Colorado

Civil Procedure

Rule 251.13 – Alternatives to Discipline

(a) Referral to Program. The Regulation Counsel, the committee, the Presiding Disciplinary Judge, a Hearing Board, or the Supreme Court may offer diversion to the alternatives to discipline program to the attorney. The alternatives to discipline program may include, but is not limited to, diversion or other programs such as mediation, fee arbitration, law office management assistance, evaluation and treatment through the attorneys’ peer assistance program, evaluation and treatment for substance abuse, psychological evaluation and treatment, medical evaluation and treatment, monitoring of the attorney’s practice or accounting procedures, continuing legal education, ethics school, the multistate professional responsibility examination, or any other program authorized by the Court.
(b) Participation in the Program. As an alternative to a form of discipline, an attorney may participate in an approved diversion program in cases where there is little likelihood that the attorney will harm the public during the period of participation, where the Regulation Counsel can adequately supervise the conditions of diversion, and where participation in the program is likely to benefit the attorney and accomplish the goals of the program. A matter generally will not be diverted under this Rule when:

(1) The presumptive form of discipline in the matter is likely to be greater than public censure;
(2) The misconduct involves misappropriation of funds or property of a client or a third party;
(3) The misconduct involves a serious crime as defined by C.R.C.P. 251.20(e);
(4) The misconduct involves family violence;
(5) The misconduct resulted in or is likely to result in actual injury (loss of money, legal rights, or valuable property rights) to a client or other person, unless restitution is made a condition of diversion;
(6) The attorney has been publicly disciplined in the last three years;
(7) The matter is of the same nature as misconduct for which the attorney has been disciplined in the last five years;
(8) The misconduct involves dishonesty, deceit, fraud, or misrepresentation; or
(9) The misconduct is part of a pattern of similar misconduct.
(c) Diversion Agreement. If an attorney agrees to an offer of diversion as provided by this rule, the terms of the diversion shall be set forth in a written agreement. If the agreement is entered prior to a determination to proceed is made pursuant to C.R.C.P. 251.9, the agreement shall be between the attorney and Regulation Counsel. If diversion is offered and entered after a determination to proceed is made pursuant to C.R.C.P. 251.9 but before authorization to file a complaint, the diversion agreement between the attorney and Regulation Counsel shall be submitted to the committee for consideration. If the committee rejects the diversion agreement, the matter shall proceed as otherwise provided by these Rules. If diversion is offered and entered after a complaint has been filed pursuant to C.R.C.P. 251.14, the diversion agreement shall be submitted to the Presiding Disciplinary Judge or Supreme Court, whichever body before which the matter is pending for consideration. If the diversion agreement is rejected, the matter shall proceed as provided by these Rules.

The agreement shall specify the program(s) to which the attorney shall be diverted, the general purpose of the division, the manner in which compliance is to be monitored, and any requirement for payment of restitution or cost.

(d) Costs of the Diversion. The attorney shall pay all the costs incurred in connection with participation in any diversion program. The attorney shall also pay the administrative cost of the proceeding as set by the Supreme Court.
(e) Effect of Diversion. When the recommendation for diversion becomes final, the attorney shall enter into the diversion program(s) and complete the requirements thereof. Upon the attorney’s entry into the diversion programs(s), the underlying matter shall be placed in abeyance, indicating diversion. Diversion shall not constitute a form of discipline.
(f) Effect of Successful Completion of the Diversion Program. If diversion is entered prior to a determination to proceed is made pursuant to C.R.C.P. 251.9(b)(3), and if Regulation Counsel determines that the attorney has successfully completed all requirements of the diversion program, the Regulation Counsel shall close the file. If diversion is successfully completed in a matter that was determined to warrant investigation or other proceedings pursuant to these Rules, the matter shall be dismissed and expunged pursuant to C.R.C.P. 251.33(d). After the file is expunged, the attorney may respond to any general inquiry as provided in C.R.C.P. 251.33(d).
(g) Breach of Diversion Agreement. The determination of a breach of a diversion agreement will be as follows:

(1) If the Regulation Counsel has reason to believe that the attorney has breached the diversion agreement, and the diversion agreement was entered prior to a decision to proceed pursuant to C.R.C.P. 251.9(b), and after the attorney has had an opportunity to respond, Regulation Counsel may elect to modify the diversion agreement or terminate the diversion agreement and proceed with the matter as provided by these rules.
(2) If Regulation Counsel has reason to believe that the attorney has breached the diversion agreement after a determination to proceed has been made, then the matter shall be referred to the Presiding Disciplinary Judge or Supreme Court, whichever body approved the diversion agreement, with an opportunity for the attorney to respond. The Regulation Counsel will have the burden by a preponderance of the evidence to establish the materiality of the breach, and the attorney will have the burden by a preponderance of the evidence to establish justification for the breach. If after consideration of the information presented by the Regulation Counsel and the attorney’s response, if any, it is determined that the breach was material without justification, the agreement will be terminated and the matter will proceed as provided for by these rules. If a breach is established but determined to be not material or to be with justification, the diversion agreement may be modified in light of the breach. If no breach is found, the matter shall proceed pursuant to the terms of the original diversion agreement.
(3) If the matter has been referred for determination to the committee, Presiding Disciplinary Judge, or the Supreme Court as provided for in section (g)(2) of this rule, upon motion of either party, the Presiding Disciplinary Judge shall hold a hearing on the matter. Upon conclusion of the hearing, the Presiding Disciplinary Judge shall prepare written findings of fact and conclusions and enter an appropriate order in those matters in which the Presiding Disciplinary Judge originally approved the diversion agreement. If the hearing is requested in a matter pending before the committee or Supreme Court for consideration, the Presiding Disciplinary Judge shall prepare findings of fact and recommendations and forward them to the body which originally approved the diversion agreement for its determination of the matter.
(h) Effect of Rejection of Recommendation for Diversion. If an Attorney rejects a diversion recommendation, the matter shall proceed as otherwise provided in these Rules.
(i) Confidentiality. All the files and records resulting from the diversion of a matter shall not be made public except by order of the Supreme Court. Information of misconduct admitted by the attorney to a treatment provider or a monitor while in a diversion program is confidential if the misconduct occurred before the attorney’s entry into a diversion program.

C.R.C.P. 251.13

Source: Amended and adopted June 25, 1998, effective July 1, 1998; entire rule amended and effective September 1, 2000; c and i corrected January 8, 2001, effective September 12, 2000; d amended and adopted October 6, 2005, effective January 1, 2006.

This rule was previously numbered as 241.11.5.