C.R.S. Section 19-3-401
Taking children into custody


(1)

A child may be taken into temporary custody by a law enforcement officer without order of the court:

(a)

When the child is abandoned, lost, or seriously endangered in such child’s surroundings or seriously endangers others and immediate removal appears to be necessary for such child’s protection or the protection of others;

(b)

When there are reasonable grounds to believe that such child has run away or escaped from such child’s parents, guardian, or legal custodian and the child’s parents, guardian, or legal custodian has not made a report to a law enforcement agency that the child has run away from home; or

(c)

When an arrest warrant has been issued for such child’s parent or guardian on the basis of an alleged violation of section 18-3-304, C.R.S. No child taken into temporary custody pursuant to this paragraph (c) shall be placed in detention or jail.

(1.3)

A child shall be taken into temporary custody by a law enforcement officer without order of the court when there are reasonable grounds to believe the child has run away from the child’s parents, guardian, or legal custodian and the child’s parents, guardian, or legal custodian has made a report to a law enforcement agency that the child has run away from home.

(1.5)

An emergency exists and a child is seriously endangered as described in paragraph (a) of subsection (1) of this section whenever the safety or well-being of a child is immediately at issue and there is no other reasonable way to protect the child without removing the child from the child’s home. If such an emergency exists, a child shall be removed from such child’s home and placed in protective custody regardless of whether reasonable efforts to preserve the family have been made.

(2)

The taking of a child into temporary custody under this section shall not be deemed an arrest, nor shall it constitute a police record.

(3)

Intentionally left blank —Ed.

(a)

Notwithstanding subsections (1) and (1.5) of this section and except as otherwise provided in subsections (3)(b) and (3)(c) of this section, a newborn child, as defined in section 19-1-103, who is not in a hospital setting must not be taken into temporary protective custody for a period of longer than twenty-four hours without an order of the court made pursuant to section 19-3-405 (1). The order must include findings that an emergency situation exists and that the newborn child is seriously endangered as described in subsection (1)(a) of this section.

(b)

A newborn child, as defined in section 19-1-103, who is in a hospital setting must not be taken into temporary protective custody without an order of the court made pursuant to section 19-3-405 (1). The order must include findings that an emergency situation exists and that the newborn child is seriously endangered as described in subsection (1)(a) of this section. A newborn child may be detained in a hospital by a law enforcement officer upon the recommendation of a county department or by a physician, registered nurse, licensed practical nurse, or physician assistant while an order of the court pursuant to section 19-3-405 (1) is being pursued, but the newborn child must be released if a court order pursuant to section 19-3-405 (1) is denied.

(c)

The court orders required by subsections (3)(a) and (3)(b) of this section are not required in the following circumstances:

(I)

When a newborn child is identified by a physician, registered nurse, licensed practical nurse, or physician assistant engaged in the admission, care, or treatment of patients as being affected by substance abuse or demonstrating withdrawal symptoms resulting from prenatal drug exposure;

(II)

When the newborn child’s only identifiable birth parent has been determined by a physician, registered nurse, or qualified mental health professional to meet the criteria specified in section 27-65-106 for custody, treatment, and evaluation of a mental health disorder or grave disability;

(III)

When both of the newborn child’s birth parents have been determined by a physician, registered nurse, or qualified mental health professional to meet the criteria specified in section 27-65-106 for custody, treatment, and evaluation of a mental health disorder or grave disability; or

(IV)

When the newborn child is subject to an environment exposing the newborn child to a laboratory for manufacturing controlled substances as defined in section 18-18-102 (5), C.R.S.

(d)

At the time a law enforcement officer takes a newborn child into temporary protective custody, the law enforcement officer shall provide the notices required by sections 19-3-402 and 19-3-212 directly to the newborn child’s identifiable birth parent or parents in both verbal and written form. Such notices may be provided to the child’s identifiable birth parent or parents in a language that the birth parent or parents understand, and the law enforcement officer may designate another person to assist him or her in providing such written and verbal notices to fulfill this requirement, if necessary.

(e)

If a newborn child is taken into temporary protective custody pursuant to this subsection (3), the county department may contact the child’s identifiable birth parent or parents to obtain the names of any relatives or other persons in the parent’s or parents’ community who may be appropriate, capable, and willing to care for the newborn child prior to the hearing required by section 19-3-403. In addition, if the identifiable parent or parents are not citizens of the United States, the county department may request the parent’s or parents’ consent to notify the parent’s or parents’ government of origin of the situation and, if consent is given, may contact the parent’s or parents’ government of origin.

Source: Section 19-3-401 — Taking children into custody, https://leg.­colorado.­gov/sites/default/files/images/olls/crs2023-title-19.­pdf (accessed Oct. 20, 2023).

