One of the biggest names caught up in legal hell over the past four years is Tina Peters, the former Mesa County, Colorado, clerk who wound up being convicted of four felonies related to her preservation of key election records and gaining supposedly unauthorized access to the electronic voting infrastructure (machines and software).
It is great to see all the January 6th prisoner pardons and subsequent releases, but it is important that we don’t forget Peters, who has paid a stiff price at the hands of the wicked Jena Griswold, Colorado’s disgraced Secretary of State, and the tyrant-in-a-robe named Matthew Barrett, for demanding a deeper dive into the world of election maladministration.
Unfortunately, since she was convicted of state crimes, President Trump cannot pardon her. So, what do we do now? David Clements posted about this yesterday, and in the spirit of justice, I am forwarding his points:
My recommendation is to continue to post online, tagging President Trump and all his DOJ leadership across all platforms, about this matter so it becomes a viral online issue, and for all concerned to contact the office of Colorado Governor Jared Polis, a Democrat, at (303) 866-2471. While he likely has no internal inclination or conviction to pardon Peters, he may find it politically expedient to appeal to mercy and moderation since he is rumored to aspire to the Presidency as soon as 2028.
Burn up those phone lines and keep this issue alive. I have little doubt Trump allies like Mike Lindell will keep this issue in his ear, and we can certainly move the needle here if we press the matter. Remember, Peters’ legal issues and persecution are directly tied to the administrative state’s desire to intimidate all so-called election deniers in order to obscure all transparency into the widespread corruption of our national elections infrastructure.
Thank you for your attention.
Seth Keshel, MBA, is a former Army Captain of Military Intelligence and Afghanistan veteran. His analytical method of election forecasting and analytics is known worldwide, and he has been commended by President Donald J. Trump for his work in the field.
Absolutely!
Thanks Seth,
Oklahoma had six J6 political hostages; two at the OKC federal transfer center (Paul Brinson and Markus Maly) and four at the Grady County jail in Chickasha, OK (Jeanette Mangia, Mark Waynick, Damon Beckley and Zach Alum). All are now home and I had the privilege to pick up all four at Grady County and help get them home.
My heart aches for Tina.