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This edition (labeled "Progress Edition" rather than v.6, no. 5)  was a special 66-page edition of this weekly newspaper, which normally only ran to 16 pages.


Page 4b includes portrait of James J. Hill. He is discussed further in article on page 9. Page 5 article "Seattle A Safe Investment" discus
Photo: Hampton, Edgar L | Public domain | Wikimedia Commons

Colorado Court E‑File System Adds Anti‑ICE Use Certification for Attorneys

Colorado attorneys say the state’s court e‑filing system now forces them to certify, under penalty of perjury, that they will not use nonpublic personal identifying information from the court database to investigate for, cooperate with, or assist federal immigration enforcement, except when required by law or court order. The change stems from Colorado’s 2025 Protect Civil Rights Immigration Status Act, which restricts collection and disclosure of immigration‑status‑related information in health care, education and government settings, and was rolled out March 30 after an earlier implementation was paused in September for review. Screenshots posted by Covenant Law founder Ian Speir show a click‑through agreement that must be accepted to log into the e‑filing system, leading him and other lawyers on X to argue the state is effectively conscripting private attorneys into its sanctuary‑style policies and interfering with cooperation with DHS and ICE. The Judicial Department’s notice says most case information remains public and that the requirement only governs access to nonpublic personal data, adding that those who decline must complete an additional brief certification, but critics online are already calling the move "indefensible" and predicting constitutional challenges on federal supremacy and attorney‑autonomy grounds.

Immigration & Demographic Change State Courts and Federal Immigration Enforcement

📌 Key Facts

  • As of March 30, Colorado’s Judicial Department has deployed an updated certification process tied to its court e‑file system to comply with the 2025 Protect Civil Rights Immigration Status Act.
  • The on‑screen agreement requires lawyers, under penalty of perjury, to promise not to use nonpublic personal identifying information from the court database to assist federal immigration enforcement, including under 8 U.S.C. §§ 1325 and 1326, unless compelled by law or court order.
  • Attorneys who click "decline" are told they must complete a separate brief certification to proceed, while critics such as Ian Speir and Matt Barber argue the requirement unlawfully co‑opts private lawyers into state anti‑ICE policies.

📊 Relevant Data

As of 2024, Colorado has 628,683 foreign-born residents, comprising 10.6% of the state's population, with 52.8% originating from Latin America, 22.7% from Asia, 13.4% from Europe, and 8.1% from Africa.

Colorado - State Demographics Data | migrationpolicy.org — Migration Policy Institute

Between July 1, 2024, and June 30, 2025, Colorado experienced a net gain of 15,356 international migrants, contributing to a 0.4% overall population growth despite net domestic out-migration.

Colorado's State Demography Office Summarizes the U.S. Census Data Released Today — Colorado Department of Local Affairs

Colorado's 2025 Protect Civil Rights Immigration Status Act and subsequent 2026 legislative bills, such as those expanding vaccine access and restricting ICE cooperation, were enacted to protect immigrant communities from federal enforcement policies.

Colorado Legislators & Coalition Unveil 2026 Legislative Agenda to Protect Immigrant Communities & Build Trust for All — Colorado Immigrant Rights Coalition

Nationally, as of February 7, 2026, 73.6% of individuals held in ICE detention (50,259 out of 68,289) have no criminal conviction, representing a significant overrepresentation of non-criminal detainees.

TRAC: Immigration Detention Quick Facts — Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse (TRAC)

In 2025, ICE made over 3,500 arrests in Colorado, a quadrupling from the previous year, with a decreasing percentage of arrestees having criminal records.

ICE arrested more than 3,500 people in Colorado in 2025 — The Colorado Sun

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