Jared Polis Did the Right Thing
On Friday afternoon, Colorado Gov. Jared Polis issued 35 pardons. He also commuted the sentences of nine prisoners, allowing them to be released years before they otherwise would be.
Some of these acts of clemency were deeply controversial. Polis, a Democrat, shortened the sentences of multiple convicted murderers. He is also setting free Brandin Kreuzer, who shot Douglas County Sheriffâs Deputy Todd Tucker in 2008and has served 15 years of a 50-year sentence. âI had numerous surgeries to basically put my arm back together,â Tucker told Denverâs 9News. âI still have lasting nerve damage to this day. My arm is not 100 percent, does not function as it should.â The current county sheriff said in a statement that he was âfuriousâ about Kreuzerâs commutation: âThe audacity of Governor Polis to grant clemency to a would-be cop killer on National Peace Officer Memorial Day shows a complete lack of respect for the brave men and women who wear the badge.â
But itâs a different commutation that has sparked furious bipartisan backlash across Colorado. In 2024, Tina Petersâthe former Mesa County clerkâwas convicted of various crimes for her role in a scheme to illegally breach that countyâs election system and in an effort to prove the 2020 race had been stolen from Donald Trump. Peters was originally sentenced to nearly nine years behind bars. On Friday, Polis commuted her sentence to about four-and-a-half years and ordered her paroled next month.
Trumpâwho for months has been demanding Petersâ release and attempting to punish Colorado for this and other perceived transgressionsâimmediately celebrated Polisâ decision. But beyond the MAGA faithful, the move is drawing broad outrage. Matt Crane, a Republican who directs the Colorado County Clerks Association, blasted Polis in a press conference, as Colorado Public Radio reported: âWhen given the opportunity to stand firmly for the rule of law, for the integrity of Colorado elections and for the public servants who defend them, [Polis] chose a different path.â The watchdog group Common Cause Colorado added that âGovernor Polisâ decision undermines election security, weakens accountability, and permanently stains his legacy.â
These are reasonable arguments, but personally, I donât find them compelling. Thereâs no doubt that Peters is a raging conspiracy theorist who abused her public office and broke the law. But nine years is an awfully long time. She is 70 and has already been in prison for more than a year and a half. A defendant who pleaded guilty to similar charges in the doomed Trump RICO prosecution in Georgia received probation. âThe crimes you were convicted of are very serious and you deserve to spend time in prison,â Polis wrote in his commutation letter to Peters. âHowever, this is an extremely unusual and lengthy sentence for a first time offender who committed nonviolent crimes.â
Why was Petersâ prison sentence so severe? Partly because it was based unconstitutional factors. At sentencing, Judge Matthew Barrett indicated that he was taking into account not just her actions, but her noxious conspiracy theories. Among other things, Barrett accused Peters of peddling âa snake oil thatâs been proven to be junk time and time again.â
âSo the damage that is caused and continue[s] to be caused is just as bad, if not worse, than the physical violence that this court sees on an all too regular basis,â Barrett declared. âAnd itâs particularly damaging when those words come from someone who holds a position of influence like you.â
The key word there is âwords.â
Last month, three Colorado appellate judgesâall of whom were appointed by Polisâ Democratic predecessorâunanimously threw out Petersâ prison sentence, declaring it a clear violation of her First Amendment free speech rights. They ordered Peters to be resentenced, but Polis intervened before that could happen.
âIt is apparent that the [trial] court imposed the lengthy sentence it did because Peters continued to espouse the views that led her to commit these crimes,â the appeals court concluded. âThe tenor of the [trial] courtâs comments makes clear that it felt the sentence length was necessary, at least in part, to prevent her from continuing to espouse views the court deemed âdamaging.ââ
In other words, Peters should have been sentenced for what she actually did, not the bizarre conspiracy theories she espoused. She can be punished for the crimes she committed in her illegal quest to expose non-existent election fraud. But she canât be punished for loudly voicing her beliefs.
Publicly, Peters herself now claims to recognize this distinction. In a statement she released after the commutation was announced, she acknowledged that her actions were wrong but said that once released, she planned to âsupport election integrityâ through âlegal means.â
Thank you Governor Polis.
I made mistakes, and for those I am sorry. Five years ago I misled the Secretary of State when allowing a person to gain access to county voting equipment. That was wrong. I have learned and grown during my time in prison and going forward I will makeâŚ
â Tina Peters
Whistleblower of fallen Navy SEAL (@realtinapeters) May 15, 2026
I have no doubt that Peters will continue spreading damaging election conspiracy theories in the years to come. But prison is not the solution to that.
Polis addressed that point in an interview Friday with 9Newsâ Kyle Clark. âI vehemently disagree with much of what she has to say, certainly her conspiratorial beliefs,â the governor said. But, he added, the proper way to oppose such rhetoric is through public refutationânot to âlock somebody up because they believe something that isâŚconspiratorial and potentially dangerous.â
âThatâs not the country we live in,â Polis said. âI believe in free speech.â
Whistleblower of fallen Navy SEAL (@realtinapeters)