Ex-head of Colorado Republicans charged
with voter fraud
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[March 23, 2017]
By Keith Coffman
DENVER (Reuters) - A Colorado talk radio
host who once chaired the state Republican Party and has accused
Democrats of widespread voter fraud has been charged with forging his
ex-wife’s signature on a mail-in ballot in the 2016 election, court
records showed on Wednesday.
Steven Curtis, 57, who served as state GOP boss from 1997 until 1999, is
charged with one felony count of forgery and one misdemeanor count of
tampering with a mail-in ballot, according to a criminal complaint filed
in Weld County District Court.
The case stems from an inquiry lodged with the Weld County Clerk and
Recorder's Office by Curtis's former spouse, Kelly Ireland, who
contacted the agency in October to check on the status of her voter
registration after the couple split.
Ireland was informed then that a signed mail-in ballot bearing her name
and voter information had already been submitted, according to Carly
Koppes, an elected Republican who serves as the county clerk.
“At that point, my office researched the situation further, and the
signature was questionable, so we then contacted the District Attorney’s
Office to start an investigation,” Koppes told Reuters.
If convicted, Curtis faces a maximum three years in prison for forgery
and up to 18 months in jail and a $5,000 fine for ballot-tampering, said
Tyler Hill, a spokesman for the district attorney.
Curtis’s lawyer, Christopher Gregory, declined comment.
The former Republican Party boss hosts a morning political talk show on
conservative Denver radio station KLZ-AM called “Wake Up With Steve
Curtis.”
Curtis spoke about election tampering in a segment titled "Voter Fraud
and Other Democratic Misbehaviors" on his Oct. 6, 2016 broadcast.
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A man, wearing a hat with an embroidery of the U.S. flag, votes on
election day at a polling station in Harlem, New York, U.S.,
November 8, 2016. REUTERS/Bria Webb/File Photo
“It seems to me, and correct me if I’m wrong, but virtually every
case of voter fraud I can remember in my lifetime was committed by
Democrats,” Cutis said, according to an archived podcast on the
station’s website.
Prosecutors allege that weeks after that broadcast, he forged his
ex-wife’s ballot.
A spokeswoman for Colorado Secretary of State Wayne Williams said
the Curtis case is the only allegation of voter fraud in the state
from the 2016 election cycle that has resulted in a prosecution.
Curtis on Tuesday made his first appearance in court, where he was
advised of the charges. A disposition hearing has been set for May,
the District Attorney’s Office said.
Republican President Donald Trump has claimed, without presenting
evidence, that millions of illegal voters cast ballots in the 2016
election.
(Editing by Steve Gorman and David Gregorio)
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