19‑3‑100.5
Legislative declarations - reasonable efforts - movement of children and sibling groups
19‑3‑102
Neglected or dependent child
19‑3‑103
Child not neglected - when
19‑3‑104
Hearings - procedure
19‑3‑201
Venue
19‑3‑201.5
Change of venue - county department and county attorney responsibilities - rules
19‑3‑202
Right to counsel and jury trial
19‑3‑203
Right to guardian ad litem and counsel for youth
19‑3‑205
Continuing jurisdiction
19‑3‑206
Representation of petitioner
19‑3‑207
Inadmissibility of certain evidence
19‑3‑208
Services - county required to provide - out-of-home placement options - rules - definitions
19‑3‑209
Individual case plan - required
19‑3‑210.5
Foster parents’ bill of rights
19‑3‑211
Conflict resolution process - rules - definitions
19‑3‑212
Notice of rights and remedies for families
19‑3‑213
Placement criteria
19‑3‑214
Placement reporting
19‑3‑215
Foster care - capacity may be exceeded for sibling groups
19‑3‑216
Rules
19‑3‑217
Family time upon removal - rules
19‑3‑301
Short title
19‑3‑302
Legislative declaration
19‑3‑304
Persons required to report child abuse or neglect
19‑3‑304.2
Mandatory reporter task force - creation - reporting - definitions - repeal
19‑3‑304.3
Domestic abuse task force - creation - best practices and training for recognition of domestic abuse as child abuse or neglect - policies and procedures - rules
19‑3‑304.5
Emergency possession of certain abandoned children - definition
19‑3‑305
Required report of postmortem investigation
19‑3‑306
Evidence of abuse - color photographs and X rays
19‑3‑307
Reporting procedures
19‑3‑308
Action upon report of intrafamilial, institutional, or third-party abuse - investigations - child protection team - rules - report
19‑3‑308.3
Differential response program for child abuse or neglect cases of low or moderate risk - rules - evaluation
19‑3‑308.5
Recorded interviews of child
19‑3‑309
Immunity from liability - persons reporting
19‑3‑309.5
Preconfirmation safety plan agreement - first-time minor incidents of child abuse or neglect - rules
19‑3‑310
Child abuse and child neglect diversion program
19‑3‑311
Evidence not privileged
19‑3‑312
Court proceedings
19‑3‑313.5
State department duties - reports of child abuse or neglect - training of county departments - rules - notice and appeal process - confidentiality
19‑3‑315
Federal funds
19‑3‑317
Screening tool - human trafficking
19‑3‑401
Taking children into custody
19‑3‑402
Duty of officer - notification - release or detention
19‑3‑403
Temporary custody - hearing - time limits - restriction - rules
19‑3‑403.5
Temporary shelter
19‑3‑404
Temporary shelter - child’s home
19‑3‑405
Temporary protective custody
19‑3‑406
Relatives or kin as providers of emergency, nonemergency, or continued placement for children or youth - initial criminal history record check - fingerprint-based criminal history record check - criteria for disqualification - use of criminal justice records - rules - definitions
19‑3‑500.2
Legislative declaration
19‑3‑501
Petition initiation - preliminary investigation - informal adjustment
19‑3‑502
Petition form and content - limitations on claims in dependency or neglect actions
19‑3‑503
Summons - issuance - contents - service
19‑3‑504
Contempt - warrant
19‑3‑505
Adjudicatory hearing - findings - adjudication
19‑3‑506
Child with a mental health disorder or an intellectual and developmental disability - procedure
19‑3‑507
Dispositional hearing - rules
19‑3‑508
Neglected or dependent child or youth - disposition - concurrent planning - definition
19‑3‑601
Short title
19‑3‑602
Motion for termination - separate hearing - right to counsel - no jury trial
19‑3‑603
Notice - abandonment
19‑3‑604
Criteria for termination
19‑3‑605
Request for placement with family members
19‑3‑606
Review of child’s disposition following termination of the parent-child legal relationship
19‑3‑607
Expert testimony
19‑3‑608
Effect of decree
19‑3‑609
Appeals - time requirements
19‑3‑610
Budgetary allocation for expenses
19‑3‑612
Reinstatement of the parent-child legal relationship - circumstances - petition - hearings - legislative declaration
19‑3‑702
Permanency hearing
19‑3‑702.5
Periodic reviews
19‑3‑704
Youth with disabilities - incapacitated persons
19‑3‑705
Transition hearing
19‑3‑901
Legislative declaration
19‑3‑902
Definitions
19‑3‑903
Task force on high-quality parenting time - creation - steering committee - membership
19‑3‑904
Task force - purposes - issues to study - written reports
19‑3‑905
Repeal of part
Green check means up to date. Up to date

Current through Fall 2024

§ 19-3-401’s source at colorado​.gov