The Denver Post

2 officers have been added to Boulder County’s Brady list

- By Madeline St. Amour

Two more law enforcemen­t officers have been added since January to the Boulder County District Attorney’s Office list of officers who were found to have violated codes of conduct or been untruthful.

Lily Moody, a former Longmont police officer, and Jamie Chester, a former Erie police detective, have both been added to the DA’s Brady list. The list contains officers with histories of untruthful­ness or misconduct that would need to be disclosed to the defense in a court case should they be called to testify as a witness in a jury trail.

The U.S. Supreme Court ruled that prosecutor­s are required to disclose any evidence that could help the defense argue innocence, including informatio­n about witnesses’ credibilit­y, in the 1963 case Brady v. Maryland. Colorado expanded on the Brady ruling with Criminal Procedure Rule 16, which requires prosecutor­s to be even more forthcomin­g about what might be relevant to the defense.

With that in mind, the Boulder County District Attorney’s Office in 2014 began maintainin­g a central Brady list of local law enforcemen­t officers with histories of untruthful­ness or misconduct that would need to be disclosed to the defense should they be called to testify.

Getting placed on the list can end an officer’s career, as prosecutor­s may be reluctant to use them in a trial and put them in front of a jury. The TimesCall previously published the full list in January, when it had 13 officers.

Erie Police Chief Kim Stewart said the department had initiated an internal affairs investigat­ion into Chester’s ac tions, but did not specify on what they were based. While Stewart said he is not eligible to be rehired, she would not provide more informatio­n because it is a personnel issue.

Longmont Police Deputy Chief Jeff Satur said that Moody is no longer employed by Longmont and that it would be “inappropri­ate” for him to provide additional informatio­n, as it is a personnel issue.

The TimesCall attempted to find contact informatio­n and reach out to both Moody and Chester, but was unsuccessf­ul.

Previously, the TimesCall reported on incidents involving both officers. In 2016, Moody grabbed a handgun from a teenager that turned out to be a BB gun. In 2011, Chester fatally shot a woman’s dog after she called police. She sued both Chester and city and reached a settlement with Erie in 2015.

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