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People V Brennan

     The summaries of the Colorado Court of Appeals published opinions
  constitute no part of the opinion of the division but have been prepared by
  the division for the convenience of the reader. The summaries may not be
    cited or relied upon as they are not the official language of the division.
  Any discrepancy between the language in the summary and in the opinion
           should be resolved in favor of the language in the opinion.


                                                                   SUMMARY
                                                                July 24, 2025

                                2025COA68

No. 23CA1865, People v. Brennan — Crimes — Unauthorized
Use of a Financial Transaction Device — Identity Theft;
Criminal Law — State Jurisdiction

     A division of the court of appeals considers the novel issue of

whether a Colorado court can exercise jurisdiction over a defendant

for unauthorized use of a financial transaction device and identity

theft based on the defendant’s solicitation, from a state other than

Colorado, of out-of-state services using a Colorado resident’s credit

card without the resident’s authorization. The division holds that,

because the conduct elements of the charged offenses exclusively

occurred out of state, a Colorado court lacks jurisdiction over the

defendant’s prosecution. It accordingly vacates the defendant’s

judgment of conviction.
COLORADO COURT OF APPEALS                                          2025COA68


Court of Appeals No. 23CA1865
Douglas County District Court No. 22CR1004
Honorable Christopher J. Munch, Judge


The People of the State of Colorado,

Plaintiff-Appellee,

v.

Erin Brennan,

Defendant-Appellant.


                            JUDGMENT VACATED

                                 Division VII
                         Opinion by JUDGE LIPINSKY
                         Pawar and Lum, JJ., concur

                           Announced July 24, 2025


Philip J. Weiser, Attorney General, Trina K. Kissel, Senior Assistant Attorney
General and Assistant Solicitor General, Denver, Colorado, for Plaintiff-Appellee

The Noble Law Firm, LLC, Antony Noble, Lakewood, Colorado, for Defendant-
Appellant
¶1    Americans reported more than 440,000 cases of credit card

 fraud in 2022. Fed. Trade Comm’n, Consumer Sentinel Network

 Data Book 2024, at 15 (2025), https://perma.cc/4APJ-JXNA.

 Christopher Caltabiano was one of them.

¶2    Caltabiano, a Colorado resident, did not fall victim to an

 anonymous scammer launching scores of phishing emails from a

 computer in a distant land. Rather, the unauthorized user of

 Caltabiano’s Mastercard (the card) was his ex-wife, defendant, Erin

 Brennan, a New York resident. And Brennan did not use the card

 to fund a spending spree; she used it to pay a portion of two of their

 children’s expenses at a summer day camp, Camp Ramaquois, in

 Pomona, New York.

¶3    Brennan was charged with and convicted of two crimes in

 Colorado — unauthorized use of a financial transaction device

 (unauthorized use) in violation of section 18-5-702(1)(b), (3)(g),

 C.R.S. 2024, and identity theft in violation of section 18-5-902(1)(a),

 C.R.S. 2024 — for using the card without Caltabiano’s permission.

¶4    On appeal, Brennan argues that the Colorado district court

 lacked jurisdiction over her because




                                    1
      •    she allegedly instructed Camp Ramaquois to use the card

           for a portion of the children’s expenses during a call from

           one New York location to another;

      •    she therefore only used Caltabiano’s “financial device” in

           New York;

      •    she formed the requisite intent for the two offenses while

           in New York; and

      •    the impact of her use of the card on Caltabiano was not

           an element of either unauthorized use or identity theft.

¶5    This is the first decision to consider whether a Colorado court

 can exercise jurisdiction over a defendant for unauthorized use and

 identity theft based on the defendant’s solicitation, from a state

 other than Colorado, of out-of-state services using a Colorado

 resident’s credit card without the resident’s authorization.

¶6    We agree with Brennan and vacate her judgment of conviction.

                           I.   Background

¶7    The underlying facts are largely undisputed.

¶8    During their marriage, Brennan and Caltabiano lived in New

 York with their three children. Brennan and Caltabiano were

 divorced in New York in 2019. Following the divorce, Brennan and


                                    2
  the children remained in New York, while Caltabiano relocated to

  Colorado.

¶9     Brennan and Caltabiano’s divorce settlement specified, among

  other terms, that Caltabiano would be responsible for paying sixty-

  five percent of all mutually agreed-upon extracurricular expenses

  for the children, including summer camp expenses.

