to or for any person under the age of
twenty-one years.
(II) If a person is convicted of an offense pursuant to subsection (1)(b)(I) of this section
for serving, giving away, disposing of, exchanging, or delivering or permitting the serving,
giving, or procuring of any alcohol beverage to a person under the age of twenty-one years, the
court shall consider the following in mitigation:
(A) After consuming the alcohol, the underage person was in need of medical assistance
as a result of consuming alcohol; and
(B) Within six hours after the underage person consumed the alcohol, the defendant
contacted the police or emergency medical personnel to report that the underage person was in
need of medical assistance as a result of consuming alcohol.
(c) To obtain or attempt to obtain any alcohol beverage by misrepresentation of age or
by any other method in any place where alcohol beverages are sold when a person is under
twenty-one years of age;
(d) To possess alcohol beverages in any store, in any public place, including public
streets, alleys, roads, or highways, or upon property owned by the state of Colorado or any
subdivision thereof, or inside vehicles while upon the public streets, alleys, roads, or highways
when a person is under twenty-one years of age;
(e) To knowingly, or under conditions that an average parent or guardian should have
knowledge of, suffer or permit any person under twenty-one years of age, of whom such person
may be a parent or guardian, to violate the provisions of subsection (1)(c) or (1)(d) of this
section;
(f) To buy any vinous or spirituous liquor from any person not licensed to sell at retail as
provided by this article 3 except as otherwise provided in this article 3;
(g) To sell at retail any malt, vinous, or spirituous liquors in sealed containers without
holding a retail liquor store or liquor-licensed drugstore license, except as permitted by section
44-3-107 (2) or 44-3-301 (6)(b) or any other provision of this article 3, or to sell at retail any
fermented malt beverages in sealed containers without holding a fermented malt beverage
retailer's license under section 44-4-104 (1)(c) or to sell at retail any fermented malt beverages
and wine in sealed containers without holding a fermented malt beverage and wine retailer's
license under section 44-4-107 (1)(a);
(h) To manufacture, sell, or possess for sale any alcohol beverage unless licensed to do
so as provided by this article 3 or article 4 or 5 of this title 44 and unless all licenses required are
in full force and effect;
(i) (I) To consume any alcohol beverages:
(A) In any public place except on any licensed premises permitted under this article 3 or
article 4 of this title 44 to sell any alcohol beverages by the drink for consumption on the
licensed premises;
(B) Upon any premises licensed to sell alcohol beverages for consumption on the
licensed premises, the sale of which is not authorized by the state licensing authority;
(C) At any time on such premises other than the alcohol beverages purchased from the
establishment; or
(D) In any public room on the licensed premises during hours during which the sale of
the alcohol beverage is prohibited under this article 3.
(II) Notwithstanding subsection (1)(i)(I) of this section, a person who is at least twenty-
one years of age may consume alcohol beverages while the person is a passenger aboard a luxury
limousine or a charter bus, as those terms are defined in section 40-10.1-301. Nothing in this
subsection (1)(i)(II) authorizes an owner or operator of a luxury limousine or charter bus to sell
or distribute alcohol beverages without obtaining a public transportation system license pursuant
to section 44-3-421.
(III) (A) Notwithstanding subsection (1)(i)(I) of this section, it shall not be unlawful for
adult patrons of a retail liquor store or liquor-licensed drugstore licensee to consume malt,
vinous, or spirituous liquors on the licensed premises when the consumption is conducted within
the limitations of the licensee's license and is part of a tasting if authorization for the tasting has
been granted pursuant to section 44-3-301.
(B) Notwithstanding subsection (1)(i)(I) of this section, it shall not be unlawful for adult
patrons of a fermented malt beverage and wine retailer licensee to consume malt or vinous
liquors on the licensed premises when the consumption is conducted within the limitations of the
licensee's license and is part of a tasting if authorization for the tasting has been granted pursuant
to section 44-3-301.
(IV) Notwithstanding subsection (1)(i)(I) of this section, it is not unlawful for adult
patrons of a retail establishment permit holder to consume alcohol beverages on the premises
when the consumption is conducted within the limitations of a valid permit granted pursuant to
section 44-3-424.
