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Drug Distribution Colorado | C.R.S. 18-18-405 Defense

Colorado Drug Distribution and Possession With Intent Charges Under C.R.S. § 18-18-405

Facing a drug distribution Colorado charge under C.R.S. § 18-18-405 can be far more serious than a simple drug possession case. Colorado law covers drug distribution, manufacturing, dispensing, sale, possession with intent to distribute, conspiracy, inducement, and possession of chemicals or equipment intended for manufacturing controlled substances.

In many cases, prosecutors do not claim they personally watched someone sell drugs. Instead, they build a case from surrounding facts: quantity, packaging, cash, scales, text messages, alleged admissions, confidential informants, or what police claim the circumstances “look like.” Because of that, a strong defense often begins by challenging the assumptions behind the charge.

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What C.R.S. § 18-18-405 Covers

Colorado’s distribution statute is broad. It makes it unlawful to knowingly manufacture, dispense, sell, distribute, or possess with intent to manufacture, dispense, sell, or distribute a controlled substance. The same law also covers attempts, inducement, conspiracy, and possessing chemicals, supplies, or equipment with intent to manufacture a controlled substance.

That means a drug distribution Colorado case is not limited to traditional “drug dealing.” A person can be charged even when no money changes hands, no completed sale occurs, and no officer personally sees a hand-to-hand transaction.

Common allegations under this statute include:

  • Distribution of controlled substances
  • Possession with intent to distribute
  • Manufacturing controlled substances
  • Dispensing controlled substances
  • Selling controlled substances
  • Conspiracy to distribute drugs
  • Inducing another person to sell or distribute drugs
  • Possessing chemicals, supplies, or equipment with intent to manufacture drugs

Because the statute is broad, the defense must be specific. A case involving fentanyl pills found in a car is different from a case involving prescription medication, a confidential informant, a shared apartment, a controlled buy, or alleged manufacturing equipment.

What Prosecutors Must Prove

To convict someone under C.R.S. § 18-18-405, prosecutors generally must prove that the accused person knowingly engaged in one of the prohibited acts involving a controlled substance.

Depending on the theory of the case, the prosecution may need to prove:

  • The substance was a controlled substance
  • The accused person acted knowingly
  • The accused person manufactured, dispensed, sold, distributed, or possessed the substance
  • If the theory is possession with intent, the accused person intended to manufacture, dispense, sell, or distribute the substance
  • If conspiracy is alleged, there was an agreement or coordinated effort
  • If manufacturing is alleged, the person possessed chemicals, supplies, or equipment with intent to manufacture
  • The weight or amount alleged is accurate
  • The charged drug schedule or category applies

Each of these elements creates an opportunity for the defense. For example, the substance may not have been tested properly. The police may have overstated the weight. The accused person may not have known the substance was present. Or the evidence may show personal use rather than intent to distribute.

Possession With Intent

Many drug distribution Colorado cases are really possession-with-intent cases. In other words, prosecutors may not claim they saw an actual sale. Instead, they argue that the person possessed drugs under circumstances suggesting an intent to distribute them.

This distinction matters. A person may possess drugs for personal use without intending to sell or transfer them. On the other hand, prosecutors may argue intent based on surrounding evidence. The dispute often becomes whether police are fairly interpreting the evidence or simply making assumptions.

Issue Simple Possession Possession With Intent
Core Allegation Personal possession or use Intent to sell, share, transfer, manufacture, or distribute
Common Evidence Small amount, paraphernalia, personal-use circumstances Quantity, packaging, scales, cash, messages, alleged customer contacts
Defense Focus Knowledge, possession, search legality, substance testing Intent, interpretation of evidence, informant credibility, constructive possession
Risk Level Often lower than distribution Often charged as a serious drug felony

Quantity matters, but quantity alone does not always prove distribution. A person struggling with addiction may possess more than police expect for personal use. Likewise, cash, baggies, or text messages may have innocent or ambiguous explanations.

How Police Build These Cases

In a drug distribution Colorado prosecution, police and prosecutors often build a story around circumstantial evidence. The problem is that circumstantial evidence can be overstated, misunderstood, or taken out of context.

