DU on the Bench
Sturm College of Law graduates are shaping the judiciary with a focus on serving the public good

This article appears in the spring issue of the University ofÌęDenver Magazine. Visit theÌęÌęfor bonus content and to read this and other articles in their original format.
Whether theyâre presiding over a municipal court in a small mountain town or serving on the federal bench in Denver, alumni are leaving their mark on the judiciary all across Colorado. They can be found in every type of court, managing dockets, instructing juries, listening to arguments and ruling with fairness and impartialityâin other words, ensuring that justice is served. Ìę
Below, youâll meet DU judges presiding over four different courts. While they come from varied backgrounds and career paths, they share judicial expertise and skill, of course, but also a genuine passion for the law and a profound dedication to public service.Ìę
That ethic grows out of the law schoolâs long tradition not just of meeting each studentâs educational goals but also of training legal experts who make a positive difference in the courtrooms and communities they serve.
The making of a judgeÌę Ìę
To retired Denver County Court Judge Alfred Harrell (JD â71), an active member of the collegeâs Alumni Council and longtime legal advocate in Colorado, the bench is the âfront lineâ of public serviceâwhere effectiveness can be measured by how a judge handles the face-to-face interactions with all those who enter the courtroom.Ìę
When Harrell was first appointed to Denver County Court, his mentor, Judge John Kane (JD â60) of the U.S. District Court for the District of Colorado, told him, âWe need our best and our brightest on [this court] because thatâs where most people meet the judicial system. If they meet a judge who isnât attentive and who doesnât care about their situation and doesnât want to help them, the whole system collapses. I want you to be mindful of that, and I want you to take care of these people.â
In his 30 years as a judge, Harrell never forgot those words. âPeople would come up to me, months or years later, and say, âYou sentenced my sonâ or âYou sentenced me,â and my retort is always, âDid I treat you fairly? Were you treated fairly?â The answer has always been, âYes,ââ he says. âThat to me has made the whole journey worth it. Iâve been able to reach people, have an impact on them, maintain their dignity, kept them intact, encourage them.â
Ian Farrell, an associate professor at the Sturm College of Law, says the schoolâs first-year courses on constitutional law and criminal law are âquite well-gearedâ toward the more technical skills that judges need. âWhat students are primarily doing is reading cases. Theyâre reading, judging, analyzing, critiquing, being taught to recognize potential arguments on both sidesâa lot of these skills are part of judicial decision making,â he says.
In addition, Farrell says, a judge needsâat the risk of stating the obviousâsound judgment. âYou have to be able to ultimately make good decisions. So, you need to have a strong sense of the role of a judge, to what extent does your sense of morality or justice inform your interpretation and application of the law. In a lot of cases, there is a clear, correct answer, but in some cases, there is not.âÌę
Another important trait, says Nancy Leong, associate dean for faculty scholarship and director of the Constitutional Rights and Remedies Program, is the ability to understand the minute details of a particular dispute and the big picture of how the law has evolved over decades and sometimes centuries. âMany lawyers, and Iâm going to say some judges as well, have a hard time doing both of these things at once,â she says.Ìę
Todayâs judges also need an understanding of technology and a willingness to keep up with advancements that may play a role in cases, Leong says. âThey donât have to be on the cutting edge, but you wouldnât want, for example, a judge deciding a case about smartphones who doesnât even know how to use their own smartphone. Itâs important that judges have experiences that are connected to the experiences that non-lawyers and non-judges have.â
Curiously and perhaps counterintuitively, Harrell says most effective judges he knows did not set out to become a judge. âIâm always surprised when someone says, âIâve always wanted to be a judge.â I think, âWhat about being a lawyer?â If you are the best lawyer you can possibly be, there will come a time when someone says something to you or something will happen, and youâll know [the bench] is the direction you should move in. And then youâll do the things you need to do to get there, but itâs not really a decision you madeâitâs your community, your legal community, making it for you.â
Colorado Supreme Court
Carlos Samour Jr. (JD â90)
Inside the chambers of Colorado Supreme Court Justice Carlos Samour Jr., a framed movie poster of Chamberlain Haller, the fictional judge from âMy Cousin Vinny,â offers this quote: âThat is a lucid, intelligent, well-thought-out objection. OVERRULED.âÌę
Clearly, Samourâan accomplished judge, litigator and self-described âpeople personââbrings a sense of humor to his very serious day job.Ìę
Samour joined the high court in 2018, having served as an 18th Judicial District judge for 11 years, including as chief judge from 2014â2018. In 2015, he gained national attention when he presided over the Aurora theater shooting proceedings, one of the largest trials in Colorado history.Ìę
Born in El Salvador, Samour learned about the law from his father, an attorney and former judge. He helped out in his dadâs office and was fascinated by the stories he heard clients tell. When he was old enough, he attended his first criminal trial and was âhooked.â
Things took a turn when his father refused a request from a high-ranking military official to bend the law. One night, when Samour was in elementary school, their house was riddled with bullets. Then, when he was 13, his father received a death threat and, without warning to Samour and his 11 siblings, the family packed up their van and fled, going into hiding until they could get visas to enter the U.S. A week later, they embarked on the five-day trip to Denver, where relatives lived.
