Colorado sectary of state says Tiger King not ready for 2024 ballot

Last Updated on June 21, 2023 by Admin

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Despite a bold proclamation on his newly launched campaign website that he has secured a spot on Colorado’s 2024 ballot for a White House run, the imprisoned “Tiger King” of Netflix fame — Joseph Maldonado, better known as Joe Exotic — is not ready for presidential prime time in the Centennial State.

So says the Secretary of State’s Office, which on Tuesday told The Denver Post that it will return Maldonado’s $500 check “with instructions for steps the candidate must take in order to be on the ballot.”

The determination from the state’s election officials comes a day after multiple media outlets, citing Maldonado’s own presidential announcement, reported that the former zookeeper and federal inmate had gained a spot on the ballot — his first among the 50 states.

“The Secretary of State’s Office requires candidates to personally sign official documentation affirming they acknowledge state law requirements in addition to providing payment for ballot access,” said agency spokesman Jack Todd. “Since the 2024 presidential candidate paperwork has not been published and therefore was not completed by Maldonado, the department will be returning the check…”

Todd went on to say that his office can only place candidates on the ballot who are “bona fide members of a major political party” and that no such candidate list from any major party has been received.

“If a candidate is not a bona fide member of a major party, they have the option to become a write-in candidate,” he said.

It’s not clear from Maldonado’s website what party, if any, he is claiming as his own. In the past, Maldonado has gone by the name Maldonado-Passage but refers to himself as simply Maldonado on his website.

He shot to fame in 2020 when the Netflix documentary, “Tiger King: Murder, Mayhem and Madness,” was released. The show, which featured Maldonado as the colorful owner of the G.W. Zoo in Wynnewood, Oklahoma, was watched by tens of millions as the pandemic forced people to stay home.

The series explored the little-known world of people who collect big cats and display them in private zoos and animal sanctuaries in the United States.

Maldonado, 60, was in trouble before the series ever aired, sentenced in January 2020 to 22 years in prison after a federal jury found him guilty of a murder-for-hire plot targeting competitor Carole Baskin, owner of a Florida-based tiger sanctuary.

Prosecutors said Maldonado offered $10,000 to an undercover FBI agent to kill Baskin during a recorded December 2017 meeting. In the recording, he told the agent, “Just like follow her into a mall parking lot and just cap her and drive off.” His attorneys have said their client wasn’t being serious.

Maldonado, who maintains his innocence and makes that point clear on his campaign website, also was convicted of killing five tigers, selling tiger cubs and falsifying wildlife records.

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