The People of the State of Colorado v. Isaac U. Mion

2026 CO 5
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedJanuary 26, 2026
Docket24SC2
StatusPublished

This text of 2026 CO 5 (The People of the State of Colorado v. Isaac U. Mion) 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
The People of the State of Colorado v. Isaac U. Mion, 2026 CO 5 (Colo. 2026).

Opinion

2026 CO 5

The People of the State of Colorado, Petitioner
v.

Isaac U. Mion, Respondent

No. 24SC2

Supreme Court of Colorado

January 26, 2026


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Certiorari to the Colorado Court of Appeals Court of Appeals Case No. 21CA1230.

Judgment Reversed

Attorneys for Petitioner: Philip J. Weiser, Attorney General Jaycey DeHoyos, Assistant Attorney General Denver, Colorado.

Attorneys for Respondent: Shulman Chase LLC Joseph Chase Denver, Colorado.

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JUSTICE BOATRIGHT delivered the Opinion of the Court, in which JUSTICE GABRIEL, JUSTICE SAMOUR, and JUSTICE BERKENKOTTER joined. CHIEF JUSTICE MARQUEZ dissented. JUSTICE HOOD dissented.

en banc

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OPINION

BOATRIGHT, JUSTICE.

¶1 Isaac U. Mion was charged with aggravated robbery, menacing, and criminal mischief after an episode of erratic and violent behavior. At trial, Mion testified that his behavior was caused by "something unknown" in a joint he smoked; he thus sought to raise the affirmative defense of involuntary intoxication. That defense applies when a defendant, "by reason of intoxication . . . lacks capacity to conform his conduct to the requirements of the law," provided that his intoxication was not "self-induced." § 18-1-804(3), C.R.S. (2025). "Self-induced intoxication" means that a defendant's intoxication was voluntary - "caused by substances which the defendant knows or ought to know have the tendency to cause intoxication and which he knowingly introduced . . . into his body."[1] § 18-1-804(5) (emphases added).

¶2 The trial court declined to instruct the jury on the involuntary intoxication defense, but a division of the court of appeals reversed. People v. Mion, 2023 COA 110M, 544 P.3d 111. The division concluded that the statute did not adequately address situations where "multiple intoxicants" are involved and held that the defense "is legally cognizable when (1) a defendant knowingly ingests what he believes to be a particular intoxicant; (2) in so doing, he unknowingly ingests a

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different intoxicant; and (3) it is the different intoxicant that deprives him of the capacity to conform his conduct to the requirements of the law." Id. at ¶¶ 2, 37, 544 P.3d at 112, 117 (emphases altered). Because this "was the essence of Mion's involuntary intoxication claim," the division concluded that Mion's involuntary intoxication defense was legally cognizable, entitling him to the jury instruction. Id. at ¶ 2, 544 P.3d at 112. We granted certiorari.[2]

¶3 The certiorari question essentially addresses whether the division erroneously eliminated consideration of moral culpability or blameworthiness in its rule. As we see it, the division's rule does not consider "innocent mistake" or any level of blameworthiness because it ultimately defines substance as each "particular intoxicant." As we explore below, segmenting potential intoxicants like this renders moot the "ought to know" prong of the voluntary intoxication analysis under section 18-1-804(5) and curtails a factfinder's ability to consider all of the circumstances involved in obtaining and consuming the intoxicating substance.[3]

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¶4 We now reverse and hold that, when a defendant contends that there are multiple intoxicants in a product that he consumed, a substance per section 18-1-804(5) is the entire product, not each "particular intoxicant" within the product. Thus, we conclude that Mion was voluntarily intoxicated and therefore barred from raising the involuntary intoxication defense because his condition was caused by knowingly smoking a joint that he knew or ought to have known had the tendency to intoxicate.

I. Facts and Procedural History

¶5 A security guard found Mion sleeping on the grounds of the Denver City and County Building. When the guard asked Mion to leave, Mion acted in an agitated and erratic manner. He grabbed the guard's phone from his hand, and when a second security guard approached to call 911, Mion knocked the phone out of her hand, cracking the screen. After running away, Mion began yelling at a civilian and struck the civilian's truck with a club-like object after the civilian entered his truck. Officers eventually arrested Mion after he tried to submerge himself in a creek. During the arrest, Mion yelled at the officers to shoot him and

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said that he wanted to die. Following these events, the People charged Mion with aggravated robbery, menacing, and criminal mischief.

¶6 At trial, Mion testified that, earlier that night, he stopped in a doorway in downtown Denver to drink beer and work on his bike with a "street guy" he knew. Mion admitted that he did not know this man's name, but when the man offered Mion a joint, Mion accepted it and took "two hits." About twenty minutes later, Mion began feeling paranoid and later blacked out, claiming that he remembered nothing else from that evening.

¶7 Relying on this testimony, Mion requested a jury instruction on the affirmative defense of involuntary intoxication, alleging that there was "something unknown" in the joint he smoked, like a stimulant, that caused his erratic behavior. The trial court found this claim to be "pure speculation" and denied Mion's request. A jury found Mion guilty of robbery, menacing, and criminal mischief.

¶8 A division of the court of appeals reversed. Mion, ¶ 56, 544 P.3d at 120. The division concluded that the involuntary intoxication statute does not "squarely address . . . the ingestion of multiple intoxicants." Id. at ¶ 37, 544 P.3d at 117. It then held that the affirmative defense of involuntary intoxication "is legally cognizable when (1) a defendant knowingly ingests what he believes to be a particular intoxicant; (2) in so doing, he unknowingly ingests a different intoxicant;

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and (3) it is the different intoxicant that deprives him of the capacity to conform his conduct to the requirements of the law." Id. at ¶ 2, 544 P.3d at 112 (emphases altered). The division held that Mion's defense under this three-part test was legally cognizable given that this "was the essence of Mion's involuntary intoxication claim." Id. We granted certiorari.

II. Analysis

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2026 CO 5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-people-of-the-state-of-colorado-v-isaac-u-mion-colo-2026.