¶ 10   Two of the children attended Camp Ramaquois in 2021.

  Caltabiano paid a portion of the children’s camp expenses that year.

  He uploaded the card information to Camp Ramaquois’s “system,”

  but he never instructed Camp Ramaquois “to take [the] card off a

  file or to remove it.”

¶ 11   In December 2021, Brennan emailed Caltabiano about the

  estimated cost of the children’s summer camps in 2022. Caltabiano

  responded that he was not prepared to authorize any summer

  camps for the coming year because he was still paying off the 2021

  camp expenses and was not comfortable “putting on credit card

  debt.” Brennan said she wanted to enroll the children before spots

  filled up, and Caltabiano responded, “I am not agreeing to send

  them to these camps as they are too costly and alternatives can be

  found that are more affordable.”


                                     3
¶ 12   In January 2022, Brennan sent Caltabiano an updated budget

  proposal for the children’s camp expenses. Caltabiano said he

  would pay fifty percent of the expenses and suggested sending the

  children to a less expensive day camp in Colorado. Brennan

  responded that the children wanted to attend camp in New York

  with their friends.

¶ 13   In April, Brennan informed Caltabiano that she had registered

  two of the children in Camp Ramaquois, noted that he “had put

  [the] card down for [Camp] Ramaquois” the prior year, and said she

  could “put a portion on [the card] and give them [hers].” Caltabiano

  responded that he had “always contested the reasonableness of

  these charges,” he had “no money,” and Brennan could “get

  compensated when/if [Caltabiano received] a bonus in December.”

¶ 14   The next month, Caltabiano discovered a $10,453.46 charge

  for Camp Ramaquois on his credit card statement. He testified at

  trial that he did not authorize Brennan to charge this sum to the

  card. Caltabiano told Camp Ramaquois that he had not authorized

  the charge and requested a refund. When Camp Ramaquois would

  not reverse the charge, Caltabiano unsuccessfully sought a credit

  for the disputed charge from the credit card company. He later


                                   4
  reported to Colorado law enforcement authorities that Brennan had

  used the card without authorization. She was charged with

  unauthorized use and identity theft.

¶ 15   Brennan’s counsel filed a pretrial motion to dismiss for lack of

  jurisdiction pursuant to section 18-1-201, C.R.S. 2024. The court

  summarily denied the motion, without explanation. Brennan

  unsuccessfully raised the issue again at trial. The court concluded

  that it had jurisdiction because there was a “sufficient nexus”

  between Brennan’s conduct and the elements of unauthorized use

  and identity theft. The court placed significant weight on Brennan’s

  knowledge that Caltabiano resided in Colorado at the time of the

  unauthorized charge.

¶ 16   Brennan testified at trial that, although she authorized Camp

  Ramaquois to charge thirty-five percent of the children’s expenses

  to her own credit card, she did not instruct the camp to charge the

  balance to the card. Brennan said that she did not discuss

  payment of the remaining balance with Camp Ramaquois, saying,

  “[t]hey didn’t ask me anything” about covering the balance.

¶ 17   After the jury convicted Brennan of unauthorized use and

  identity theft, the court sentenced her to one year in the custody of


                                    5
  the Department of Corrections, suspended on the conditions that

  she pay a $5,000 fine, take a victim empathy class, and make full

  restitution.

¶ 18   Brennan raises a single issue in this appeal — whether her

  judgment of conviction should be reversed because the court lacked

  jurisdiction over the case under section 18-1-201. We now turn to

  the law governing this appeal.

                                 II.       Law

                          A.   Standard of Review

¶ 19   “Jurisdiction is a question of law that we review de novo.”

  People v. Nevelik, 2021 COA 30, ¶ 10, 491 P.3d 492, 493.

                     B.    The Jurisdictional Statute

¶ 20   Section 18-1-201 sets forth the limits on Colorado courts’

  subject matter jurisdiction in criminal cases. The statute makes

  clear that the courts in this state cannot exercise jurisdiction over

  every criminal case involving a Colorado-based victim. The statute

  provides:

              (1) A person is subject to prosecution in this
              state for an offense which he commits, by his
              own conduct or that of another for which he is
              legally accountable, if:



                                       6
             (a) The conduct constitutes an offense and is
             committed either wholly or partly within the
             state . . . .

