DISTRICT COURT, PITKIN COUNTY, COLORADO
Pitkin County Courthouse 
      
506 East Main Street, Suite 
      300
Aspen, Colorado 81611
   
      
Plaintiff: 
MARILYN MARKS
v. 
Defendant: 
KATHRYN KOCH
 
Attorney for 
      Plaintiff:
Robert A. McGuire 
      
Robert A. McGuire, Attorney At Law, 
      LLC
1624 Market Street, Suite 202 
      
Denver, Colorado 80202
   
      
COURT USE ONLY
Case Number: 2009CV294 
      
Phone Number:
FAX Number: 
E-mail: 
Atty. Reg. #: 
303-734-7175 Div.: 3 Ctrm.: 
      
303-734-7166 
ram@lawram.com
37134
 
MEMORANDUM OF MARILYN MARKS, PLAINTIFF, 
          
       IN RESPONSE TO DEFENDANT’S MOTION TO 
      DISMISS
This memorandum is submitted on behalf of the 
      Plaintiff, Marilyn Marks, by and 
      through
her undersigned counsel, to review the facts and 
      law establishing that an order granting 
      dismissal
for failure to state a claim or a judgment on the 
      pleadings would be improper and that 
      the
Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss should therefore be denied.
       
      
   
      
The public records at issue in this case are 2,544 
      electronic files maintained on a
computer disk by the Defendant (the “TIFF files”). 
      Each TIFF file is a scanned copy of a 
      single
ballot cast in the May 5, 2009, Aspen municipal 
      election. (V. Compl. ¶ 15.) The TIFF files 
      were
created and saved to disk as part of the vote 
      tabulation process performed by the Defendant, 
      her
staff and City contractor, TrueBallot, Inc., on 
      election night. (Id. ¶¶ 12-15, 25, 
      32-33.)
Voted portions of all of the TIFF files were 
      completely or partially shown to the 
      general
public by the Defendant and her staff on election 
      night using projector screens. (Id. ¶¶ 
      26-28.)
Many of the projected TIFF files were 
      simultaneously broadcast on live television, (Id. ¶ 29), 
      and
a recording of this election night broadcast 
      remains available for public download over 
      the
Internet, (Id. ¶ 30). Hundreds of the TIFF files 
      were also shown separately to 
      individual
members of the public who were present at a 
      post-election audit conducted by the Defendant 
      and
her staff on May 7, 2009. (Id. ¶ 22.) For every 
      ballot counted on election night, the 
      Defendant
has also released to the public an individual “data 
      string” that identifies the vote content 
      and
rankings that the counting software extracted from 
      the TIFF file for that individual ballot. (Id. 
      ¶¶
16-18.)
On June 1, 2009, Marilyn Marks, the Plaintiff, 
      submitted a request to Aspen City 
Clerk
Kathryn Koch, the Defendant, seeking to inspect the 
      TIFF files as public records under the
Colorado Open Records Act (“CORA”), §§ 24-72-100.1 
      to -502., C.R.S. (V. Compl. ¶ 39.) 
The Defendant denied the Plaintiff’s right to 
      inspect the TIFF files on grounds that 
      a
ballot preservation law, § 31-10-616(1), C.R.S., 
      and the constitutional requirement of secrecy 
      in
voting, Colo. Const. art. VII, § 8, each prohibited 
      public inspection of TIFF files. (V. 
      Compl.
¶¶ 41-48.) When the Plaintiff offered to limit her 
      inspection to exclude any TIFF files that 
      the
Defendant reasonably considered to have identifying 
      marks that could compromise secrecy in
voting, the Defendant continued to refuse the 
      Plaintiff’s right of inspection, citing again 
      the
ballot preservation statute. (Id. ¶¶ 
      55-56.)
On August 27, 2009, the Plaintiff gave the 
      Defendant notice of the Plaintiff’s intention to 
      
apply to this Court under Section 24-72-204(5), 
      C.R.S., for relief in the form of an 
      order
directing the Defendant to show cause why the 
      Defendant should not permit the 
      Plaintiff’s
inspection of the TIFF files and for injunctive relief. (V. Compl. ¶ 57.)
        
          
    
      
On October 8, 2009, the Plaintiff filed her 
      Verified Complaint and Application for 
      Order
Directing Custodian to Show Cause (the “Verified Complaint”).
       
      
On October 16, 2009, the Court conducted a Status 
      Conference, at which the Court
granted the Plaintiff’s requests for an order to 
      show cause, for an order scheduling a hearing 
      on
the order to show cause, and for a preliminary 
      injunction protecting the TIFF files 
      from
destruction until the conclusion of this action. 
      (Tr. Status Conf. at 4-5, 11.) At the 
      Defendant’s
request, the preliminary injunction was extended to 
      protect the paper ballots cast in the 
      May
election as well as the TIFF files. (Id. at 4-5.) 
      Also at the Status Conference, the 
      Defendant
informed the Court of her intention to file a 
      motion to dismiss or a motion for 
      summary
judgment, (Id. at 6), and the Court accordingly set 
      deadlines for filings related to the 
      Defendant’s
proposed motion, (Id. at 14).
    
      
On November 6, 2009, the Defendant filed her Motion 
      to Dismiss. In response, the
Plaintiff now files this Memorandum of Marilyn 
      Marks, Plaintiff, in Response to 
      Defendant’s
Motion to Dismiss.
   
      
Although the Defendant has styled her Motion to 
      Dismiss as a C.R.C.P. 12(b)(5) motion
to dismiss for failure to state a claim upon which 
      relief can be granted, her Memorandum 
      in
Support of Motion to Dismiss identifies no formal 
      insufficiency in the Verified 
      Complaint.
Instead, the Defendant’s argument for dismissal is 
      based entirely on the assertion of 
      affirmative
defenses. The Court should deny the Defendant’s 
      Motion to Dismiss because the Verified
Complaint states a formally sufficient claim under 
      CORA and because none of the 
      Defendant’s
asserted defenses entitle the Defendant either to 
      dismissal for failure to state a claim or 
      to
judgment on the pleadings.
   
      
I. This Court should not dismiss the Verified 
      Complaint under C.R.C.P. 12(b)(5)
because the Verified Complaint is formally 
      sufficient to state a claim upon which
relief can be granted.
    
