In the Matter of Laurie A. Booras

2019 CO 16
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedMarch 11, 2019
Docket18SA83
StatusPublished
Cited by165 cases

This text of 2019 CO 16 (In the Matter of Laurie A. Booras) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In the Matter of Laurie A. Booras, 2019 CO 16 (Colo. 2019).

Opinion

Opinions of the Colorado Supreme Court are available to the public and can be accessed through the Judicial Branch’s homepage at http://www.courts.state.co.us. Opinions are also posted on the Colorado Bar Association’s homepage at http://www.cobar.org.

ADVANCE SHEET HEADNOTE March 11, 2019

2019 CO 16

No. 18SA83, In the Matter of Laurie A. Booras—Judicial Discipline—Sanctions.

In this judicial disciplinary proceeding, the Supreme Court considers the

exceptions of a now-former Colorado Court of Appeals judge to the Colorado

Commission on Judicial Discipline’s (the “Commission’s”) recommendation that the

judge be removed from office and that the judge be ordered to pay the costs incurred by

the Commission in this matter.

The Commission’s recommendation was based on factual findings and

conclusions of law determining that the judge had violated Canon 1, Rule 1.2, Canon 3,

Rule 3.1, and Canon 3, Rule 3.5 of the Colorado Code of Judicial Conduct by (1) disclosing

confidential information belonging to the court of appeals (namely, the vote of a court of

appeals division on a case prior to the issuance of the decision in that case) to an intimate,

non-spousal partner and (2) using inappropriate racial epithets in communications with

that intimate partner, including a racially derogatory reference to a court of appeals

colleague. The court concludes that the Commission properly found that the judge’s

communications with the judge’s then-intimate partner were not protected by the First

Amendment. The court further concludes that, given the judge’s resignation, which the

judge tendered and which became effective after the Commission made its

recommendation, the court need not decide whether the judge’s removal from office was

an appropriate sanction. Rather, the court concludes that the appropriate sanction in this

case is the acceptance of the judge’s resignation, the imposition of a public censure, and

an order requiring the judge to pay the Commission’s costs in this matter. The Supreme Court of the State of Colorado 2 East 14th Avenue • Denver, Colorado 80203

Supreme Court Case No. 18SA83 Original Proceeding in Discipline Colorado Commission on Discipline Case No. 18-36

In the Matter of Laurie A. Booras

Order re: Recommendation of the Colorado Commission on Judicial Discipline and the Imposition of Sanctions en banc March 11, 2019

Attorneys for Complainant-Appellee The People of the State of Colorado: Jessica E. Yates, Regulation Counsel Gregory G. Sapakoff, Deputy Regulation Counsel Denver, Colorado

Attorneys for Respondent-Appellant Laurie A. Booras: Recht Kornfeld, P.C. David M. Beller Richard K. Kornfeld Denver, Colorado

PER CURIAM. ¶1 In this judicial disciplinary proceeding, we consider the exceptions of now-former

Colorado Court of Appeals Judge Laurie A. Booras to the Colorado Commission on

Judicial Discipline’s (the “Commission’s”) recommendation that Judge Booras be

removed from office and that she be ordered to pay the costs incurred by the Commission

in this matter.

¶2 The Commission’s recommendation was based on the factual findings and

conclusions of law set forth in the December 12, 2018 Report of the Special Masters in this

case. That report concluded that Judge Booras had violated Canon 1, Rule 1.2, Canon 3,

Rule 3.1, and Canon 3, Rule 3.5 of the Colorado Code of Judicial Conduct by (1) disclosing

confidential information belonging to the court of appeals (namely, the vote of a court of

appeals division on a case prior to the issuance of the decision in that case) to an intimate,

non-spousal partner and (2) using inappropriate racial epithets in communications with

that intimate partner, including a racially derogatory reference to a court of appeals

colleague.

¶3 Judge Booras timely filed exceptions to the Commission’s recommendation,

contending that her communications with her then-intimate partner were protected by

the First Amendment and that the recommendation that she be removed from office was

too severe under the circumstances of this case. In addition, by letter dated January 2,

2019, Judge Booras advised the Chief Justice that she was resigning her position as a

Colorado Court of Appeals Judge, effective as of the close of business on January 31, 2019,

although no party contends that Judge Booras’s resignation rendered the present matter

moot.

2 ¶4 Having now considered the record and the briefs of the parties, we conclude that

the Commission properly found that Judge Booras’s communications with her

then-intimate partner were not protected by the First Amendment. We further conclude

that, given Judge Booras’s resignation, which she tendered and which became effective

after the Commission made its recommendation, we need not decide whether Judge

Booras’s removal from office was an appropriate sanction. Rather, we conclude that the

appropriate sanction in this case is the acceptance of Judge Booras’s resignation, the

imposition of a public censure, and an order requiring Judge Booras to pay the

Commission’s costs in this matter.

I. Facts and Procedural History

¶5 In 2007, Judge Booras began what would become a ten-year relationship with a

man whom she met online (“J.S.”). At the time the two met, J.S. represented that he was

divorced and living in Denver, although Judge Booras later learned that he was actually

married and living in California. Although the two did not see each other frequently,

they communicated often, and Judge Booras described their relationship as an intimate

one that she had believed would one day result in marriage. The evidence in the record

tends to show, however, that by the time of the events at issue, the relationship was

deteriorating, and Judge Booras had good reason to distrust J.S.

¶6 As pertinent here, on February 21, 2017, a division of the court of appeals heard

oral argument in Martinez v. Colorado Oil & Gas Conservation Commission, 2017 COA 37,

__ P.3d __, rev’d, 2019 CO 3, 433 P.3d 22, a case principally concerning the extent to which

the Colorado Oil & Gas Conservation Commission is required to consider public health

3 and the environment in deciding whether to grant permits for oil and gas development.

Judge Booras sat on that division.

¶7 The next morning, Judge Booras sent J.S. an email stating:

We had an oral argument yesterday re: fracking ban where there was standing room only and a hundred people in our overflow video room. The little Mexican is going to write in favor of the Plaintiffs and it looks like I am dissenting in favor of the Oil and Gas Commission. You and Sid [a colleague of J.S.’s] will be so disappointed.

¶8 As pertinent to the issues now before us, “The little Mexican” was a reference to

one of Judge Booras’s colleagues, a Latina who would ultimately write the opinion for

the majority in that case (as she represented in her email to J.S., Judge Booras would later

write the dissent). Moreover, in sending this email, Judge Booras disclosed to a

third-party the division’s vote in the Martinez case, which vote indisputably was

confidential information of the Colorado Court of Appeals. And this email was not the

first time that Judge Booras had used an inappropriate racial epithet in communicating

with J.S. A year earlier, Judge Booras had sent an email to J.S. in which she referred to

her ex-husband’s new wife, a woman of Navajo descent, as “the squaw.”

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