Sharon Shuteran Memorial Service Saturday, June 2, 2 p.m. at The Palm
by Watch Staff
May 31, 2012 | 1589 views | 0 0 comments | 4 4 recommendations | email to a friend | print
A memorial service for Sharon Shuteran, who died unexpectedly last month, takes place Saturday, June 2, at 2 p.m., at the Palm Theatre
A memorial service for Sharon Shuteran, who died unexpectedly last month, takes place Saturday, June 2, at 2 p.m., at the Palm Theatre
slideshow
TELLURIDE – A memorial service for Sharon Shuteran will be held Saturday, June 2, at 2 p.m., at the Palm Theatre.

Shuteran’s death on May 5, in Mexico, sent shock waves through the Telluride community, where she served as San Miguel County Court judge since 1984.

Shuteran was equally prominent outside the courtroom, where she was a frequent volunteer to local festivals and nonprofits, a familiar presence on town streets, ski slopes and hiking trails, and a close friend to many.

Shuteran died unexpectedly on a morning hike near a friend’s house in Cabo Pulmo, Baja California; a search party found her body after she failed to return as expected. To have died abroad was also characteristic of Shuteran, who traveled the world extensively.

Shuteran, 58, was a fourth generation Coloradoan, and a 1978 graduate of the University of Denver law school. She started her legal career as a VISTA attorney for Legal Services in Denver, and then as a deputy district attorney. She arrived in Telluride in 1979, when she purchased the Excelsior Café, which she operated for 14 years.

Friends remembered her as unfailingly kind and generous; her colleagues, as an unfailingly fair judge. In the outpouring of grief everywhere, from her Facebook page to comments on The Watch website to countless conversations, there were recollections of her deep and wide-ranging interests and her extraordinary compassion for all who came across her path.

“Leave it to Sharon,” longtime friend Lynn Rae Lowe posted on Shuteran’s Facebook page, soon after news broke of Shuteran’s death. “She made her transition on the same day as the Buddha was born, enlightened and died.”

“She really touched more bases and with more presence than anyone I know,” said Shuteran’s close friend Marshall Whiting.

“Sharon’s ego was not part of any of her behavior or activities; it was not in need of reinforcement,” Whiting said. “Her need was to be of help to others in the world, whether it was helping them to be a better driver or setting up the San Miguel Resource Center or doing a mock trial with students, which she did last week at the school.

“She showed up,” said Whiting, of Shuteran’s involvement in the world around her. “Sharon was the real deal,” both in her personal life and in the courtroom, where “she gave both love and instruction. If it needed to be there, she just laid it out, compassionately but fearlessly, trying in her own way to build a bridge to that person, to light the fire of ethics and of turning around their lives.”

In a statement released this week, Seventh Judicial District Attorney Dan Hotsenpiller praised Shuteran as someone who “did not just ‘move people through the system’ – she cared deeply about each and every defendant and worked diligently to find creative sentencing solutions,” carefully weighing “rehabilitation and punishment considerations to do the right thing for defendants, victims and the community.

“Aside from her long-term service on the bench,” Hotsenpiller wrote, “Judge Shuteran was active in countless nonprofit organizations. For the past several years, she traveled to Bhutan with a group of physicians and other volunteers to help children with cleft palates. She never slowed down, always getting involved and trying to make the world better.”

In the Seventh Judicial District’s Telluride office, attorney Keri Yoder remembered her friend and colleague. “I think we feel empty,” said Yoder. “I think everyone feels empty. She had such a strong presence. You always knew where she stood. She had her policies, and it was protective for me to be able to say, ‘The judge isn’t going to accept anything less than that.

“She really cared about everybody who came through there; she really cared and made sure they knew what their rights were and that they understood the process, and she wasn’t going to hurry them through, even if I wanted her to.”

Shuteran is survived by her son, Eliot Muckerman.
Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet

photos

more photos