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The American Republic has produced its share of Shakespearean tragedies but few unfold with the quiet, grinding cruelty of a life dismantled not in a single dramatic stroke, but by the slow, methodical machinery of the state. The story of Tina Peters is not merely a legal saga; it is the anatomy of a citizen who believed she was safeguarding democracy, only to find herself consumed by the very system she trusted. It is a tale that begins in duty and ends in a prison cell, with every intervening chapter raising deeply uncomfortable questions about power, punishment, and the peril of dissent in modern America.

Tina Peters was not born into notoriety. She was a middle aged election clerk in Mesa County, Colorado, a grandmother, a woman who had spent decades in relative obscurity. By all conventional measures, she was an unlikely figure to become a national lightning rod. Yet history has a peculiar habit of selecting the most unassuming individuals and thrusting them into the center of political storms.

Following the 2020 presidential election Peters became increasingly concerned about the integrity of voting systems under her supervision. Whether one agrees with her conclusions or not is beside the point. What matters is that she acted on those concerns. She authorized the copying of election system data before a scheduled software update, believing that preserving that information was essential for transparency and future review. That decision would define the rest of her life.

State authorities viewed her actions not as whistleblowing, but as a breach. Prosecutors argued that she had violated election security protocols and compromised sensitive systems. The state of Colorado moved swiftly and decisively. Peters was indicted, tried, and ultimately convicted on multiple charges related to unauthorized access and data handling. The legal proceedings were not merely technical. They were imbued with the full weight of a political climate already charged with suspicion, anger, and division. Peters’ defenders cast her as a whistleblower attempting to preserve evidence. Her critics portrayed her as reckless, even dangerous. In such an environment, nuance rarely survives.

Her conviction resulted in incarceration, a reality that has transformed her from a local official into a symbol. To some, she is a cautionary tale about the consequences of overstepping legal boundaries. To others, she is something far more troubling: an example of what happens when the state chooses to make an example out of an individual.

The tragedy of Tina Peters lies not only in the loss of her freedom, but in the broader implications her case presents. The American system has long held that intent matters. Motive matters. Context matters. Yet in an era of zero tolerance enforcement and political hypersensitivity, those distinctions appear increasingly blurred.

There is a profound difference between malicious interference and misguided conviction. Between sabotage and suspicion. Between a criminal enterprise and a citizen acting, rightly or wrongly, out of a belief that she was protecting the public interest. The law, ideally, is meant to distinguish between these things with precision. Whether it succeeded in this case is a question that deserves serious and sober reflection.

What makes Peters’ story particularly unsettling is its ordinariness. She is not a shadowy operative. She is not a career criminal. She is not a figure of vast power. She is, in many respects, the kind of person the system was designed to protect rather than destroy. And yet, here she is.

One must ask whether proportionality has been lost. Whether the punishment fits the act. Whether the full force of the state has been deployed in a manner that reflects justice, or merely authority. These are not partisan questions. They are foundational ones.

The American tradition is built on the premise that citizens have not only the right but the duty to question systems of power. That principle does not evaporate when the subject becomes politically inconvenient. Indeed, it becomes more essential.

The incarceration of Tina Peters forces us to confront an uncomfortable possibility: that in the modern United States, the line between accountability and retribution is becoming increasingly difficult to discern. When enforcement becomes indistinguishable from example setting, the integrity of the system itself is called into question.

This is not a plea for anarchy, nor an argument that laws should be ignored. It is a plea for balance. For perspective. For the recognition that justice must be more than mechanical. It must be measured, deliberate, and above all, fair.

Tina Peters’ life story, now marked indelibly by her imprisonment, will be debated for years to come. But regardless of where one stands, her case serves as a stark reminder that the machinery of government is not abstract. It is personal. It touches real lives. It reshapes them, often irrevocably. And sometimes, as in this case, it leaves behind something that feels less like justice and more like tragedy.

Free Tina Peters and please continue to pray for her.

Part 1

On December 1, 2025, Donald Trump pardoned the former president of Honduras, Juan Orlando Hernández. He was in a US prison.

Hernández had served less than four years of a 45-year sentence when he was pardoned. He was 57.

Hernández walked out of FCI Hazelton on the day Trump signed the pardon. 

The US Attorney for the Southern District of New York had convicted him in March 2024 of conspiring to import cocaine into the United States, along with two weapons charges connected to a bribe by Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán.

It was an odd shift in fortunes.

As President of Honduras, Juan Orlando Hernández had been a partner in the requests that American presidents made of Honduras during his eight years in office.

He extradited more drug traffickers to the United States than any Honduran president before him. He worked with the DEA, the FBI, and U.S. Southern Command. 

He cooperated on migration, slowing the northbound flow when Washington asked. He kept Honduras aligned with Taiwan, despite years of Chinese pressure to switch.

He was an ally.

Then he left office after two terms in office.