Common evidence includes:

  • Scales: Police may argue scales show sales activity, but scales can have other explanations.
  • Baggies or packaging: Packaging may be used to argue distribution, although packaging alone does not prove intent.
  • Cash: Officers often treat cash as suspicious, but many people carry cash for lawful reasons.
  • Text messages: Prosecutors may claim slang or short messages refer to drug sales, even when the meaning is disputed.
  • Multiple phones: Police may argue multiple phones show dealing, but the defense can challenge that assumption.
  • Confidential informants: Informants may have incentives to exaggerate, cooperate, or shift blame.
  • Controlled buys: These cases may turn on audio quality, video gaps, officer procedures, and informant credibility.
  • Location of drugs: Drugs found in a shared car, bedroom, apartment, or bag may create serious constructive possession issues.

A strong defense does not accept the police interpretation at face value. Instead, it asks whether the evidence actually proves the government’s theory beyond a reasonable doubt.

Penalty Levels

The penalties for unlawful distribution, manufacturing, dispensing, sale, or possession with intent depend on the substance involved, the weight, whether fentanyl is involved, whether the alleged transfer was to a minor, and whether special offender or death-resulting allegations apply.

A drug distribution Colorado charge may be filed as a level 1, level 2, level 3, or level 4 drug felony. Some lower-level conduct may be charged as a level 1 drug misdemeanor.

Colorado Drug Felony Levels Under C.R.S. § 18-18-405

Offense Level Common Thresholds Under the Statute Examples
Level 1 Drug Felony Very large quantities; certain transfers to minors; certain fentanyl-related death allegations More than 225 grams of Schedule I or II; more than 112 grams of methamphetamine, heroin, ketamine, or cathinones; more than 50 grams of fentanyl-related substances
Level 2 Drug Felony Intermediate quantities; certain transfers of Schedule III or IV substances to minors More than 14 grams but not more than 225 grams of Schedule I or II; more than 7 grams but not more than 112 grams of methamphetamine, heroin, ketamine, or cathinones; more than 4 grams but not more than 50 grams of fentanyl-related substances
Level 3 Drug Felony Lower quantities of serious controlled substances Not more than 14 grams of Schedule I or II; not more than 7 grams of methamphetamine, heroin, ketamine, or cathinones; not more than 4 grams of fentanyl-related substances
Level 4 Drug Felony Lower-level Schedule III or IV conduct, and some contemporaneous sharing situations Not more than 4 grams of Schedule III or IV; certain small-quantity transfers intended for shared contemporaneous use
Level 1 Drug Misdemeanor Schedule V substances or certain no-remuneration transfers of Schedule III or IV substances Schedule V cases; transfer without payment of not more than 4 grams of Schedule III or IV

General Sentencing Exposure

The felony level matters because Colorado drug felonies carry different sentencing ranges. Depending on the charge level and aggravating factors, potential penalties may include prison, jail, probation, mandatory parole, fines, treatment, and collateral consequences.

Drug Felony Level General Sentencing Exposure
Level 1 Drug Felony The most serious drug felony level, with potential mandatory sentencing issues in certain cases
Level 2 Drug Felony Serious felony exposure, often involving significant quantities or aggravating circumstances
Level 3 Drug Felony Felony exposure for lower quantities of certain controlled substances
Level 4 Drug Felony Lowest drug felony level, but still a felony with long-term consequences

Even when the statute appears to assign a level based on weight, the defense should still examine whether the weight was calculated correctly, whether the entire mixture was counted, whether the substance was tested, and whether the prosecution can prove the defendant possessed or intended to distribute the amount alleged.

When Fentanyl Changes the Case

Fentanyl cases are treated differently and often more aggressively. Under C.R.S. § 18-18-405, fentanyl, carfentanil, benzimidazole opiates, and certain analogs have specific weight thresholds that can dramatically affect the charge level.

In a drug distribution Colorado case involving fentanyl, even small differences in weight can change the charge level. Prosecutors may rely on mixture weight, counterfeit pill allegations, residue, lab reports, or assumptions about distribution.

The statute distinguishes fentanyl-related cases by weight:

  • More than 50 grams: Level 1 drug felony exposure
  • More than 4 grams but not more than 50 grams: Level 2 drug felony exposure
  • Not more than 4 grams: Level 3 drug felony exposure, subject to certain statutory provisions

Common defense issues include:

  • Whether the substance actually contained fentanyl
  • Whether the weight was measured correctly
  • Whether the accused person knew fentanyl was present
  • Whether police can prove intent to distribute
  • Whether the evidence came from an illegal search
  • Whether the alleged substance was possessed by someone else

Overdose Death Allegations

Some fentanyl-related cases become even more serious when prosecutors allege that the controlled substance was the proximate cause of another person’s death. These cases are complex and should not be treated as ordinary cases.