  § 18-1-201 (emphasis added). An offense is committed “partly

  within this state” if (1) “conduct occurs in this state which is an

  element of an offense,” or (2) “the result of conduct in this state is

  such an element.” § 18-1-201(2).

¶ 21   “The definition of an offense may include conduct,

  circumstances, or result elements.” People v. Baca, 852 P.2d 1302,

  1305 (Colo. App. 1992); see Model Penal Code § 1.13(9) (Am. L. Inst.

  1985). Conduct elements describe “the nature of the forbidden

  conduct” and include both the underlying action or omission and

  its accompanying state of mind. Baca, 852 P.2d at 1305;

  § 18-1-501(2), C.R.S. 2024. “[A]ttendant circumstance[]” elements

  — which do not confer jurisdiction on a court, see § 18-1-201 —

  include “the circumstances surrounding [a prohibited act’s]

  commission . . . as distinguished from any element requiring that

  such act have a particular effect, or cause a particular result.”

  People v. Childress, 2015 CO 65M, ¶¶ 21, 29, 363 P.3d 155, 161,

  164. Result elements indicate that causation is part of a crime’s

  actus reus. See Dep’t of Nat. Res. v. 5 Star Feedlot, Inc., 2021 CO


                                     7
  27, ¶ 69, 486 P.3d 250, 265 (Hood, J., dissenting) (citing 1 Paul H.

  Robinson, Criminal Law Defenses § 88 (2020)) (“Causation is a part

  of a crime’s actus reus whenever the General Assembly prohibits a

  specific result.”).

¶ 22    Section 18-1-201(3) provides that “[w]hether an offender is in

  or outside of the state is immaterial to the commission of an offense

  based on an omission to perform a duty imposed by the law of this

  state.” (Emphasis added.)

¶ 23    Although no previous Colorado case has applied section

  18-1-201 to prosecutions for unauthorized use or identity theft,

  divisions of this court have considered whether a court in this state

  could exercise jurisdiction over prosecutions for other offenses

  involving out-of-state conduct. We review those cases next.

                C.      The Cases Applying Section 18-1-201

¶ 24    Fifty years ago, a division of this court decided that a Colorado

  court could exercise jurisdiction over a theft case involving the sale

  of stolen power saws in Colorado. See People v. Martinez, 543 P.2d

  1290, 1291 (Colo. App. 1975). In Martinez, a Colorado resident and

  his friend purchased the saws in Colorado from Martinez and his

  codefendant, who displayed them in the trunk of the codefendant’s


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  vehicle. Id. The saws had been stolen from a store in New Mexico.

  Id. at 1291-92.

¶ 25   On appeal, Martinez argued that the Colorado court lacked

  jurisdiction over his case because he was charged with “theft by

  taking,” and the “taking” had occurred in New Mexico. Id. at 1292.

  The division disagreed:

            The elements of theft as charged here are
            knowingly obtaining or exercising control over
            a thing of value of another without
            authorization and with the intent to deprive
            another permanently of the use or benefit of
            his property. There was evidence presented
            that [Martinez] exercised control over these
            chain saws in Colorado without authorization.
            Thus, the offense of theft was “committed
            partly within this state” as contemplated by
            [section] 18-1-201(2) . . . .

  Id. Accordingly, a person who exercises control over stolen goods in

  Colorado can be prosecuted for theft in this state.

¶ 26   In contrast, another division of this court held that no element

  of theft occurred in Colorado when, pursuant to an oral agreement,

  the defendant took possession of a Colorado resident’s goods, sold

  them in another state, and failed to pay the sales proceeds to the

  Coloradan. See People v. Tinkle, 714 P.2d 919, 920 (Colo. App.

  1985). In Tinkle, the trial court concluded it could exercise


                                    9
  jurisdiction over the case because the defendant’s actions in

  Colorado — taking possession of the goods after agreeing to sell

  them for the victim in another state — whether “criminal or not,

  were part and parcel of the theft.” Id. The division squarely

  rejected the trial court’s “part and parcel” rationale because the

  place where a defendant came into possession of the thing of value

  is “not an element of the crime of theft.” Id.

