In re People v. Austin
No. 18SA1
The Supreme Court of the State of Colorado
June 4, 2018
2018 CO 47
JUSTICE COATS
Original Proceeding Pursuant to C.A.R. 21, Weld County District Court Case No. 17CR1231, Honorable Thomas J. Quammen, Judge
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ADVANCE SHEET HEADNOTE
June 4, 2018
2018 CO 47
No. 18SA1, In re People v. Austin – Preliminary Hearings.
Austin petitioned for relief pursuant to
The supreme court makes the rule absolute and orders that Austin be given a preliminary hearing because he was charged by information with a class 4 felony committed as a “crime of violence” as defined at
In Re
Plaintiff:
The People of the State of Colorado,
v.
Defendant:
Ilyias Calese Austin.
Rule Made Absolute
en banc
June 4, 2018
Attorneys for Plaintiff:
Michael J. Rourke, District Attorney, Nineteenth Judicial District
Havilah Louise Bruno Lilly, Deputy District Attorney
Greeley, Colorado
Attorneys for Defendant:
Douglas K. Wilson, Public Defender
John Walsh, Deputy Public Defender
Greeley, Colorado
JUSTICE COATS delivered the Opinion of the Court.
¶1 Austin petitioned for relief pursuant to
¶2 Because Austin was charged by information with a class 4 felony committed as a “crime of violence” as defined at
I
¶3 Ilyias Austin was charged with the class 4 felony of second degree assault committed by intending to cause bodily injury to another person and causing serious bodily injury to that person, as proscribed at
¶4 After noting that having posted bond, the defendant was at liberty in this case, and that he was therefore statutorily entitled to a preliminary hearing only if the class 4 felony with which he had been charged required mandatory sentencing or was a crime of violence, the district court concluded that the felony with which the defendant was charged met neither condition. With regard to the first condition, the court reasoned that as the result of a 2016 amendment to
¶5 Pursuant to
II
¶6 A criminal defendant‘s right to a preliminary hearing in this jurisdiction is governed by statute and rule. See
¶7 Although the term “mandatory sentencing” is not expressly defined in the revised statutes,
¶8 In an omnibus bill in 1986, however, the legislature amended nine criminal statutes to require that a defendant convicted of crimes proscribed by any of those statutes “shall be sentenced by the court in accordance with the provisions of section 16-11-309.”2 People v. Terry, 791 P.2d at 377. After analyzing the language and legislative history of these amendments, we concluded that they effectively required mandatory sentencing as prescribed for crimes of violence, without regard for compliance with the special pleading and proof requirements of the violent crime statute. See id. at 378. Nine years later, we further explained the rationale for that holding, referring to those crimes for which a court is required to impose a mandatory sentence without regard for the special pleading and proof requirements of the
¶9 Finally, two years later, we were called upon to construe the statutory language, “crime of violence, as defined in section 16-11-309,”
¶10 In holding that “extraordinary risk sentencing” was not mandated, we expressly distinguished mandatory sentencing, or crime-of-violence sentencing, under
¶11 In Banks, we therefore made it clear that not every crime for the conviction of which mandatory, or crime of violence, sentencing is required, also constitutes a “crime of violence as defined in section 18-1.3-406“; and by the same token, not every crime constituting a “crime of violence defined in section 18-1.3-406” requires, upon its conviction, mandatory, or crime of violence, sentencing pursuant to
¶12 As the result of a 2016 amendment to
¶13 The defendant in this case was charged with committing second degree assault as proscribed by
¶14 While the word “or” is notoriously ambiguous and takes its meaning from the specific context in which it is used, no one suggests, and it is clearly not the case, that “or” is used in its conjunctive implication in prescribing the right to a preliminary hearing; nor, for the reasons already explained, does it merely offer alternative language expressing the same concept. See People v. Swain, 959 P.2d 426, 430 n.12 (Colo. 1998) (explaining that while the word “or” is generally a disjunctive particle that denotes an alternative, it may also be utilized as a coordinate conjunction introducing a synonymous word or phrase or it may join different terms expressing the same idea or thing). Disjoining alternate conditions, the existence of either of which entitles a defendant to a preliminary hearing, as the word “or” clearly does in this statute, the fact that the defendant stands accused of a crime of violence as defined in
III.
¶15 Because Austin was charged by information with a class 4 felony committed as a “crime of violence” as defined at
10
