Names can be deceiving
Would a group called Colorado Ethics Watch ever do something out-of-bounds? Names can be deceiving.
More on that in a moment on the Face The State Radio Minute.
Political attack ads are often funded by some group with a name like, “Coloradans for fluffy bunnies” or “The campaign for rainbows and sunshine.” Names can be deceiving. Take for example Colorado Ethics Watch, which purports to use the courts to pursue unethical political behavior. Well, so long as the target is a conservative, that is. Despite their intentions, the group has every right to access the legal system. But last week, CEW was slapped with attorneys fees for filing a complaint it knew had no merit. In Colorado, fees are assessed sparingly, and only in clearcut cases like this. It’s the second time in four years CEW has been rebuked like this. Legal harassment doesn’t sound very “ethical” to me.
For FaceTheState.com, I’m Brad Jones.
FTS Weekend Edition
A weekly, one-hour news magazine examining Colorado's political landscape. Tune in for interviews with FTS reporters, newsmakers, and civic leaders.

Peter Blake on the state PUC (and whether commissioners are acting unethically); state ed board chair Bob Schaffer talks "Race to the Top" money and curriculum standards, and why is it so hard to start up a new cab company in Colorado? 

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