¶ 27   Almost thirty years later, in People v. Chase, the division held

  that a Colorado court could exercise jurisdiction over the

  prosecution of a defendant charged with stalking for sending

  threatening emails to current and former personnel at his housing

  complex in Grand County. 2013 COA 27, ¶¶ 2, 5-7, 411 P.3d 740,

  744-45. In the emails, the defendant threatened to retaliate against

  the victims, who were all Colorado residents, in this state if they did

  not take an action in Colorado — remove an eviction notice from the

  defendant’s door. Id. at ¶¶ 4-7, 411 P.3d at 745. But the defendant

  sent the emails from Boston, and the recipients received them while

  on vacation in Baltimore. Id. at ¶ 24, 411 P.3d at 747. Based on

  these facts, the defendant argued that the Colorado court lacked

  jurisdiction over the case. Id.


                                    10
¶ 28   As relevant here, the stalking statute that the division

  analyzed in Chase required the prosecution to prove that the

  defendant knowingly made a credible threat to another person. Id.

  at ¶ 20, 411 P.3d at 747 (citing § 18-9-111(4)(b)(II), C.R.S. 2008).

  The version of the stalking statute in effect at the time defined a

  “credible threat” as a threat that would “cause a reasonable person

  to be in fear for the person’s safety.” Id. at ¶ 21, 411 P.3d at 747

  (quoting § 18-9-111(4)(c)(II), C.R.S. 2008).

¶ 29   The division reasoned that the critical analysis was “not where

  the e-mails were written or read, but rather whether the result of

  Chase’s conduct, namely, causing a reasonable person to be in fear

  for his or her safety, occurred, at least in part, in Colorado.” Id. at

  ¶ 24, 411 P.3d at 747. It concluded that the result of the

  defendant’s conduct partly occurred in Colorado primarily because

  the threatening emails would have caused reasonable people in the

  victims’ position to be in fear for their safety in Colorado. Id. at

  ¶ 26, 411 P.3d at 748; see also People v. Jacobs, 91 P.3d 438, 440,

  442 (Colo. App. 2003) (holding that the defendant could be

  prosecuted in Colorado for soliciting for child prostitution when, in

  response to a California detective’s website offering “very young . . .


                                     11
  escorts,” the defendant sent emails proposing to engage in sexual

  acts with a twelve-year-old girl in Colorado).

¶ 30   In contrast, in Nevelik, the defendant, a Texas resident, had no

  contact with the Colorado victims. Nevelik, ¶ 1, 491 P.3d at 492.

  The victims in that case lost more than $20,000 through a wire

  fraud scheme, and the defendant was a “money mule” hired to move

  the victim’s funds from the defendant’s bank account to the

  instigators’ accounts. Id. at ¶¶ 1-2, 5-7, 491 P.3d at 492-93. The

  defendant’s conviction for money laundering rested on, as relevant

  here, his role in conducting a financial transaction that involved

  money he knew was, or believed to be, the proceeds of a criminal

  offense, with the intent to promote the commission of a criminal

  offense. Id. at ¶ 12, 491 P.3d at 493-94 (citing § 18-5-309(1)(a)(I),

  C.R.S. 2024).

¶ 31   The division held that Colorado lacked jurisdiction over the

  defendant’s prosecution because “the essential elements of money

  laundering occurred outside of Colorado” and because the

  defendant “never traveled to, emailed, telephoned, or had any other

  contact with anyone in Colorado, nor did he commit any of the acts




                                    12
  in furtherance of a money laundering offense in Colorado.” Id. at

  ¶¶ 14, 16, 491 P.3d at 494.

¶ 32   These authorities instruct that, when conducting a

  jurisdictional analysis, we must closely examine the material

  elements of the charged offenses and disregard facts not subsumed

  within those elements. Accordingly, we consider whether Brennan

  engaged in conduct in Colorado that constituted an element of

  either unauthorized use or identity theft; whether the result of her

  conduct was an element of either offense (and if so, whether the

  result occurred in this state); and whether Brennan’s conviction

  was based on her failure to perform a duty required under Colorado

  law. We therefore turn to the elements of the unauthorized use and

  identity theft statutes.

         D.   The Unauthorized Use and Identity Theft Statutes

        1.    Unauthorized Use of a Financial Transaction Device

¶ 33           (1) A person commits unauthorized use of a
               financial transaction device if [s]he uses
               such device for the purpose of obtaining
               cash, credit, property, or services or for
               making financial payment, with intent to
               defraud, and with notice that . . .

               ....