      
In her Motion to Dismiss and Memorandum in Support 
      of Motion to Dismiss, the
Defendant has identified no inadequacy in the 
      Verified Complaint that renders the 
      Plaintiff’s
pleadings formally insufficient to entitle the 
      Plaintiff to relief under Section 24-72-204(5), 
      C.R.S.
On the contrary, the Verified Complaint pleads a 
      set of material facts that is formally 
      sufficient
to entitle the Plaintiff to her requested relief. 
      For these reasons, dismissal of the 
      Verified
Complaint for failure to state a claim upon which 
      relief can be granted under C.R.C.P. 
      12(b)(5)
would be improper and should not be granted.
        
      
A. Standard of review for failure to state a claim 
      under C.R.C.P. 12(b)(5).
The purpose of a motion under C.R.C.P. 12(b)(5) is 
      to test the formal sufficiency of the
complaint. See Dorman v. Petrol Aspen, Inc., 914 
      P.2d 909 (Colo. 1996). In evaluating a
motion to dismiss under C.R.C.P. 12(b)(5), a trial 
      court may consider only those matters stated 
      in
the complaint, must accept all averments of 
      material fact as true and must view the allegations 
      in
the light most favorable to the plaintiff. See Town 
      of Alma v. AZCO Constr., Inc., 10 P.3d 1256 
      
(Colo. 2000). A complaint is sufficient to 
      withstand a motion to dismiss if the plaintiff states 
      a
claim that would entitle the plaintiff to relief. 
      See Shapiro & Meinhold v. Zartman, 823 P.2d 120 
      
(Colo. 1992). 
B. The Verified Complaint is formally sufficient 
      under C.R.C.P. 12(b)(5).
The averments of material fact made in the Verified 
      Complaint, when accepted as true
and viewed in the light most favorable to the 
      Plaintiff as required by Town of Alma, 10 P.3d 
      at
1256, are sufficient to entitle the Plaintiff to 
      relief under Section 24-72-204(5), C.R.S. Section 
      
24-72-204(5), C.R.S., provides in pertinent 
      part:
[A]ny person denied the right to inspect any record covered by [CORA] may
apply to the district court…for an order directing the custodian of such record to
show cause why the custodian should not permit the inspection of such record;
except that, at least three business days prior to filing an application with the
district court, the person who has been denied the right to inspect the record shall
file a written notice with the custodian…informing said custodian that the person
intends to file an application with the district court. Unless the court finds that the
denial of the right of inspection was proper, it shall order the custodian to permit
such inspection….
The averments made by the Plaintiff in the Verified 
      Complaint track the language of
Section 24-72-204(5), C.R.S., insofar as they 
      include, among other material facts, the 
      following:
a. The Plaintiff is a person entitled to inspect 
      public records under CORA. (V. Compl. 
¶¶ 3, 70.)
b. The TIFF files are public records covered by 
      CORA. (Id. ¶¶ 13-15, 25, 33, 71.) 
c. The Defendant is the custodian of the TIFF 
      files. (Id. ¶¶ 6, 32-33, 72.)
d. The Plaintiff requested to inspect the TIFF 
      files. (Id. ¶¶ 39, 55.) 
e. The Defendant denied the Plaintiff’s request. 
      (Id. ¶¶ 41-48, 56, 58.)
f. The Plaintiff gave the Defendant at least three 
      business days notice before filing the
Verified Complaint. (Id. ¶¶ 57, 
      75.)
Because these averments match the elements of 
      Section 24-72-204(5), C.R.S., the
Verified Complaint states a claim that entitles the 
      Plaintiff to relief as required under Shapiro 
      &
Meinhold, 823 P.2d at 120, and the Verified 
      Complaint is therefore formally sufficient 
      to
withstand a C.R.C.P. 12(b)(5) motion to dismiss. 
      
