Reporting by incumbents and elected candidates - gifts, honoraria, and other benefits - prohibition on monetary gifts - penalty - definitions.

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(1) (a) As used in this section, the terms "appropriate officer" and "candidate" shall have the meanings ascribed to them in section 1-45-103, C.R.S., of the "Fair Campaign Practices Act".

(b) (I) As used in this section, the term "public office" means any office voted for in this state at any election. "Public office" includes, without limitation, the governor, lieutenant governor, secretary of state, attorney general, and state treasurer; a member of the general assembly or the state board of education; a regent of the university of Colorado; a judge on the Colorado court of appeals or the Colorado supreme court; a district attorney; or an officer of a county, municipality, city and county, school district, or any elective office within a special district for which the annual compensation exceeds two thousand four hundred dollars.

(II) "Public office" does not include:

  1. The office of president or vice president of the United States;

  2. The office of senator or representative in the congress of the United States;

  3. Any office in a political party chosen pursuant to sections 1-3-103, 1-4-403, and 1-4-

701, C.R.S.; or

  1. Any political party office in an assembly or convention, including delegates thereto.(E) Repealed.

(III) Repealed.

(c) As used in this section, "covered state office" means the governor, lieutenant governor, secretary of state, attorney general, state treasurer, a member of the state board of education, a regent of the university of Colorado, a member of the general assembly, or a district attorney.

  1. Every incumbent in or candidate elected to public office who receives from any otherperson any item described in subsection (3) of this section in connection with the incumbent's or elected candidate's public service shall file with the appropriate officer, on or before January 15, April 15, July 15, and October 15 of each year, a report covering the period since the last report. The requirement of this subsection (2) pertaining to the report due January 15 shall extend to an incumbent leaving public office between October 15 and January 15, who shall file with the appropriate officer by January 15 a report that covers any items received during the period since the last report. Such report shall be on forms prescribed by the secretary of state and shall contain, at a minimum, the name of the person from whom the item was received and the amount or value and the date of receipt. The secretary of state shall furnish such forms to municipal clerks, to county clerk and recorders, and to incumbents and elected candidates for state offices and district offices of districts greater than a county free of charge for use by incumbents and elected candidates required to file such forms. If any incumbent in or candidate elected to public office does not receive any such item, he or she shall not be required to file such report.

  2. The reports required by subsection (2) of this section shall include the following:

  1. In the case of a candidate elected to public office who is not an incumbent and hasnot yet been sworn into such office and subject to the requirements of subsection (3.5) of this section, any money, including but not limited to a loan, pledge, or advance of money or a guarantee of a loan of money, or any forbearance or forgiveness of indebtedness from any person, with a value greater than fifty-three dollars;

  2. In the case of a candidate elected to public office who is not an incumbent and hasnot yet been sworn into such office and subject to the requirements of subsection (3.5) of this section, any gift of any item of real or personal property, other than money, with a value greater than fifty-three dollars;

  3. In the case of a candidate elected to public office who is not an incumbent and hasnot yet been sworn into such office, any loan of any item of real or personal property, other than money, if the value of the loan is greater than fifty-three dollars. For such purpose, the "value of the loan" means the cost saved or avoided by the elected candidate by not borrowing, leasing, or purchasing comparable property from a source available to the general public.

  4. Any payment for a speech, appearance, or publication;

  5. In the case of a candidate elected to public office who is not an incumbent and hasnot yet been sworn into such office, tickets to sporting, recreational, educational, or cultural events with a value greater than fifty-three dollars for any single event;

  6. Payment of or reimbursement for actual and necessary expenditures for travel andlodging for attendance at a convention, fact-finding mission or trip, or other meeting that the incumbent or elected candidate who has been sworn into public office is permitted to accept or receive in accordance with the provisions of section 3 of article XXIX of the state constitution, unless the payment of or reimbursement for such expenditures is made from public funds of a state or local government in the case of an incumbent or elected candidate subject to the provisions of said article or from the funds of any association of public officials or public entities whose membership includes the incumbent's or elected candidate's office or the governmental entity in which such office is held;

  7. Subject to the provisions of section 3 of article XXIX of the state constitution, anygift of a meal to a fund-raising event of a political party;

  8. Payment of or reimbursement for actual and necessary expenses for travel and lodging for attendance at a convention, fact-finding mission or trip, or other meeting that is from an organization declared to be a joint governmental agency by section 2-3-311, C.R.S.

(3.5) (a) Each incumbent in or candidate elected to covered state office is prohibited from knowingly receiving or accepting from any other person, in connection with the public service of the incumbent or elected candidate:

(I) A gift of any money, including but not limited to a loan, pledge, or advance of money, a guarantee of a loan of money, or any monetary payment given, directly or indirectly, for the purpose of defraying any expenses related to the official duties undertaken by the incumbent or elected candidate; or (II) An in-kind gift.