Xiomara Castro and the Libre party came into power on January 27, 2022. The Libre party’s foreign policy orientation was the opposite of Hernández’s on issues that American officials care about.

Closer ties with Venezuela and Cuba. 

Skepticism of the United States. And, 14 months after Castro took office, in March 2023, Honduras switched its diplomatic recognition from Taiwan to the People’s Republic of China.

Switching to China led to the closure of the Taiwanese embassy. It opened a Chinese one. Castro did it to bring Chinese state investment, Chinese intelligence presence, and Chinese strategic influence into a country 90 minutes by plane from Texas. 

The post-Hernandez Honduran realignment is what American foreign policy had spent decades trying to prevent.

That didn’t stop the Biden DOJ from indicting Hernández on January 27, 2022 — the same day Castro was inaugurated, as if it was almost a tip of the hat to Castro and the Chinese.

Castro’s government switched Honduras to China in March 2023, ending an 82-year recognition of Taiwan. 

The Biden administration extradited Hernández the same year his successor pulled the country into Beijing’s sphere. 

Hernández was tried in 2024. Sentenced in June. Sent to FCI Hazelton in early 2025.

In Honduras, Chinese promises did not materialize. Shrimp exports collapsed. Infrastructure projects stalled. The shift that Castro called pragmatic looked, to many Hondurans, like a country that had given up its alliance with the USA for something that never materialized.

In November 2025, the National Party — Hernández’s party – as the former president sat in prison— ran Nasry Asfura on a platform of restoring ties with Taiwan. Trump endorsed him. Trump said U.S. aid depended on his winning. 

And in a strategic act of brilliance for American interests, Trump pardoned Hernández the day before the vote. 

Pro-American Asfura won by less than one percent.

Whatever else it was, the pardon was the move that returned Honduras to American allegiance and pulled it out of China’s reach. That, by itself, made the pardon, arguably, an act of preserving American interests.

Asfura won by 0.74 percent. In a race that close, any number of factors could have tipped it. But Trump’s intervention in the final 72 hours — the endorsement, the threat of suspending aid, and the pardon of Hernández — was, by both sides’ admission, what moved the needle. 

Nasralla said publicly that the endorsement and the pardon cost him the election. The Castro government called it an electoral coup. Supporters of Asfura did not deny that Trump put them over the top. They celebrated it. In a tipping-point race, the pardon was part of what tipped it.

Asfura took office on January 27, 2026 — four years to the day after Hernández left.

Within weeks, Asfura met Trump at Mar-a-Lago. He met Secretary of State Marco Rubio at the Shield of the Americas Summit. He ordered a review of every agreement Castro had signed with China. His vice president confirmed publicly that Honduras intends to restore relations with Taiwan, slowly, as the Chinese contracts can be unwound.

Honduras is the first Latin American country in more than 30 years to begin moving away from Beijing after recognizing it.

The realignment Hernández stood for during his eight years in office — the realignment the Biden Justice Department prosecuted him after a successor government reversed — is being put back into place by the man who pardoned him.

You can call that a coincidence if you want.



This multi-series on Hernandez trial will show why he was outrageously framed, the uncorroborated evidence against him was fabricated and came from individuals with an ax to grind, and his conviction was politically motivated and fraudulent.

By ArtVoice – https://artvoice.com/2026/04/29/the-framing-of-honduran-president-juan-orlando-hernandez-by-bidens-doj/

Saturday night delivered a warning written in sirens and gunfire.

The near miss as another of President Trump’s wannabe assassins charged past the agents and magnetometers at the Washington Hilton on Saturday night was no random spasm of violence. It was a calculated incursion that exposed the dangerous vulnerabilities of holding high profile presidential events at commercial venues. What should have been an evening of ceremony and spectacle instead became a chilling reminder that the enemies of order need only one opening.

The alleged gunman, Cole Tomas Allen, a 31 year old from Torrance, California, came perilously close to turning a glittering media gala into a national catastrophe. According to public reports, Allen was armed with a shotgun, a handgun, and multiple knives. He was also a registered guest at the hotel, a status that reportedly allowed him to bypass several outer security layers applied to non-guests and move throughout the premises with relative ease.

Authorities say he had checked into the hotel one or two days before the event after traveling cross country by train. As a paying guest, he blended into the stream of transient foot traffic that makes hotel security so difficult to control. Around 8:36 in the evening, he allegedly charged a Secret Service checkpoint near the ballroom entrance and opened fire.

One Secret Service officer was struck and survived because of a ballistic resistant vest. Had that armor not held, the nation might be mourning a fallen law enforcement officer today. Thankfully, Allen was subdued and taken into custody before reaching the main ballroom where President Trump, the First Lady, the Vice President, cabinet officials, donors, media figures, and invited dignitaries had assembled.

No additional injuries were reported among those under protection, but the implication is unmistakable. The attacker appears to have sought to get close enough to kill the President of the United States.

