The proposed bill, HB25-1049, seeks to enhance communication rights for individuals in custody in Colorado. Key provisions include:
Expanded Communication Rights: Individuals in custody would have the right to receive a reasonable number of telephone calls or other reasonable communications, including interactive audiovisual conferencing, if available.
Private Legal Consultations: The bill clarifies that individuals in custody have the right to make and receive private, unrecorded legal telephone calls without cost, or to communicate through private, unrecorded interactive audiovisual conferencing.
Attorney Access: Attorneys would have the right to call and consult with their clients in custody by telephone through private, unrecorded legal calls without cost, or by making and receiving private, unrecorded interactive audiovisual conferencing calls without cost.
These provisions aim to ensure that individuals in custody have adequate access to legal counsel and maintain communication with their attorneys and family members, thereby upholding their rights and facilitating fair legal proceedings.
Summary
Legislative Oversight Committee Concerning Colorado Jail Standards. Current law allows a person who is committed, imprisoned, or arrested (person in custody) the right to communicate with an attorney or family member by making a reasonable number of telephone calls or through any other reasonable manner. The bill adds the right for a person in custody to receive a reasonable number of telephone calls or other reasonable communications and to communicate through interactive audiovisual conferencing, if available.
Current law allows a person in custody the right to consult with an
attorney. The bill clarifies that the person in custody has the right to make and receive private and unrecorded legal telephone calls without cost, and, alternatively, to communicate through private unrecorded interactive audiovisual conferencing.
Current law requires all peace officers or individuals who have a
person in custody to allow the person in custody to see and consult with an attorney, alone and in private, at the location the person in custody is being held. The bill expands this requirement to allow the attorney for the person in custody to call and consult with the person in custody by telephone through a private and unrecorded legal telephone call without cost or by making and receiving private and unrecorded interactive audiovisual conferencing calls without cost.