‘Political Prisoner’ Twist Sets Stage for Historic Legal Battle

President Donald Trump issued a full pardon Thursday to Tina Peters, the former Mesa County clerk who became a symbol for election-integrity advocates nationwide.

The 70-year-old Peters had been serving time following her conviction related to accusations that she participated in breaching Mesa County’s election equipment security in 2021. 

Authorities alleged that unauthorized individuals gained access to sensitive voting-system data and copied it, The Post Millennial (TPM) reported earlier this month.

Trump made the announcement on Truth Social, characterizing the situation as an example of Democrats weaponizing the legal system against their political adversaries while turning a blind eye to violent offenders.

The president stated that Peters was jailed for demanding honest elections. 

He referred to her as a patriot whose only goal was ensuring election fairness and integrity.

Trump has called Peters a “political prisoner” on multiple occasions prior to issuing the pardon. 

In his statement, the president accused Democrats of ignoring violent crime across all categories. 

He claimed the party allowed dangerous criminals who belonged behind bars to strike again.

Trump asserted that Democrats concentrated their prosecutorial resources on individuals who raised questions about election procedures instead of protecting citizens.

The president wrote that Democrats believe there is only one crime: refusing to vote for them. 

He stated that Peters faced relentless targeting because she advocated for secure elections.

Trump’s complete statement declared that Democrats ignored violent and vicious crime of all types for years. 

He said violent criminals who should have been incarcerated were permitted to attack again.

We don’t spam! Read our privacy policy for more info.

The president further claimed that Democrats willingly admitted the worst individuals from the worst countries in order to exploit American taxpayers. 

Rather than safeguarding Americans and their tax dollars, Trump argued that Democrats chose to prosecute anyone seeking safe and secure elections.

He characterized Peters as sitting in a Colorado prison for the so-called crime of demanding honest elections. 

Trump stated he was granting Peters a full pardon for her attempts to expose voter fraud in what he called the rigged 2020 presidential election.

The president has made repeated pledges to intervene in Peters’ case. However, presidential pardons traditionally do not extend to state-level criminal convictions.

Trump had previously issued warnings that he would take retaliatory action against Colorado officials if they did not release Peters from custody.

Court filings revealed that Peters’ legal team made direct appeals to Trump for clemency. 

TPM noted that Attorney Peter Ticktin sent a nine-page letter to the president dated Dec. 7, requesting that he grant Peters a pardon.

Ticktin contended in his letter that presidential clemency authority reaches state convictions. The attorney conceded that no court has ever examined whether a president possesses the power to pardon state offenses.

Despite this legal uncertainty, Ticktin expressed his belief that the United States Supreme Court should be the body to resolve this constitutional question. 

The pardon sets up a potential landmark case regarding the scope of presidential clemency powers.

By Reece Walker

Reece Walker covers news and politics with a focus on exposing public and private policies proposed by governments, unelected globalists, bureaucrats, Big Tech companies, defense departments, and intelligence agencies.

Subscribe
Notify of
guest
0 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x