(V) Notwithstanding subsection (1)(i)(I) of this section, it is not unlawful for adult
patrons of the Colorado state fair to consume malt, vinous, or spirituous liquor upon unlicensed
areas within the designated fairgrounds of the Colorado state fair authority or at a licensed
premises on the fairgrounds when not purchased at the licensed premises, but this subsection
(1)(i)(V) does not authorize a patron to remove an alcohol beverage from the fairgrounds.
(VI) Notwithstanding subsection (1)(i)(I) of this section, it is not unlawful for adult
patrons of a licensed premises that is attached to a common consumption area to consume
alcohol beverages upon unlicensed areas within a common consumption area, but this subsection
(1)(i)(VI) does not authorize a patron to remove an alcohol beverage from the common
consumption area.
(VII) Notwithstanding subsection (1)(i)(I) of this section, it is not unlawful for a person
who is at least twenty-one years of age to consume any alcohol beverages in any public place,
other than a public right of way, where consumption of alcohol beverages has been specifically
authorized by ordinance, resolution, or rule adopted by a municipality, city and county, or
county or, for purposes of state parks, state wildlife areas, or other properties open to recreation
that are under the supervision of the parks and wildlife commission created in article 9 of title
33, by the parks and wildlife commission.
(VIII) Notwithstanding subsection (1)(i)(I) of this section and when and where
consumption is specifically authorized by an ordinance adopted by the city and county of
Denver, it is not unlawful for adult patrons of the national western center to consume malt,
vinous, or spirituous liquors in unlicensed areas of the national western center or at a licensed
premises in the national western center when not purchased at the licensed premises. This
subsection (1)(i)(VIII) does not authorize a patron to remove an alcohol beverage from the
national western center.
(j) To regularly provide premises, or any portion thereof together with soft drinks or
other mix, ice, glasses, or containers at a direct or indirect cost or charge to any person who
brings alcohol beverages upon the premises for the purpose of consuming the beverages on the
premises during the hours in which the sale of such beverages is prohibited or to consume such
beverages upon premises operated in the manner described in this subsection (1)(j);
(k) To possess any package, parcel, or container on which the excise tax has not been
paid;
(l) With knowledge, to permit or fail to prevent the use of his or her identification,
including a driver's license, by a person who is under twenty-one years of age, for the unlawful
purchase of any alcohol beverage;
(m) Who is a common carrier regulated under article 10.1 of title 40, or is an agent or
employee of such common carrier, to deliver alcohol beverages for any person who has not been
issued a license or permit pursuant to this article 3;
(n) To remove an alcohol beverage from a licensed premises where the liquor license for
the licensed premises allows only on-premises consumption of alcohol beverages, except as
permitted under subsection (1)(i)(VI) of this section or section 44-3-107 (2).
(2) (a) An underage person is immune from arrest and prosecution under subsection
(1)(c) or (1)(d) of this section if he or she establishes the following:
(I) The underage person called 911 and reported that another underage person was in
need of medical assistance due to alcohol consumption;
(II) The underage person who called 911 provided his or her name to the 911 operator;
(III) The underage person was the first person to make the 911 report; and
(IV) The underage person who made the 911 call remained on the scene with the
underage person in need of medical assistance until assistance arrived and cooperated with
medical assistance or law enforcement personnel on the scene.
(b) The immunity described in subsection (2)(a) of this section also extends to the
underage person who was in need of medical assistance due to alcohol consumption if the
conditions of subsection (2)(a) of this section are satisfied.
(3) It is unlawful for any person licensed as a manufacturer, limited winery, brew pub, or
distillery pub pursuant to this article 3 to manufacture alcohol beverages in any location other
than the permanent location specifically designated in the license for manufacturing, except as
allowed pursuant to section 44-3-402 (3), 44-3-403 (2)(a), 44-3-417 (1)(b), or 44-3-422 (1)(b).
(4) (a) It is unlawful for any person to import or sell any imported alcohol beverage in
this state unless that person is the primary source of supply in the United States for the brand of
such liquor to be imported into or sold within this state and unless that person holds a valid
importer's license issued under the provisions of this article 3.
(b) If it is determined by the state licensing authority, in its discretion, as not constituting
unfair competition or unfair practice, any importer may be authorized by the state licensing
authority to import and sell under and subject to the provisions of the importer's license any
brand of alcohol beverage for which he or she is not the primary source of supply in the United
States if the licensee is the sole source of supply of that brand of alcohol beverage in the state of
Colorado and authorization is determined by the state licensing authority as not constituting a
violation of section 44-3-308.
