Mark D Recommendation of the Colorado Commission on Judicial Discipline and Public Censure en banc PER CURIAM CHIEF JUSTICE BOATRIGHT

2023 CO 21
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedMay 15, 2023
Docket23SA18
StatusPublished

This text of 2023 CO 21 (Mark D Recommendation of the Colorado Commission on Judicial Discipline and Public Censure en banc PER CURIAM CHIEF JUSTICE BOATRIGHT) 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.

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Mark D Recommendation of the Colorado Commission on Judicial Discipline and Public Censure en banc PER CURIAM CHIEF JUSTICE BOATRIGHT, 2023 CO 21 (Colo. 2023).

Opinion

The Supreme Court of the State of Colorado 2 East 14th Avenue • Denver, Colorado 80203

2023 CO 21

Supreme Court Case No. 23SA18 Original Proceeding in Discipline Colorado Commission on Judicial Discipline Case No. 22-231 ________________________________________________________________________ In the Matter of Complainant:

The People of the State of Colorado,

and

Respondent:

Mark D. Thompson, a Former Judge of the Summit County District Court. ________________________________________________________________________ Public Censure en banc May 15, 2023 ________________________________________________________________________

Appearing for the Colorado Commission on Judicial Discipline: Jeffrey M. Walsh, Special Counsel Denver, Colorado

Attorneys for Respondent: Recht Kornfeld PC Abraham V. Hutt Denver, Colorado

PER CURIAM

CHIEF JUSTICE BOATRIGHT and JUSTICE SAMOUR did not participate. 1 ¶1 Former Judge Mark D. Thompson, you appear before this Court for

imposition of discipline based upon violations of the duties of your office as a

District Court Judge for the Fifth Judicial District. The Colorado Commission on

Judicial Discipline (“the Commission”) recommends approval of the Stipulation

for Public Censure (“the Stipulation”), which you and the Commission executed

on April 24, 2023, pursuant to Rule 37(e) of the Colorado Rules of Judicial

Discipline (“RJD”). Consistent with the Stipulation, the Commission recommends

that this Court issue a public censure. Before the entry of the Stipulation, you

resigned your position as a judge. As part of the Stipulation, you also stipulated

to the entry of a public censure.

¶2 The Court adopts these recommendations.

I. Prior Disciplinary History

¶3 On August 29, 2022, this Court accepted former Judge Thompson’s

stipulation in case no. 22SA268 to a public censure and a thirty-day unpaid

suspension from his judicial duties. These sanctions stemmed from former Judge

Thompson’s guilty plea to a reduced charge of disorderly conduct in Summit

County District Court Case No. 21CR264. Former Judge Thompson’s plea

reflected his admission to having “recklessly” displayed an AR-15 style assault

rifle during a dispute with his adult stepson. In the Matter of Thompson, 2022 CO

39, ¶ 2, 516 P.3d 28, 28–29. 2 ¶4 Former Judge Thompson was suspended from his judicial duties from

October 15, 2022, through November 13, 2022. Id. at ¶ 8, 516 P.3d at 31. In

conjunction with this judicial disciplinary sanction, former Judge Thompson

entered a separate stipulation with the Supreme Court’s Office of Attorney

Regulation Counsel, in which he received a six-month stayed suspension of his

law license and one-year of probation, in which he was expected to provide

updates regarding his progress in anger management treatment. Former Judge

Thompson’s one-year probationary term began on July 26, 2022. See Order

Approving Stipulation to Discipline Under C.R.C.P. 242.19(c), Matter of Thompson,

22PDJ45.

II. Stipulated Facts

¶5 In the April 24, 2023 Stipulation, you and the Commission agreed to the

following facts:

1. In the fall of 2022, [former] Judge Thompson was presiding over a personal injury case1 that was set for trial at the end of November. In October, counsel for the parties jointly informed [former] Judge Thompson in writing that they had recently learned the defendant had died. Counsel indicated they were unsure how this would affect the proceedings and suggested that a stay and/or continuance of the trial might be necessary until a personal representative for the defendant’s estate had been appointed.

1 Summit County District Court Case No. 20CV30125. 3 2. On October 14, 2022, [former] Judge Thompson responded to the above by issuing an order that read as follows:

The court orders counsel for the parties to confer and file an updated status report with the court not later than [fourteen] days from the date of this order. A suggestion of death should be filed. Additionally, the case may only proceed against the estate. The court does not continue trial at this time and will await further information from the parties.

3. On October 27, 2022, the defendant’s counsel filed the suggestion of death. The parties did not file an updated status report as directed. The parties did not file all of the previously ordered pretrial filings due on November 1, 2022. Plaintiff’s counsel filed a proposed Joint Trial Management Order on November 9, 2022, but the parties took no action to substitute the estate of the deceased defendant as required.

4. On November 15, 2022 (i.e.[,] two days after [former] Judge Thompson returned from his unpaid suspension), he presided over a pre-trial readiness conference in the above case. When [former] Judge Thompson learned (a) that plaintiff’s counsel didn’t know how to substitute the defendant’s estate for the defendant, and (b) that neither counsel had complied with an earlier pre-trial order to submit witness lists, . . . exhibit lists, proposed jury instructions, and a joint case management certificate, he lost his temper on the record. He berated counsel in a tone that was rude, condescending, and mocking.

5. During that hearing, [former] Judge Thompson expressed, among other things, the following:

a. That the parties had waived their right to jury by failing to file timely pretrial jury instructions and 4 that he was imposing sanctions excluding evidence.

b. That he was dismissing the case with prejudice because of the parties’ failure to comply with his pre-trial orders.

c. That he was inclined to pursue an indirect contempt citation against the attorneys and to request that the attorneys serve a week in jail as a sanction.

d. That he was prohibiting the parties from making additional filings to mitigate the evidentiary sanctions imposed under the trial management order.

e. That he was grieving both of the attorneys to the Colorado Supreme Court’s Office of Attorney Regulation Counsel.

f. That, even though the jury trial was now vacated, he would not vacate the jury call, thus forcing up to 80 prospective jurors to come to court so that [former] Judge Thompson could humiliate the lawyers in front of the prospective jurors. Specifically, [former] Judge Thompson told both counsel that they would be required to tell the prospective jurors (a) their names, (b) that they were not prepared for trial because of a complete failure to follow court orders, and (c) how proud they were of themselves for wasting the jury’s time by forcing the jurors to come to court for a trial that counsel were not ready for.

g. [Former] Judge Thompson threatened counsel that if they did not appear to say these things to the prospective jurors, he would issue bench warrants for their arrest. He further threatened that if counsel did not say exactly what he told 5 them to say, he would immediately find them in direct contempt of court, remand them to jail, and that it would be a “heck of a long time before they saw the light of day.”

6. On November 16, 2022, one day after the above referenced hearing and three days after returning to the bench from his suspension, [former] Judge Thompson did two things relevant to this proceeding.

a. First, he issued sua sponte a written order relieving counsel of their obligation to appear before a panel of jurors.

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