Samourâs father, then 47, never worked as a lawyer again and eventually took a job as a school bus driver. âThat [experience] and what my dad had to sacrifice taught me the importance of the rule of law, and that is something that has stayed with me,â he says.Ìę
The family settled in Littleton, where Samour attended Columbine High School. âEverything was different. We were wearing the wrong clothes, we couldnât understand anything. I remember thinking, Iâm never going to be able to speak English.â But he worked hard and, by the time he was a senior, he was on the speech team and was selected to address the crowd at graduation.
The speech team coach had taken him under her wing, spending extra time to help him with pronunciation. That kind of support buoyed Samour throughout his academic career.
After he received his undergraduate degree in psychology from the University of Colorado Denver, a family friend from church put him in touch with the financial services office at DU, which helped him obtain the financing he needed to attend law school. Later, an assistant to Edward Pringleâa former Colorado Supreme Court chief justice who taught one of Samourâs first-year coursesâhelped him land a research assistant position. That, in turn, led to a federal clerkship with Judge Robert McWilliams Jr. (JD â38) on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 10th Circuit.
After his clerkship, another DU connectionâa lawyer who volunteered to grade papers in Pringleâs classâhelped Samour secure a position at Holland & Hart, Denverâs largest firm. It was a great opportunity, but his dream was to work in the public sector, so he left five years later to join the Denver District Attorneyâs Office, where he prosecuted cases for a decade.
In the DAâs office, Samour says, he learned âhow to be comfortableâ in the courtroomâand, ultimately, how to be a judge. âI appeared in front of so many great judges, and I learned different things from each of them. Thatâs where I learned how to run a docket, how to handle tough hearings, how to keep control of the courtroom without yelling, how to set expectations, all those kinds of things.â
He also learned the âart of disagreement,â becoming friends with colleagues and even opposing counselâa skill he relies on as one of seven justices on Coloradoâs Supreme Court, two of whom are also Denver Law alumni: Chief Justice Brian Boatright (JD â88) and Justice Maria Berkenkotter (JD â87).
On cases ranging from water rights and election code disputes to reviews of lower court decisions and cases of first impression, he says, the justices âcome together and try to make the best decisions we can as a group. Sometimes we canât agree, and thatâs OK. At the end of the day, we respect each other and genuinely care about each other. Having different perspectives is what makes the court as good as it is.â
Samour credits much of his success to his parents, who encouraged him to dream big, and to all the people who mentored and helped him along the way. When asked what traits have served him well, he points to his ability to get along with people, his work ethic, his down-to-earth nature and his willingness to take risks in his career.Ìę
When he agreed to preside over the Aurora theater trial, he says, âPeople told me, it could blow up in my face, it could ruin my career. It was super scary, but when I feel anxious about something, I dare myself to get past it. Itâs kind of like being on a roller coaster. When youâre going up, you feel like you might die, but as soon as youâre done, you want to get back on again. I like that feeling.â
U.S. District Court, District of Colorado
Charlotte Sweeney (JD â95)
For years, Charlotte Sweeney had no interest in being a judge. Then came the 2016 election.
At the time, Sweeney, who grew up south of DU in the suburb of Littleton, had built a successful legal career, happily leading her own Denver-based law firm focused on employment discrimination and pay disparity cases.Ìę
That interest, she says, grew out of a class on the subject with Sturm College of Law professor Roberto Corrada. âIt just fit where I was and what I believed and where I wanted to go,â she recalls. âI knew how important employment isâbesides family, itâs generally the second most important thing in most peopleâs lives.âÌę
But after the election, Sweeney recalls, she grew troubled by legal developments. âI felt that, rather than sit and complain about what was going on, if I had more to give, Iâd better step up. It dawned on me that [being a judge] might be a good next step.â
Six years later, in the summer of 2022, Sweeney became the first openly gay federal judge in Colorado history, something she says wouldnât have been possible until recently.Ìę
When Joe Biden became president, the White House sent out a memo that was âa call to action,â Sweeney says, for people to serve on the federal bench. âLo and behold,â she adds, âfor the first time ever, they were looking for diverse candidates,â including people with civil rights and employment backgrounds.Ìę
âIt was just one of those slap-you-in-the-face moments, and I said, âOK, Iâll apply, weâll see.â I wasnât sure I believed itâand kind of felt that way throughout the processâbut here I am,â she says.
