Griswold Rejects Sending Trump Admin Data; Denver City Council Considers $27 Million Contract; Andrea Gibson Poems Posthumously Released in Anthology Book; Peters Applies for Official Trump Pardon

Headlines Friday December 5, 2025

  • cover play_arrow

    Griswold Rejects Sending Trump Admin Data; Denver City Council Considers $27 Million Contract; Andrea Gibson Poems Posthumously Released in Anthology Book; Peters Applies for Official Trump Pardon Jack Armstrong

Griswold Rejects Sending Trump Admin Data 

Colorado Secretary of State Jena Griswold has rejected a new request from the U.S. Department of Justice for sensitive voter information. It’s the second time the Trump administration has asked for voter data this year.

Federal officials asked the Secretary of State’s office this week to share unredacted data that includes voters’ birthdates, home addresses, and partial Social Security numbers. In a statement, Griswold said the Justice Department has no legal right to the information and can, “take a hike.” 

The request comes as Colorado waits for answers on how the Trump administration is using voter data it collected from states this summer. Griswold and nine other secretaries of state asked federal officials last month whether the information is being shared with the Department of Homeland Security. Griswold says they haven’t received a response.

The report comes to us from the Colorado Capital News Alliance

 

Denver City Council Considers $27 Million Contract

The Denver City Council is considering a new five-year contract for Denver police cameras and tasers. 

The consideration comes as a previous $22 million contract with the Arizona-based company Axon is set to expire next week. That contract was signed ten years ago.

Now, a proposal for a renewed contract starting Jan. 1, 2026, and costing $27 million, is under evaluation in City Council. This new contract would provide thousands of police body cameras, tasers, and equipment upgrades throughout the contract term.

A Colorado law passed in 2023 mandates that all officers in Colorado police forces are provided a body-worn camera. The contract also provides cloud storage of body camera evidence via the site Evidence.com

READ MORE

 

Andrea Gibson Poems Posthumously Released in Anthology Book

The State of Colorado is releasing an anthology of work written by all 10 of Colorado’s poets laureate – spanning 100 years of years of art. Notably, the collection includes never-before published work from Colorado’s most recent poet Laureate, Andrea Gibson – they passed from ovarian cancer in July of this year.

According to Colorado Creative Industries, a division of the state’s Office of Economic development – the collection is the first anthology of U.S. State poets laureate. The anthology also included unpublished work from past laureates,  Bobby LeFebre, Joseph Hutchison, David Mason and Mary Crow.

All proceeds from book sales will continue to fund the poet laureate program through an endowment – the poet laureate program was signaled to be in danger of being defunded after funding cuts made to humanities programs by the Trump Administration.

The anthology can be pre-ordered, and there will be an official launch party for the poetry collection tonight at 6pm at Petals and Pages Bookstore in Denver.

READ MORE

 

Peters Applies for Official Trump Pardon

The lawyer for Tina Peters says the former Mesa County clerk has officially applied for a pardon by President Donald Trump. Peters was convicted of assisting in tampering with election equipment in 2021 to prove the 2020 presidential election was stolen.

Peters’ convictions were all related to state-level offenses. The Colorado Department of Corrections denied a request from the Federal Bureau of Prisons to transfer Tina Peters from a state correctional facility in Pueblo to federal custody.

Peter Ticktin, Peters’ lawyer argues the language in the constitution referencing the ‘United States’ when granting the power of pardoning to the executive should be valid for the county as a whole, as well as the ability to pardon within individual states.

President Donald Trump has repeatedly demanded that Colorado officials release Peters, threatening “harsh measures.”

READ MORE

READ MORE

 

You can hear daily headlines on the Morning Magazine, KGNU’s weekday morning show with coverage of local and regional public affairs and news with headlines and commentary. Click here to listen to full episodes of the Morning Magazine.

Picture of Jack Armstrong

Jack Armstrong

Search

Now Playing

play_arrow

Live Broadcast

Recent Stories

Upcoming Events

KGNU PARTNERS

Want to help us build a better radio station?

We’re conducting a survey to help us understand how our listeners are using new technology. Please spend 15 minutes to let us know what you think.

Public media moves forward because you listen, watch, share and support. Thank you for being part of this community — and for helping us continue the journey during Public Media Giving Days.