Breaking
World leaders gather for emergency summit on climate crisis • Tech giants announce major breakthrough in fusion energy • Stocks reach all-time high as global trade recovers • Global News 24 launches premium news experience • Stay updated with real-time headlines •
BACK TO NEWS
Politicsabout 3 hours ago

Colorado governor commutes sentence of election denier Tina Peters

The Guardian
The Guardian

Verified Publisher

Colorado governor commutes sentence of election denier Tina Peters

Former election clerk who allowed unauthorized access to voting systems was convicted and sentenced to nine years The Colorado governor, Jared Polis, commuted the nearly nine-year prison sentence of a former Colorado clerk who allowed unauthorized people to access her county’s voting systems in a case that had been an intense focus of Donald Trump and other allies who

Tina Peters outside court in Grand Junction, Colorado in December 2021.

Photograph: McKenzie Lange/AP View image in fullscreen Tina Peters outside court in Grand Junction, Colorado in December 2021.

Photograph: McKenzie Lange/AP Colorado governor commutes sentence of election denier Tina Peters Former election clerk who allowed unauthorized access to voting systems was convicted and sentenced to nine years The Colorado governor, Jared Polis, commuted the nearly nine-year prison sentence of a former Colorado clerk who allowed unauthorized people to access her county’s voting systems in a case that had been an intense focus of Donald Trump and other allies who sought to overturn the 2020 election.

Peters, who is currently incarcerated, will be released on parole on 1 June after Polis reduced her sentence from eight and a half years in prison to about four and a half. “This is an extremely unusual and lengthy sentence for a first time offender who committed non-violent crimes,” Polis wrote in a clemency letter to Peters.

Tina Peters, the former clerk in Mesa county in western Colorado, was found guilty of four felonies and three misdemeanors in 2024 . In 2021, she allowed a former pro surfer named Conan Hayes to access the county’s voting equipment and copy it and attend a sensitive upgrade of the county’s voting software.

Hayes is affiliated with MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell, one of the most prominent figures to spread misinformation about the 2020 election and try and overturn it. Sensitive passwords and other information from Mesa county’s voting equipment, made by Dominion, later was published online by rightwing personalities.

A judge sentenced Peters to eight and a half years in prison and six months in jail. “You are no hero,” judge Matthew Barrett said when he sentenced Peters in 2024. “You’re a charlatan who used, and is still using, your prior position in office to peddle a snake oil that’s been proven to be junk time and time again.” But an appeals court overturned that sentence in April , and ordered a judge to reconsider it.

Trump, who continues to spread false information about Dominion and the 2020 election, has repeatedly called for Peters to be freed. He issued a federal pardon to Peters last year, but the effort was largely symbolic since Peters is in prison for state crimes. He also instructed the justice department to try and get Peters released from prison.

“God Bless Tina Peters, who is now, for two years out of nine, sitting in a Colorado Maximum Security Prison, at the age of 73, and sick, for the “crime” of trying to stop the massive voter fraud that goes on in her State (where people are leaving in record numbers!),” he posted on Truth Social last year.

“Hard to wish her a Happy New Year, but to the Scumbag Governor, and the disgusting “Republican” (RINO!) DA, who did this to her (nothing happens to the Dems and their phony Mail In Ballot System that makes it impossible for a Republican to win an otherwise very winnable State!), I wish them only the worst.” Polis, a Democrat serving his second term as governor, had been tight-lipped about potential clemency for Peters for months. But on 3 March , he gave a strong signal he was leaning towards doing so. In a post on social media, he compared Peters’ case with that of former state senator Sonya Jaquez Lewis. Lewis was convicted of submitting forged letters to the legislature during an inquiry into whether she mistreated staff.

Both Lewis and Peters have overlapping felony counts of attempting to influence a public official, but Lewis was sentenced to probation and community service. Polis said: “Justice in Colorado and America needs to be applied evenly, you never know when you might need to depend on the rule of law. This is the context I am using as I consider cases like this that have sentencing disparities.” But officials in Colorado said it was not accurate to compare the two cases. Election officials also warned that letting Peters off the hook would send the wrong message to those who tamper with elections.

“Beyond one count in common, it is not accurate to suggest that Peters’s and Sonya Jaquez Lewis’s actions or impacts are the same,” Jena Griswold, Colorado’s secretary of state, said in a statement at the time.

“Peters organized the breach of the election equipment, broke the public trust and attacked the very foundations of our democratic process,” Griswold, a Democrat, said in a statement. “Her actions are still being used to try to undermine the 2026 election. She should get no special treatment by the Governor, and his statement is shocking and worrisome.” Dan Rubinstein, the district attorney whose office prosecuted Peters, noted that sentencing ranges allowed for two people convicted of the same charge to get different sentences.

“The same offense can be committed in very different ways and result in very different consequences,” he said in a statement. “While the governor has the legal authority to modify a sentence, doing so here would be a gross injustice to the affected citizens I represent,” he said earlier this month.

Explore more on these topics US news US elections 2024 US voting rights news Share Reuse this content

Read original story at The Guardian

Continue reading this article on the publisher's website.

Visit Website

More from The Guardian

Iraqi accused of multiple terror attacks in US and Europe arrested and charged
Technology
The Guardian
The Guardianabout 1 hour ago1 min read

Iraqi accused of multiple terror attacks in US and Europe arrested and charged

Mohammad Baqer Saad Dawood al-Saadi appeared in US federal court to face six terrorism-related chargesThe US justice department has arrested and charged an Iraqi national accused of involvement in nearly 20 alleged terror attacks and attempted attacks across the US and Europe.The wave of violence attributed to Mohammad Baqer Saad Dawood al-Saadi has caused huge concern in many Euro

Pentagon quietly shut legally required program to prevent civilian deaths by military, watchdog finds
Technology
The Guardian
The Guardianabout 2 hours ago1 min read

Pentagon quietly shut legally required program to prevent civilian deaths by military, watchdog finds

Trump administration accused of cutting military’s civilian harm program in light of US strike on girls school in IranThe Pentagon has quietly dismantled a program it is legally required to operate to prevent and respond to civilian deaths in US military operations, according to its internal watchdog.A report released by the department’s inspector general

Tennessee school district bans Alex Haley’s Roots under 2022 state law
Sports
The Guardian
The Guardianabout 3 hours ago1 min read

Tennessee school district bans Alex Haley’s Roots under 2022 state law

With third-highest number of books banned, state removes renowned work about slave trade from library shelvesA Tennessee school district has banned Roots, the author Alex Haley’s groundbreaking novel and one of the most renowned and influential works about the horrors of the transatlantic slave trade.Knox county schools (KCS) took that step under a