(c) Any such manufacturer or importer shall file with the state licensing authority notice
of intent to import one or more specified brands of the alcohol beverage, together with a
statement that the manufacturer or importer is the primary source of supply in the United States
for the brand, unless exempted pursuant to subsection (4)(b) of this section, in which case, the
manufacturer or importer shall also file a statement that the manufacturer or importer is the sole
source of supply of that brand of beverage in the state of Colorado. Upon the request of the state
licensing authority, the manufacturer or importer shall file a copy of the manufacturer's federal
brand label approval form as required by the federal bureau of alcohol, tobacco, firearms, and
explosives or any of its successor agencies. Thereafter, the licensee shall file with the state
licensing authority a copy of each sales invoice with a monthly sales report as required by
section 44-3-503 (4) and (6).
(d) As used in this subsection (4), the term "primary source of supply in the United
States" means the manufacturer, the producer, the owner of such alcohol beverage at the time it
becomes a marketable product, the bottler in the United States, or the exclusive agent within the
United States, or any of the states, of any such manufacturer, producer, owner, or bottler outside
the United States. To be the "primary source of supply in the United States", the said
manufacturer or importer must be the first source, such as the manufacturer or the source closest
to the manufacturer, in the channel of commerce from which the product can be secured by
Colorado alcohol beverage wholesalers.
(e) It is unlawful for any person licensed as an importer of alcohol beverages pursuant to
this article 3 to deliver any such alcohol beverages to any person not in possession of a valid
wholesaler's license.
(5) It is unlawful for any person licensed to sell at wholesale pursuant to this article 3:
(a) To peddle malt, vinous, or spirituous liquor at wholesale or by means of a truck or
other vehicle if the sale is consummated and delivery made concurrently, but nothing in this
subsection (5)(a) shall prevent delivery from a truck or other vehicle of orders previously taken;
(b) To deliver malt liquors to any retail licensee located outside the geographic territory
designated on the license application filed with the state licensing authority if the person holds a
wholesaler's beer license;
(c) To purchase or receive any alcohol beverage from any person not licensed pursuant
to this article 3 or article 4 of this title 44, unless otherwise provided in this article 3;
(d) To sell or serve any alcohol beverage to consumers for consumption on or off the
licensed premises during any hours retailers are prohibited from selling or serving such liquors
pursuant to subsection (6) of this section.
(6) It is unlawful for any person licensed to sell at retail pursuant to this article 3 or
article 4 of this title 44:
(a) (I) To sell an alcohol beverage to any person under the age of twenty-one years, to a
habitual drunkard, or to a visibly intoxicated person. If a person who, in fact, is not twenty-one
years of age exhibits a fraudulent proof of age, any action relying on such fraudulent proof of
age shall not constitute grounds for the revocation or suspension of any license issued under this
article 3 or article 4 of this title 44.
(II) (A) If a licensee or a licensee's employee has reasonable cause to believe that a
person is under twenty-one years of age and is exhibiting fraudulent proof of age in an attempt to
obtain any alcohol beverage, the licensee or employee shall be authorized to confiscate the
fraudulent proof of age, if possible, and shall, within seventy-two hours after the confiscation,
turn it over to a state or local law enforcement agency. The failure to confiscate such fraudulent
proof of age or to turn it over to a state or local law enforcement agency within seventy-two
hours after the confiscation shall not constitute a criminal offense, notwithstanding section 44-3-
904 (1)(a).
(B) If a licensee or a licensee's employee believes that a person is under twenty-one
years of age and is exhibiting fraudulent proof of age in an attempt to obtain any alcohol
beverage, the licensee or the licensee's employee or any peace or police officer, acting in good
faith and upon probable cause based upon reasonable grounds therefor, may detain and question
the person in a reasonable manner for the purpose of ascertaining whether the person is guilty of
any unlawful act under this section. Questioning of a person by a licensee or a licensee's
employee or a peace or police officer does not render the licensee, the licensee's employee, or a
peace or police officer civilly or criminally liable for slander, false arrest, false imprisonment,
malicious prosecution, or unlawful detention.
(III) Each licensee shall display a printed card that contains notice of the provisions of
this subsection (6)(a).
