Menu

Post image 1
Post image 2
Post image 3
Post image 4
Post image 5
Post image 6
Post image 7
1 / 7
0

Boulder County prosecutor improperly used defendant’s silence as guilt, appeals court finds

Colorado Springs Gazette·Michael Karlik [email protected]·27 days ago
#9f6LUzzA
Reading 0:00
15s threshold

Colorado’s second-highest court reversed a Boulder County defendant’s sexual assault conviction last week after concluding that a trial judge should have intervened to stop the prosecutor from inappropriately using the man’s constitutional right to silence to suggest he was guilty. Prosecutors charged Charles G. Higdon III with two counts of sexual assault. Jurors acquitted him of one and convicted him of the other. He is serving a six-year prison sentence. The alleged victim was extremely intoxicated and Higdon had also been drinking prior to the sexual encounter. The dispute at trial was the consensual nature of the interaction. Case: People v. Higdon Decided: April 30, 2026 Jurisdiction: Boulder County Ruling: 3-0 Judges: Jaclyn Casey Brown (author) Rebecca R. Freyre Timothy J. Schutz Although Higdon spoke to Longmont police that same night, they did not arrest him until six months later. At the police station, Det.…

Continue reading — create a free account

Join HashtagPLUS to read full articles, follow hashtags, vote, and join the conversation.

Read More