C. Affirmative defenses cannot 
      support a dismissal under C.R.C.P. 12(b)(5).
The Defendant has nowhere 
      identified a single necessary allegation that is absent from
the averments set out in the 
      Verified Complaint. Instead, the Defendant argues for dismissal on
the basis of “two separate 
      justifications” that she asserts for refusing to allow inspection of 
      the
TIFF files. (Def.’s Mem. Supp. 
      Mot. Dismiss 6.) Her first asserted justification is the claim that 
allowing inspection of the TIFF 
      files would violate the constitutional requirement of secrecy in
voting, Colo. Const. art VII, § 
      8, (Id. at 7-8), and “would be contrary to [a] state statute” under
Section 24-72-204(1)(a), 
      C.R.S., (Id. at 6). Her second asserted justification is the “defense”
permitted by Sections 
      24-72-204(6)(a) and 24-72-204(6)(b), C.R.S., that disclosure of the 
      TIFF
files “would do substantial 
      injury to the public interest.” (Id.)
These justifications are each 
      in the nature of affirmative defenses. See State v. Nieto, 993
P.2d 493, 507 (Colo. 2000) (“an 
      affirmative defense is a legal argument that a defendant, who is
capable of being sued, may 
      assert to require the dismissal of a claim or to prevail at trial”).
Affirmative defenses cannot 
      constitute grounds for a C.R.C.P. 12(b)(5) motion to dismiss for
failure to state a claim. See 
      Denver Parents Ass'n v. Denver Bd. of Educ., 10 P.3d 662 (Colo.
App. 2000). Furthermore, a 
      plaintiff does not need to anticipate and negate affirmative defenses
in the complaint in order to 
      survive a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim. See Davis v.
Bonebrake, 135 Colo. 506 
      (1957), 313 P.2d 982 (Colo. 1957). Where, as here, a motion to
dismiss for failure to state a 
      claim is based on an affirmative defense, the motion more accurately 
constitutes a motion for 
      judgment on the pleadings under C.R.C.P. 12(c). See Shaw v. City of
Colorado 
Springs, 683 P.2d 385 (Colo. App., 1984); Lin Ron, Inc. v. Mann's World of Arts 
&
Crafts, 
Inc., 624 P.2d 1343 (Colo. App., 1981).
Because 
the Defendant’s justifications for refusing to allow inspection of the TIFF 
files
constitute affirmative defenses that do not bear on the 
formal sufficiency of the Verified
Complaint 
under C.R.C.P. 12(b)(5) and because the Verified Complaint is in fact 
formally
sufficient to entitle the Plaintiff to relief under Section 
24-72-204(5), C.R.S., dismissal of the
Verified 
Complaint under C.R.C.P. 12(b)(5) would be improper, and the Defendant’s Motion 
to
Dismiss 
should be denied.
II. Even 
if the Court evaluates the Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss as a motion for
judgment 
on the pleadings under C.R.C.P. 12(c), the Court should still deny the
Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss because none of the 
Defendant’s affirmative defenses 
entitles 
the Defendant to a judgment on the pleadings. 
The 
Plaintiff objects to the Defendant’s assertion of affirmative defenses by 
motion.
However, 
if the Court chooses to consider the Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss as a 
C.R.C.P.
12(c) 
motion for judgment on the pleadings under Shaw, 683 P.2d at 385, and Lin Ron, 
Inc., 624
P.2d at 
1343, and permits the Defendant’s motion itself to serve in effect as a 
responsive
pleading, 
then the Court should still deny the Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss because 
the
affirmative defenses of constitutional infirmity and 
contrary state statute are based on erroneous
constructions of the Colorado Constitution and Colorado 
statutes and therefore do not entitle the
Defendant 
to judgment as a matter of law; and because the defense of “substantial injury 
to the
public 
interest” under CORA requires the Court to resolve a disputed issue of material 
fact,
which 
renders judgment on the pleadings inappropriate.
A. 
Standard of review for judgment on the pleadings under C.R.C.P 12(c). 
Under 
Shaw, 683 P.2d at 385, and Lin Ron, Inc., 624 P.2d at 1343, if a motion to 
dismiss
for 
failure to state a claim is based on an affirmative defense, the motion more 
accurately
constitutes a motion for judgment on the pleadings under 
C.R.C.P. 12(c). The standard of review
for 
evaluating a motion for a judgment on the pleadings is effectively the same as 
that used to
evaluate 
a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim. See Abts v. Board of Ed., 622 
P.2d 518 
(Colo. 
1980). In other words, a court must construe the allegations of the pleadings 
strictly
against 
the movant and the allegations of the party resisting the motion as true. See 
Smith v. TCI
Communications, Inc., 981 P.2d 690 (Colo. App. 1999). 
Importantly, judgment on the pleadings
under 
C.R.C.P. 12(c) is only appropriate if the trial court can determine that the 
moving party is
entitled 
to judgment as a matter of law merely by inspecting the pleadings and the 
controlling
law. See 
City and County of Denver v. Qwest Corp., 18 P.3d 748 (Colo. 2001). Where 
material
facts are 
disputed, judgment on the pleadings is not appropriate. See Koch v. Whitten, 140 
Colo.
109 
(1959), 342 P.2d 1011 (Colo. 1959); Quiroz v. Goff, 46 P.3d 486 (Colo. App. 
2002).
B. The 
Defendant is not entitled to a judgment on the pleadings on the basis of 
Article 
VII, Section 8, of the Colorado Constitution because the public
inspection of TIFF files does not violate secrecy in 
voting. 
The 
Defendant asserts that Article VII, Section 8, of the Colorado Constitution 
prohibits 
the 
public disclosure of “ballots and copies of ballots” cast in an election. 
(Def.’s Mem. Supp.
Mot. 
Dismiss at 7.) This contention is erroneous both because the public’s inspection 
of the
TIFF 
files cannot violate secrecy in voting where the underlying ballots themselves 
comply with
the 
Colorado Constitution and because TIFF files created from underlying ballots 
that are
illegally 
marked to be personally identifiable should not be constitutionally shielded 
from public
disclosure purely as a result of their illegality.
1. The 
Colorado Constitution protects as secret the anonymity of ballots,
not their 
content. 
Section 8 
of Article VII of the Colorado Constitution provides in pertinent part 
(emphasis
added):
All elections by the people shall be by ballot, and in case paper ballots are required to be
used, no ballots shall be marked in any way whereby the ballot can be identified as the
ballot of the person casting it. The election officers shall be sworn or affirmed not to
inquire or disclose how any elector shall have voted. In all cases of contested election in
which paper ballots are required to be used, the ballots cast may be counted and
compared with the list of voters, and examined under such safeguards and regulations as
may be provided by law. Nothing in this section, however, shall be construed to prevent
the use of any machine or mechanical contrivance for the purpose of receiving and
registering the votes cast at any election, provided that secrecy in voting is preserved.
