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What’s the difference between assault and menacing in Colorado?

Assault and menacing are related but different crimes in Colorado. Assault is causing physical injury to someone, such as by punching. By contrast, menacing is putting a person in fear of imminent serious bodily injury or death, such as by holding up a fist to a person’s face.

Other examples of assault versus menacing in Colorado are:

Assault

Menacing

Shooting a person Pointing a gun at a person
Stabbing a person Holding a knife up to a person
Hitting a person with a baseball bat Holding a baseball bat to a person’s head
Throwing a brick, which hits a person Throwing a brick in the direction of a person, and it misses

In short, menacing is like an attempted assault. Since assault involves physical contact and menacing does not, assault charges typically carry harsher penalties than menacing charges.1

Assault penalties

Assault carries a potential jail or prison sentence depending on the specific assault charge you were convicted of.

Colorado assault crime

Penalties

First-degree assault (CRS 18-3-202):

Class 3 felony:

Second-degree assault (CRS 18-3-203):

  • Intentionally causing serious injury without a deadly weapon
Class 4 felony:

  • 5 to 16 years in prison, and/or
  • $2,000 to $500,000
Third-degree assault (CRS 18-3-204):

  • Negligently causing bodily harm with a deadly weapon
Class 1 misdemeanor:

  • Up to 18 months in jail, and/or
  • Up to $1,000 in fines2

Menacing penalties

In Colorado, menacing is usually a class 1 misdemeanor punishable by:

  • Up to 364 days in jail, and/or
  • Up to $1,000.

However, menacing becomes a class 5 felony if:

  • There is any use of a deadly weapon (or of any item a person would reasonably believe is a deadly weapon); or
  • You represent verbally or otherwise that you are armed with a deadly weapon.

Class 5 felony penalties include:

  • 1 to 3 years in prison, and/or
  • $1,000 to $100,000.3
Man holding baseball bat about to strike
Menacing with a deadly weapon is a Colorado felony.

Fighting the charges

Here at Colorado Legal Defense Group, I have represented literally thousands of people charged with assault or menacing. In my experience, the following legal defenses have proven very effective with judges, juries, and prosecutors:

  1. The victim was attacking you, and you were acting in lawful self-defense;
  2. The incident was a blameless accident;
  3. You were falsely accused (sometimes accusers even self-inflict their own injuries);
  4. The victim consented to your physical actions; or
  5. The police committed misconduct, such as coercing your confession.

In every criminal case, prosecutors have the burden to prove guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. As long as the D.A.’s evidence is too weak or unreliable to support a conviction, the charges should be dropped.

Additional Resources

If you are a crime victim, you may be eligible for assistance. Refer to the following for more information:


Legal References

  1. C.R.S. 18-3-202 – 206. See also People v. Lopez (Colo.App. 2015) 399 P.3d 129.
  2. CRS 18-3-202 – 204. See also Rowe v. People (Colo. 1993) 856 P.2d 486; People v. Sauser (Colo.App. 2020) 490 P.3d 1018.
  3. CRS 18-3-206.

About the Author

Picture of Michael Becker

Michael Becker

Michael Becker has over a quarter-century's worth of experience as an attorney and more than 100 trials under his belt. He is a sought-after legal commentator and is licensed to practice law in Colorado, Nevada, California, and Florida.

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