(IV) Any licensee or licensee's employee acting in good faith in accordance with the
provisions of subsection (6)(a)(II) of this section shall be immune from any liability, civil or
criminal; except that a licensee or employee acting willfully or wantonly shall not be immune
from liability pursuant to subsection (6)(a)(II) of this section.
(b) To sell, serve, or distribute any malt, vinous, or spirituous liquors at any time other
than the following:
(I) For consumption on the premises on any day of the week, except between the hours
of 2 a.m. and 7 a.m.;
(II) In sealed containers, beginning at 8 a.m. until 12 midnight each day;
(c) To sell fermented malt beverages:
(I) To any person under twenty-one years of age, except as provided in section 18-13-
122; or
(II) To any person between the hours of 12 midnight and 8 a.m.;
(III) (Deleted by amendment, L. 2024.)
(d) To offer for sale or solicit any order for vinous or spirituous liquors in person at retail
except within the licensed premises;
(e) Except as provided in section 44-3-107 (2), to have in possession or upon the
licensed premises any alcohol beverage, the sale of which is not permitted by said license;
(f) To buy any alcohol beverages from any person not licensed to sell at wholesale as
provided by this article 3 except as otherwise provided in this article 3;
(g) To sell at retail alcohol beverages except in the permanent location specifically
designated in the license for such sale;
(h) To fail to display at all times in a prominent place a printed card with a minimum
height of fourteen inches and a width of eleven inches with each letter to be a minimum of one-
half inch in height, which shall read as follows:
WARNING
IT IS ILLEGAL TO SELL WHISKEY, WINE, OR BEER TO ANY PERSON UNDER
TWENTY-ONE YEARS OF AGE, AND IT IS ILLEGAL FOR ANY PERSON UNDER
TWENTY-ONE YEARS OF AGE TO POSSESS OR TO ATTEMPT TO PURCHASE THE
SAME.
IDENTIFICATION CARDS WHICH APPEAR TO BE FRAUDULENT WHEN
PRESENTED BY PURCHASERS MAY BE CONFISCATED BY THE ESTABLISHMENT
AND TURNED OVER TO A LAW ENFORCEMENT AGENCY.
IT IS ILLEGAL IF YOU ARE TWENTY-ONE YEARS OF AGE OR OLDER FOR
YOU TO PURCHASE WHISKEY, WINE, OR BEER FOR A PERSON UNDER TWENTY-
ONE YEARS OF AGE.
FINES AND IMPRISONMENT MAY BE IMPOSED BY THE COURTS FOR
VIOLATION OF THESE PROVISIONS.
(i) (I) To sell malt, vinous, or spirituous liquors or fermented malt beverages in a place
where the alcohol beverages are to be consumed, unless the place is a hotel, a restaurant, a
tavern, an entertainment facility, a lodging facility, a racetrack, a club, a retail gaming tavern, or
an arts licensed premises or unless the place is a dining, club, or parlor car; a plane; a bus; or
other conveyance or facility of a public transportation system.
(II) Notwithstanding subsection (6)(i)(I) of this section, it shall not be unlawful for a
retail liquor store, liquor-licensed drugstore, or fermented malt beverage and wine retailer
licensee to allow tastings to be conducted on his or her licensed premises if authorization for the
tastings has been granted pursuant to section 44-3-301.
(j) To display or cause to be displayed, on the licensed premises, any exterior sign
advertising any particular brand of malt liquors or fermented malt beverages, unless the
particular brand so designated in the sign is dispensed on draft or in sealed containers within the
licensed premises wherein the sign is displayed;
(k) (I) Except as provided in subsections (6)(k)(II), (6)(k)(IV), and (6)(k)(V) of this
section, to have on the licensed premises, if licensed as a retail liquor store, liquor-licensed
drugstore, fermented malt beverage retailer, or fermented malt beverage and wine retailer, any
container that shows evidence of having once been opened or that contains a volume of liquor
less than that specified on the label of the container;
(II) (A) A person holding a retail liquor store or liquor-licensed drugstore license under
this article 3 may have upon the licensed premises malt, vinous, or spirituous liquors in open
containers when the open containers were brought on the licensed premises by and remain solely
in the possession of the sales personnel of a person licensed to sell at wholesale pursuant to this
article 3 for the purpose of sampling malt, vinous, or spirituous liquors by the retail liquor store
or liquor-licensed drugstore licensee only.