….
In 
interpreting the Colorado Constitution, Colorado courts look to the plain 
language of
the text 
and will avoid interpretations that produce absurd results. See People v. 
Rodriguez, 112
P.3d 693, 
696 (Colo. 2005).
Applying 
Rodriguez, 112 P.3d at 696, it is readily apparent from the plain language 
of
Article 
VII, Section 8, that the secret protected by the Colorado Constitution in the 
voting
context 
is the anonymity of the voter casting a legal ballot. The first sentence of 
Article VII,
Section 
8, prohibits the marking of ballots in a way that makes them personally 
identifiable,
while the 
last sentence of the initial paragraph imposes a general requirement that 
“secrecy in
voting” 
should be preserved using wording that ties the secrecy requirement to the act 
of
“receiving and registering” votes, a stage in the voting 
process at which a voter casting a ballot
would be 
personally identifiable.
The 
Defendant argues that the Colorado Constitution requires the actual content of 
the
ballot 
itself to be kept secret. (Def.’s Mem. Supp. Mot. Dismiss at 7-8.) The Defendant 
cites to 
a number 
of statutory provisions, (see id. at 9-10 [citing § 31-10-504, -505, -607 and 
-1514,
C.R.S.]), 
and cases, (see id. at 9, 19-21 [citing Taylor v. Pile, 391 P.2d 670 (Colo. 
1964);
Littlejohn v. Desch, 121 P.2d 159 (Colo. 1912); Young v. 
Simpson, 42 P. 666 (Colo. 1895); and
various 
decisions from other States and the federal courts]), which she mistakenly 
characterizes
as 
supporting her argument that secrecy in voting goes to the “contents or 
information contained
on 
ballots,” (Def.’s Mem. Supp. Mot. Dismiss at 9). 
None of 
the Defendant’s cited authorities support her view that the Colorado
Constitution’s conception of secrecy in voting protects any 
secret other than the anonymity of the
voter 
casting a legal ballot. Each of the Colorado statutory provisions cited by the 
Defendant
operates 
only to obscure the connection between an identifiable voter and the contents of 
his
ballot. 
See § 31-10-504, -505, -607 and -1514, C.R.S. None of the cases cited by the 
Defendant
suggests 
that the right to vote in secret requires the content of a ballot to be kept 
secret, rather
than (or 
even in addition to) the anonymity of the ballot. See Taylor v. Pile, 391 P.2d 
670 (Colo.
1964); 
Littlejohn v. Desch, 121 P.2d 159 (Colo. 1912); Young v. Simpson, 42 P. 666 
(Colo.
1895). 
Indeed, in a decision handed down subsequently to Taylor, 391 P.2d at 670, which 
is the
most 
recent case that the Defendant cites, the Colorado Supreme Court affirmed that 
anonymity,
as 
expressed by the Court in the form of the conclusion that, “good faith voters 
cannot be
compelled 
to disclose how they voted,” is essential to secrecy in voting. Mahaffey v. 
Barnhill,
855 P.2d 
847, 850 (Colo. 1993).
Furthermore, the Defendant’s interpretation that the 
contents of a ballot are themselves
required 
to be secret ultimately cannot be correct, since requiring the contents of 
ballots to be
secret 
would produce the absurdity that votes in an election could not constitutionally 
be
counted. 
After all, the government is nowhere exempted from the requirements of Article 
VII,
Section 
8; so if secrecy in voting shields a ballot’s content from the eyes of the 
public, then it
must 
equally shield that ballot’s content from the eyes of the government, including 
from a
government tabulator who can only count votes by accessing 
the “content or information
contained 
on the ballots.” (Id. at 9.) 
Because 
the Defendant’s interpretation produces an absurdity and because the plain
language 
of Article VII, Section 8, supports the more reasonable conclusion that secrecy 
in
voting 
protects the anonymity of ballots, rather than their contents, the Defendant’s 
interpretation
of the 
scope of the constitutional requirement of secrecy in voting must be rejected 
under
Rodriguez, 112 P.3d at 696. The plain language of Article 
VII, Section 8, is properly interpreted
only to 
require that ballots be anonymous, not that their contents should also be 
secret.
2. 
Secrecy in voting cannot be violated by the public inspection of an
anonymous TIFF file created from an anonymous, unmarked ballot.
Since the 
Colorado Constitution requires that “no ballot shall be marked” in a way 
that
allows it 
to be “identified as the ballot of the person casting it,” Colo. Const. art. 
VII, § 8, the
ballots 
cast in the Aspen municipal election in May must be presumed to be unmarked (at 
least
by the 
City of Aspen acting through its employees and agents) and must therefore be 
presumed
to be 
anonymous. [1] As the TIFF files are simply electronically scanned images of the 
voted
ballots, 
(V. Compl. ¶ 15), the TIFF files necessarily share the anonymity of the 
underlying
ballots 
to at least the same extent that the ballots themselves are anonymous. Public 
inspection
of the 
TIFF files cannot violate secrecy in voting under these circumstances unless the 
secrecy
requirement of the Colorado Constitution has already been 
violated by the underlying ballots.
[1] If 
these presumptions were proven to be false, it would be the duty of this Court 
to void the
election 
ab initio. See Taylor v. Pile, 154 Colo. 516, 523 (1964). 
3. The act of 
illegally marking a ballot should be interpreted under
Mahaffey 
as a determination by the voter not to invoke the personal
privilege of secrecy in voting.
The 
Defendant raises the possibility that some voters may have marked their ballots 
in a 
way that 
makes those ballots personally identifiable. (Def.’s Mem. Supp. Mot. Dismiss at 
26-
27). Her 
position is not only that illegally marked ballots should benefit from the 
constitutional
protection of secrecy in voting, but also that the mere 
possibility that some underlying ballots
may be 
illegally marked justifies restricting the public’s right of inspection of all 
of the TIFF
files. 
The Court should reject this argument, since a voter who has illegally marked 
his own
ballot 
can hardly be justified in relying upon the protection of Article VII, Section 
8, when it is
that 
voter’s own illegal act that has compromised the anonymity of his ballot.
In 
Mahaffey v. Barnhill, 855 P.2d 847, 851 (Colo. 1993), the Colorado Supreme 
Court
ruled 
that, while a voter cannot be compelled to reveal how he or she voted, the 
constitutional
protection of secrecy in voting is nevertheless a privilege 
that “is personal, and it is for the voter
to 
determine whether to invoke its protection.” Given that it is illegal in 
Colorado for a voter to
mark his 
own ballot so as to render it identifiable, both for elections held under the 
Colorado
Municipal 
Election Code of 1965, § 31-10-1517, C.R.S., and for elections held under 
the
Uniform 
Election Code of 1992, § 1-13-712(1), C.R.S., this Court should hold that a 
voter’s
affirmative act of illegally marking a ballot in a way that 
makes that ballot personally identifiable
implicitly constitutes a determination by that voter under 
Mahaffey not to invoke the protection