                                   13
            (b) For any reason h[er] use of the financial
            transaction device is unauthorized either by the
            issuer thereof or by the account holder.

            (2) For purposes of paragraphs (a) and (b) of
            subsection (1) of this section, “notice” includes
            either notice given in person or notice given in
            writing to the account holder.

  § 18-5-702 (emphases added).

                            2.      Identity Theft

¶ 34            (1) A person commits identity theft if he or
                she:

                (a) Knowingly uses the personal identifying
                information, financial identifying
                information, or financial device of another
                without permission or lawful authority with
                the intent to obtain cash, credit, property,
                services, or any other thing of value or to
                make a financial payment . . . .

  § 18-5-902.

                                 III.   Analysis

       A.   Colorado Lacks Jurisdiction Over This Case Because
            All the Conduct Elements Occurred in New York and
                     the Statutes Governing the Offenses
                       Do Not Include Result Elements

¶ 35   We conclude that the court lacked subject matter jurisdiction

  over Brennan’s prosecution because none of her conduct forming a

  material element of either offense occurred in Colorado, and the




                                        14
  unauthorized use and identity theft statutes do not include a result

  element. See § 18-1-201(2).

¶ 36     The following tables show the elements of unauthorized use

  and identity theft, the classification of each element, and where in

  this case the conduct occurred:

        Elements of Section           Type of Element        Location
           18-5-702(1)(b):        (Conduct, Circumstance,
         Unauthorized Use                or Result)

   1.     Use of a financial                Conduct          New York
          transaction device

   2.     for the purpose of                Conduct          New York
          obtaining cash,
          credit, property, or
          services or for
          making financial
          payment

   3.     with intent to                    Conduct          New York
          defraud

   4.     and with notice that            Circumstance          N/A
          her use of the
          financial transaction
          device is
          unauthorized by the
          account holder

  (Because attendant circumstance elements — unlike conduct or

  result elements — do not confer jurisdiction, see § 18-1-201, we




                                     15
  need not determine the geographic location of the attendant

  circumstance elements of the charged offenses.)

¶ 37   Brennan notes that the “for the purpose” element of the

  unauthorized use statute could be viewed as a result element to the

  extent section 18-5-702 requires that the “defendant in fact

  obtain[ed] possession or use of cash, credit, property, or services

  through the unauthorized use of a financial transaction device.”

  People v. Novitskiy, 81 P.3d 1070, 1073 (Colo. App. 2003),

  abrogated on other grounds by Reyna-Abarca v. People, 2017 CO 15,

  ¶¶ 34-36, 390 P.3d 816, 821-22. But Brennan reads too much into

  the element’s language, particularly as the Novitskiy division did

  not consider the classification of the unauthorized use statute’s

  elements. But even if “for the purpose” could be deemed a result

  element, our analysis would not change because Brennan engaged

  in conduct in New York for the purpose of obtaining Camp

  Ramaquois’s services in New York.




                                    16
        Elements of Section             Type of Element         Location
       18-5-902(1)(a): Identity     (Conduct, Circumstance,
               Theft                       or Result)

   1.      Knowingly                          Conduct           New York

   2.      uses the financial                 Conduct           New York
           device of another

   3.      without permission               Circumstance          N/A
           or lawful authority

   4.      with the intent to                 Conduct           New York
           obtain cash, credit,
           property, services, or
           any other thing of
           value or to make a
           financial payment

¶ 38      We recognize that the pattern jury instructions for

  unauthorized use and identity theft break down the elements of the

  offenses even further — for example, separating “with intent to

  defraud” into two elements (“with intent” and “to defraud”). COLJI-

  Crim. 5-7:01 (2024); see COLJI-Crim. 5-9:01 (2024). However, we

  decline to take such a granular approach to the plain language of

  the unauthorized use and identity theft statutes. See People v.

  Hernandez, 2025 CO 13, ¶ 9, 566 P.3d 995, 997 (We give statutes

  their “plain and ordinary meaning.” (quoting People v. Steen, 2014

  CO 9, ¶ 9, 318 P.3d 487, 490)); see also Krueger v. Ary, 205 P.3d



                                       17
  1150, 1154 (Colo. 2009) (“[T]he pattern instructions are not law, not

  authoritative, and not binding on this court.”).

¶ 39   In any event, no conduct elements occurred in Colorado

  because Brennan did not improperly obtain the card information in

  Colorado. Nor did she ever even possess that information.

