Colorado
Colorado Elections Race Tests GOP Embrace of Conspiracies
By NICHOLAS RICCARDI, Related Press
LITTLETON, Colo. (AP) — A handful of curious voters mingled on a suburban Denver brewpub’s patio one current night as Pam Anderson advised them she might restore professionalism to the workplace of Colorado secretary of state.
Anderson rattled off her resume — former county clerk, head of the state clerks’ affiliation and ardent defender of Colorado’s mail voting system — making clear that she match the profile of the kind of technocrat whom Republicans used to again for the highest election publish in Colorado.
“I am the one particular person on this election, together with the first, who has an actual document in election integrity,” Anderson mentioned.
Anderson was taking a swipe at her better-known main rival, Mesa County Clerk Tina Peters, who has grow to be the prime instance of the GOP’s new strategy to operating elections.
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A grand jury earlier this 12 months indicted Peters for her position in breaking into her personal county’s election system throughout a hunt for proof of conspiracy theories fanned by former President Donald Trump. A choose already barred Peters from operating final 12 months’s native elections as a result of controversy and this week blocked Peters from administering this 12 months’s, too. Nonetheless, she’s grow to be a heroine to those that disbelieve the precise outcomes of the 2020 elections.
“I’ve taken their greatest shot. They made me sleep on the concrete jail flooring for 30 hours as a result of I protected your election information,” Peters advised a crowd of three,000 GOP activists and officers on the state occasion’s conference final month. “They know who to be afraid of.” Sixty p.c of attendees voted to put her atop the poll for secretary of state of their June 28 main.
For practically a century, U.S. elections have relied on a kind of partisan truce. They’re run by hundreds of native officers, usually elected in partisan races, and often overseen by secretaries of state who run statewide together with candidates for hotly contested places of work like lawyer basic and governor. However, sometimes, election administration itself has been performed in a nonpartisan method, and those that run for positions overseeing it are extra technocrats than crusaders.
That’s altering after Trump’s 2020 loss. The previous president is recruiting a category of partisan secretary of state candidates who parrot his lies about dropping the election as a result of fraud and argue he ought to have remained president. The competition between Peters — she joined Trump at his Florida headquarters of Mar-a-Lago final week — and Anderson is probably the starkest battle within the GOP between these traditions.
The 2 candidates will face one another at a debate Thursday evening in suburban Denver, together with the third Republican within the race, businessman Mike O’Donnell, one other election denier.
There is no query that the election deniers are profitable the struggle throughout the Republican Celebration. In Michigan final month, Kristina Karamo, a neighborhood faculty professor endorsed by Trump, gained the GOP nomination to run for secretary of state after fanning suspicion of the 2020 election outcomes. Candidates with related stances are operating in GOP primaries in each swing state, together with for secretary of state in Arizona, Georgia and Nevada.
An Related Press-NORC ballot final 12 months discovered that two-thirds of Republicans doubt Biden was legitimately elected president. Trump continues to fan the parable that huge voter fraud swung the election. He and his supporters have misplaced greater than 60 courtroom instances attempting to reveal such fraud. His personal Justice Division, together with quite a few different investigations and audits, discovered no vital fraud.
Although Trump’s election denial has caught on among the many occasion’s rank and file, many GOP strategists worry it might backfire on them in November. In Colorado, some Republicans dread the concept of Peters on the final election poll.
“The Democrats are going to find it irresistible and do all the things they will to make each Republican candidate appear like they got here from the identical DNA as Tina Peters,” mentioned Scott McInnis, a former GOP congressman who’s now on the Mesa County Fee.
McGinnis and different Republican Mesa County commissioners have lengthy clashed with Peters. The native district lawyer, a Republican, is overseeing her prosecution. McGinnis predicts that Anderson will win the first.
“I do not suppose Republican voters are going to vote for somebody who has 9 felony expenses,” McGinnis mentioned of Peters.
