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Colorado suspends access to state election site to remove some information after Minnesota shootings
Colorado suspends access to state election site to remove some information after Minnesota shootings

CBS News

time4 days ago

  • Politics
  • CBS News

Colorado suspends access to state election site to remove some information after Minnesota shootings

Colorado Secretary of State Jena Griswold closed off access to the state's online election database, known as "TRACER," over the weekend, amid concerns about publicly available private information about politicians in the aftermath of the politically-motivated shootings and killings in Minnesota. "Addresses and other personal information is on TRACER," Griswold said. "The reason it's on there is for public transparency. There is the ability for elected officials and candidates to request that their addresses are redacted, and so we wanted to give folks enough time to do that, and temporarily took TRACER down." The site is where political candidates post their information to comply with election finance requirements, among other information. The site Monday carried the message, "Down for maintenance," which Griswold pointed out, does happen from time to time. After a few seconds on the error message, the website redirects you to another elections landing page on the Colorado Secretary of State's Office's website. TRACER, Colorado's online elections database, was taken down by the Colorado Secretary of State's Office as election officials and elected officials review private information on the site after the politically-motivated killing of a state representative and her husband and the shooting of a state senator and his wife in Minnesota. CBS She said she had talked with legislative leadership and other statewide elected leaders about the existence of the information on the public database. "Out of abundance of caution, we wanted to make sure that officials had the ability to think about whether they wanted their addresses redacted," Griswold said. There are many places where people's private information can be potentially obtained online, but Griswold said the killing of a state representative and her husband and the shooting of a state senator and his wife in Minnesota made the review timely. Griswold herself has been the subject of repeated threats, particularly following the 2020 elections. Four people have been convicted of charges related to making threats directed at her. "It's coming from the real facts that elected officials are under increased threats. I myself received, just in 2024, over 1,800 death threats or physical threats. It is scary, and I think we have to take that as a fact of where this country is right now," she said. "And for me, weighing the choices of the safety of elected officials, Republicans and Democrats, and a brief outage of Tracer, that the choice was very clear." Griswold said she had asked lawmakers if they wanted information like home addresses, which is not required, to be removed. The process of redacting information was taking time, and she said the site would likely remain down, but for a period of days, not weeks.

The Uses and Abuses of Political Violence
The Uses and Abuses of Political Violence

Wall Street Journal

time4 days ago

  • Politics
  • Wall Street Journal

The Uses and Abuses of Political Violence

Spare me the outrage, the tearful empathy, the impassioned condemnations of extremism, the solemn pleas for an end to political violence. They have all been on ritual display after our latest politically motivated barbarism: the killing of Minnesota state Rep. Melissa Hortman and her husband and the wounding of state Sen. John Hoffman and his wife. The only thing now more routine than political violence is the shock that greets it, the tedious and self-evidently false declarations that such acts 'have no place in America,' the vow that they must never happen again. All while we wait with absolute certainty for the next one.

California state senator cited for suspicion of impaired driving, says she wasn't intoxicated
California state senator cited for suspicion of impaired driving, says she wasn't intoxicated

Washington Post

time22-05-2025

  • Washington Post

California state senator cited for suspicion of impaired driving, says she wasn't intoxicated

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — A California state lawmaker denied having any alcohol and drugs in her system after Sacramento police cited her earlier this week on suspicion of driving under the influence. Sacramento police responded at around 1:30 p.m. Monday to a report of a vehicle crash involving state Sen. Sabrina Cervantes, department spokesperson Allison Smith said. Cervantes was taken by a private party to a hospital and treated for minor injuries, Smith said.

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