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As DOJ looks into Tina Peters' prosecution, Colorado officials field pleas from her supporters

FILE - Tina Peters, former Mesa County, Colo., clerk, listens during her trial, March 3, 2023, in Grand Junction, Colo. (Scott Crabtree/The Grand Junction Daily Sentinel via AP, Pool, File)
Scott Crabtree/AP
/
Pool The Grand Junction Daily Sentinel
Tina Peters, former Mesa County, Colo., clerk, listens during her trial, March 3, 2023, in Grand Junction, Colo. Supporters are targeting state officials with an email campaign, while also calling on the Trump administration to take action.

Supporters of former Mesa County Clerk Tina Peters are trying to persuade the governor and state lawmakers to do something about her long prison sentence, on the heels of news that the U.S. Justice Department for abuses of the criminal justice process. 

In October Peters was sentenced to nine years on charges stemming from her efforts to help a man gain unauthorized access to Mesa Countys Dominion voting machines in 2021. She is currently being held in the Larimer County jail while she appeals her conviction.

Democratic Rep. Jenny Willford of Northglenn said shes received about 50 emails so far this week from Peters supporters, mostly people from Texas, 

They are all talking about how Tina Peters has been victimized and Colorados weaponizing our justice system to keep her in jail, that Tina did not break the law, said Willford. 

The emails are going to every member of the general assembly as well as Gov. Jared Polis and Attorney General Phil Weiser. 

Its fascinating to me that weve received this many emails asking us to free Tina Peters,  Willford told CPR 做窪惇蹋. That is not our position or something that we even have the authority to do as a legislature.

While state lawmakers dont have power to overturn a state conviction, Gov. Polis does have that authority. His office said he has received 400 emails and calls since January in favor of a pardon for Peters. 

The individual has not applied to be considered through that process, spokesman Eric Maruyama wrote in response to CPRs questions. He added that the Governor would only consider a clemency application on its own merits regardless of bullying and threats. 

Polis office said the bullying and threats reference was in response to which said some Republican leaders in Colorado are calling on the Trump administration to withhold federal funding to the state to force a pardon from Polis. 

Quid pro quo or blackmail is not the way our system of laws work, Maruyama stated. Coloradans are federal taxpayers. Its repugnant to demand to withhold taxpayer money in exchange for a political favor.

A spokesman for Attorney General Phil Weiser said the office cannot comment on this pending matter at this time, but will have a court filing soon on Peters federal habeas petition, in which shes . 

Republican state Rep. Scott Bottoms of Colorado Springs, who is also a candidate for governor, said hes been closely involved in conversations with Peters and others about her situation and pushing for her release. He said he thinks Colorado is already on track to lose federal funding, not because of Peters, but because of the states opposition to the Trump administration on other issues that he thinks are anti-parent and anti-child, like trans rights.

Bottoms said hes glad Peters case is getting more attention because he believes her conviction and whats happened to her since are unjust. 

She should have got probation, but she gets nine years and shes not allowed to get out on appeal. This stuff does not happen except in a Venezuela-type government, he said.

As supporters rally to aid Peters, others see any federal intervention as a miscarriage of justice

Peters continues to argue she did nothing wrong when she helped an unauthorized person use someone elses identity to access her offices election equipment and attend a secure software update. And she remains a cause celeb for those on the right who believe election equipment makers conspired with Democrats to sway elections claims that have never been upheld in any court.

Sherronna Bishop, a prominent conservative activist who participated in the planning behind efforts to copy Mesa Countys election equipment hard drives, is working with Mike Lindell, the CEO of MyPillow and a prominent election denier, and his Lindell Offense Fund to raise money for Peters legal fees. 

Theres a lot of people that have stepped up and want to help and want to see this be made right, said Bishop. We believe this is political. This is a political hit job. 

Mesa County District Attorney Daniel Rubinstein, a Republican, said his offices prosecution was not politically motivated, noting that the judicial district sits in a conservative part of the state. 

For Republican Rep. Matt Soper of Delta, who represents most of Mesa County at the capitol, the handling of Peters case is a states rights issue.

I see this as being a very classic constitutional analysis of stay in your lane, he said of the Justice Department interest. 

Soper noted he has constituents on both sides of the issue, but regardless of how someone feels about Tina Peters conviction, she was convicted under Colorado state law by a jury of her peers from Mesa County. 

Soper, who holds a law degree, said from his legal analysis, he doesnt see what leverage the DOJ has over Colorado. 

If the leverage at the end of the day is going to be threatening to pull back federal funds or threatening to remove federal jobs from Colorado or threatening economic sanctions on Colorado, I mean, to me thats quite disturbing actually, he said. It sort of feels like justice can be purchased at the end of the day, and thats not the American system.

The DOJ filing said Peters received an exceptionally lengthy sentence imposed relative to the conduct at issue and urged the federal judge to consider Peters request to be released as her case is appealed. The Justice Department wrote that it plans to evaluate whether the state prosecution was oriented more toward inflicting political pain than toward pursuing actual justice or legitimate governmental objectives.

Ian Farrell, associate professor of law at the University of Denver described the federal interest in Peters case as an unprecedented situation; he said its shocking a federal department would consider intervening in a state conviction, but when you think about it for even a few seconds, its not surprising. And so thats I guess the world we live in these days. 

Farell said he doesnt find Peters claim that her constitutional rights are being violated remotely credible. Her being jailed during the appeal is routine, he said, and he noted her nine-year prison sentence is half the maximum sentence she could have received. 

A recent filing by Peters lawyers, however, could lay the groundwork for a federal judge to look over her case, and Farrell worries that could lead to her release.

I dont think we can any longer assume that federal judges will, in all cases, simply apply the law, he said. One hopes that they will.

Copyright 2025 CPR 做窪惇蹋

Bente Birkeland is an award-winning journalist who joined Colorado Public Radio in August 2018 after a decade of reporting on the Colorado state capitol for the Rocky Mountain Community Radio collaborative and KUNC. In 2017, Bente was named Colorado Journalist of the Year by the Society of Professional Journalists (SPJ), and she was awarded with a National Investigative Reporting Award by SPJ a year later.
Stina Sieg