The Denver Post’s Sam Tabachnik reports that the Colorado Supreme Court unanimously ruled cities cannot impose harsher penalties than the state for the same offense when a municipal ordinance duplicates a state statute. Chief Justice Monica M. Márquez authored the opinion. The court’s bottom line is simple. Duplicate the state crime, inherit the state cap.
The case came out of Westminster and Aurora, where defendants faced dramatically longer potential sentences in municipal court than they would have in state court for identical conduct. The justices did not reach equal protection claims. They found preemption in an area of mixed local and statewide concern. The ruling leaves cities room to set tougher penalties only when no identical state offense exists. The Post also notes that 2021 state reforms cut state penalties but left municipal caps in place, creating a patchwork that let an officer’s checkbox decide which court you landed in.
The Bullet Point Brief
- Unanimous ruling. City penalties cannot exceed state caps when the ordinance matches a state crime.
- Westminster and Aurora examples showed far longer city sentences for identical behavior. That triggered the challenge.
- Equal protection was punted. The court hung its hat on state preemption over a mixed local and statewide concern.
- Cities keep discretion only where the state has no identical offense. Copy-paste the statute, and you copy-paste the ceiling.
- 2021 state cuts made a messy split. This ruling chooses uniformity. It sidelines local judgment where laws mirror the state.
My Bottom Line
The best government is the government closest to home. I believe that. You believe that. Anyone who believes in good governance believes that. This decision says the quiet part out loud. The folks in the big dome think they know better than the people who plow their own streets and sit in their own council chambers.
This ruling is a slap in the face to local control. The court took a messy policy problem and solved it with central control. Instead of fixing officer discretion and clarifying charging standards, they told every community from Sterling to Pueblo to live under the same ceiling because Denver says so.
Let’s be clear. Uniformity is not justice. Accountability is justice. Local standards are justice. Communities should be able to set consequences that reflect their values and safety needs. If a city gets it wrong, voters can correct it at the next election. That is real oversight.
Centralized power flatters the people who hold it. It does not serve the people who live with it. Keep authority where it belongs. Closest to home.
Source: The Denver Post