of the 
constitutional privilege of secrecy in voting. To decide otherwise would create 
the
perverse 
result that the Colorado Constitution “rewards” illegality by shielding marked 
ballots
from 
public disclosure while permitting their unmarked counterparts remain subject to 
public
inspection. This outcome cannot be countenanced and the 
Court should reject it.
Because 
the TIFF files do not violate secrecy in voting where the underlying ballots
themselves comply with the Colorado Constitution and 
because the personal privilege of secrecy 
in voting 
should be deemed to be not invoked where the underlying ballots have been 
illegally 
marked, 
the Court should not grant the Defendant a judgment on the pleadings on the 
basis of her
defense 
that inspection is contrary to the Colorado Constitution’s requirement of 
secrecy in
voting.
C. The 
Defendant is not entitled to a judgment on the pleadings on the basis of a 
contrary 
state statute because Section 31-10-616(1), C.R.S., is not properly
construed as contrary to public inspection of the TIFF files.
The 
Defendant argues under Section 24-72-204(1)(a), C.R.S., that the TIFF files 
are
exempt 
from public inspection because such inspection would be contrary to Section 
31-10-
616(1), 
C.R.S., which requires the preservation of ballots and election records. (Def.’s 
Mem.
Supp. 
Mot. Dismiss at 6, 10-12, 14-15.) The Court should reject this affirmative 
defense as a
basis for 
judgment on the pleadings because TIFF files are not ballots under Section 
31-10-
616(1), 
C.R.S., and because Section 31-10-616(1), C.R.S., is not sufficiently specific 
to create an
exception 
to CORA that is “specifically provided by law.” 
1. 
Exceptions to the general right of public inspection under CORA are to 
be 
narrowly construed and must be specifically provided by law if set out 
in 
contrary statutes. 
The 
broad, general policy of CORA provides a presumption in favor of disclosure 
of
public 
records. See City of Westminster v. Dogan, 930 P.2d 585, 589 (Colo. 1997); 
Zubeck v. El
Paso 
County Retirement Plan, 961 P.2d 597, 601 (Colo. App. 1998). Exceptions to this 
broad,
general 
policy are to be narrowly construed, subject only to the explicit language of 
the
exception. See Sargent Sch. Dist. N o. RE-33J v. Western 
Serv., Inc., 751 P.2d 56, 60
(Colo.1988); see also Gumina v. City of Sterling, 119 P.3d 
527 (Colo. App. 2004). Furthermore,
the only 
permissible exceptions to the right of inspection are those “provided for in the 
act itself
or 
otherwise specifically provided by law.” Denver Publ’g Co. v. Dreyfus., 184 
Colo. 288, 293 
(1974), 
520 P.2d 104, 107 (Colo. 1974) (emphasis in original). 
2. 
Section 31-10-616(1), C.R.S., is nothing more than a records
preservation statute that requires a particular method of 
storage for
ballots. 
Section 
31-10-616, C.R.S.,2 which the Defendant has asserted is contrary to the
Plaintiff’s right to inspect TIFF files under CORA, 
provides in pertinent part: 
31-10-616. Preservation of ballots and election records.
(1) The ballots, when not required to be taken from the ballot box for the purpose of
election contests, shall remain in the ballot box in the custody of the clerk until six
months after the election at which such ballots were cast or until the time has expired for
which the ballots would be needed in any contest proceedings, at which time the ballot
box shall be opened by the clerk and the ballots destroyed by fire, shredding, or burial….
(2) The clerk shall preserve all other official election records and forms for at least six
months following a regular or special election.
This 
provision makes use of two key defined terms, “ballot” and “election records,” 
each
of which 
is defined in the Uniform Election Code of 1992, §§ 1-1-101 to 1-13-803, C.R.S., 
as
follows: 
(1.7) "Ballot" means the list of all candidates, ballot issues, and ballot questions upon
which an eligible elector is entitled to vote at an election.
§ 1-1-104(1.7), C.R.S.
(11) "Election records" includes but is not limited to accounting forms, certificates of
registration, pollbooks, certificates of election, signature cards, all affidavits, mail-in
voter applications, mail-in voter lists and records, mail-in voter return envelopes, voted
ballots, unused ballots, spoiled ballots, and replacement ballots.
§ 1-1-104(11), C.R.S. (emphasis added).
[2] 
Pursuant to Section 2.1 of the Home Rule Charter for the City of Aspen, 
Colorado, Aspen’s 
elections 
are governed by the Colorado Municipal Election Code of 1965, §§ 31-10-101 to 
-
1540, C.R.S.
Section 
31-10-616(1), C.R.S., requires the clerk to preserve election records, 
including
ballots, 
for a certain period of time following an election. As part of its requirements, 
the statute
specifies 
a certain storage method in particular that must be used for storing ballots. 
The
Defendant 
argues at length that the general intent underlying the particularity of the 
statute’s
treatment 
of ballots is to protect both their contents and their physical security. 
(Def.’s Mem.
Supp. 
Mot. Dismiss at 8-12.) However, her content argument has already been shown in 
the
constitutional context to be ill-conceived for reasons that 
apply equally well in the realm of
statutory 
construction, see Section II.B.1., supra, and the Defendant expressly concedes 
that her
physical 
security argument has no actual application to TIFF files, (Def.’s Mem. Supp. 
Mot.
Dismiss 
at 11 [“It is certainly true that making ballot images, as opposed to the 
ballots
themselves, available for public inspection would not 
compromise the physical security of the
original 
ballots.”] (emphasis in original)).
The plain 
fact is that Section 31-10-616, C.R.S., says nothing at all on its face 
about
whether 
ballots or election records should be exempted from the right of public 
inspection under
CORA. The 
Defendant broadly construes the preservation statute to be an exception to 
CORA
solely 
because it requires that ballots “shall remain in the ballot box,” and because 
this
requirement appears superficially to be incompatible with 
allowing the physical inspection of
ballots. 
If this language constitutes an exception to CORA, then it constitutes only a 
tenuous and
indirect 
exception at best. 
Under the 
cases controlling statutory interpretation of exceptions to CORA, in order 
for
the 
Defendant successfully to assert that Section 31-10-616(1), C.R.S., is a 
contrary state statute
that 
exempts the TIFF files from public inspection, the Defendant must persuade the 
Court, first,
that the 
term “ballots” in Section 31-10-616(1), C.R.S., properly includes the TIFF files 
even
under 
Sargent’s requirement that exceptions to CORA must be narrowly construed; and, 
second,
that the 
exemption from CORA that is supposedly created by Section 31-10-6161(1), C.R.S., 
is
sufficiently specific to satisfy the requirement of Dreyfus 
that exceptions to CORA must be
specifically provided by law. This is a burden of 
persuasion that the Defendant cannot bear on
the basis 