The prosecution may need to prove much more than a transfer. Causation can become the central issue.

Important defense questions include:

  • What substances were found in the person’s system?
  • Was fentanyl the actual cause of death?
  • Were multiple substances involved?
  • Was there an intervening cause?
  • Can prosecutors prove the source of the substance?
  • Can prosecutors prove the accused person transferred the substance that allegedly caused the death?
  • Does the toxicology evidence support the prosecution’s theory?

These cases often require careful review of toxicology, medical records, digital evidence, witness statements, and the timeline of alleged use.

Transfer to a Minor

C.R.S. § 18-18-405 contains enhanced treatment for certain transfers to minors. An adult can face elevated felony exposure if the adult sells, dispenses, distributes, or otherwise transfers controlled substances to a minor and the adult is at least two years older than the minor.

The statute treats Schedule I and II substances differently from Schedule III and IV substances. In either situation, the minor’s age and the age difference can significantly affect the case.

Defense issues may include:

  • Whether any transfer actually occurred
  • Whether the accused person knew or reasonably understood the other person’s age
  • Whether the substance was accurately identified
  • Whether the case depends on unreliable witness statements
  • Whether digital messages are being interpreted fairly

Because allegations involving minors can affect bond, negotiation, sentencing, and reputation, early defense work is especially important.

Manufacturing Allegations

The statute also covers manufacturing controlled substances and possessing chemicals, supplies, or equipment with intent to manufacture a controlled substance.

Manufacturing allegations can arise in several ways:

  • Alleged production of controlled substances
  • Possession of precursor chemicals
  • Possession of supplies or equipment
  • Alleged extraction or processing
  • Claims that ordinary items were being used for illegal production

These cases can be highly technical. The defense may need to examine whether the items were actually connected to manufacturing, whether police misunderstood innocent materials, whether the accused person had access or control, and whether the search warrant accurately described the evidence.

Conspiracy and Inducement

A person can face charges under C.R.S. § 18-18-405 even if prosecutors claim the person conspired with someone else or induced another person to manufacture, dispense, sell, distribute, or possess with intent to distribute a controlled substance.

Conspiracy allegations often rely on:

  • Text messages
  • Phone calls
  • Social media messages
  • Statements from co-defendants
  • Confidential informants
  • Surveillance
  • Shared transportation or housing

The defense should carefully separate association from agreement. Knowing someone involved in drugs is not the same as agreeing to distribute drugs. Being present is not the same as participating. And ambiguous messages do not always prove a criminal conspiracy.

Shared Use Situations

Not every transfer involves a commercial sale. Colorado law recognizes important distinctions when a controlled substance is transferred for the purpose of using it together at about the same time.

Under certain small-quantity circumstances, a transfer for shared contemporaneous use may be treated differently than a typical drug distribution Colorado case. This can matter when prosecutors try to turn social use or shared use into a serious felony charge.

Facts that may matter include:

  • Whether money changed hands
  • Whether the transfer was part of a sale
  • Whether the people intended to use the substance together
  • The amount involved
  • The schedule or type of controlled substance
  • Whether fentanyl or another specifically treated substance is involved

This is one of the most important areas for defense investigation because police often write reports in a way that makes every transfer sound like dealing.

Where the Case Can Break Down

Many cases filed under C.R.S. § 18-18-405 are defensible. The best defense depends on the facts, but common strategies include:

Illegal Search or Seizure: If police violated constitutional protections during a traffic stop, car search, home search, warrant search, or detention, evidence may be suppressed.

No Intent to Distribute: The evidence may show personal use, shared use, or ambiguous conduct rather than intent to sell or distribute.

Lack of Knowing Possession: Prosecutors must prove more than proximity. Drugs found in a car, apartment, backpack, or shared space may not belong to the accused person.

Constructive Possession Problems: When multiple people had access to the area where drugs were found, proving possession becomes more difficult.

Weak Lab Testing: Field tests and assumptions are not enough. The government must prove what the substance actually was.