Nonetheless, the passion for Peters in some components of the GOP is appreciable. She raised $158,000 within the eight weeks since she introduced her marketing campaign, in comparison with $50,000 by Anderson, who reported solely having $5,000 left readily available on the finish of April. On the state GOP conference, one in all a bevy of aspirants for governor gained sufficient votes from the group to safe a spot on the first poll just by promising to pardon Peters if elected.
“I agree with what she did. I do not suppose she did something unlawful,” mentioned Pam Utterback, 67, an ordained minister who banged on a drum appreciatively as Peters spoke at a pre-convention rally in Denver.
Peters flew to the rally with MyPillow founder Mike Lindell, at whose election conspiracy seminar she spoke final 12 months after the information breach in Mesa County election machines. That information quickly appeared on election conspiracy web sites and Lindell insists it proves huge, internationally run fraud that put President Joe Biden in workplace. He advised reporters he is paid $800,000 to Peters’ authorized protection fund.
Peters’ authorized jeopardy extends past the costs of id theft, trying to affect a public official and legal impersonation filed by the grand jury. She was additionally arrested after kicking at a police officer attempting to serve a search warrant for her iPad, to see if Peters had illegally recorded a courtroom listening to of a deputy accused of housebreaking and cybercrimes.
Peters’ supporters are satisfied she’s a martyr for the trigger. Even when they cannot clarify exactly what it’s Peters claims to have uncovered, they’re satisfied one thing went unsuitable in 2020.
“I feel the explanation everyone seems to be attacking her is she’s for election integrity,” mentioned Adrianna Cuva, 45, a volunteer for a Peters-affiliated candidate who has met Peters. “I feel the election was rigged. That is why we’re seeing all these issues in our economic system.”
It is a stark distinction with the sentiment on the brewpub within the Denver suburb of Littleton, the place the small group of Anderson supporters burdened the significance of competent, nonpartisan election administration.
“That is what you need, somebody who’s performed it straight,” mentioned Paul Schauer, a former Republican state legislator.
Anderson grew up in Southern California. Her father was a freeway patrolman, a part of a protracted line of legislation enforcement in a household that is instilled in Anderson a reverence for legislation enforcement. She was elected clerk of the suburban metropolis of Wheat Ridge in 2003 after which of the suburban swing county round it the next 12 months.
She’s been witheringly essential of Trump’s election lies since they started in 2020 and sits on the board of a nonprofit that distributed $350 million in donations from Fb founder Mark Zuckerberg and his spouse to assist fund the 2020 elections, an act that fueled conservative suspicions.
“We have to restore sanity,” Anderson mentioned in an interview.
However she additionally bought into the race due to frustration with the Democratic secretary of state, Jena Griswold, who she contends has politicized the workplace for Democrats.
And Anderson has been pissed off at how Griswold and different Democrats assault Republicans as a celebration for election misinformation. She cites some Republicans who’ve stood up for reality and nonpartisanship in election administration. One is Stephen Richer, the clerk in Arizona’s Maricopa County, who pushed again strongly in opposition to a conspiratorial, Trump-supported pseudo-audit of the election.
“There are Republicans throughout the nation combating the nice struggle on elections,” Anderson mentioned.
Copyright 2022 The Related Press. All rights reserved. This materials will not be printed, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Colorado
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Colorado
Colorado man and woman who were arrested out of state face charges in 2 southern Colorado killings
Authorities in Mississippi arrested a 46-year-old man this week on charges related to the killing of his 37-year-old housemate in southern Colorado and separate charges of killing another man. Johnny Rankin Morris was arrested along with Hailey Cole, 43, who also faces charges in the second murder case.
Morris is being held without bond until he is extradited back to Colorado, according to the El Paso County Sheriff’s Office.
Morris is charged with murder in the death of his housemate Stephen Walker. The Colorado Bureau of Investigation says Morris and Hailey Cole, 43, also face charges of killing Timmy Huston of Hartsel, Colorado.