After Sweeney threw her hat in the ring, she was one of a handful of candidates chosen to be interviewed by Colorado Sens. Michael Bennet and John Hickenlooper. They narrowed the pool to three candidates, who went on to interview with the White House Counsel Office in Washington, D.C.Ìę Ìę
The nomination processâand the ensuing confirmation hearing with the Senate Judicial Committeeâwas âsurreal,â Sweeney says. âIt just honestly didnât seem real.â
When she got the call, she says, âIt was terribly exciting. Iâm extremely honored to be the first member of the LGBT community here in Colorado on the federal court. Itâs always wonderful to be the first, but it is more important that I am not the last.âÌę
Sweeney began her term last August and now oversees a wide-ranging docket that includes everything from a property case involving national forests to one involving a ban on conversion therapy for LGBT youth. âItâs been kind of a trial-by-fire, drink-from-the spigot kind of thing,â Sweeney says. âBut itâs been fun learning and adjusting to the different areas of law.â
What has surprised her most is the sheer volume of cases on the docket. Off the bat, she was assigned about 250 cases, with almost as many pending motions. The average time to trial in this court is about 33 months. âThatâs not giving proper access to justice,â she says. âMy single focus here is moving cases through efficiently and productively, while making sure the parties feel heard.â
Sweeney also takes pride and pleasure in helping to diversify the courts. âAs a law student who was basically in the closet, I didnât have any role models. Monumental changes have occurred just by people being out and being accepted,â she says. âIâm delighted for law students now who have many more doors open to them. I mean, weâre not there yet, but itâs nice that young lawyers are walking into a different set of circumstances than we were.âÌę
Having that representation is also important for litigants. âIf you canât be in front of a judge who looks like you, who is like you, you just feel left out of the system,â Sweeney says. âAs we diversify the courts, the public will have a greater sense of confidence in us and the decisions we make.â
18th Judicial District, Douglas County
Theresa Slade (JD â97)
For Judge Theresa Slade, presiding over a courtroom can be a sobering experience. After all, judges make decisions that profoundly affect peopleâs lives. But Slade never forgets the role she also plays in connecting with people, guiding them through legal proceedings and educating the community about how the law works. Ìę
Slade, a Colorado native, learned about the legal profession by watching Court TV and shows like âL.A. Law.â For a while, she wanted to be on TV herself, perhaps as a law correspondent. But once in law school, Slade discovered a love for the nuts and bolts of civil procedure. âI just loved the problem-solvingâall the steps and getting through it. If one piece isnât in place, the rest falls. That made sense to me,â she says.Ìę
In her last year at the Sturm College of Law, she interned for the Denver District Attorneyâs Office, and everything clicked. âThe cases I worked on were mostly traffic violations, but I thought it was the coolest thing in the world. I thought, this place is magical. The courtroom is magical. This is where Iâm meant to be,â Slade says.
She felt she could make a difference by treating everyoneâand every situationâfairly. âSpeeding tickets, getting a ticket for driving without a license, these are things that matter to people,â she says. âIf someone is driving without a license, I tend to think that itâs better for everyone if they get their license, rather than go to jail and then be resuspended.â Ìę
After graduation, Slade briefly worked for a law firm doing transactional work, but she missed interacting with people. She left to start her own criminal defense practice and get âback into the courtroom.â Eventually, a judge asked if she was interested in becoming a guardian ad litem, a court-appointed representative who serves individualsâin this case, childrenâwho lack the capacity or competency to act in their own interests. âI was like, âOh, I can represent kids?â That sounded pretty great,â she recalls.Ìę
She took on that challenge and added juvenile defense to her practice. Working with kids, she says, was not easy. âKids in tough situations are good at building up walls. They push you away, refuse to answer questions, tell you youâre dumb. But theyâre just humansâand Iâm persistent. You just have to give them the time and space they need.â
As a judge, she welcomes kids into her courtroom. âKids didnât used to come to court. People thought they didnât need to be involved in their parentsâ divorce or whatever the case may be,â she says. âBut I remember thinking, if I were 7 and my parents were getting divorced, I would sure want someone to know how I felt about it.â Ìę Ìę
That potential for making a difference drew Slade to the bench. âI saw these great judges doing things that made a huge difference to my clients. I wanted to do that.â She first became a magistrate and then was appointed to the bench in 2012. Sheâs been retained ever since. Ìę
Being up for retention is one of the most stressful parts of her job, Slade says. âPeople are often voting only for a specific issue or person theyâre passionate about, and the rest they just âeeny-meeny-miny-moeâ it. Or they donât think their vote matters, and so they donât vote at all.â Ìę
Slade takes every opportunity to talk about what she does and explain how things work, noting that judges have more freedom to do so now than they once did.
