A Colorado appeals panel on Wednesday seemed skeptical that a judge could use former county clerk Tina Peters’ insistence on spreading election conspiracy theories as part of the reason to sentence her to nine years in prison for orchestrating a data breach of election equipment.
The three-judge panel was dismissive of many of the arguments made by Peters’ attorneys. But they grilled the state’s lawyer over the trial judge reciting Peters’ false statements about elections in handing down her sentence.
“The court cannot punish her for her First Amendment rights,” Appeals Judge Craig Welling said.
The remarks are significant because President Donald Trump has embraced Peters, who was trying to find evidence of the fraud that he continues to claim, without evidence, caused him to lose the 2020 presidential election. He’s threatened Colorado with the loss of federal funding if it does not release her and even issued a pardon of her last month, although she was convicted on state crimes that he cannot erase.
Peters’ lawyers have said Trump does have the authority to pardon her, arguing that President George Washington issued pardons to people convicted of both state and federal crimes during the Whiskey Rebellion in 1795. But that argument did not even come up during oral arguments as they appealed her sentence Wednesday.
A member of her legal team, Peter Ticktin, said they didn’t have time to argue about the pardon during the 30 minutes allotted by the court. But he also said he thinks Gov. Jared Polis will grant Peters clemency, based on his recent comments. Polis, a Democrat, has said he would consider granting clemency for Peters, characterizing her sentence as “harsh.”
Judge Ted C. Tow III speaks during oral arguments for People vs Tina Peters in the Court of Appeals at the Ralph L. Carr Colorado Judicial Center in Denver on Wednesday, January 14, 2026. (Photo by AAron Ontiveroz/The Denver Post, Pool)The former clerk in Mesa County, in the far western part of Colorado, was convicted of state crimes for orchestrating a data breach of the county’s elections equipment, driven by false claims about voting machine fraud after Trump lost his reelection bid. She is serving a nine-year sentence at a state prison in Pueblo after being convicted in 2024 in her home county, a Republican stronghold that supported Trump.
Prosecutors said Peters became fixated on voting problems after becoming involved with activists who had questioned the 2020 presidential election results, including Douglas Frank, an Ohio math teacher, and MyPillow founder Mike Lindell.
Peters used another person’s security badge to allow a former surfer affiliated with Lindell, Conan Hayes, to watch a software update of her county’s election management system. Prosecutors said he made copies of the system’s hard drive before and after the upgrade, and that partially redacted security passwords later turned up online, prompting an investigation. Hayes was not charged with any wrongdoing.
Peters didn’t deny the deception but said she had to do it to make sure election records weren’t erased. She claims she should not have been prosecuted because she had a duty under federal law to preserve them — a contention that drew sharp skepticism from Wednesday’s panel.
Former Mesa County Clerk and Recorder Tina Peters smiles at supporters sitting behind her during her sentencing for her election interference case at the Mesa County District Court on Oct. 3, 2024. (Larry Robinson, Grand Junction Daily Sentinel)Instead, the three judges all expressed concern about District Court Judge Matthew Barrett’s statements during Peters’ sentencing. He called her a “charlatan” and said she posed a danger to the community for spreading lies about voting and undermining the democratic process.
Senior Assistant Attorney General Lisa Michaels said Barrett was responding to a lengthy presentation Peters had just concluded during the sentencing hearing, repeating the debunked election conspiracy theories that she was trying to prove.
“She made it relevant,” Michaels said of Peters. “She had a slideshow. She had pages and pages going on about this.”
Michaels contended that Barrett made clear in the sentencing that he was imposing a sentencing her for the specific crimes she was convicted of at trial. But the elements of one of those, a felony conviction for criminal impersonation, was improperly presented to the jury with language for the misdemeanor version of the crime, another element of her case that alarmed the panel’s judges.
Last month, Peters lost an attempt in federal court to be released from prison while she appeals her conviction.
Her lawyers say she also is entitled to at least a new sentencing hearing because Barrett based his sentence partially on a contempt conviction in a related case that the appeals court threw out last year. They also are asking the appeals court to recognize Trump’s pardon and immediately set Peters free.
Attorney John Case talks to reporters after a hearing to urge a state appeals court to overturn the convictions against former Colorado elections clerk and Donald Trump ally Tina Peters for orchestrating a data breach of her county’s elections equipment Wednesday, Jan. 14, 2026, in Denver. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski)Peters’ release has become a cause celebre in the election conspiracy movement.
Trump has lambasted both Polis and the Republican district attorney who brought the charges, Dan Rubinstein, for keeping Peters in prison. The Federal Bureau of Prisons tried but failed to get Peters moved to a federal prison.
Jake Lang, who was charged with assaulting a police officer during the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol and was later pardoned by Trump, announced on social media last month that “January 6er Patriots” and U.S. Marshals would storm a Colorado prison to release Peters unless she is freed by the end of this month.
included a phone video interview with Peters from behind bars. But a message on Peters’ X account said she is not affiliated with any demonstration or event at the prison and denounced any use of force against it.
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Associated Press writer Nicholas Riccardi contributed to this report.
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