Police seek Republican county clerk charged with election tampering in
Colorado
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[July 15, 2022]
By Keith Coffman
DENVER (Reuters) - A county clerk who was
indicted on felony charges of tampering with voting equipment and then
lost a bid for the Republican nomination to Colorado's top
election-management post has become a fugitive from justice, court
records showed on Thursday.
In a written court order, Mesa County District Judge Matthew Barrett
revoked a $25,000 cash bond for Tina Peters, who is the county's
Republican elected clerk and recorder, and issued a warrant for her
arrest.
Court records show Peters left the state without permission, violating
the terms of her bail bond that permitted her pre-trial release from
jail in March.
Peters' lawyer, Harvey Steinberg, filed court papers later on Thursday
seeking to block the bench warrant for her arrest. The motion
acknowledged Peters had gone to Las Vegas, Nevada, this week to speak at
a sheriff's conference but asserted she misunderstood the court-ordered
travel restrictions she faced.
In March, Peters was indicted by a Colorado grand jury on election
tampering charges stemming from an alleged breach of Mesa County's
voting equipment, and was barred by Colorado's secretary of state from
overseeing elections in the western Colorado county this year.
According to the 10-count indictment, which included charges of criminal
impersonation, conspiracy, identity theft and official misconduct,
Peters gave unauthorized personnel access to the county's election
computer server.
Two of her deputies have also been criminally charged in the case, which
gained national attention in part because Peters was outspoken in her
support for former President Donald Trump's baseless claims that the
2020 presidential election was rigged against him.
Peters has denied any wrongdoing, and blamed her legal troubles on her
political adversaries, including Colorado Secretary of State Jena
Griswold, a Democrat.
Undaunted by her indictment, Peters sought the
Republican nomination to challenge Griswold, who is up for re-election
in November. But Peters, who was permitted to travel outside Colorado
while she was a candidate for statewide office, lost the Republican
primary last month.
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Tina Peters, the Mesa County, Colorado, clerk indicted on multiple
felony counts stemming from an election security breach, poses in a
jail booking photograph in Grand Junction, Colorado, U.S. March 9,
2022. Mesa County Sheriff's Office/Handout via REUTERS
Investigators learned that Peters had filed a document with
Griswold's office this week, requesting a recount of the primary
election and that it was notarized in Las Vegas. That revelation led
Mesa County District Attorney Daniel Rubinstein to file a motion to
revoke Peters' bond.
"Ms. Peters has less motivation to appear in court now that she is
no longer a candidate," Rubinstein wrote. "Additionally, she has
evidenced through her travel prior to the election that she has the
means to flee if she wants to."
Peter's defense lawyer denied she was a flight risk and argued she
believed she still had permission to travel out of state with 72
hours advance notice, as she did during her election campaign, and
that her failure to provide such notice before going to Las Vegas
was an oversight.
Peters was in Las Vegas on July 12 to address a symposium on
election fraud held by the Constitutional Sheriffs and Peace
Officers Association, a conservative group of elected local law
enforcement officials and their allies.
The criminal investigation of Peters was opened last year after
images of Mesa County's election equipment passwords were on a
right-wing blog site.
The suspected computer breach was pinpointed during a software
update in 2021 and did not involve any actual election or voting
irregularities, authorities said.
(Reporting by Keith Coffman in Denver; Editing by Steve Gorman and
Daniel Wallis)
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