"SLOWLY MURDERED": GOLD STAR MOTHER TINA PETERS DYING IN PRISON FOR PRESERVING 2020 ELECTION "SMOKING GUN"
PUEBLO, CO — Tina Peters, a 70-year-old Gold Star Mother and the former Clerk of Mesa County, is reportedly dying inside the concrete walls of a Colorado state prison. Her crime? She didn't rob a bank. She didn't hurt a child. She simply hit "Save."
According to a desperate pardon application submitted to Governor Jared Polis, Peters is being "slowly murdered" for a singular act of defiance: preserving forensic evidence that she claims proves the 2020 election was stolen.
The "Trusted Build" Wipe
The controversy centers on a software update ordered by the Colorado Secretary of State known as a "Trusted Build." State officials claimed it was routine maintenance. Peters, under a federal oath to preserve election records for 22 months, believed it was a digital bleach-bit operation designed to wipe critical logs.
Before the update occurred, she made forensic backup images of the machines. According to her legal team, those images—which remain sealed by the court—are the "smoking gun." They allegedly prove that certified election results were altered after the election and that the state’s own audit tools were deliberately disabled.
Punished for Preservation
Instead of investigating the discrepancies found in the images, Colorado Democrats raided Peters’ home. They indicted her, staged what supporters call a "sham trial" that excluded the forensic evidence, and sentenced the grandmother to nine years in prison.
The pardon letter details a harrowing existence. For the past 14 months, Peters has allegedly been:
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Thrown into freezing solitary confinement.
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Stripped naked and subjected to humiliating searches.
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Denied medical care while coughing up blood and suffering from recurring cancer symptoms.
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Forced to undergo drug tests despite being too weak to stand.
"This is not justice," said a spokesperson for her defense. "This is a purge. They are killing her to send a message: Do not look under the hood of the election machines."
A Political Hostage?
The situation has escalated into a federal standoff. President Trump has publicly labeled Peters a "political hostage," and the Federal Bureau of Prisons has formally requested her transfer to a safer federal facility.
Yet, Governor Jared Polis and the Colorado Department of Corrections have refused to act.
The judge who sentenced her, noted in the pardon application for openly mocking her Christian faith during the trial, has ensured she remains in state custody. Critics argue that keeping her in a Colorado prison is not about public safety—it is about keeping the Mesa County forensic images buried forever.
"The Overthrow is Complete"
As Peters wastes away, suffering from severe memory loss and rapid physical collapse, her supporters are issuing a dire warning to the American public.
"If a 70-year-old Gold Star Mother can be slowly killed in a cage for documenting the overthrow of her own government, then the overthrow is already complete," her pardon appeal reads.
Tina Peters is running out of time. And according to those who have seen the sealed evidence, so is the Republic.
President Trump Gets His Revenge and Sweet Payback. Long Serving RINO Senator Is OUT Of The Lead.

ANCHORAGE, AK — The long game is finally paying off. For years, Lisa Murkowski has stood as the ultimate symbol of the anti-Trump establishment within the GOP, surviving primary challenges and defying the MAGA movement. But her luck just ran out. President Donald Trump is preparing his "sweet payback," and his weapon of choice is Alaska Governor Mike Dunleavy.

The Revenge: "He's Not Sarah Palin"
Murkowski has survived before by painting her opponents as extreme or incompetent. But Mike Dunleavy is a different beast. According to exclusive sources, Dunleavy is preparing to launch a 2028 Senate run to unseat Murkowski. Unlike Sarah Palin, who resigned early and "never recovered," Dunleavy is playing it smart. “He’s not going to quit his term,” a top source confirmed. He will finish his job as Governor, proving his competence, before turning his sights on Washington.
The Cinematic Moment: Standing with Giants
While Murkowski was busy clashing with Trump in D.C., where was Dunleavy? He was standing shoulder-to-shoulder with President Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin at the historic summit at Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson in Anchorage on August 15.
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The Visual: Murkowski is in the hallways of Congress making deals with Democrats. Dunleavy is on the tarmac welcoming world leaders with Trump.
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The Message: Dunleavy is the trusted ally. Murkowski is the outsider in her own party.

The Stakes: Ending the RINO Reign
This isn't just about one seat; it's about the soul of the Republican Party. Murkowski is often viewed as the "most moderate" (read: liberal) Republican in Congress. Dunleavy, by contrast, was the second governor to endorse Trump in 2016. He visits the White House frequently despite the 3,500-mile distance. “Trump has talked to him before about running and wants him to run,” sources say. The President sees Dunleavy not just as an ally, but as the instrument of his final victory over the old guard.
Vindication: He Can Win the Native Vote
Murkowski's "ace in the hole" has always been the Alaska Native vote and the Ranked-Choice Voting system. But Dunleavy has cracked that code. He is deeply respected in rural Alaska and the North Slope for his focus on energy and infrastructure. “Murkowski has never faced a challenger like him,” an insider noted. “He’s built support that goes beyond just conservatives.”
If Dunleavy can unite the MAGA base with rural Alaskans, Murkowski’s coalition crumbles. The "write-in" miracle of 2010 won't happen twice.
Common Enemy: The D.C. Ego
Dunleavy’s appeal is his hatred for the D.C. swamp. He jokes about preferring the Arctic to "all this concrete" and despises "cocktail parties." Alaskans are tired of a Senator who loves the Washington spotlight. They want a Governor who "gets stuff done." Lisa Murkowski has spent decades building a legacy in D.C. Mike Dunleavy is coming to tear it down.