  Caltabiano had previously provided it to Camp Ramaquois without

  restriction. Brennan merely instructed Camp Ramaquois to use the

  card information on file to charge Caltabiano for his share of the

  two children’s camp expenses.

¶ 40   It is of no consequence that, as the People point out,

  Caltabiano’s physical credit card was located in Colorado because,

  again, Brennan never had possession of it. The financial

  transaction device that Brennan allegedly used without

  authorization was an “account number representing a financial

  account,” § 18-5-701(3), C.R.S. 2024, because she instructed the

  New York camp to use the credit card information in its file.

¶ 41   The prosecution presented no evidence that Brennan formed

  the mental state elements of the unauthorized use and identity theft

  statutes in Colorado. Thus, her unlawful use of a financial device




                                    18
  involved calling the camp and telling it to use a credit card it

  already had on file — conduct that solely occurred in New York.

¶ 42   We are not persuaded by the People’s argument that

  Brennan’s knowledge that Caltabiano resided in Colorado and her

  email correspondence to him conferred jurisdiction in Colorado. We

  disagree with the People’s contention that, under Chase, Brennan’s

  knowledge of the victim’s state of residence was sufficient to

  establish jurisdiction in this state.

¶ 43   We acknowledge that, in Chase, the division quoted with

  approval the United States Supreme Court’s statement in

  Strassheim v. Daily, 221 U.S. 280, 285 (1911), that “[a]cts done

  outside a jurisdiction, but intended to produce and producing

  detrimental effects within it, justify a state in punishing the cause

  of the harm as if he had been present at the effect, if the state

  should succeed in getting him within its power.” Chase, ¶ 29, 411

  P.3d at 748. But the facts in Chase and Strassheim, as well as the

  Colorado jurisdictional statute, caution against an overly broad

  reading of this language.

¶ 44   As noted above, in Chase, there were numerous connections

  between the elements of the stalking charge of which the defendant


                                     19
  was convicted and Colorado. (Although the defendant was also

  convicted of three misdemeanor harassment counts, he did not

  challenge those convictions on jurisdictional grounds. Id. at ¶¶ 1,

  11, 411 P.3d at 744, 746.) The defendant sent threatening emails

  to victims he knew resided in Colorado, even though they received

  the emails while in another state; he knew where the victims lived

  in Colorado and that they would be returning to this state; he

  demanded that the victims take specific actions in Colorado; he

  needed to be in Colorado to determine whether the victims complied

  with his demands; and he threatened to retaliate against the

  victims in Colorado. Chase, ¶¶ 2-7, 26, 411 P.3d at 744-75.

¶ 45   Significantly, the stalking statute that the division discussed

  in Chase included a result element with a strong tie to Colorado.

  See id. at ¶ 22, 411 P.3d at 747 (“[T]he elemental conduct of making

  a credible threat” for purposes of the stalking statute “is defined by

  its result of causing a reasonable person to be in fear as

  described.”). The Chase division concluded there was sufficient

  evidence to establish that the defendant’s emailed threats “would

  have caused a reasonable person in the position of [the victims] to




                                    20
  be in fear for their own safety and the safety of other persons in

  Colorado.” Id. at ¶ 26, 411 P.3d at 748 (emphasis added).

¶ 46   Unlike the stalking offense analyzed in Chase, the offenses of

  which Brennan was convicted did not include result elements,

  much less result elements that occurred, in whole or in part, in

  Colorado. Brennan’s transmission of emails to Caltabiano in

  Colorado was not an element of either charged offense: The

  prosecution was not required to establish that Brennan

  communicated with Caltabiano to prove that she committed

  unauthorized use or identity theft. Brennan could have been

  convicted without evidence of the emails. In sum, we need not

  consider whether any result of Brennan’s conduct occurred in

  Colorado because neither the unauthorized use nor the identity

  theft statute includes a result element. See § 18-1-201(2).

¶ 47   Similarly, the facts in Strassheim do not support the

  conclusion that a state may exercise jurisdiction over a criminal

  defendant solely because the defendant knew that the victim

  resided in the forum state, even if the underlying criminal statute

  does not include a result element linked to the forum. In

  Strassheim, the United States Supreme Court held that a Michigan


                                    21
  court could exercise jurisdiction over the defendant’s criminal case

  because he committed an “overt act” while physically present in

  Michigan. 221 U.S. at 285. Thus, allowing a state to prosecute a

  criminal case solely because the defendant knew the victim resided

  in that state would unreasonably expand the sweep of jurisdictional

  statutes such as section 18-1-201.