The arrests of Morris and Cole in Poplarville, Mississippi, on Monday follow a multiple-week investigation in Colorado’s El Paso County which started out as a missing person case.
The missing person investigation began on Dec. 19 at a home in the Cimarron Hills community in an unincorporated part of the county. The home is on the 1800 block of Pima Drive and blood was found in the garage. Five days later police found first the car of Walker and then body of Walker in what the El Paso County Sheriff’s Office called a “wooded area” in neighboring Park County. On the same day, about a mile-and-a-half away, Huston was found dead in his home.
Police say they think Morris and Cole drove Huston’s pickup truck out of state. Last weekend the truck was found in Lamar County, Mississippi. Two days later the pair was arrested.
An arrest warrant was issued in the Walker case, and on Friday the sheriff’s office announced that Morris faces the following charges in Walker’s death:
– first-degree murder
– tampering with a deceased human body
– tampering with physical evidence
The Colorado Bureau of investigation said on Friday an arrest warrant was issued for Morris and Cole on the following charges relating to Huston’s death:
– first-degree murder
– aggravated robbery
– motor vehicle theft
– tampering with evidence
El Paso County Sheriff Joseph Roybal called Walker’s death a “tragic situation” in a news release.
“I speak for my entire Office when I say our heartfelt prayers are with Mr. Walker’s family and friends as they navigate this,” he said in a prepared statement. “Although there is no way to ease their broken hearts, we hope to ease their burden by holding the individual who senselessly took Stephen’s life accountable to the fullest extent of the law.”
A judge has sealed the arrest documents in the Walker case.
Anyone who has information about the investigation who thinks they can help the sheriff’s office in the ongoing investigations is asked to call their tip line at 719-520-7777.
Colorado
Colorado’s BJ Green declares for the 2025 NFL Draft
BJ Green’s decision to declare for the 2025 NFL Draft represents a significant milestone for both his career and the Colorado Buffaloes football program. As one of Colorado’s defensive anchors, Green’s departure signals the loss of a key playmaker but highlights the program’s increasing prominence under Coach Deion Sanders.
Green transferred to Colorado from Arizona State ahead of the 2024 season and immediately became an impact player. His leadership and on-field production helped propel the Buffaloes to a 9-4 record and a fourth-place finish in the Big 12. Green’s defensive dominance was reflected in his stat line—33 tackles, 7.5 sacks, two forced fumbles, and a fumble recovery. His ability to disrupt opposing offenses consistently made him a cornerstone of Colorado’s defensive unit.
Over his collegiate career, Green demonstrated remarkable durability and performance. In four seasons split between Arizona State and Colorado, he accumulated 93 tackles, 21 sacks, and three forced fumbles. His tenure at Arizona State showcased his early potential, recording 60 tackles (21 for loss), 13.5 sacks, and a forced fumble across 36 games. Notably, Green never missed a game throughout his collegiate career, a testament to his resilience and preparation.
Green’s growth as a player was shaped by the mentorship of Coach Prime, former defensive end coach Vincent Dancy, and NFL legend Warren Sapp. Their guidance helped refine his technique and develop his instincts, making him a formidable force on the field and a coveted NFL prospect. His second-team All-Pac-12 honor in 2023 serves as further validation of his talent and work ethic.
WATCH: Warren Sapp laid out by Colorado Buffaloes player in practice
While Green’s departure leaves a void, it underscores Colorado’s evolution into a program capable of producing NFL-caliber talent. With Shedeur Sanders and Travis Hunter also eyeing the 2025 NFL Draft, the Buffaloes face a critical transition period. However, Coach Sanders’ reputation for attracting top-tier talent ensures that Colorado’s upward trajectory will continue.
BJ Green’s journey reflects the spirit of Colorado’s football resurgence—a blend of opportunity, grit, and development that positions players for success at the next level. His NFL aspirations are not just personal achievements but markers of the program’s bright future.
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