BROOMFIELD MUNICIPAL COURT
JUVENILE
BENCH TRIAL PROCEDURES
FOR
JUVENILE DEFENDANTS REPRESENTING THEMSELVES
IN A
TRIAL TO
THE COURT
Please be
advised that your parent or guardian may not represent you at your trial. It is
the responsibility of the juvenile to be prepared and proceed at the trial on
his/her own behalf.
This information
is designed to assist Juvenile Defendants who choose to represent themselves in
a trial to the Court in Broomfield Municipal Court. It is a general overview of
trial procedures.
It by no means
covers all situations that may arise during the course of a trial.
It is intended
to assist in the preparation and orderly presentation of evidence at the trial.
Your case will be called by
the Judge and the Judge will inquire if you are ready to proceed to trial. If
you have any witnesses that you feel will be necessary to testify at the trial,
you will be required to have them in attendance. If a potential witness advises
you that they are unavailable you may subpoena them to your trial. You must
obtain a subpoena, issued by the court, well in advance of your trial
date and have your witness served at least 48 hours prior to your time of trial,
by another person who is not a party to your case and is over the age of 18
years. You must then file a return of service with the Court showing that your
witness was personally served.
First, the trial will begin
with opening statements from the prosecuting city attorney and from you
if you choose to do so. An opening statement is not evidence, it is
merely a statement of what the city attorney and the defense intends to prove
through the course of the trial.
An opening statement is not
mandatory and it may be waived by either the city attorney or the defense.
After the city attorney has made his/her opening statement to the court,
you may either make an opening statement, waive an opening statement, or
reserve your right to make an opening statement until after the city
attorney has presented its case to the court.
The city attorney will then
call its witnesses and introduce any physical evidence they may have and
question their witnesses concerning the incidents involved in your case. After
the city attorney has finished questioning each witness you will have the right
to question that witness. This is called cross examination. Your
questions must be relevant and appropriate to the matters the witness testified
to and must bear a relationship to the incidents involved in the case.
Once the city attorney is
done then you may make an opening statement if you reserved your opening
statement. You may call witnesses to testify on your behalf and to question
them concerning the incidents involved in the case. Just as you have a right to
cross examine the city’s witnesses, the city attorney has the right to also
question and cross examine each of your witnesses.
Since it is the city
attorney’s burden to prove each element of the offense for which you are charged
beyond a reasonable doubt you are presumed to be innocent. You will be
given what is called a Curtis Advisement, which advises you that you have
a constitutional right to remain silent and if you choose to remain silent the
city attorney may not comment on that fact and the court may not infer any guilt
by the fact that you chose to remain silent. You also have a constitutional
right to testify and if you choose to testify then you are waiving or giving up
your right to remain silent and you subject yourself to cross examination
the same as any other witness.
After you have concluded the
presentation of your evidence the city attorney may present additional evidence,
which is called rebuttal testimony, to rebut any evidence you presented
in the case. After the city attorney concludes presenting rebuttal evidence,
the evidence in the case is closed.
The City attorney now has the
opportunity to make a closing argument, arguing why, based on the
evidence which has been presented, the court should find you guilty of the
offense you are charged with committing. You then have the opportunity to also
make a closing argument arguing why, based on the evidence which has been
presented, the court should find you not guilty. Finally, since it is the city
attorney’s burden of proof they will have the last word so to speak and will be
allowed to present a rebuttal closing argument.
Closing arguments are not
evidence and cannot be considered by the court as evidence. Any questions or
statements which you make which are not in the form of sworn testimony cannot be
considered by the court as evidence in the case nor in the determination of its
judgment.
The court will then make its
decision, based upon the evidence that has been submitted to the court during
the course of the trial.
·
Right to Appeal
If you are found guilty you
have the right to appeal your case to the District Court of Broomfield County.