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Former Mesa County election clerk Tina Peters has allegedly been threatened and violently attacked multiple times inside a Colorado state prison, intensifying concerns that the high-profile election-integrity advocate is being targeted as a political prisoner rather than simply serving a sentence.
Attorney Peter Ticktin has penned a compelling letter to President Donald Trump, revealing a disturbing sequence of events surrounding Tina Peters. Ticktin alleges that Peters, approximately six months ago, faced life-threatening harm from a group of inmates who threatened to stab and kill her. This alarming situation was reported to both the FBI and the Department of Justice, prompting agents to interview her and subsequently move her to a different unit. However, Ticktin claims that in this new environment, Peters suffered three separate assaults in various locations, necessitating intervention by guards to pull off her attackers.
The letter, a crucial part of a formal pardon request to Trump, highlights Peters’ attempts to secure placement in a safer unit intended for nonviolent and vulnerable inmates. Despite her repeated appeals, these requests have allegedly been turned down six times without any justification. Ticktin has publicly voiced concerns about Peters’ wellbeing, portraying her as deeply fearful for her life, increasingly despondent, and physically deteriorating under conditions akin to solitary confinement that could drive anyone to madness.
President Trump has been vocally supportive of Peters, criticizing Colorado Governor Jared Polis for inaction. On Truth Social, Trump lambasted the governor, accusing him of failing his state and demanding Peters’ release with the rallying cry, “FREE TINA!” Earlier this year, Trump urged the Justice Department to investigate options for transferring Peters to federal custody or facilitating her release, portraying her as an “innocent Political Prisoner” enduring severe and unfair punishment.
The National File has chronicled Peters’ legal battle, including her federal habeas corpus petition. This petition argues that the Colorado courts withheld her bond to suppress her criticism of the state’s election system, thus violating her First Amendment rights. During a July hearing, Ticktin emphasized that Peters’ imprisonment stems from a fear of her potential speech rather than any genuine threat she poses to public safety.
With mounting allegations of death threats, inmate assaults, and insufficient protection or medical care—issues reportedly flagged to the FBI and DOJ—Peters’ situation has sparked fervent calls for her release or a presidential pardon. Her plight highlights a significant miscarriage of justice, casting her as a political prisoner and a defender of election integrity wrongfully punished for challenging the status quo.
Amid growing allegations that Peters has faced death threats, been assaulted three times by inmates, and denied adequate protection or medical care—despite notifications to the FBI and DOJ—her case has galvanized calls for her immediate release or pardon, including direct appeals to President Trump. Tina Peters’ ordeal underscores a profound injustice, positioning her as a political prisoner and American hero unjustly silenced for championing election transparency amid a system that punishes dissent.