By COLLEEN SLEVIN
DENVER (AP) — Colorado doesn’t plan to switch from state jail to federal custody a former county clerk who has turn into a hero to election conspiracy theorists following a request from the Trump administration, state officers mentioned Wednesday.
The Colorado Division of Corrections mentioned it’s not looking for a switch of Tina Peters, who was convicted final 12 months of orchestrating a scheme in Mesa County to breach voting machine information pushed by false claims of fraud within the 2020 election.
“Transferring a person is an motion initiated by the Colorado Division of Corrections, not an outdoor entity,” division spokesperson Alondra Gonzalez-Garcia mentioned in an e mail.
The Federal Bureau of Prisons declined to remark.
Peters, 70, is serving a nine-year sentence at a state jail in Pueblo.
The Bureau of Prisons requested on Nov. 12 that the state corrections division switch her to federal custody to serve her sentence. The explanation isn’t identified.
A duplicate of the request launched by the state corrections division was closely redacted. The division mentioned releasing that info was “opposite to the general public curiosity.”
Peters’ launch has turn into a trigger celebre within the election conspiracy motion. On Sunday, President Donald Trump renewed his name for her to be let loose. Certainly one of Peters’ attorneys, Peter Ticktin, steered on Trump ally Steve Bannon’s podcast this week that the navy be used to free Peters from jail.
County clerks in Colorado of assorted political affiliations blame Peters for making their jobs extra harmful by fueling mistrust within the voting system. They’ve been urging Gov. Jared Polis, a Democrat, to definitively reject the federal switch request.
In a press release Tuesday, a Polis spokesperson praised the integrity of the state’s election system and mentioned the governor welcomes an opportunity to fulfill with the clerks in regards to the federal switch request however didn’t instantly handle it.
“Governor Polis takes his obligations critically and has been clear that he’ll take threats from the federal authorities head-on – particularly once they undermine our democracy – which is why we’ve got vigorously defended Colorado’s values throughout this turbulent time,” Polis spokesperson Shelby Wieman mentioned.
Matt Crane, government director of the Colorado County Clerks Affiliation, mentioned the state corrections division is finally beneath Polis’ management and can do what he directs it to.
“The open-ended assertion from the Division of Corrections doesn’t alleviate our considerations,” he mentioned.
