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HomeMy WebLinkAboutInformation Only 050624AGENDA INFORMATION UPDATE May 6, 2024 4:00 PM, I.Information Update I.A Ordinance Violation Citations and Municipal Court Case Outcomes Ordinance Violations and Case Findings (info only).docx 1 1 INFORMATION ONLY MEMORANDUM TO: Aspen City Council    FROM: Darcy Weir, City Manager’s Office Fellow   THROUGH:Sara Ott, City Manager   MEMO DATE:May 2, 2024 RE: Ordinance Violation Citations and Municipal Court Case Outcomes PURPOSE: No action is requested of Council. This informational memo provides Council with an overview of City of Aspen ordinance violation citationsand municipal court case dispositions from 2021 through 2023. SUMMARY: Ordinance Violation Citations from 2021-2023 From 2021 to 2023, 992 City of Aspen ordinance violation citations were issued. As shown in Figure 1, ordinance violation citations have fluctuated over the last three years, with citations dropping by 11 percent from 2021 to 2022 and then increasing by 15 percent from 2022 to 2023. On average, around 330 citations were issued each year. Figure 1. Total Ordinance Violations from 2021-2023 340 302 350 0 50 100 150 200 250 300 350 400 2021 2022 2023 Ordinance Violation Citations from (2021-2023) 2 2 The 992 citations issued from 2021-2023 consist of 92 categories of ordinance violations. The most common violations cited include speeding 5-9 MPH over the prima facie limit, speeding 10-19 MPH over the prima facie limit, maintaining and operating wildlife-proof containers (not secured), failure to obey traffic control device/stop sign, and failing to appear. Figure 2 highlights the 10 most common citations issued over the last three years. As seen below, speeding 5-9 MPH over the prima facie limit is by far the most common citation issued, accounting for 20 percent of the total citations issued from 2021-2023. Figure 2 Most Common Citations Issued from 2021-2023 Municipal Court Case Dispositions from 2021-2023 Over the last three years, 815 cases were disposed by the City of Aspen Municipal Court. Figure 3 provides an overview of municipal court cases with disposition dates between 2021 and 2023. As can be seen below, the number of cases disposed of has remained relatively consistent over the last three years, fluctuating by around 1 percent, on average, each year. 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 Speeding 5-9 MPH Over Prima Facie Limit Speeding 10-19 MPH Over Prima Facia Limit Maintenance & Operation of Wildlife Proof… Failed to Obey Traffic Control Device/Stop Sign Failure to Appear Disorderly Conduct Trespassing Prohibited Careless Driving Wildlife Resistant Containers or Enclosures… Speeding 1-5 over (0-4) 10 Most Common Citations Issued from 2021-2023 2023 2022 2021 3 3 Figure 3 Disposed Court Cases from 2021-2023 Overwhelmingly, the majority of municipal court cases disposed during this time involved only one ordinance citation. Only around 7 percent of cases involved two or more citations. Table 1 provides a summary of all municipal court case dispositions from 2021-2023. Around 78.4 percent of these cases resulted in a disposition of guilty, whether by a plea of guilty or a finding of guilt by the Court. Guilty dispositions result in outcomes such as probation, a sentence to jail time, and fines paid. About 4.3 percent of cases disposed from 2021-2023 were dismissed in which there was no finding of guilt or conviction. These cases were dismissed for various reasons, including dismissal because the defendant was either subject to a mental health hold or deemed incompetent by the state court, trials were set but witnesses failed to appear or refused to testify, and cases involving defendants who had pending state court charges and were sentenced to long jail sentences or prison. Table 1. Municipal Court Case Dispositions (2021-2023) Case Dispositions 2021 2022 2023 Total Guilty 235 213 191 639 Not Guilty 1 0 4 5 Dismissed by a Police Officer 9 7 31 47 Dismissed Pursuant to a Plea Agreement or Completion of Traffic School 22 33 28 83 Dismissed 2 15 18 35 Deferred 2 0 4 6 Total 271 268 276 815 271 268 276 0 50 100 150 200 250 300 2021 2022 2023 Municipal Court Cases (2021-2023) 4 4 10 percent of cases disposed in the last three years were dismissed pursuant to a plea agreement or the completion of traffic school. It has long been a policy of the municipal court to allow minor traffic violators who have a clean driving record for at least five preceding years to elect to enter an agreement whereby if the violator completes traffic school, the ticket is dismissed; this practice is common across the State.This category also includes cases that were dismissed pursuant to the completion of conditions surrounding a plea agreement being met. For example, of the cases dismissed pursuant to a plea agreement or the completion of traffic school, around 40 percent of these cases were dismissed in response to a completed deferred judgment and sentence or other plea arrangement. A deferred judgment and sentence is a sentencing option utilized regularly in both municipal and state courts. In these types of cases, a defendant pleads guilty, and sentencing is deferred for a period of time. During that time, the defendant must comply with certain conditions, including payment of a fine, no new offenses, community service, or other terms. Only if these terms are complete can the defendant withdraw the plea of guilty, and at that time, the case is dismissed. In discussing municipal court case findings, it is important to note that city staff are considering municipal code updates as an avenue to increase the judicial mechanisms that the municipal court has at its disposal. 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