(B) A person holding a fermented malt beverage and wine retailer's license under section
44-4-107 (1)(a) may have upon the licensed premises fermented malt beverages and wine in
open containers when the open containers were brought onto the licensed premises by and
remain solely in the possession of the sales personnel of a person licensed to sell at wholesale
pursuant to article 4 of this title 44 for the purpose of sampling fermented malt beverages and
wine by the fermented malt beverage and wine retailer licensee only.
(III) Nothing in this subsection (6)(k) applies to any liquor-licensed drugstore where the
contents, or a portion of the contents, have been used in compounding prescriptions.
(IV) It is not unlawful for a retail liquor store, liquor-licensed drugstore, or fermented
malt beverage and wine retailer licensee to allow tastings to be conducted on the licensed
premises if authorization for the tastings has been granted pursuant to section 44-3-301.
(V) A person holding a retail liquor store or liquor-licensed drugstore license under this
article 3 or a fermented malt beverage and wine retailer's license under section 44-4-107 (1)(a)
may have upon the licensed premises an open container of an alcohol beverage product that the
licensee discovers to be damaged or defective so long as the licensee marks the product as
damaged or for return and stores the open container outside the sales area of the licensed
premises until the licensee is able to return the product to the wholesaler from whom the product
was purchased.
(l) To employ or permit, if the person is licensed to sell alcohol beverages for on-
premises consumption or is the agent or manager of said licensee, any employee, waiter,
waitress, entertainer, host, hostess, or agent of said licensee to solicit from patrons in any
manner, for himself or herself or for any other employee, the purchase of any food, beverage, or
any other thing of value;
(m) To require a wholesaler to make delivery to any premises other than the specific
hotel and restaurant premises where the alcohol beverage is to be sold and consumed if the
person is a hotel and restaurant licensee or the manager of a hotel and restaurant license requires
the delivery;
(n) (I) To authorize or permit any gambling, or the use of any gambling machine or
device, except as provided by the "Bingo and Raffles Law", part 6 of article 21 of title 24. This
subsection (6)(n) does not apply to those activities, equipment, and devices authorized and
legally operated pursuant to articles 30 and 32 of this title 44.
(II) A person who violates any provision of this subsection (6)(n) is guilty of a class 5
felony and, upon conviction thereof, shall be punished as provided in section 18-1.3-401.
(o) To authorize or permit toughperson fighting as defined in section 12-110-104;
(p) (I) (A) To permit a person under eighteen years of age to sell, dispense, or participate
in the sale or dispensing of any alcohol beverage; or
(B) Except as provided in subsection (6)(p)(II) of this section, to employ a person who is
at least eighteen years of age but under twenty-one years of age to sell or dispense malt, vinous,
or spirituous liquors unless the employee is supervised by another person who is on the licensed
premises and is at least twenty-one years of age; except that this subsection (6)(p)(I)(B) does not
apply to a retail liquor store licensed under section 44-3-409 or a liquor-licensed drugstore
licensed under section 44-3-410;
(II) If licensed as a tavern under section 44-3-414 that does not regularly serve meals or
an entertainment facility under section 44-3-428 that does not regularly serve meals, to permit an
employee who is under twenty-one years of age to sell malt, vinous, or spirituous liquors; or
(III) If licensed as a retail liquor store under section 44-3-409, a liquor-licensed
drugstore under section 44-3-410, or a fermented malt beverage and wine retailer under section
44-4-107 (1)(a), to permit an employee or any other person who is under twenty-one years of age
to deliver malt, vinous, or spirituous liquors or fermented malt beverages and wine offered for
sale on, or sold and removed from, the licensed premises of the retail liquor store, liquor-
licensed drugstore, or fermented malt beverage and wine retailer;
(q) To knowingly permit the illegal sale, or negotiations for the sale, of a controlled
substance, as defined in section 18-18-102 (5), on the licensee's licensed premises. This
subsection (6)(q) does not prohibit a pharmacy licensed by the state board of pharmacy from
selling lawfully prescribed controlled substances at a liquor-licensed drugstore.
(7) It is unlawful for any importer, manufacturer, or brewer to sell or to bring into this
state for purposes of sale any malt liquor without causing the same to be unloaded and placed in
the physical possession of a licensed wholesaler at the wholesaler's licensed premises in this
state and to be inventoried for purposes of tax collection prior to delivery to a retailer or
consumer.