of a definition of “ballot” that plainly excludes TIFF files, which is used in 
a
preservation statute that itself contains no language that 
is even plausibly indicative of an intent 
to exempt 
any specific type of records from public inspection.
3. The 
TIFF files cannot properly be construed to be “ballots” under
Section 
31-10-616(1), C.R.S. 
Under 
Sargent, 751 P.2d at 56, the term “ballots” in Section 31-10-616(1), C.R.S., 
must 
be 
narrowly construed where the term would create an exception to the broad, 
general right of
public 
inspection under CORA. Because a broader construction of the term “ballot” would 
have 
the 
effect of excluding more records from public inspection under CORA (if the 
Defendant’s
theory is 
correct that Section 31-10-616(1), C.R.S., exempts “ballots” from public 
inspection),
the 
narrow construction rule of Sargent dictates that the term, “ballot,” must be 
interpreted
strictly, 
with reference only to the “explicit language” of the definition. See Sargent, 
751 P.2d at 
60. In 
performing this exercise of statutory construction, the Court should give the 
words used in
the 
statute their plain and ordinary meaning, in keeping with the underlying 
legislative intent, see
id., and 
should not strain to give the language other than its plain meaning unless the 
result is
absurd, 
see City of Westminster v. Dogan Construction Co., 930 P.2d 585, 590 (Colo. 
1997).
Where 
statutory language is unambiguous, legislative intent is to be gleaned from the 
language
itself, 
taking into consideration the entire statute. See Sargent, 751 P.2d at 60. Only 
where there
is 
ambiguity in the plain language may the Court consider the object sought to be 
attained and
the 
consequences of a particular construction. See Ritter v. Jones, 207 P.3d 954, 
957 (Colo.
App. 
2009).
Under a 
narrow construction of its plain language, the definition of “ballots” set out 
in
Section 
1-1-104(1.7), C.R.S., cannot properly be understood to include TIFF files. 
The
language 
of the statute is unambiguous: "‘Ballot’ means the list of all candidates, 
ballot issues,
and 
ballot questions upon which an eligible elector is entitled to vote at an 
election.” § 1-1-
104(1.7), 
C.R.S.
This 
plain language describes a ballot as the physical list on which voters make 
their
marks to 
signify their electoral preferences. The definition’s use of the definite 
article indicates a
specific 
list, namely the one “upon which” voters make their actual voting mark “at” the 
election.
The TIFF 
files cannot be properly described by this definition because a TIFF file is 
obviously 
not “the 
list … upon which an eligible elector is entitled to vote at an election.” § 
1-1-104(1.7),
C.R.S. 
(emphasis added). No voter appears to have been given physical access to any 
TIFF file
in the 
same way that voters were provided with ballots on election day. On the 
contrary, the
TIFF 
files are electronic computer files that were only created after the close of 
voting on
election 
night by scanning the voted paper ballots. (V. Compl. ¶¶ 1, 15, 25.) A TIFF file 
can no
more be a 
“ballot” for purposes of the legal definition in Section 1-1-104(1.7), C.R.S., 
than a
copy of a 
driver license can be an actual driver license.
The 
Defendant has in fact conceded on the record that substantive differences 
exist
between 
TIFF files and ballots. She did so at the Status Conference, when she asked the 
Court to
extend 
the Plaintiff’s requested preliminary injunction to preserve the original 
ballots as well as
the TIFF 
files because, “we don’t know where this case is going, but we believe that the 
ballots
themselves are the best evidence.” (Tr. Status Conf. at 5 
(emphasis added).) 
Consideration of the substantive provisions of the Colorado 
Municipal Election Code that 
surround 
Section 31-10-616(1), C.R.S., as required under Sargent, 751 P.2d at 60, shows 
that
much of 
the statute uses the term “ballot” in ways that are rendered non-sensical if the 
term is
interpreted to include TIFF files. See, e.g., §§ 31-10-901 
to -906 (detailing physical
requirements for paper ballots); § 31-10-803 (specifying 
requirements for the use of ballots in
electronic voting); §§ 31-10-606 to -607, -610 (discussing 
the use of ballots in voting generally).
The plain 
language of Section 1-1-104(1.7), C.R.S., taken together with the 
Defendant’s
admission 
and giving consideration to the legislative intent gleaned from the use of the 
term,
“ballot,” 
in the entire statute, all refute the Defendant’s argument that the TIFF files 
may be
included 
within the meaning of the defined term, “ballot,” under the narrow construction 
that
must be 
given to the exceptions from CORA under Sargent.
The 
Defendant suggests that the decision in City of Westminster v. Dogan, 930 P.2d 
585 
(Colo. 
1997), supports including the TIFF files within the meaning of “ballots” because 
the
Court in 
Dogan eschewed a literal, form-based approach to construing an exemption 
from
CORA’s 
right of public inspection where a content-based approach was more consistent 
with the
Court’s 
understanding of the legislative intent. (Def.’s Mem. Supp. Mot. Dismiss at 12.) 
The
Defendant 
ignores the fact that the Court only departed from its own rule of narrow 
construction
in Dogan 
because it found, in interpreting an exemption from CORA that was set out in 
CORA
itself, 
that a literal, strict construction of the phrase, “letters of reference,” 
actually produced a
construction that was “contrary to the ascertainable 
legislative purpose” of the exception itself.
Dogan, 
930 P.2d at 592 (emphasis added). 
Dogan is 
completely inapposite here because the plain language of Section 
31-10-616(1),
C.R.S., 
is indicative of no “ascertainable legislative purpose” whatsoever to do 
anything more
than 
subject literal ballots to a particularly specified method of storage for the 
sole purpose of
preservation and safekeeping. Nothing in Section 
31-10-616(1), C.R.S., provides any basis at all 
for 
discerning the legislative intent to exempt either ballots or other official 
election records from
public 
inspection except perhaps indirectly. Given the absence of any basis for 
perceiving such
intent, 
it would turn Dogan completely on its head to treat Section 31-10-616(1), 
C.R.S., as a
situation 
in which there was “ascertainable legislative” intent for “ballots” to be 
affirmatively
and 
broadly construed as a specifically referenced exception to public inspection 
CORA, instead
of 
narrowly construed, as required under Sargent, simply as actual ballots that are 
subject to a
particular storage requirement.
Indeed, 
if the Court were to accept the Defendant’s content-over-form argument based 
on
Dogan, 
then one absurd implication that arises from interpreting “ballots” as including 
TIFF files
for 
purposes of Section 31-10-616(1), C.R.S., is that all of those TIFF files qua 
ballots that
temporarily resided in the memory of the City of Aspen’s 
tabulating computers on election night
as a part 
of the scanning process must be regarded as “ballots” that were required to be 
