Current:Home > 新闻中心Former Colorado clerk was shocked after computer images were shared online, employee testifies -Excel Wealth Summit
Former Colorado clerk was shocked after computer images were shared online, employee testifies
View
Date:2025-04-18 05:56:23
DENVER (AP) —
An employee of former Colorado clerk Tina Peters who says she was present when her boss allowed an outsider posing as a county employee to breach her voting system’s computer testified Wednesday that Peters was shocked when images from the computer appeared online.
In the summer of 2021, former elections manager Sandra Brown said Peters called her after seeing the photos and videos she took of the Dominion Voting Systems’ hard drive and said, “I don’t know what to do,” using an obscenity to express her distress over the possible consequences. Soon after that, as authorities began investigating what had happened, Peters and her attorney advised Brown and another employee to buy disposable cellphones known as burner phones so their conversations with her and lawyers could not be discovered by investigators and urged them not to talk to law enforcement, Brown said.
After Brown was indicted and turned herself in, Peters came to visit her at jail the same day, she said.
“She came in and she said, ‘I love you, you have support, and don’t say anything,’” said Brown, who said Peters also gave her the number of an attorney who could represent her in court for her bail hearing. Brown eventually got another attorney and pleaded guilty under a plea deal that required her to testify against Peters.
Peters’ attorneys argue she only wanted to preserve election data before the system got a software update and did not want that information shared with the world. They say she was acting under her authority as clerk and did not break any laws.
Prosecutors, meanwhile, have portrayed Peters as someone who had become “fixated” on voting problems after becoming involved with activists who had questioned the accuracy of the 2020 presidential election results, including Douglas Frank, an Ohio math teacher who worked for MyPillow founder Mike Lindell. The defense says she was a responsive public official who wanted to be able to answer questions about the election in her community in western Colorado’s Mesa County, a Republican stronghold that voted for Donald Trump in the election.
Prosecutors allege the plan to take an image of the voting system’s hard drive was hatched during an April 2021 meeting with Frank, Peters and others in her office when he was in town to give a presentation on voting fraud. On a secret recording made by another elections employee, Frank told Peters that uncovering corruption in her voting system and cleaning it up would be “a feather in your cap.” Peters invited Frank to come back the following month for the software update for the county’s voting machines. Frank said he could instead send a team that’s “the best in the country.”
According to prosecutors, Frank sent a retired surfer from California and fellow Lindell associate, Conan Hayes, to take an image of the hard drive before and after the software update. Peters is accused of passing Hayes off as an elections employee using another person’s badge, a person she allegedly pretended to hire only so she could use the badge to get Hayes in to also observe the update. The Colorado Secretary of State’s office, which facilitated the update being done with Dominion, had denied Peters’ requests to have an outside computer expert to be in the room.
Hayes has not been charged with a crime. He did not respond messages left at telephone numbers listed for him and to an email seeking comment about the allegations.
The defense claims that Peters thought Hayes was working as a government informant and that he only agreed to help her if his identity was concealed. Judge Matthew Barrett has barred the defense from discussing that claim in front of jurors. Prosecutors say there’s no evidence to support that Hayes was an informant. Barrett has also ruled that, even if Peters believed he was, it is not an excuse for what she is accused of doing.
After lawyer Amy Jones, a former Ohio judge, suggested that Peters believed Hayes was an informant during opening statements, Barrett told jurors to “put that out of your minds.” After the jury left, he scolded the defense for bringing it up despite his prior order not to introduce it.
Peters is charged with three counts of attempting to influence a public servant, criminal impersonation, two counts of conspiracy to commit criminal impersonation, one count of identity theft, first-degree official misconduct, violation of duty and failing to comply with the secretary of state.
The trial is expected to continue through early next week.
veryGood! (3526)
Related
- The company planning a successor to Concorde makes its first supersonic test
- Dakota Johnson Clarifies Her Viral 14-Hour Sleep Schedule
- Oscar nominations 2024: Justine Triet becomes 8th woman ever nominated for best director
- The Best Rotating Curling Irons of 2024 That Are Fool-Proof and Easy to Use
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- New York City looks to clear $2 billion in unpaid medical bills for 500,000
- To parents of kids with anxiety: Here's what we wish you knew
- Norman Jewison, director and Academy Award lifetime achievement honoree, dead at 97
- Trump's 'stop
- Vermont governor proposes $8.6 billion budget and urges the Legislature not to raise taxes, fees
Ranking
- Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow owns a $3 million Batmobile Tumbler
- Outgoing North Dakota Gov. Burgum sees more to do for the ‘underestimated’ state
- Malaria mass-vaccination program launches in Cameroon, bringing hope as Africa battles surging infections
- New York man convicted of murdering woman who wound up in his backcountry driveway after wrong turn
- This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
- Ed O'Neill says feud with 'Married… With Children' co-star Amanda Bearse was over a TV Guide cover
- 24 Things From Goop's $113,012 Valentine's Day Gift Guide We'd Actually Buy
- Backpage founder will face Arizona retrial on charges he participated in scheme to sell sex ads
Recommendation
Mets have visions of grandeur, and a dynasty, with Juan Soto as major catalyst
Police say a former Haitian vice-consul has been slain near an airport in Haiti
Defendant, 19, faces trial after waiving hearing in slaying of Temple University police officer
Milwaukee Bucks fire first-year head coach Adrian Griffin after 43 games
Realtor group picks top 10 housing hot spots for 2025: Did your city make the list?
These new synthetic opioids could make fentanyl crisis look like 'the good old days'
Germany’s top court rules a far-right party is ineligible for funding because of its ideology
Army doctor to face court martial following allegations of sexual abuse