Weight Disputes: A few grams can dramatically change the charge level. The defense should examine how the substance was weighed and what was included.

Informant Credibility: Confidential informants may cooperate to avoid their own charges, receive payment, or curry favor with police.

Controlled Buy Problems: Audio gaps, video gaps, poor searches of informants, missing recordings, and sloppy procedures may undermine the case.

Cell Phone Interpretation: Prosecutors may claim messages prove dealing, but slang, jokes, addiction-related communication, or ambiguous conversations may be interpreted unfairly.

Prescription or Authorization Issues: Some controlled substances may be lawfully possessed with proper medical authorization.

Entrapment: In some cases, the defense may examine whether law enforcement improperly induced conduct that would not otherwise have occurred.

Common Mistakes After an Arrest

What someone does after an arrest can affect the entire case. Common mistakes include:

  • Talking to detectives without a lawyer
  • Trying to explain who owned the drugs
  • Consenting to a phone search
  • Deleting messages or social media content
  • Contacting witnesses or co-defendants
  • Posting about the case online
  • Assuming the case is hopeless because the charge sounds serious

The safest approach is usually to remain silent, avoid discussing the case, preserve helpful evidence, and speak with a criminal defense lawyer as early as possible.

How a Lawyer Can Help

A drug distribution Colorado case is often built from police assumptions. Officers may assume cash means sales, packaging means distribution, text messages mean customers, or proximity means possession. A defense lawyer can test those assumptions.

An effective defense may include:

  • Challenging the stop or search
  • Filing motions to suppress evidence
  • Reviewing lab testing and chain of custody
  • Investigating whether the alleged weight is accurate
  • Examining phone evidence and message context
  • Attacking confidential informant credibility
  • Challenging whether the evidence proves intent to distribute
  • Negotiating reductions when the evidence is weaker than police claim
  • Preparing the case for trial when necessary

Josh Landy is a former Colorado State Public Defender and trial-focused criminal defense lawyer who has tried more than 200 cases. Landy Criminal Defense approaches serious drug cases by focusing on what the government can actually prove, not simply what police wrote in a report.

If you are facing a Colorado drug distribution, manufacturing, or possession with intent charge, early action can protect your future.

Schedule a confidential consultation today to discuss your case.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is C.R.S. § 18-18-405?

C.R.S. § 18-18-405 is Colorado’s statute covering unlawful distribution, manufacturing, dispensing, sale, possession with intent to distribute, conspiracy, inducement, and possession of chemicals or equipment with intent to manufacture controlled substances.

Is possession with intent to distribute the same as selling drugs?

No. Possession with intent means prosecutors claim the person intended to distribute drugs, even if police did not witness a completed sale.

Can quantity alone prove intent to distribute?

Quantity can be evidence, but it does not automatically prove intent to distribute. The defense may argue the amount was consistent with personal use, shared use, or addiction-related possession.

What evidence do police use to prove drug distribution?

Police often rely on quantity, packaging, scales, cash, text messages, phones, informants, controlled buys, surveillance, and statements. Each type of evidence can be challenged.

What is a level 1 drug felony under C.R.S. § 18-18-405?

A level 1 drug felony is the most serious drug felony level under this statute. It can apply to large quantities, certain transfers to minors, and some fentanyl-related death allegations.

Are fentanyl cases treated differently?

Yes. Fentanyl, carfentanil, benzimidazole opiates, and certain analogs have specific weight thresholds under C.R.S. § 18-18-405.

Can I be charged if the drugs belonged to someone else?

Yes, but prosecutors must still prove knowing possession or participation. If drugs were found in a shared space, car, house, or bag, the defense may challenge constructive possession.

What if I shared drugs but did not sell them?

Colorado law recognizes certain distinctions involving small-quantity transfers for contemporaneous shared use. The facts, amount, substance, and circumstances matter.

Can text messages prove drug distribution?

Text messages can be used as evidence, but they do not automatically prove distribution. The meaning, context, identity of the sender, and interpretation may all be disputed.

What are common defenses to this type of charge?

Common defenses include illegal search, no intent to distribute, lack of knowing possession, weak lab testing, inaccurate weight, informant credibility problems, controlled buy issues, and cell phone interpretation disputes.

Should I talk to police after an arrest?

Usually, no. Statements to police can make a defensible case much harder. It is generally safer to remain silent and speak with a defense lawyer first.

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