Wolf Law is proud to serve Denver and surrounding communities, including Aurora, Lakewood, and the broader Denver Metro area. Criminal tampering is a charge that can arise from situations far more ordinary than the name suggests. Touching someone else’s property, interfering with a utility, or handling evidence in a way that law enforcement views as obstructive can all give rise to a tampering charge in Colorado. If you are facing a criminal tampering allegation, understanding exactly what you are charged with and what the prosecution must prove is the first step toward building an effective defense.
Wolf Law represents individuals across Colorado with a criminal defense practice focused on preparation, strategy, and strong legal advocacy. Attorneys and Partners Jeff Wolf and Colleen Kelley lead the firm’s defense team, each bringing decades of trial experience, sharp legal analysis, and a commitment to protecting their clients’ rights at every stage. Both attorneys are known for their national media presence, including commentary on Court TV and Law & Crime, and both bring that same level of analytical rigor and courtroom preparation to criminal tampering defense cases throughout Colorado. Together, they reflect Wolf Law’s philosophy that excellent criminal defense is built on preparation, precision, and a genuine commitment to the people they represent.
Criminal tampering charges in Colorado span a range of conduct and carry varying levels of severity. Whether your charge involves property, physical evidence, or utilities, our attorneys are prepared to evaluate every element and build the strongest possible defense.
What Is Criminal Tampering Under Colorado Law?
Colorado law addresses tampering in several distinct statutes, each covering different types of conduct. The most common charges our attorneys handle include criminal tampering with physical evidence and criminal tampering with utility meters or equipment.
Tampering with physical evidence, under Colorado Revised Statutes Section 18-8-610, occurs when a person, believing that an official proceeding is pending or about to be instituted, alters, destroys, conceals, or removes any physical object with the intent to impair its use as evidence. This is a class 6 felony. Tampering with a utility or utility meter under Colorado Revised Statutes Section 18-4-505 covers interference with gas, electric, water, or similar services and is typically a misdemeanor, though aggravated circumstances can elevate the charge.
What Are Common Situations That Lead to Criminal Tampering Charges?
Tampering charges arise in a range of circumstances that our attorneys evaluate case by case:
- Evidence-related conduct during investigations: A defendant who disposes of an item, deletes digital records, or moves objects when they know or reasonably should know that law enforcement is investigating can face tampering with evidence charges. The critical element is the intent to impair the item’s usefulness as evidence.
- Domestic situations and protective orders: Deleting text messages, disposing of items, or altering records in the context of a domestic violence investigation is a common source of evidence tampering charges in Denver and Aurora.
- Utility meter alteration: Bypassing or altering an electric, gas, or water meter to avoid charges is charged as tampering under Colorado law. These cases often arise from investigations initiated by utility companies.
- Vehicle and property tampering: Interfering with another person’s vehicle — disabling it, damaging a component, or altering its condition — can be charged as criminal tampering with property under Colorado law.
- Tampering with monitoring equipment: Defendants on probation or parole who interfere with GPS monitors, ignition interlock devices, or other court-ordered monitoring equipment face tampering charges alongside probation violation proceedings.
What Does the Prosecution Have to Prove for a Tampering Conviction?
The prosecution’s burden varies depending on the specific tampering offense charged. For tampering with physical evidence — the most serious category — the prosecution must prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant believed an official proceeding was pending or about to be instituted, that they altered, destroyed, concealed, or removed a physical object, and that they did so with the intent to impair its use as evidence.
Intent is the most critical and most contested element. The prosecution must establish not just that the defendant handled or disposed of an item, but that they did so specifically to obstruct the use of that item as evidence. Our attorneys focus intensely on challenging intent evidence and presenting alternative explanations for the defendant’s conduct.
Facing a criminal tampering charge in Denver, Aurora, or Lakewood? Call Wolf Law at 720.479.8574 for a free consultation. Our legal team will evaluate every element of the prosecution’s case.
What Are the Defenses to Criminal Tampering in Colorado?
