Denver County Court mourns passing of Judge Andre Rudolph

DENVER – Denver County Court announces with deep sadness the passing of Judge Andre Rudolph, who died unexpectedly on Friday, May 15, 2025. He was 59 years of age. Appointed to the bench in January 2005 by then-Denver Mayor John Hickenlooper, Judge Rudolph served for more than two decades and was one of the Court’s longest-serving judges. At 37 years old at the time of his appointment, he was among the youngest judges in the State of Colorado.

“Andre Rudolph was one of the most vibrant, larger-than-life people I have ever known,” said Presiding Judge Kerri Lombardi. “He walked into every room and filled it with his presence, his laugh, his generosity of spirit. As a jurist, he demonstrated every day that the administration of justice is not an abstraction, but a practice carried out with integrity, fairness, and deep humanity. He believed that judges who are present in their communities are better judges, and he lived that belief without exception. I had the privilege of working alongside him and calling him my friend for more than 31 years, and I will miss him in ways I cannot fully put into words. His loss leaves a profound void in this Court and in this community, and his example will shape us for years to come.”


Judge Rudolph was born and raised in Cheyenne, Wyoming, where he was later inducted into the Central High School Hall of Fame. He attended the University of Wyoming on a football scholarship, earning his undergraduate degree while competing as part of two WAC Championship football teams in 1987 and 1988, an achievement that twice earned him a place in the University of Wyoming Athletics Hall of Fame. Supported by the prestigious Patricia Roberts Harris Fellowship, he went on to earn his law degree from Creighton University School of Law in Omaha, Nebraska in 1993.

Judge Rudolph began his legal career as a deputy state public defender in 1993, a role in which he quickly distinguished himself, earning the Lowrey Kelley Memorial Boot Camp Award as the outstanding young public defender of the year in 1995. In 1999, he was appointed as a magistrate in Denver District Court to serve on the drug court bench at a time when Denver operated one of the first and largest drug courts in the country, work for which he was later named Drug Court Employee of the Year. He also served as a Magistrate in the 17th Judicial District before his appointment to Denver County Court.

On the bench at Denver County Court, Judge Rudolph presided over municipal and state criminal proceedings and built a reputation for being knowledgeable, prepared, and exceptionally efficient. He was also an adjunct professor at the University of Denver Sturm College of Law and received the Sam Cary Bar Association’s Distinguished Jurist Award.

Judge Rudolph was a tireless and joyful presence in the Denver community. He served on the boards of Denver Kids, the Stapleton Redevelopment Corporation, and the Justice Information Center, and was a representative to the Denver County Court’s Racial and Gender Disparity Committee. He mentored minority law students through the Sam Cary Bar Association and the Colorado Hispanic Bar Association. He was twice honored by the Denver Sheriff’s Department, in 2000 and again in 2009, for his personal intervention in apprehending a fleeing felon and assisting deputies in detaining a courtroom escapee and was awarded an honorary badge in a ceremony conducted by the Sheriff’s Department.

Away from the courthouse, Judge Rudolph dedicated himself to a cause close to his heart. After his father was diagnosed with prostate cancer, he became a passionate advocate for early detection, volunteering with Pints for Prostates and carrying the message with personal conviction: “If my dad would have gotten diagnosed earlier, he would still be here.” It was a mission he pursued with the same energy and warmth he brought to everything he did.

Funeral and memorial service arrangements, as well as additional information from the family, will be announced and shared with the public as they become available.

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