  1. Nothing in paragraph (a) of this subsection (3.5) shall be construed to prohibit anincumbent or elected candidate from receiving a salary or other compensation paid to the incumbent or elected candidate in connection with the performance of his or her official duties, including, without limitation, payment for a speech, appearance, or publication or payment of or reimbursement for actual and necessary expenditures for travel and lodging to the extent the incumbent or elected candidate who has been sworn into covered state office is permitted to accept or receive such items in accordance with the provisions of section 3 of article XXIX of the state constitution.

  2. For purposes of this subsection (3.5), an "in-kind gift" means any gift of equipment,goods, supplies, property, services, or anything else, the value of which exceeds fifty dollars in the aggregate in any one calendar year, given, directly or indirectly, to an incumbent in or candidate elected to covered state office for the purpose of defraying any expenses related to the official duties undertaken by the incumbent or elected candidate.

(3.7) Notwithstanding any other provision of this section, no incumbent in or candidate elected to covered state office shall accept a gift of any money from any person who is a professional or volunteer lobbyist or from a corporation or labor organization.

(4) The reports required by subsection (2) of this section need not include the following:

  1. A contribution or contribution in kind that has already been reported pursuant tosection 1-45-108, C.R.S.;

  2. Any unsolicited item of trivial value as described in section 3 (3)(b) of article XXIXof the state constitution;

  3. An unsolicited token or award of appreciation as described in section 3 (3)(c) ofarticle XXIX of the state constitution;

  4. Payment of or reimbursement for actual and necessary expenditures for travel andlodging for attendance at a convention, fact-finding mission or trip, or other meeting that the incumbent or elected candidate is permitted to accept or receive in accordance with the provisions of section 3 of article XXIX of the state constitution, if the payment of or reimbursement for such expenditures is made from public funds of a state or local government in the case of an incumbent or elected candidate subject to the provisions of said article or from the funds of any association of public officials or public entities whose membership includes the incumbent's or elected candidate's office or the governmental entity in which such office is held;

  5. Payment of salary from employment, including other government employment, inaddition to that earned from being a member of the general assembly or by reason of service in other public office;

  6. Except as otherwise described in this subsection (4), any other gift or thing of valuean incumbent or elected candidate who has been sworn into public office is permitted to solicit, accept, or receive in accordance with the provisions of section 3 of article XXIX of the state constitution.

  1. Any person who provides an incumbent or elected candidate with any item requiredto be reported by the incumbent or elected candidate pursuant to this section shall, at the time the item is provided, furnish the recipient with a written statement of the dollar value of the item.

  2. Nothing contained in this section shall relieve any person from the disclosure requirements of part 3 of article 6 of this title, relating to the regulation of lobbyists.

  3. Any person who willfully files a false or incomplete report pursuant to this section,who willfully fails to file a report required by this section, who willfully fails to provide the statement of value required by subsection (5) of this section, or who violates any provision of subsection (3.5) of this section is guilty of a misdemeanor and, upon conviction thereof, shall be punished by a fine of not less than fifty dollars nor more than one thousand dollars.

  4. The amount of the gift limit specified in subsection (3) of this section, set at fiftythree dollars as of August 8, 2012, shall be identical to the amount of the gift limit under section 3 of article XXIX of the state constitution, and shall be adjusted for inflation contemporaneously with any adjustment of the constitutional gift limit pursuant to section 3 (6) of article XXIX.

Source: L. 94: Entire section added, p. 1824, § 3, effective January 1, 1995. L. 98: (3)(g) added and (4)(b) amended, p. 952, §§ 5, 6, effective April 27; (1) amended, p. 823, § 34, effective August 5. L. 2006: (1)(c), (3.5), and (3.7) added and (2), IP(3), (3)(a), (3)(b), IP(4), and (7) amended, p. 2063, §§ 1, 2, effective July 1. L. 2010: (3)(f) and (4)(d) amended and (3)(h) added, (SB 10-099), ch. 184, p. 661, § 3, effective August 11. L. 2012: (1)(b)(I), (1)(c), (2), (3), IP(3.5)(a), (3.5)(b), (3.5)(c), (3.7), and (4) amended, (1)(b)(II)(E) and (1)(b)(III) repealed, and (8) added, (HB 12-1070), ch. 167, p. 580, § 1, effective August 8. L. 2017: (1)(b)(I) amended, (HB 17-1297), ch. 364, p. 1906, § 3, effective August 9.

Cross references: For the legislative declaration in the 2010 act amending subsections (3)(f) and (4)(d) and adding subsection (3)(h), see section 1 of chapter 184, Session Laws of Colorado 2010.


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