Criminal tampering charges frequently turn on intent, knowledge, and the connection between the defendant’s conduct and any pending or anticipated legal proceeding. Our attorneys identify and develop the strongest available defenses:
- No knowledge of pending proceedings: The tampering with evidence statute requires that the defendant believed an official proceeding was pending or imminent. If the defendant had no reasonable basis to believe an investigation was underway, this foundational element cannot be established.
- No intent to impair evidence: Disposing of an item for reasons unrelated to any investigation — ordinary cleanup, routine digital housekeeping, or standard property maintenance — is not criminal tampering. Our attorneys present the full context of the defendant’s conduct and motivations.
- The item was not evidence: Not every object or record that law enforcement later wishes to examine qualifies as evidence in a legal proceeding. Our attorneys challenge the prosecution’s characterization of the item and its role in the case.
- Constitutional challenges: If the investigation that gave rise to the tampering charge was itself initiated through an unlawful search or seizure, the evidence supporting the tampering charge may be suppressible. Our attorneys evaluate the full chain of events leading to the charge.
- Utility tampering defenses: In utility tampering cases, our attorneys challenge the evidence of who made the alteration, whether the defendant had knowledge of the modification, and whether the prosecution can establish the required elements beyond a reasonable doubt.
Why Criminal Tampering Charges Matter for Your Rights and Future
Tampering with physical evidence is a class 6 felony in Colorado — the lowest felony classification, but a felony nonetheless. A felony conviction carries prison time, a permanent criminal record, and lasting consequences for employment, housing, professional licensing, and civil rights. Even a misdemeanor tampering conviction affects a permanent record and can create collateral consequences that compound over time.
Tampering charges also commonly arise alongside other serious allegations. A defendant charged with assault may face an additional tampering charge if law enforcement believes evidence was concealed. A DUI defendant who is alleged to have tampered with an ignition interlock device faces both the original DUI consequences and a new criminal charge. Our attorneys address the full scope of every client’s legal situation from the start.
How Wolf Law Approaches Criminal Tampering Defense in Colorado
Jeff Wolf and Colleen Kelley are both excellent trial attorneys who understand how to challenge intent-based charges effectively. Both have appeared on national platforms including Law & Crime and Court TV to analyze complex criminal matters, and both bring that same analytical depth to every criminal tampering defense case they handle in Colorado courts.
Our attorneys begin with a thorough factual investigation — what happened, in what sequence, and what evidence the prosecution is relying on to establish intent. We evaluate every element of the charge, identify weaknesses in the prosecution’s theory, and build a defense strategy that addresses both the factual and legal dimensions of the case. Whether your matter is before Denver County Court, the Jefferson County Courthouse in Lakewood, or another Colorado court, we are prepared.
Frequently Asked Questions About Criminal Tampering Charges in Colorado
Potentially, yes — if the prosecution can establish that you deleted messages knowing that a legal proceeding was pending or imminent, and with the intent to impair their use as evidence. Whether this can be proven beyond a reasonable doubt depends heavily on the specific facts.
Lack of knowledge that an item would be used as evidence is a significant defense. Our attorneys evaluate what the defendant knew and when, and challenge any prosecution theory that overstates the defendant’s awareness.
Tampering with physical evidence is a class 6 felony. Other forms of tampering — with utilities, vehicles, or equipment — may be charged at the misdemeanor level depending on the circumstances.
Contact Wolf Law Today to Defend Against Tampering Charges
A criminal tampering charge in Colorado deserves immediate, serious legal attention. Wolf Law offers free consultations, and our attorneys will evaluate your case, challenge the prosecution’s evidence, and build a defense designed to protect your rights and your future. Call 720.479.8574 today.
Wolf Law represents clients throughout Colorado with excellent criminal defense focused on results. From Denver and Aurora to Lakewood and every community in the Denver Metro area, our legal team is ready. Call Wolf Law at 720.479.8574 for your free consultation today.
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