preserved
for six 
months under Section 31-10-616(1), C.R.S. The deletion of these TIFF files 
from
computer 
memory during the course of the vote counting operation and from the 
computer
storage 
hard drives afterward would therefore both constitute violations of the very 
preservation
statute 
that the Defendant seeks to rely upon to shield the surviving TIFF files, safely 
burned to a
disk, 
from the Plaintiff’s right of public inspection.
Even if 
the plain language of Section 31-10-616(1), C.R.S., is insufficiently 
persuasive
that TIFF 
files cannot be deemed to be ballots, this single example of the kind of 
unintended
consequences that will result the Defendant’s 
interpretation of the term, “ballot,” emphasizes
why the 
Court should refuse to construe the definition of “ballot” so broadly as to 
include the
TIFF 
files. 
4. Even 
if the Court does regard the TIFF files as ballots, Section 31-10-
616(1), 
C.R.S., still does not create an exception that is sufficiently
specific 
under Dreyfus to overcome CORA’s legislative intent for
election 
records to be open to public inspection. 
Exceptions to CORA that are set out in a contrary state 
statute must be “specifically 
provided 
by law” in that statute. Denver Publ’g Co. v. Dreyfus, 184 Colo. 288, 296 
(1974), 520 
P.2d 104, 
108 (Colo. 1974)(emphasis added). Under Dreyfus, Section 31-10-616(1), 
C.R.S.,
cannot be 
construed to exempt the TIFF files from the Plaintiff’s right of public 
inspection under
CORA 
because nothing in the ballot preservation statute specifically addresses either 
TIFF files
or the 
availability of unavailability of ballots or election records for public 
inspection. 
In 
Dreyfus, the Colorado Supreme Court examined a provision of CORA that 
prohibited
the 
public inspection of “Medical…data on individual persons, exclusive of coroners’ 
autopsy
reports,…” Because autopsy reports were specifically carved 
out of the types of medical data
that CORA 
excluded from public inspection, the Court ruled that, “This is convincing 
evidence
of 
legislative intent to classify autopsy reports as public records open to 
inspection, rather than
directing 
the denial of a right of inspection…as is the case with other medical…data.” Id. 
Since
the 
supposedly contrary laws asserted by the custodian as prohibiting the disclosure 
of autopsy 
reports 
did not actually contain a “specific reference to autopsy reports,” the Colorado 
Supreme
Court 
ruled that CORA’s legislative intent controlled, and the custodian’s assertion 
of contrary
law was 
not valid. Id. As the Court stated in opening its discussion of the issue, “The 
act
[CORA] 
itself requires that exceptions be specifically provided by law.” Id. 
The rule 
in Dreyfus must apply to Section 31-10-616(1), C.R.S., because the 
legislative
intent of 
CORA, as expressed in the plain language of the CORA statute, clearly favors 
the
public 
inspection of “election records” that do not contain certain types of personally 
identifiable
information. Specifically, the Colorado Open Records Act, 
in Section 24-72-204(8)(a), C.R.S., 
provides 
the following:
A 
designated election official shall not allow a person, other than the person in 
interest, to
inspect 
the election records of any person that contain the original signature, 
social
security 
number, month of birth, day of the month of birth, or identification of that
person, 
including electronic, digital or scanned images of a person’s original 
signature,
social 
security number, month of birth, day of the month of birth, or identification. 
“Election 
records” for purposes of this provision are defined in Section 1-1-104(11),
C.R.S. 
See § 24-72-204(8)(c). This definition consists of a non-exclusive, catch-all 
list of
election-related materials. The list expressly includes 
ballots and plainly encompasses other
election-related materials such as the TIFF files. 
Section 
24-72-204(8)(a), C.R.S., prohibits the public inspection of election records 
that
contain 
certain items of personally identifiable information. It is significant that 
CORA prohibits
the 
public inspection of only certain election records because Dreyfus reads this as 
“convincing 
evidence 
of legislative intent to classify” the remaining records “as public records open 
to
inspection, rather than directing the denial of a right of 
inspection.” Dreyfus, 184 Colo. at 296, 
520 P.2d 
at 108. This application of Dreyfus is consistent with basic canons of 
statutory
construction, including the canon of expressio unius est 
exclusio alterius, which holds that to
express 
or include one thing implies the exclusion of the alternative. In this case, 
because CORA
expressly 
identifies specific kinds of election records that are not intended to be 
subject to public 
inspection, the application of expressio unius dictates 
that all other kinds of election records are
intended 
to be subject to public inspection under CORA. 
The fact 
that CORA addresses election records establishes its legislative intent for 
those 
records 
to be open to public inspection. Because the TIFF files are scans of anonymous 
ballots, [3]
(V. 
Compl. ¶ 1), they are properly understood to contain none of the items of 
personal
information that would place them within the category of 
election records that are exempted
from 
public inspection under Section 24-72-204(8)(a), C.R.S. The TIFF files therefore 
belong to
the class 
of non-personally identifiable election records that the General Assembly must 
be
intended 
for CORA to make available too public inspection. In light of CORA’s 
legislative
intent 
that non-personally identifiable election records like the TIFF files should be 
available for
public 
inspection, the imposition by Section 31-10-616(1), C.R.S., of a ballot 
storage
requirement that appears incompatible with the physical 
inspection of ballots simply cannot be
regarded 
as an exception to CORA that is “specifically provided by law.” Dreyfus, 184 
Colo. at
296, 520 
P.2d at 108. The exception asserted by the Defendant is too tenuous and indirect 
to
overcome 
the requirement of Dreyfus that exceptions to CORA based in contrary state must 
be
specific 
enough to justify the subordination of CORA’s own legislative intent with 
respect to the
records 
in question. 
For the 
Defendant to obtain judgment on the pleadings on the basis of asserting that
Section 
31-10-616(1), C.R.S., is contrary law, she must persuade the Court, under City 
and
County of 
Denver v. Qwest Corp., 18 P.3d 748 (Colo. 2001), that by merely inspecting 
the
pleadings 
and controlling law the Court can arrive at the following two conclusions as a 
matter
of law: 
First, that the term “ballot” in Section 31-10-616(1), C.R.S., is properly 
construed to
[3] This 
averment appears to be conceded by the Defendant, (Def.’s Mem. Supp. Mot. 
Dismiss at 
24), 
subject to the caveat that anonymity may nevertheless be compromised where 
voters have
illegally 
marked their ballots, (Id. at 24, 26-27). The implications of illegally marked 
ballots are 
addressed in Section II.B.3., infra.
