Colorado earns a C for its civil forfeiture laws

Standard of Proof

Somewhat higher bar to forfeit: Prosecutors must provide clear and convincing evidence that property is connected to a crime.

Innocent Owner Burden

Stronger protections for the innocent: The government must prove third-party owners knew about criminal activity connected to their property.

Financial Incentive

Large profit incentive: 75% of forfeiture proceeds go to law enforcement (50% to law enforcement directly and 25% to a law enforcement community services fund that funnels proceeds back to law enforcement; the remaining 25% goes to drug rehabilitation programs).

  • 2023 (HB 23-1086): Modestly strengthened transparency requirements.

Recommendations

  • End civil forfeiture
  • Direct all forfeiture proceeds to a non-law enforcement fund
  • Fully close the equitable sharing loophole
  • Strengthen transparency and accountability requirements
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What happens after personal property is seized in Colorado? 

Under Colorado law, the government’s, owners’, and court deadlines leading to a judicial hearing add up to 175 days, but there is no deadline for the show cause order and possible extensions may add to the wait. While you wait, the government has your property, and you have no way to seek its return. 

State and Federal Forfeiture Proceeds, 2000–2023

At least $121 million in state and federal forfeiture revenue

Year Colorado Forfeiture Revenues Dept. of Justice Equitable Sharing Proceeds Treasury Equitable Sharing Proceeds Total
2000 $623,651 $639,942 $17,000 $1,280,593
2001 $2,210,838 $5,013,103 $69,000 $7,292,941
2002 $1,454,868 $1,348,887 $48,000 $2,851,755
2003 $1,193,625 $1,288,769 $111,000 $2,593,394
2004 $249,179 $1,712,673 $28,000 $1,989,852
2005 $609,354 $2,944,760 $215,000 $3,769,114
2006 $1,106,608 $5,159,744 $83,000 $6,349,352
2007 $783,888 $4,799,505 $336,000 $5,919,393
2008 $761,082 $4,211,955 $22,000 $4,995,037
2009 $1,553,586 $4,494,751 $496,000 $6,544,337
2010 $351,442 $3,808,573 $330,000 $4,490,015
2011 $739,151 $3,220,174 $261,000 $4,220,325
2012 $533,111 $5,773,624 $643,000 $6,949,735
2013 $628,239 $3,817,589 $1,885,000 $6,330,828
2014 $491,773 $3,974,765 $228,000 $4,694,538
2015 $390,766 $5,066,151 $1,746,000 $7,202,917
2016 $577,292 $3,110,770 $303,000 $3,991,062
2017 $798,118 $7,018,719 $316,000 $8,132,837
2018 $343,450 $4,402,065 $877,000 $5,622,515
2019 $1,657,322 $1,287,556 $40,000 $2,984,878
2020 $741,764 $3,562,176 $217,000 $4,520,940
2021 $2,126,725 $2,504,743 $711,000 $5,342,468
2022 $5,196,718 $2,431,519 $1,579,000 $9,207,237
2023 $1,818,948 $2,492,979 $52,000 $4,363,927
Totals $26,941,498 $84,085,492 $10,613,000 $121,639,990

Federal Equitable Sharing

Since August 2017, Colorado has prohibited equitable sharing unless the assets are worth more than $50,000 and there is an associated criminal case. IJ’s analysis (see https://ij.org/report/policing-for-profit-4/equitable-sharing/evaluating-efforts-to-reform-equitable-sharing/) found that, relative to non-reform states, the reform resulted in both immediate and long-term reductions in the sharing of below-threshold assets and assets overall. However, below-threshold assets were still consistently shared in the long run. From 2018 to 2023, Colorado law enforcement agencies generated more than $20 million in equitable sharing proceeds. And on average from 2019 to 2023, 76 Colorado agencies, or an estimated 34% of all law enforcement agencies in the state, were certified for the program.

Forfeitures Under Colorado Law: Key Facts

Median Value

$2,387

From 2019 to 2023, half of Colorado’s currency forfeitures were worth less than $2,387.

Property Types

From 2019 to 2023, more than 80% of Colorado’s forfeitures were of currency.

Proceeding Types

UNKNOWN

Colorado does not report whether forfeitures are processed under civil or criminal forfeiture law.

Median Time to Forfeiture

9 months

From 2019 to 2023, half of Colorado’s forfeitures took more than nine months, while one-quarter took more than 15 months.

Forfeiture Transparency and Accountability Report Card

Tracking Seized Property
B+
Statewide Forfeiture Reports
A
Penalties for Failure to File a Report
C*
Accounting for Forfeiture Fund Spending
A
Accessibility of Forfeiture Records
A
Financial Audits of Forfeiture Accounts
A
Data Notes

Statewide, property-level forfeiture data for 2017–2023 were downloaded from the Department of Local Affairs’ website. Data for earlier years were obtained via public records requests to the Colorado Department of Local Affairs. All figures are in calendar years. Revenues for 2019–2023 were calculated using the value of forfeited currency and property reported in a year, while those for earlier years were calculated using the proceeds agencies reported in a year. Legislation expanded the definition of a reporting agency in 2019, requiring about 20 more agencies to report. This likely accounts for some of the increase in revenues since 2019. Equitable sharing data are from DOJ’s and Treasury’s annual forfeiture reports. Due to differences in reporting and accounting practices, figures may not match aggregate numbers produced by the state or cover the same 12-month period as the federal data. See Appendix C, available online at ij.org/report/policing-for-profit-4/appendix-c-equitable-sharing-methods/, for details of the equitable sharing reform analysis. The number of certified agencies was computed using the approved Equitable Sharing Agreement and Certification requests submitted by police, sheriff, and other local law enforcement agencies. The percentage of certified agencies was computed using that number and the total number of agencies reported in the 2018 Census of State and Local Law Enforcement Agencies.

Legal Sources

Standard of proof: Clear and convincing evidence.

Colo. Rev. Stat. §§ 16-13-307(1.7)(c) (public nuisance), -505(1.7)(c) (contraband), -509 (currency), 18-17-106(11) (racketeering).

Innocent owner burden: Government.

Colo. Rev. Stat. §§ 16-13-303(5.1)(a), (5.2)(c), 16-13-504(2.1)(a), (2.2)(c).

Financial incentive: 75% (50% to law enforcement, 25% to a grant fund that distributes money to law enforcement). The remaining 25% goes to drug rehabilitation programs.

Colo. Rev. Stat. §§ 16-13-311(3)(a)(VII), -506(1), 18-17-106(2)(d).

Note: This restriction does not apply to funds received through federal equitable sharing, which is available only in cases where more than $50,000 is seized.

Colo. Rev. Stat. §§ 16-13-306.5, -504.5, -601.

Process: Colo. Rev. Stat. §§ 16-13-501 et seq. (forfeiture procedure).