NEW: We're going through body camera video of the arrest of Mesa County Clerk Tina Peters. After Peters is escorted out, she continues to accuse officers of hurting her. An officer suggests she "stand up like an adult"
Peters: "Shut up. What an a**h*** thing to say to me."
As officers place Peters in a patrol car, Peters, who'd been loudly accusing officers of hurting her for several minutes, lowers her voice and asks if officers know what they're really doing... "You're assisting Merrick Garland to not show truth about election machines."
Let's back track. Here's the lead-up to the arrest. DA investigators are serving a search warrant for Peters' iPad. When officers arrive, they start to approach a man named Randy, but it appears Peters steps in the way.
The audio on the body cam is redacted as officers converse with DA investigators while Peters is in the back of a squad car, but a DA investigator is seen holding an iPad with a keyboard like the one described in the search warrant.
The DA investigator meets Peters in the back of the patrol car. Peters tells the investigator she wishes they would investigate election fraud, then claims the device they have is not her iPad.
Peters says she can't hold the warrant to read it..."you could before," he tells her.
As Peters is uncuffed, she's told to keep her hands behind her back. She pulls her wrist forward and says "look what you did to me."
She then tearfully says she thinks officers have broken her hand. She's offered an ambulance, but instead has a bystander take a photo.
Seconds after saying her hand is broken, she uses it to hold the search warrant the investigator gives her the chance to read, then puts that same hand on her hip.
She continues to insist that the iPad isn't hers.
Peters tells the DA investigator the iPad belongs to Tammy Bailey. When the investigator asks if Tammy is a local, Peters responds no...then says she needs to talk to her lawyer.
She ends the conversation, walks away, "What is this a police state? It looks like it."
That's going to do it for me. My colleagues on @nexton9news will have more of this video tonight. It's my day off - and my wife would really appreciated it if I did my laundry.
appreciate*
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THREAD: On June 10, 2022 Christian Glass called 911 after his car got stuck on a road in Silver Plume.
70 minutes after Clear Creek County deputies arrived... he was dead.
Newly obtained body camera video is raising some serious questions about how police handled this call.
In a 911 call, obtained by 9NEWS, 22-year-old Glass tells the call taker that he's stuck. He also appears to be delusional and paranoid, saying he's seeing skin-walkers and he might have to go kill them.
The call taker asks if he has any weapons...
Glass tells the call taker he has two knives, a rubber mallet and a hammer. But he offers to throw them out the window when officers arrive to make them feel safe.
QUICK THREAD: RTD's new police chief, Dr. Joel Fitzgerald, has had a tough few years leading up to his hiring by RTD.
It includes a still active whistleblower lawsuit in Texas and what appears to be some pretty serious racial tensions in his last job in Waterloo, Iowa...
Fitzgerald made national headlines while in Waterloo.
He was the first Black chief in that predominantly white city and faced a lot of external backlash for changes he made, including removing a griffin that resembled a KKK dragon from the dept's logo.
🧵A #HeyNext viewer asked a question: What ever happened to the old #GoAvsGo mascot: Howler the Yeti?
And it sent me down a fantastic rabbit hole this afternoon.
Join me....
Howler was the Avs first mascot when the franchise moved to Denver from Quebec City. He's the reason the classic Avalanche sweaters have a foot patch on the shoulder.
Then all of a sudden... around the turn of the century... Howler disappeared...
A few vague articles about Howler over the years have mentioned an incident with a fan in 1999 in a game against the Chicago Blackhawks.
It took some digging but finally Nexis found me the 1999 AP article about the incident.
BREAKING: A Mesa County Grand Jury has returned a 13 count indictment against Mesa County Clerk Tina Peters and her deputy clerk related to official misconduct and election equipment tampering.
Peters is charged with 3 counts of attempting to influence a public servant, 1 count of conspiracy to commit attempting to influence, criminal impersonation, impersonation conspiracy, identity theft, official misconduct, violation of duty, and failing to comply with the SOS.
According to the grand jury's indictment, this all started in April of last year - when the Secretary of State started preparing for the trusted build upgrades to election software. Mesa County election staff requested to have members of the public on site during the build...