¶ 48   The facts in this case are akin to those in Nevelik, in which

  none of the defendant’s actions occurred in Colorado. Nevelik,

  ¶¶ 14, 16, 491 P.3d at 494. Although, unlike the defendant in

  Nevelik, Brennan knew the victim’s identity and his state of

  residence, those facts are insignificant because such knowledge was

  not an element of either unauthorized use or identity theft.

¶ 49   The court’s rationale for exercising jurisdiction — that there

  was a “sufficient nexus” between Brennan’s conduct and the

  elements of the unauthorized use and identity theft statutes —

  tracked the trial court’s determination in Tinkle that the defendant’s

  actions in Colorado were “part and parcel” of the charged offense.

  714 P.2d at 920. But the division in Tinkle rejected that reasoning

  on appeal, and the “sufficient nexus” analysis fares no better here.




                                   22
  Section 18-1-201 cabins our jurisdictional analysis to the specific

  elements of the charged offenses.

¶ 50   Because no conduct related to any element of the offenses of

  which Brennan was convicted occurred in Colorado, the court erred

  by exercising jurisdiction over Brennan’s case. See § 18-1-201(2).

                 B.     Brennan Did Not Fail to Perform
                      a Duty Required Under Colorado Law

¶ 51   The People alternatively argue that, because Brennan did not

  obtain Caltabiano’s authorization to use the card, she engaged in

  unauthorized use and identity theft based on her omission to

  perform a duty imposed by Colorado law. See § 18-1-201(3).

¶ 52   To support this argument, the People cite People v. Haynie, a

  parental kidnapping case arising from the defendant father’s breach

  of his duty under the subject divorce decree to timely return the

  children to their mother. 826 P.2d 371, 373 (Colo. App. 1991). But

  Brennan did not fail to perform a duty imposed by Colorado law.

¶ 53   Unlike the father in Haynie, Brennan did not violate the law by

  not seeking Caltabiano’s authorization to use the card before Camp

  Ramaquois charged it for the children’s expenses. The elements of

  unauthorized use and identity theft do not require the user of the



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  financial device to take the initial affirmative step of seeking

  authorization to use the device. Rather, they prohibit the

  intentional or knowing use of those devices to make an

  unauthorized payment. Thus, a shopper who discovers a credit

  card on the floor of a grocery store does not violate the law by failing

  to hunt down its owner to ask for permission to use the card. The

  shopper can violate the unauthorized use and identity theft statutes

  simply by using the credit card with the knowledge that the shopper

  lacks permission to do so.

¶ 54   The Florida and Massachusetts cases on which the People rely

  are inapposite, either because the elements of the charged offenses

  included an affirmative duty to obtain the victim’s consent or

  because the state’s jurisdictional law materially differs from section

  18-1-201. See State v. Roberts, 143 So. 3d 936, 937-38 (Fla. Dist.

  Ct. App. 2014) (holding that a Florida court had jurisdiction over an

  Indiana defendant’s prosecution for violating Florida’s identity theft

  statute because one of its elements requires the use of another’s

  personal information “without first obtaining that individual’s

  consent,” constituting an omission of a duty imposed by Florida

  law) (citation omitted); Commonwealth v. Thompson, 50 N.E.3d 845,


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  857-59 (Mass. App. Ct. 2016) (addressing a statute that, like the

  Florida statute, contained a failure to obtain consent element and

  applying the Massachusetts rule that a court can exercise

  jurisdiction over a criminal case if the defendant’s conduct had

  “detrimental effects” in the state, without considering whether such

  effects must be an element of the offense).

¶ 55   Thus, the court could not exercise jurisdiction over Brennan’s

  case on the grounds that she failed to perform a legal duty. Neither

  the unauthorized use nor the identity theft statute imposes an

  affirmative duty that the defendant obtain the victim’s consent

  before using the victim’s financial device.

                             IV.   Disposition

¶ 56   The judgment of conviction is vacated, and therefore, the

  district court must dismiss the charges against Brennan.

       JUDGE PAWAR and JUDGE LUM concur.




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