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Colorado Governor Polis signals he is open to clemency for Tina Peters

By Thomson Reuters Mar 4, 2026 | 4:25 PM

By Jasper Ward

WASHINGTON, March 4 (Reuters) – Colorado Governor Jared Polis signaled on Tuesday he was willing to consider clemency for Tina Peters, a former state county clerk convicted of illegally tampering with voting machines as she pursued ​claims that the 2020 presidential election had been stolen.

Polis, citing the case ‌of another public official who was given a lighter penalty, said clemency may be appropriate to avoid sentencing disparities, although Colorado’s secretary of state said Peters had committed a more grave offence.

Polis has drawn attention to the relatively light sentence – probation and community service – handed down to State Senator Sonya ‌Jaquez ​Lewis, who was convicted of attempting to influence a ⁠public official and other charges ⁠after prosecutors said she forged letters from former aides.

“It is not lost on me that she was convicted of the exact same felony charge as Tina Peters — attempting to influence a public official — and yet Tina Peters, as a non-violent ​first-time offender got a nine-year sentence,” Polis, a Democrat, wrote on X. He said that justice needed to be applied evenly.

He extended the clemency application deadline until April ⁠3, allowing him to review the case.

Colorado Secretary ⁠of State Jena Griswold, the state’s top election official, said on ​Wednesday that it was inaccurate, however, to suggest that the actions of Lewis and Peters ​had the same impact.

“Peters organized the breach of the election equipment, ‌broke the public trust and attacked the very foundations of our democratic process,” Griswold said in a statement.

Peters, a Republican, was an outspoken supporter of U.S. President Donald Trump’s unsubstantiated claims that he lost the 2020 U.S. presidential election because of widespread fraud.

She was ⁠indicted in 2022 following an election security breach at her office that led to voting equipment passwords getting posted on a right-wing blog. She denied wrongdoing.

Peters, 70, was convicted in ⁠2024 on seven charges, ‌including three counts of attempting to influence a public servant. She ⁠is not eligible for release until November 2028.

Peter Ticktin, a ​lawyer ‌for Peters, said he hopes the governor commutes the former ​county clerk’s sentence ⁠this week, saying her nine-year sentence was “too harsh.”

Trump has repeatedly called for Peters to be released from the La Vista Correctional Facility, a state prison in Colorado, and has criticized Polis for not granting her clemency.

Trump pardoned Peters in December in a move that was considered symbolic since Peters is not in federal custody.

(Reporting by Jasper Ward in Washington; ​Editing by Edmund Klamann)