The Tenth Circuit affirmed a lower district court ruling in favor of a Colorado non-profit that allowed it not to register as an “issue committee,” thus allowing it to protect the identities of its donors. This case should also be read in conjunction with a related campaign case also recently decided in the Tenth Circuit.
The non-profit in question is Colorado’s Coalition for Secular Government, which has fought zealously against a proposed amendment to the Colorado Constitution to grant “personhood” to unborn fetuses.
The Coalition for Secular Government was started in 2008 by Dr. Diana Hsieh. Coincidentally, in that time, the proposed personhood amendment to the Colorado Constitution was put to the voters for the first time and again in 2010 and 2014.
Resistance
The Colorado secretary of state has, in response, challenged the Coalition’s status as a non-issue entity after it published a series of papers criticizing the proposal to amend the Colorado Constitution. The contention was that the group should rightly be classified as an “issue committee” under Colorado law because it had allegedly “had as a major purpose” supported a major ballot issue or question – in this case, blockading any successful passage of the proposal.
Court Skepticism
Court documents indicated that the Coalition spent anywhere between $1,500 and $3,500 to publish and distribute papers that had analyzed and ultimately criticized the personhood proposal.
“Obvious Decision”
The district’s conclusion was described by U.S. Judge John Kane as “obvious.” Judge Gregory Phillips wrote for the panel and said that the burdens were too great in the face of any legitimate public interest of the coalition’s donors and expenditures. The court also described the coalition as being too small scale to tip any scale in favor of relaxed scrutiny.
Related Resources:
- Outside Spending by Disclosure, Excluding Party Committees (OpenSecrets.org)
- 10th Cir. Backpedals, Declares Colorado’s Tax Reporting Law Is Okay (FindLaw’s U.S. Tenth Circuit Blog)
- Atkins Diet Doctor Going to Prison for Tax Evasion: 10th Cir. (FindLaw’s U.S. Tenth Circuit Blog)
- Seizing a Prisoner’s Guitar Isn’t a Due Process Violation (FindLaw’s U.S. Tenth Circuit Blog)
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