Daily Camera (Boulder)

County Judge Kristy Martinez dies

- By Mitchell Byars mbyars@ prairiemou­ntainmedia.com

Boulder County Judge Kristy Martinez, who also served as the first full-time director of the University of Colorado Boulder’s Korey Wise Innocence Project, died Tuesday morning.

A post from the Boulder County Bar Associatio­n did not list a cause, but indicated Martinez had been receiving cards and emails for several weeks and “spent a lovely afternoon reading every letter and sharing stories with her colleagues.”

“The Boulder County Bar is grieving the loss of Judge Martinez this morning,” the post read.

“We are so grateful for everything she has done for our members and appreciate all she has given to make this community a better place.”

Martinez was appointed as a Boulder County judge by thencolora­do Gov. John Hickenloop­er in 2018, and took the bench in early 2019.

She had just been retained for another term in the November general election.

“I just wanted to be a good lawyer,” Martinez told the Camera in 2018 of her move to the bench. “As I grew profession­ally, that became more of an aspiration­al goal. But I didn’t start out thinking I wanted to become a judge.”

Martinez began her career as a Deputy District Attorney in Adams County after graduating from the University of Denver College of Law and being admitted to the Colorado Bar in 2000.

Prior to being appointed as a judge, Martinez was a law professor at CU Boulder and the director of the law school’s Innocence Project chapter, which had just been renamed after Wise made a $190,000 donation.

“She really was our first paid staff person, so we worked together really closely,” said Ann England, a CU law professor and the founder of the Korey Wise Innocence Project. “She really took our project from being just a volunteer kind of program to a real Innocence Project. We had a huge backlog of letters and applicatio­ns and things like that that were sitting around this tiny little office, and she went thorough it all with some volunteers.”

England said Martinez was “a fierce advocate” for her clients but also a great teacher and mentor, which made her great for her role.

“She really fought for all of her clients, especially people we came to believe were innocent in the project,” England said. “She was also just a very warm, wonderful teacher and mentor to a lot of law students.

“The world is a sadder place without her.”

“Mentor” was also the word Colorado Attorney General Phil Weiser, who was the dean of the law school when Martinez was there, used to describe Martinez.

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