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Colorado Judge Resigns After Admitting to Using N-Word and Saying All Lives Matter While at Work


By Victor Omondi
Colorado District Judge Natalie Chase stepped down after she admitted to having used a racial slur in front of court employees, and made inappropriate comments about Black people. The judge was also reported to have been asking other employees to do her personal tasks during work hours. 
Chase handed her resignation letter on Friday and agreed to officially be off-work on May 31st, 45 days later. She apparently didn’t deny or dispute any accusations indicated in the court order. The judge was censured on Friday by the Colorado Supreme Court after serious allegations stemming from an investigation by The Denver Post were made against her.

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Colorado Judge Resigns After Using N-Word Multiple Times


Colorado Judge Resigns After Using N-Word Multiple Times
She also questioned why it was socially acceptable for Black people to use the word but not white people.
Published 15 hours ago
Written by Paul Meara
A Colorado judge is resigning after she was censured by the state’s Supreme Court for using racist language with a coworker.
Arapahoe County District Court Judge
Natalie T. Chase was accused of using the N-word multiple times with a coworker and was racially insensitive on numerous occasions, court documents for discipline and censure revealed.
The Colorado Supreme Court detailed a 2020 incident in which Chase, a former law clerk and a Family Court Facilitator, was headed to work after attending an event in Pueblo. While driving back, Chase questioned why it was socially acceptable for Black people to use the word but not white people.

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Colorado Judge Resigns After Admitting to Using the N-Word at Work and Saying 'All Lives Matter'


Updated: 11:21 AM PDT, April 21, 2021
Judge Natalie T. Chase agreed to step down after the Colorado Supreme Court censured her last Friday for violating her duties of the office.
A Colorado judge had agreed to step down this week from her role after she admitted to repeatedly using racial slurs, saying all lives matter, and expressing her opinion on racial issues and police brutality. Judge Natalie T. Chase, 43, who was based in Arapahoe County outside Denver, resigned after the Colorado Supreme Court censured her last Friday for violating her duties of the office.
She was appointed to the District Court in 2014 by Gov. John Hickenlooper, a Democrat who is now a U.S. senator, the New York Times reported.

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Colorado judge steps down after saying N-word, all lives matter at work

Colorado judge steps down after saying N-word, all lives matter at work
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Colorado Judge Resigns After Admitting to Using the N-Word and Making Other Controversial Remarks While on the Bench


Colorado Judge Resigns After Admitting to Using the N-Word and Making Other Controversial Remarks While on the Bench
A Colorado District judge has resigned after admitting to using racial slurs in front of court employees.
On Friday, April 16, the Colorado Supreme Court issued an order in which it publicly censured and accepted Natalie T. Chase’s resignation after being accused of expressing her views on racial issues from the bench. She reportedly also asked employees to perform personal tasks for her during work hours. 
Judge Natalie Chase(Colorado Office of Judicial Evaluation)
The order stated that Chase confessed to using the N-word several times in early 2020 while driving to Pueblo, Colorado, with a former law clerk and a Family Court facilitator. According to the order, Chase allegedly asked the facilitator, who is Black, questions about why Black people were allowed to use the N-word but not white people. She also questioned if the same rules would be applied if the word was said with an “er” or an “a” at the end. “During the conversation, Judge Chase used the full N-word a number of times,” the order stated.

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Colorado judge Natalie Chase resigns after using N-word multiple times and using racially insensitive language


By Caitlin O Kane
Alicia Garza on the origin of Black Lives Matter
A Colorado judge who was censured by the state s Supreme Court after being accused of using racist language with a coworker has resigned.
The Colorado Supreme Court said Arapahoe County District Court Judge Natalie T. Chase used the N-word multiple times with a coworker and was racially insensitive on many occasions, according to court documents recommending discipline for Chase and public censure from the Court.
The documents detail a 2020 incident in which Chase, a former law clerk and a Family Court Facilitator were driving back to work after attending an event in Pueblo, Colorado.

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Colorado judge resigns after using N-word


Colorado judge resigns after using N-word
Caitlin O Kane
© Colorado Office of Judicial Evaluation
chase.jpg
A Colorado judge who was censured by the state s Supreme Court after being accused of using racist language with a coworker has resigned.
The Colorado Supreme Court said Arapahoe County District Court Judge Natalie T. Chase used the N-word multiple times with a coworker and was racially insensitive on many occasions, according to court documents recommending discipline for Chase and public censure from the Court.
The documents detail a 2020 incident in which Chase, a former law clerk and a Family Court Facilitator were driving back to work after attending an event in Pueblo, Colorado.

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Colorado judge resigns after she 'used the full N-word' in conversation Black co-worker: court documents


A Colorado judge who was recently censored by the state s Supreme Court amid accusations of racist language has now resigned.
According to CBS News, documents compiled by the Colorado Supreme Court include details about Arapahoe County District Court Judge Natalie T. Chase s racially insensitive conversation with a co-worker. The conversation allegedly took place back in 2020 as Chase, a Family Court Facilitator, and a former law clerk were driving back home from Pueblo, Colo., after attending an event.
Judge Chase is white and the Family Court Facilitator is Black, the documents read. On the way back from Pueblo, Judge Chase asked the Family Court Facilitator questions about why Black people can use the N-word but not white people, and whether it was different if the N-word is said with an er or an a at the end of the word.

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Colorado Judge Resigns After Using N-Word Multiple Times, Using Racially Insensitive Language


Colorado Judge Resigns After Using N-Word Multiple Times, Using Racially Insensitive Language
A Colorado judge who was censured by the state s Supreme Court after being accused of using racist language with a coworker has resigned.
The Colorado Supreme Court said Arapahoe County District Court Judge Natalie T. Chase used the N-word multiple times with a coworker and was racially insensitive on many occasions, according to court documents recommending discipline for Chase and public censure from the Court.
The documents detail a 2020 incident in which Chase, a former law clerk and a Family Court Facilitator were driving back to work after attending an event in Pueblo, Colorado.

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Colorado Judge Set to Resign After Using N-Word and Declaring 'All Lives Matter'


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Judge Natalie Chase was censured by the Colorado Supreme Court for exhibiting inappropriate work behavior, including use of the N-word.
According to
The Denver Post, a judge in Colorado’s largest judicial district will resign. It was reported that the Colorado Supreme Court on Friday censured 18th Judicial District Court Judge Natalie Chase for using a racial slur, employing derogatory language to speak about another judge, and espousing opinions about racial justice from the bench, and directing court employees to work on her personal business.
A six-page order was provided as a part of the Colorado Commission on Judicial Discipline’s investigation of various incidents. It revealed that in late January or early February 2020, Chase had court employees in her car to and from Pueblo, Colorado, after attending an event. Upon returning from Pueblo, Judge Chase, who is white, asked the Black Family Court Facilitator why Black people can use the N-word but not white people. The order also said that she asked whether it was different if the N-word is said with an “er” or an “a” at the end of the word. Judge Chase used the full N-word a number of times, during this conversation. It was also said that the Family Court Facilitator was uncomfortable, angry, and hurt. She remarked that Judge Chase’s use of the full N-word was “like a stab through my heart each time.”

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