(8) (a) It is unlawful for any person licensed pursuant to this article 3 or article 4 of this
title 44 to give away fermented malt beverages for the purpose of influencing the sale of any
particular kind, make, or brand of any malt beverage and to furnish or supply any commodity or
article at less than its market price for said purpose, except advertising material and signs.
(b) Notwithstanding subsection (8)(a) of this section, it shall not be unlawful for a retail
liquor store, liquor-licensed drugstore, or fermented malt beverage and wine retailer licensee to
allow tastings to be conducted on his or her licensed premises if authorization for the tastings has
been granted pursuant to section 44-3-301.
(9) Repealed.
(10) (a) (I) Except as provided in subsection (10)(c) of this section, it is unlawful for a
person who is licensed to sell alcohol beverages for consumption on the licensed premises to
knowingly permit the removal of an alcohol beverage from the licensed premises.
(II) (A) Except as provided in subsection (10)(a)(II)(C) of this section, the licensee shall
not be charged with permitting the removal of an alcohol beverage from the licensed premises
when the licensee has posted a sign at least ten inches wide and six inches high by each exit used
by the public that contains the following notice in type that is at least one-half inch in height:
WARNING
DO NOT LEAVE THE PREMISES OF THIS ESTABLISHMENT WITH AN
ALCOHOL BEVERAGE.
IT IS ILLEGAL TO CONSUME AN ALCOHOL BEVERAGE IN A PUBLIC PLACE.
A FINE OF UP TO $250 MAY BE IMPOSED BY THE COURTS FOR A VIOLATION
OF THIS PROVISION.
(B) A person licensed pursuant to section 44-3-416 must post a sign with the specified
notice and in the minimum type size required by subsection (10)(a)(II)(A) of this section that is
at least twelve inches wide and eighteen inches high.
(C) Regardless of whether a licensee posts a sign as specified in subsection (10)(a)(II) of
this section, the licensee may be charged with knowingly permitting the removal of an alcohol
beverage from the licensed premises if the licensee shows reckless disregard for the prohibition
against alcohol beverage removal from the licensed premises, which may include permitting the
removal of an alcohol beverage from the licensed premises three times within a twelve-month
period, regardless of whether the three incidents occur on the same day or separate days. A
licensee may be charged with knowingly permitting the removal of an alcohol beverage from the
licensed premises upon the third occurrence of alcohol beverage removal from the licensed
premises.
(III) In addition to posting a sign as described in subsection (10)(a)(II) of this section, a
licensee may also station personnel at each exit used by the public in order to prevent the
removal of an alcohol beverage from the licensed premises.
(b) This subsection (10) applies to persons licensed or permitted to sell or serve alcohol
beverages for consumption on the licensed premises pursuant to section 44-3-403, 44-3-411, 44-
3-412, 44-3-413, 44-3-414, 44-3-415, 44-3-416, 44-3-417, 44-3-418, 44-3-419, 44-3-420, 44-3-
421, 44-3-422, 44-3-424, 44-3-426, 44-3-428, or 44-4-107 (1)(b).
(c) This subsection (10) does not preclude a licensee described in section 44-3-423 (2)
from permitting a customer to remove from the licensed premises one opened container of
partially consumed vinous liquor that was purchased on the licensed premises and has been
resealed, as permitted by section 44-3-423 (1).
(11) (a) Except as provided in subsection (11)(b) of this section, a retail licensee or an
employee of a retail licensee shall not sell malt, vinous, or spirituous liquors or fermented malt
beverages to a consumer for consumption off the licensed premises unless the retail licensee or
employee verifies that the consumer is at least twenty-one years of age by requiring the
consumer to present a valid identification, as determined by the state licensing authority by rule.
The retail licensee or employee shall make a determination from the information presented
whether the purchaser is at least twenty-one years of age.
(b) It is not unlawful for a retail licensee or employee of a retail licensee to sell malt,
vinous, or spirituous liquors or fermented malt beverages to a consumer who is or reasonably
appears to be over fifty years of age and who failed to present an acceptable form of
identification.
(c) As used in this subsection (11), "retail licensee" means a person licensed under
section 44-3-409, 44-3-410, 44-4-104 (1)(c), or 44-4-107 (1)(a).

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