include 
TIFF files under the Colorado Municipal Election Code of 1965, §§ 31-10-101 to 
-1540,
C.R.S.; 
and second, that Section 31-10-616(1), C.R.S., when narrowly construed, see 
Sargent
School 
District N o. RE-33J v. Western Services, Inc., 751 P.2d 56 (Colo.1988), 
specifically
exempts 
the TIFF files from public inspection, see Denver Publ'g Co. v. Dreyfus, 184 
Colo. 288 
(1974), 
520 P.2d 104 (Colo. 1974), sufficiently to overcome CORA’s legislative intent 
for non-
personally identifiable election records such as the TIFF 
files to be open to public inspection.
The 
Defendant fails to bear this burden of persuasion, and therefore the Court 
should not grant
the 
Defendant a judgment on the pleadings on the basis that Section 31-10-616(1), 
C.R.S., is a
contrary 
state statute. 
D. The 
Defendant is not entitled to a judgment on the pleadings on the basis of 
the 
defense that inspection of the TIFF files will do “substantial harm to the 
public 
interest” because material facts are in dispute and therefore judgment 
on the 
pleadings is inappropriate. 
Finally, 
the Defendant has asserted as an affirmative defense, permitted by Sections 
24-
72-204(6)(a) and -204(6)(b), C.R.S., the argument that 
allowing public inspection of the TIFF
files 
would do substantial injury to the public interest. (Def.’s Mem. Supp. Mot. 
Dismiss at 6.)
The Court 
should deny the Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss on the basis of this defense 
because
substantial injury to the public interest is a question of 
disputed material fact that is inappropriate
for 
judgment on the pleadings.
1. Under 
Pinder, the question of whether disclosure of a public record will
do 
“substantial harm to the public interest” under Section 24-72-204(6),
C.R.S., 
is an issue of material fact. 
What 
constitutes a substantial injury to the public interest under Section 
24-72-204(6),
C.R.S., 
is not defined in CORA. See Bodelson v. Denver Publ’g Co., 5 P.3d 373, 377 
(Colo.
App. 
2000). However, this catch-all exemption from disclosure is applicable only in 
“those
extraordinary situations which the General Assembly could 
not have identified in advance.” Id.;
see also 
Freedom N ewspapers, Inc. v. Tollefson, 961 P.2d 1150, 1156 (Colo. App. 
1998).
Furthermore, the question of whether a substantial injury 
to the public interest will result from
the 
disclosure of public records is an issue of material fact for the trial court to 
resolve. See Civil
Serv. 
Comm'n v. Pinder, 812 P.2d 645 (Colo. 1991). The custodian bears the burden of 
proving
that a 
substantial injury to public interest will occur. See Denver Publishing Co. v. 
Dreyfus, 184
Colo. 
288, 295 (1974), 520 P.2d 104, 108 (Colo. 1974); Zubeck v. El Paso County 
Retirement
Plan, 961 
P.2d 597, 601 (Colo. App. 1998). 
2. Under 
Koch and Quiroz, judgment on the pleadings is not appropriate
where 
material facts are in dispute. 
As set 
out in Section II.A., supra, the standard of review for evaluating a motion for 
a
judgment 
on the pleadings is effectively the same as that used to evaluate a motion to 
dismiss for 
failure 
to state a claim, see Abts v. Board of Ed., 622 P.2d 518 (Colo. 1980), which 
means that
the Court 
must construe the allegations of the pleadings strictly against the movant and 
the
allegations of the party resisting the motion as true, see 
Smith v. TCI Communications, Inc., 981
P.2d 690 
(Colo. App. 1999). Where material facts are disputed, judgment on the pleadings 
is not
appropriate. See Koch v. Whitten, 140 Colo. 109 (1959), 342 
P.2d 1011 (Colo. 1959); Quiroz v.
Goff, 46 
P.3d 486 (Colo. App. 2002).
3. 
Material facts are in dispute on the question of whether disclosure of the
TIFF 
files would do substantial injury to the public interest. 
The 
Plaintiff has alleged a number of facts in the Verified Complaint that are 
material to
the 
Court’s determination of whether disclosure of the TIFF files will do 
substantial injury to the
public 
interest. (V. Compl. ¶¶ 4-5, 20, 22-23, 26-31, 39.) Among the Plaintiff’s 
averments are
factual 
allegations showing both that the public interest affirmatively favors 
disclosure of the
TIFF 
files, (Id. ¶¶ 4-5, 20, 22-23, 39), and that the Defendant has already allowed 
public
disclosure of the TIFF files in ways that are inconsistent 
with the Defendant’s contention that
public 
inspection of the TIFF files under CORA will do substantial injury to the public 
interest, 
(Id. ¶¶ 
22, 26-31).
The 
Defendant not only fails to admit material facts set out by the Plaintiff in 
paragraphs
4-5, 20, 
22-23, 30 and 39 of the Verified Complaint, but she expressly denies that the 
allegations
in these 
paragraphs are variously either relevant or material. (Def.’s Mem. Supp. Mot. 
Dismiss 
at 3-4.) 
At the same time, the Defendant advances a number of arguments, unsupported by 
any 
factual 
evidence of her own introduced by affidavit or otherwise, to sustain the 
assertion that
public 
inspection of the TIFF files will do substantial injury to the public interest. 
(Id. at 19-29.)
Under 
these circumstances, the Court must consider the material facts that pertain to 
the issue of 
substantial injury to the public interest to be in 
dispute.
Because 
the question of whether public inspection of the TIFF files would do 
substantial
injury to 
the public interest is an issue of material fact under Pinder, 812 P.2d at 645, 
and
because 
the material facts that bear on this issue are in dispute between the parties, a 
judgment
on the 
pleadings is inappropriate under Koch, 140 Colo. at 109, 342 P,2d at 1011, and 
Quiroz, 46 
P.3d at 
48. Therefore the Court should not grant the Defendant a judgment on the 
pleadings on
the basis 
of her affirmative defense that substantial injury to the public interest would 
result from
public 
inspection of the TIFF files. 
CONCLUSION
For the 
foregoing reasons, the Plaintiff respectfully requests that the Defendant’s 
Motion
to 
Dismiss be denied. 
Respectfully submitted this 1st day of December, 2009,
By: S/ 
Robert A. McGuire_______________ 
Robert A. 
McGuire, Reg. No. 37134 
1624 
Market Street, Suite 202 
Denver, 
Colorado 80202 
(303) 
734-7175 
(303) 
734-7166 Fax 
ram@lawram.com 
Attorney 
for Plaintiff Marilyn Marks 
26
CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
I hereby 
certify that on this 1st day of December, 2009, I served a true and correct copy 
of
the 
foregoing MEMORANDUM OF MARILYN MARKS, PLAINTIFF, IN RESPONSE TO
DEFENDANT’S MOTION TO DISMISS by the method indicated below 
to each of the
following: 
Attorney 
Firm And/Or Address: Method
John 
Worcester City Attorney Lexis Nexis File & Serve
City of 
Aspen, Colorado 
130 S 
Galena 
Aspen, 
Colorado 81611 
James R. 
True Special Counsel Lexis Nexis File & Serve
City of 
Aspen, Colorado 
130 S 
Galena 
Aspen, 
Colorado 81611 
S/ Robert 
A. McGuire_______________ 
Robert A. 
McGuire, Reg. No. 37134 
1624 
Market Street, Suite 202 
Denver, 
Colorado 80202 
(303) 
734-7175 
(303) 
734-7166 Fax 
ram@lawram.com 
Attorney for Plaintiff Marilyn Marks