Election Data Leak In Colorado Is Tied To Conspiracy Theorists
Stina Stieg/CPR News
It’s been nearly a month since sensitive data about voting equipment in Colorado’s Mesa County was posted online by conspiracy theorists eager to cast doubt on the outcome of the 2020 election.
At the center of the criminal investigation into how that information was released is county clerk Tina Peters, whose whereabouts remain unknown. She hasn’t returned to work in Mesa County since the data breach was announced.
The FBI is also investigating the case.
One reason why the Mesa County security breach is particularly significant is because it uses equipment from Dominion Voting Systems, one of the country’s biggest vendors of election equipment. The company is also at the center of many of the conspiracy theories about the 2020 election that claim the ballot counting was somehow rigged against former President Donald Trump. (Dominion is pursuing a number of defamation suits against both pro-Trump news outlets and Trump advisers over the conspiracy theories.)
While most election officials around the country have spent the better part of the last year and a half fighting conspiracy theories spouted by Trump and his allies, Peters seemed to embrace the falsehoods and fueled them.
Just as state officials announced a probe, Peters was attending and speaking at a conference hosted by Mike Lindell, the CEO of MyPillow, that pushed more falsehoods about the 2020 election.
“I’ve listened to people. I looked at it objectively and there’s some discrepancies there that I cannot deny. And I tell people, I say, ‘I can’t unsee some of these things,’ ” Peters told attendees at the conference.
‘She needs to come back to work’
Hart Van Denburg/CPR News
Peters is being sheltered by Lindell, a serial promoter of false election fraud claims. He says Peters fears for her safety if she returns home.
Local county commissioners say Peters needs to return to oversee the other parts of her job and the staff.
“She’s in hiding by her own admission,” said Commissioner Scott Mcinnis, who like Peters is a Republican.
“We want to make sure we take the threats against her very, very seriously. We want to make sure she’s protected, but she needs to come back to work.”
First elected in 2018, Peters’ tenure as the top local election official in her rural, western Colorado county has occasionally been controversial. In February 2020, her office admitted to finding 574 uncounted ballots from a 2019 election, leading to a state probe and calls for her resignation.
The problems at the clerk’s office extend beyond Peters. On Thursday her deputy, Belinda Knisley, was charged with second-degree burglary and a cybercrime for entering the building while she was suspended, pending an investigation for unprofessional and inappropriate conduct in the workplace.
Earlier this week, Colorado Secretary of State Jena Griswold filed a lawsuit to officially prevent Peters from having any role in the county’s upcoming fall election.
Mesa County is a conservative area where voters strongly backed Trump last fall. While some residents say they want Peters voted out of office or recalled, she also has vocal backers. Recently, several hundred supporters gathered for a rally outside of the clerk’s office, chanting, “We love Tina!”
“I feel that there was definitely election fraud and we need to get to the bottom of it,” said Shelly Lucas, who lives in the area and attended the rally. “It’s been in every county, every state. And I want to know about it.”
‘[S]o completely outside the norm’
Colorado’s audits show that there were no problems with the state’s election. In fact, election officials from around the country consider the state to have some of the best-run elections in the U.S. There are paper ballots and post-election audits to make sure the tallies match what the machines count.
Mesa County has had to spend nearly a million dollars to renew a contract with Dominion after the state banned the compromised machines from being used this fall. In particular, local prosecutors and the FBI have open investigations into whether Peters gave an unauthorized person access to the voting machine software. So far, no criminal charges have been filed against her.
Susan Walsh/AP
“It’s stunning to me as an election professional because it is so completely outside the norm,” said Matt Masterson, who led election security work at the U.S. Department of Homeland Security last year and is now a policy fellow at Stanford University.
Historically, Masterson said Democratic and Republican officials have typically administered elections in a professional, nonpartisan way.
“Because they know that their job is to be protectors of democracy, of our system, of our elections. And this is the first time in my memory that I can recall an election official brazenly shirking that duty in pursuit of their own benefit in such a way.”
This incident has made Masterson fearful about the 2022 elections.
“[F]or these ongoing conspiracies and lies to continue to be perpetrated for political and financial gain, is sad and sells out our democracy at a time when election officials risk their health and safety to do this.”
Masterson says if there isn’t accountability in Mesa County, he worries other partisan-minded election officials could be inspired to act the same way.
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