Nobody moved for a full second after I said it.
The red microphone light stayed on. Air from the ceiling vent pushed cold across the back of my neck. A legal pad page lifted and settled. Somewhere behind the rail, a cough started and got swallowed. The defendant’s mouth opened, then held there. One hand was still half raised, papers bent between his fingers, his knuckles pale from the grip.
“Do you understand what I’ve just told you, Mr. Sullivan?”
His jaw shifted once.
“I understand you’re going to do what you’re going to do,” he said.
That answer came out flatter than the speeches before it. No lecture about contracts. No talk about color of law. Just that one line, and the sound of the clerk’s keyboard resuming beneath it.
I looked down at the court folder under my palm. Two case numbers. Two different tracks. One hearing already stretched by arguments I had ruled on months earlier.
“Then listen carefully,” I said. “If I rule on an objection, that ruling stands. If I overrule your objection, you preserve it and move on. You do not keep arguing with me in front of a jury.”
The prosecutor’s pen tapped once against the legal pad and stopped.
He tilted his head, eyes fixed on me with that same expression he had worn from the beginning, like the courtroom itself had personally offended him.
“No,” he said. Then, after a beat: “I’ve already made clear I don’t believe this is fair.”
The room was quiet enough to hear the clerk turn a page.
“That is your position,” I said. “The trial setting remains.”
By 9:11 a.m., the hearing was over. He gathered his loose papers instead of stacking them, leaving one page half hanging off counsel table until the clerk slid it back toward him. The district attorney stood first. The bailiff opened the side gate. He did not thank anyone. He did not look at anyone. The folder under his arm bowed in the middle where the papers were already out of order.
I had seen versions of him before.
Not the same face, not the same name, not always the same theory. But the same posture. The same confidence that procedure would bend if challenged loudly enough. The same belief that one phrase, repeated often enough, could become a key.
This file had started small. A traffic stop. Insurance. License. Plate. Then obstruction. Then another case. Then motions. Then objections to orders. Then complaints about discovery. Then the refusal to work within the structure while insisting the structure owed him special treatment. Months of paper for matters that should have taken far less time.
Last year, when he first came in with appointed counsel, the room had felt different. His shoulders were still tight, but there had been less performance in him and more impatience. Counsel had asked for time. Counsel had raised ordinary issues in an ordinary voice. Then came dissatisfaction. Then ineffective-assistance complaints. Then the request to proceed without counsel. Then the advisement.
That was not a box I checked lightly.
A defendant has the right to represent himself. The law protects that choice, even when it is a bad one. So the questions have to be asked. Do you understand what an attorney does? Do you understand what you are giving up? Do you understand that the rules will still apply to you when the jury is in the room and the witness is on the stand and the answer you want does not come out the way you imagined?
He had answered yes often enough to reach the next stage, and no often enough to make every stage take longer.
There were details in the file that told their own story. A discovery demand filed, but not actually followed through. An office upstairs he had been invited to visit. A website the prosecutor offered to write down for him, rejected in the moment. An old mailing error that had put Fort Collins where Loveland should have been. An order from November 12 already issued. A complaint that the motion had not been served. A copy of the order received anyway.
It was never one clean problem. It was a nest of small refusals.
By the time the morning docket ended, the courtroom smelled like warm dust and coffee gone stale in paper cups. My robe stuck slightly between my shoulder blades. The clerk followed me into chambers with the file and the trial worksheet.
“He’s still set on 439 next week,” she said.
“I heard him.”
She laid the papers down in order. Exhibits. Estimated times. Jury instruction notes. Contact correction.
“The people are going to send him everything again,” she said. “And the exhibit list.”
I nodded.
The clock on the wall read 9:43.
A bench does not get the luxury of irritation for very long. There is too much to do after it. Orders have to be signed. Calendars have to be reset. Jurors have to be summoned. Court staff have to know where the line is before someone else tests it. Still, some hearings leave a physical trace.
That one had. My temples were tight. The bridge of my nose ached where my glasses had sat all morning. When I reached for the water glass beside the folder, the water was already room temperature.
What stayed with me was not the oath question. It was the voir dire moment.
For what?
He had said it plainly, with no irony at all. A man demanding a jury trial, standing in open court, not knowing the name of the process used to question jurors. That was the sound of the floor dropping out beneath his own case.
The hidden part of these hearings is the work that begins after the performance ends. Staff who were not interrupted in the courtroom still had to prepare for the consequences of his interruptions. The prosecutor’s office re-sent filings. The clerk confirmed contact information. The bailiff flagged the matter as one likely to require tighter courtroom control once jurors were seated. I reviewed the instruction packet again that afternoon, including the new reasonable-doubt language he had said was “fair enough.”
At 12:30 p.m., the resolution deadline passed.
No plea.
The $500 offer on the insurance count had already gone cold. The global offer with probation, classes, and community service had gone with it. Paper that could have ended the matter now only documented what would no longer be available.
The following Tuesday, he came back for trial in the same dark jacket, this time with a laptop bag over one shoulder and a stack of papers tucked under his arm. The fluorescent lights made everyone look a little washed out that morning. Jurors filed in smelling faintly of winter air and detergent, coats folded over their laps, badges clipped to sweaters and flannel shirts. One man in the back row kept smoothing his tie with both hands. A woman near the front held a spiral notebook but never opened it.
I watched the defendant watch the jury.
That was the first moment the room got real for him.
