Nathan B. Coats
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Nathan B. Coats is an American lawyer and jurist who served as the 46th chief justice of the Colorado Supreme Court from 2018 to 2020. Coats had been appointed to the court in 2000, by Governor Bill Owens and served until his retirement in 2020. His views while serving on the court were considered conservative.


Early life

Nathan B. Coats received an undergraduate degree from the University of Colorado in 1971, and later received a
juris doctor The Juris Doctor (J.D. or JD), also known as Doctor of Jurisprudence (J.D., JD, D.Jur., or DJur), is a graduate-entry professional degree in law and one of several Doctor of Law degrees. The J.D. is the standard degree obtained to practice law ...
from the university in 1977. He was admitted to the
Colorado Bar Association The Colorado State Bar Association (CBA), founded in 1897, is a voluntary bar association for the state of Colorado. There are 26 local bars within the organization. The CBA works for the common interests of attorneys and judges and is a non-prof ...
in 1977.


Career


Military Service

Coats served in the United States Army before entering law school.


Law

Coats worked at a private practice in
Longmont, Colorado The City of Longmont is a home rule municipality located in Boulder and Weld counties, Colorado, United States. Longmont is located northeast of the county seat of Boulder and north-northwest of the Colorado State Capitol in Denver. Longmont ...
, from 1977 to 1978. He joined the Colorado Attorney General's in 1978 and served in the office's appellate unit until 1986. While in that role he worked for Mary Mullarkey, who later became Colorado's chief justice. From 1986 to 2000, he served as a chief appellate deputy district attorney in Denver, Colorado. During Coats's career, he appeared before the Colorado Courts of Appeals and Colorado Supreme Court over 150 times. A man murdered a fourteen-year-old girl and confessed to her murder to police in 1983, after waiving his right to remain silent. However, his confession was ruled invalid after his defense attorneys argued that he was mentally ill. Coats argued for Colorado at the Colorado Supreme Court and won which allowed the confession to be admitted as evidence. Coats also argued
Colorado v. Connelly ''Colorado v. Connelly'', 479 U.S. 157 (1986), was a U.S. Supreme Court case that was initiated by Francis Connelly, who insisted that his schizophrenic episode rendered him incompetent, nullifying his waiver of his Miranda rights. Prior histor ...
in the
Supreme Court of the United States The Supreme Court of the United States (SCOTUS) is the highest court in the federal judiciary of the United States. It has ultimate appellate jurisdiction over all U.S. federal court cases, and over state court cases that involve a point o ...
.


Colorado Supreme Court

Governor Bill Owens selected Coats on April 24, 2000, to replace
Gregory K. Scott Gregory Kellam Scott (July 30, 1948 – March 31, 2021) was an associate justice of the Colorado Supreme Court from 1993 to 2000. Scott received his J.D. from Indiana University. He moved to Denver, Colorado, in 1977 to take a position with the ...
on the Colorado Supreme Court, becoming Owens' twentieth judicial nomination, after Scott's resignation. He was retained in the 2002 and 2012 elections. He was considered "a fairly consistent conservative vote on the court" by Richard Collins, a professor from the University of Colorado Boulder. In 2006, the court ruled five to two to invalidate the Defend Colorado Now proposition as it was not a single-subject initiative, but Coats dissented stating that court took too much latitude with the single-subject requirement. The court ruled four to three in 2019, that a police search started as a result of a dog trained to detect marijuana was unconstitutional as marijuana was legal in Colorado, but Coats dissented in the decision. Coats became the 46th chief justice of the supreme court on June 30, 2018, following the retirement of Chief Justice
Nancy E. Rice Nancy E. Rice (born June 2, 1950) is the former Chief Justice of the Colorado Supreme Court. Life and education Rice was born on June 2, 1950 in Boulder, Colorado, and grew up in Colorado and Cheyenne, Wyoming. She received her Bachelor of Art ...
who had served as chief justice since 2013. Coats retired once he reached the age of seventy-two which was the mandatory retirement age for judges and Justice
Brian Boatright Brian Boatright (born June 16, 1962) is an American lawyer and judge, who is the chief justice of the Colorado Supreme Court. He previously served as a judge on the Colorado District Court from 1999 to 2011. Education and early career Boatright ...
was selected to succeed him as chief justice. At the time of his retirement he was the last person appointed to the court by a Republican. He left the court on January 1, 2020, and Governor Jared Polis, in his first appointment to the supreme court, appointed
Maria Berkenkotter Maria Encarnacion Berkenkotter (born 1962 or 1963) is an American lawyer who has served an associate justice of the Colorado Supreme Court since 2021. Education Berkenkotter received a Bachelor of Arts from Western Michigan University in 198 ...
to succeed him.


Censure

Former Chief Justice Coats agreed on May 3, 2023 to a public censure by th
Colorado Commission on Judicial Discipline
The censure agreement followed an investigation of Coats' role in failing to supervise the behavior of the Office of State Courts Administrator. According to the entity that conducted the investigation, Coats "displayed a lack of attention to the dysfunctional and toxic operations of the State Court Administrator’s Office and made no effort to intervene." The events that led to Coats' censure included the improper award of a contract to a former chief of staff of the State Court Administrator's Office and sexual harassment by employees and judges of the Colorado state judiciary. The censure request is the first in Colorado history that would apply to a member of the state's highest court or to a chief justice of that court. A special panel of the Colorado Supreme Court, composed of judges of the Colorado Court of Appeals, officially censured Coats on August 7, 2023.


Electoral history


References


External links


2023 censure documentJustice Nathan B. Coats
, - {{DEFAULTSORT:Coats, Nathan B. 21st-century American judges 1949 births Chief Justices of the Colorado Supreme Court Justices of the Colorado Supreme Court Living people University of Colorado alumni