Former El Paso County Sheriff Terry Maketa and former Cmdr. Juan San Agustin turned themselves in to authorities Thursday morning, a day after being indicted on felony charges.

Maketa was booked into the Gilpin County Sheriff’s Office at 8:30 a.m. A department spokeswoman said he posted bail and was released by 11:30 a.m.

San Agustin turned himself in to the Teller County Sheriff’s Office.

“He posted bond,” said Cmdr. Mark Morlock of the Teller County Sheriff’s Office. “He was released within an hour.”

Maketa, San Agustin and former Undersheriff Paula Presley were indicted together Wednesday. Presley surrendered in Pueblo County on Wednesday night. She posted bail and was released.

Bail was set at $10,000 for each.

Maketa and Presley were indicted on nine counts, including allegations of extortion, official misconduct, witness tampering, kidnapping and false imprisonment. San Agustin faces one count of second-degree kidnapping and one count of false imprisonment.

The indictment states Maketa and Presley used their power to take punitive action against employees and contractors they disagreed with. It also alleges the pair, along with San Agustin, encouraged a domestic-violence victim to recant her story — then arrested her — to protect the deputy accused of attacking her.

The charges of witness tampering, kidnapping and false imprisonment allege Maketa talked to a woman, who was a civilian employee working for a health contractor at the El Paso County jail, after her boyfriend, a deputy, had been arrested and fired for beating her.

Maketa told the woman to recant her statement and “tell investigators that she instigated the incident in order to allow (the deputy) to get his job back,” the indictment said.

When the woman recanted her statement, she told deputies she was doing so to follow the sheriff’s orders. The woman was arrested unlawfully and spent more than 24 hours in custody before being released on bail, the indictment said.

According to the indictment, the detectives on the case did not feel they had probable cause to arrest the woman but did so under orders.

The indictment states Maketa and Presley also threatened the health company with ending its jail contract if it did not fire an employee who refused to run Presley’s planned campaign to be sheriff.

Other charges allege Presley placed deputies on a county list of officers whose credibility had come into question because “those officers had angered her.” The indictment also states Maketa tried to add deputies’ names to the list for disagreements, including over a report criticizing the response to the 2012 Waldo Canyon fire.

The indictment states various sheriff’s employees were investigated in the purported 2013 disappearance of an internal affairs file for Bill Elder, a former deputy who was running for sheriff. Elder supporters were singled out for questioning, and one was threatened with termination.

“These exams also occurred despite the fact that Undersheriff Presley subsequently admitted in a meeting on February 20, 2014 that she in fact had the Bill Elder file at home,” the indictment states.

It was not clear Thursday if the trio’s indictment would have any impact on the cases they worked on during their tenure at the sheriff’s office. San Agustin oversaw the sheriff’s office investigations.

A spokeswoman for the El Paso County district attorney’s office did not immediately return a message seeking comment.

“That is an unknown at this point in time,” El Paso County sheriff’s spokeswoman Jackie Kirby said of any case reviews the sheriff’s office might undertake.

David Beller, a Denver criminal defense attorney, said the indictment probably won’t have impacts on any convictions stemming from Maketa’s, Presley’s and San Agustin’s work.

“Without direct evidence impacting the material facts of a particular case, it is extremely unlikely these indictments will have any impact on other criminal cases making their way through the trial court, or on appeal,” Beller said.

Maketa could not be reached for comment Wednesday but has said he is confident he will be vindicated.

A message left for Presley was not immediately returned, and San Agustin said he had no comment.