Tina Peters pardon by Jared Polis wrongly subverts process
Itβs entirely possible β as hard as it may be to conceive in these deeply tribal, us-vs.-them times β for two competing notions to be true.
Tina Peters personally enriched herself and betrayed the public trust by perpetrating a harebrained scheme to βproveβ the 2020 election in Mesa County, Colo., was rigged against President Trump. The former county clerk and MAGA warrior deserved to go to jail.
But the nine-year sentence she received was unduly harsh and, according to an appeals court decision, improperly meted out as punishment for the false and reckless public statements Peters made, a clear violation of her 1st Amendment rights. The court kicked the case back for resentencing.
Thatβs when Coloradoβs Democratic governor, Jared Polis, stepped in.
And stepped in it.
Over the strenuous objection of fellow Democrats and many Republicans β including Petersβ prosecutor and a majority of Coloradoβs election clerks β Polis commuted her sentence, clearing the way for Petersβ parole on June 1 after less than two years in prison.
Which just goes to show three wrongs donβt make a right.
Peters, 70, was convicted on multiple criminal counts, four of them felonies, for conspiring to let an unauthorized person access supposedly compromised voting equipment. She then lied to cover up her actions.
Trump carried Mesa County, a conservative stronghold, by nearly 30 percentage points, making Petersβ actions β apart from illegal β unaccountably stupid. But her conniving made her a belle of Mar-a-Lago and a celebrity on the election-denial circuit, jetting around the country and spewing cockamamie conspiracy theories.
Trump loudly agitated for her release.
His corrupted Justice Department sought to get Peters sprung from Colorado prison, presumably to set her loose from a federal facility. The president issued a symbolic βpardon,β though Petersβ conviction on state charges put her beyond his crooked reach. Trump insulted and belittled Polis, suggesting, among other things, he βrot in hell.β More significantly, the vengeful president waged economic war against Colorado.
Among the retributive acts, Trump slashed federal funds earmarked for the state, closed a climate research center in Boulder and moved the U.S. Space Command headquarters from Colorado Springs to Alabama.
Polis, who has a broad libertarian streak, insisted his freeing of Peters was not a capitulation to Trump, but rather a matter of principle, which seems plausible to the extent the governor could have anticipated the unshirted hell heβs gotten from fellow Democrats.
Among the great many infuriated by Polisβ decision are Coloradoβs two U.S. senators, as well as other vocal critics up and down the ballot. (One of those indignant senators is Michael Bennet, who is running to replace Polis.) There have been calls, within his own party, to investigate and impeach the governor, who had been spoken of as a potential presidential candidate in 2028.
βHe was aiming for a national profile,β said Floyd Ciruli, a pollster whoβs been taking soundings of Colorado voters for decades. βThis makes it much more difficult.β
Given Democratsβ molten outrage, that seems like an understatement.
The judge who sentenced Peters in October 2024 was unsparing.
βYouβre as defiant … a defendant as this court has ever seen,β District Judge Matthew Barrett scolded her. βYou are as privileged as they come and you used that privilege to obtain power, a following and fame. You are no hero…. Youβre a charlatan who used and is still using your prior position in office to peddle a snake oil thatβs been proven to be junk time and time again.β
Amen.
The problem, according to the Colorado Court of Appeals, was that Barrett wrongly punished Peters not just for her illegal actions but for speaking out about alleged election fraud.
βHer offense was not her belief, however misguided the trial court deemed it to be, in the existence of such election fraud,β the three-judge panel wrote in a unanimous April decision. βIt was her deceitful actions in her attempt to gather evidence of such fraud.β
The judges β all Democratic appointees β upheld Petersβ conviction and denied her request to transfer the case from Barrett. They ordered him to come up with a new sentence.
And thatβs where Polis, who placed Barrett on the bench, should have let things alone.
Instead, the governor interceded and essentially cut Petersβ sentence in half.
βThe crimes you were convicted of are very serious and you deserve to spend time in prison,β Polis wrote in his commutation letter. βHowever, this is an extremely unusual and lengthy sentence for a first time offender who committed nonviolent crimes.β
In response, Peters thanked Polis, apologized and expressed contrition.
βI made mistakes, and for those I am sorry,β Peters wrote in a statement addressed to the governor. βI have learned and grown during my time in prison and going forward I will make sure that my actions always follow the law, and I will avoid the mistakes of the past.β
Weβll see about that. If Peters clambers back aboard Mike Lindellβs crazy plane β he of MyPillow and election denial fame β weβll know Polis was duped.
Itβs easy to see his actions as surrendering to Trump. If so, Polisβ cave-in was pointless. The president is a bully to his core, always demanding more.
But if you take the governor at his word, and his actions werenβt meant as appeasement, what he did was bad nonetheless. He emulated one of Trumpβs worst habits, short-circuiting a well-established, independent process by substituting his own headstrong judgment.
Pride, the saying goes, comes before a fall. In Polisβ case, so does arrogance.