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Colorado election denier Tina Peters to be freed from prison | Collector
Colorado election denier Tina Peters to be freed from prison
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Colorado election denier Tina Peters to be freed from prison

Colorado Gov. Jared Polis on Friday announced he's cutting disgraced election denier and former Mesa County clerk Tina Peters' sentence by half, making her eligible for release next month. Why it matters: The move comes after repeated calls from the Trump administration for Peters to be freed. President Trump pardoned her late last year despite having no jurisdiction over state-level cases. Driving the news: The development means Peters is expected to be released on June 1. She had been serving a roughly nine-year sentence for tampering with county voting and records equipment after the 2020 election. State of play: Polis' decision drew immediate condemnation from other high-profile Democrats, including Attorney General Phil Weiser and Secretary of State Jena Griswold, who both issued statements on Friday. "Gov. Polis' commutation of Tina Peters' sentence is mind-boggling and wrong as a matter of basic justice," Weiser said, calling the decision "caving" to Trump . "The Governor's actions today will validate and embolden the election denial movement, and leave a dark, dangerous imprint on American democracy for years to come," Griswold said in a statement. What they're saying: "FREE TINA!" Trump wrote in a Truth Social post shortly after the decision. "[Clemency] has the ability to change lives ... and it comes with great consideration, and sometimes even controversy," Polis said in a statement, adding his decision came after a careful review. Between the lines: Peters was among 44 people who received clemency on Friday. The governor issued 35 pardons and nine commutations, per a statement from the governor's office.

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