âWhen I started out, I was told to build a wall, protect myself, be careful who I talk to. No one in my social circles even knew what I did,â she says. But now, Slade is encouraged to connect with the community and help educate people about what she does and the judicial system. She gives presentations at high schools, attends Constitution Day events and participates in mock trials.Ìę
âWhen you take the bar and take the oath to uphold the Constitution, you take on an obligation to help people have faith in the system and to teach them about it,â Slade says. âWhether youâre a public service attorney, a civil litigator, a legislator or a judge, I think you are obligated to teach people around you about what you do, why you do it and why itâs important.â
Vail Municipal Court
Cyrus âBuckâ Allen III (JD â74)
âYouâre always on display,â says Judge Cyrus G. Allen III, known as Buck, of being the one-and-only judge in the town of Vail. Despite its status as a world-class ski destination, Vail is a close-knit community, and Allen, who is in his 44th year on the bench, is not only recognized everywhere he goes but is seen as a steward of the communityâs values. Ìę
He recalls one Sunday morning early in his career when he went into town to buy newspapers. âThere was absolutely no one around. I went to the newspaper rack, put in 50 cents, pulled out a paper, closed the door, put in another 50 cents, took out another paper, and went on my way,â he says. âSix months later, somebody came up to me and said, âYou know, I was cleaning the shop up above where the rack is, and I watched you buy two separate papers. Most people put in 50 cents and take two or three papers and walk away.âÌę
âI had never even thought about doing something like that, but it was like, gee, even when you think thereâs nobody looking, you have to always do whatâs right and set a good example.â
As a municipal court judge, Allen takes on that responsibility gladly. He grew up in Denver, but the avid skier has had an affinity for Vail since he was a kid. He attended Dartmouth College for his undergraduate studies, but returned to Colorado for law school, partially, he says, because the mountains beckoned. Ìę
After law school, Allen served as a deputy district attorney in the Georgetown office of the 5th Judicial District, which includes Eagle County. When a judge he had worked with needed to take a leave of absence, Allen was appointed as the temporary judgeâand he never looked back. âAt some point, I realized Iâm a better listener than talker, so [the judiciary] was the direction I thought I should go in,â he says.Ìę
Serving as the judge in Vail is a part-time job, allowing Allen to also preside as a municipal judge in neighboring Avon and Breckenridge. His docketâmade up largely of relatively minor incidents related to traffic, shoplifting, deceptive use of ski facilities, and late-night, alcohol-related âgood ideasââis not, in general, as full as those in other jurisdictions. This allows him to connect with the community more personally.
âI can spend more time with each individual that comes through the court, and I think thatâs been valuable,â he says. âWhat Iâve found is, if you listen to what people have to say very carefully, and you incorporate what theyâve told you in your response, that makes a big impression on them. Oftentimes, even when Iâm giving someone a fine or penalty, they thank me. They feel like they were heard.â Ìę
Most of those people are âself-correcting,â Allen says. âBy the time they come to court, theyâve realized what they have done wrong and have made efforts to fix it, which allows me more flexibility in dealing with them.â For example, he has been known to hand out penalties that require, say, donations to a local food bank or, for juveniles, joining the family dinner three times a week.
Allen also finds that using humor in the courtroom goes a long way. He allows people to tell their stories of what happened and why. Many of these tales are humorous and recounted with vigorous expression. Allen may respond with stories from his own life, some of them self-deprecating, to make his points.Ìę
âPeople are nervous. They donât know what the judge is going to be like, and it puts them at ease a bit if you can make a little fun of yourself. They realize, âOh, maybe heâs human after all.ââÌę