Voir dire began with the prosecution. Ten minutes. Clean questions. Prior experiences with law enforcement. Ability to follow instructions. Presumption of innocence. Burden of proof.
Then it was his turn.
He stood too fast, bumping the edge of counsel table with his thigh. The microphone gave a small burst of feedback. He looked down at a page, then up at the panel.
“Is anyone here employed by the corporate government of the State of Colorado?”
The prosecutor was on her feet before the sentence finished.
“Objection.”
“Sustained,” I said.
A few jurors blinked and shifted in their seats. One woman pressed her lips together so hard the color left them.
He tried again.
“Does anyone here believe statutes are contracts?”
“Sustained.”
The back of his neck went red. He swallowed and looked at me.
“This goes to bias.”
“Move on, sir.”
He pulled another page from the stack. Wrong page. Put it back. Drew out a second page. His fingers had begun to lose their precision.
“Can you be fair,” he asked finally, “if the judge has already prejudged matters in this case?”
This time the prosecutor did not even stand all the way up.
“Objection.”
“Sustained. Ask an appropriate question.”
He used nine of his fifteen minutes that way, burning them against the frame instead of using them inside it. By the time he reached something close to proper, the jurors had already learned what mattered most about him: not that he was dangerous, not that he was innocent, not that he was guilty, but that he could not stop wrestling the rules long enough to use them.
Openings were worse.
The prosecution took four minutes and thirty seconds. Dates. Stop. Requests. Conduct. Counts.
He took the podium with a sheet he had folded in half and unfolded so many times it would not lie flat.
“There is no injured party in this matter,” he began.
“Opening statements are not argument on the law,” I said.
His thumb pressed hard into the paper until it shook.
“The state is a corporation—”
“Counsel table, Mr. Sullivan. Start over with the facts you expect the evidence will show.”
He stared at me long enough for one juror to glance sideways at another.
“I expect the evidence will show,” he said at last, each word forced through his teeth, “that no one was harmed.”
That, at least, was short.
The officer who made the stop testified first. Registration request. Insurance request. Driver’s license request. The body-worn camera was admitted. The defendant had said he wanted to use that footage himself, but when I asked for his copies, he had none in admissible form and no foundation plan beyond “they have it.”
Cross-examination lasted less than seven minutes.
“Do you have an oath to the Constitution on record?” he asked the officer.
“Objection,” the prosecutor said.
“Sustained.”
“Did you identify an injured party before making claims against me?”
“Sustained.”
“Were you acting under color of law?”
“Sustained.”
By the fourth sustained objection, the line between defiance and helplessness was no longer hard to see.
He had one usable moment all morning. The body-cam footage showed the officer moving quickly around the driver’s side door, and the defendant managed, for about forty seconds, to ask practical questions about distance, timing, and whether his hands had remained visible. The jurors leaned in for that part. He lost them again as soon as he stepped back into theory.
When the prosecution rested, he announced he would call himself.
I gave the advisement outside the jury’s presence. Again.
His answers came out clipped. Yes. Yes. Yes.
On the stand, he lasted eleven minutes before speaking himself into a corner. He wanted to explain every count as invalid and every instruction as suspect. The prosecution only had to wait.
“You were asked for proof of insurance, correct?”
“That document is only required within a corporate code structure I do not—”
“Yes or no.”
He looked at the jurors, then at me.
“I did not produce it.”
The same thing happened with the plate. With the license. With the refusal.
Deliberations started at 3:06 p.m.
The courtroom emptied in layers. Jurors gone. Witnesses gone. The prosecutor in the hallway with a paper cup and her trial binder. He stayed at counsel table longer than most attorneys do, staring at the blank monitor as if the next instruction might appear there if he kept waiting. The wood in the room held the day’s heat by then. The microphones were dark. Somebody’s cologne from the morning still hung faintly near the rail.
The verdict came back at 4:18.
Everyone stood.
The foreperson’s voice was soft, almost apologetic, but it carried.
Guilty on driving without insurance.
Guilty on failure to display a license.
Guilty on fictitious plate.
Not guilty on obstructing a peace officer.
That was the moment the room became honest.
Not the earlier arguments. Not the oath question. Not the speeches about contracts. Twelve people had listened to the evidence, followed the instructions, and separated one count from the others. No blanket rejection. No blanket acceptance. Just line by line, count by count, exactly the way the system is supposed to work when everyone in the room finally does the work.
He stood very still through all four findings. Only his throat moved. When I set sentencing and reminded him the remaining case was still pending, he gave one short nod that looked more like muscle memory than agreement.
The next morning, my clerk knocked on chambers with the update before the second call of the day.
“He went upstairs,” she said.
“For what?”
“Discovery. Finally. Asked for the file on 426.”
I signed the minute order without comment.
Late that afternoon, after the last advisement, after the final custody review, after the hallway outside my courtroom had gone quiet enough to hear the elevator cables hum, I carried the Sullivan file back to the shelf myself. The tab was bent from use. A faint coffee ring marked the lower corner of one pleading. Inside were the same things that had been there all along: motions already ruled on, deadlines already given, warnings already spoken, choices already made.
When I returned to the courtroom, the lights over the gallery had been dimmed. The bench lamp left a small circle on the wood. Counsel table was empty except for a forgotten yellow juror note and a single paper clip turned on its side like a bent silver fish. The red microphone light was finally off.
The court folder sat closed where my hand had pressed it the week before.
No one was asking about oaths anymore.