Everything publicly known so far paints the portrait of an educated but deeply disturbed man operating alone. Reports indicate he earned a bachelor’s degree in mechanical engineering from the California Institute of Technology in 2017 and later completed a master’s degree in computer science from California State University Dominguez Hills in 2025.

He reportedly worked as a tutor in Torrance and had even received local recognition as Teacher of the Month in late 2024. His interests allegedly included game development and designing an emergency brake mechanism for wheelchairs. Public records also suggest a modest donation to Kamala Harris during the 2024 cycle, though voter registration records reportedly showed no formal party affiliation.

He had no prior criminal record and according to available accounts had not previously drawn law enforcement attention. Investigators are said to be examining electronic devices, travel records, and communications for motive. Preliminary assessments indicate a lone actor without known accomplices.

The precise details of the weapons remain under investigation. That data is classified under the Tiahrt Amendment and will be released at some point in the future; for now authorities have confirmed the use of a shotgun and handgun. Some reports suggest the long gun may have been retrieved or assembled from a bag near the entrance before the attack commenced. Witness accounts indicate multiple shots were fired during the exchange.

This horror summons the ghost of history, because this same hotel is forever linked to presidential bloodshed. In 1981, John Hinckley Jr. ambushed Ronald Reagan outside the Washington Hilton following a public appearance. Reagan was gravely wounded, along with Press Secretary James Brady, Tim McCarthy who is the Secret Service agent that literally jumped in front of the bullet that day, and a Metropolitan Police Officer named Thomas Delahanty in the neck. That attack succeeded in part becausethe President had to exit a commercial property into an exposed public zone with predictable movement patterns. Forty five years later, the same venue again appears as an inviting target.

Hotels are designed for hospitality, not hardened executive security. Their mission is guest convenience, privacy, luggage access, room turnover, catering logistics, and constant civilian movement. Those realities are fundamentally incompatible with airtight protective operations. The courageous men and women of the Secret Service and supporting law enforcement who threw themselves between the gunman and the protectees deserve the gratitude of every American. In the critical seconds when chaos erupted, they acted with speed, discipline, and valor. Their professionalism likely prevented a historic tragedy.

An attack on the President of the United States, regardless of party, is an attack on the constitutional order itself. It strikes at peaceful succession, national continuity, and the stability of the republic. There is also a broader cultural sickness that cannot be ignored. For years, certain corners of American political life have trafficked in fantasies of destruction, normalization of rage, and theatrical hatred of political opponents. They strike matches near dry timber, then feign innocence when flames appear. Reckless rhetoric can help create the atmosphere in which unstable men imagine themselves historical actors.

This incident should end the debate over the need for a secure, purpose built White House ballroom. Major presidential events should be held on fortified federal grounds, not in commercial hotels with porous access points and divided chains of authority. A dedicated White House ballroom could incorporate permanent perimeter defenses, hardened walls, blast resistance, secure ingress and egress routes, drone countermeasures, integrated communications systems, and immediate medical response capabilities.

Such a venue would eliminate the recurring vulnerabilities that accompany rented ballrooms, temporary magnetometers, ad hoc screening lanes, shared loading docks, elevators, kitchens, hotel staff rotations, and thousands of variables no planner can ever fully control.

Opponents of this idea often dismiss it as vanity or extravagance. That is unserious nonsense. Security is not ornamentation. It is necessity. President Trump has long recognized the practical need for such a facility. State dinners, diplomatic receptions, award ceremonies, and major addresses should occur in an environment built for the office of the presidency, not improvised within private hospitality infrastructure.

Saturday night delivered a warning written in sirens and gunfire. Commercial venues carry intrinsic risks that temporary measures cannot fully erase. Moving major presidential gatherings to a permanent, secure, on site stronghold is no longer optional. It is indispensable to the safety of the presidency and the continuity of the republic. Anything less invites the shadow of another attempt.

STONEZONE LIVE!

Tina Peters legal case and debate over why she remains in prison after election system conviction

WHY WON’T THEY RELEASE TINA PETER?

Why Won’t They Release Tina Peters? Inside the Legal Battle Roger Stone interviews investigative journalist Joe Hoft to discuss perceived injustices and systemic corruption within the American legal and electoral

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ROGER STONE MEDIA

WHO IS ROGER STONE?

Roger Stone is a seasoned political operative, speaker, pundit, and New York Times Bestselling Author featured in the Netflix documentary Get Me Roger Stone.

Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan, and Donald Trump—all of these Presidents relied on Roger Stone to secure their seat in the Oval Office. In a 45-year career in American politics, Stone has worked on over 700 campaigns for public office.

“Roger’s a good guy. He is a patriot and believes in a strong nation, and a lot of other things I believes in.”

– President Donald J. Trump
Stone’s bestselling books include The Man Who Killed Kennedy: The Case Against LBJThe Bush Crime FamilyThe Clintons’ War on WomenThe Making of The President—How Donald Trump Orchestrated a Revolution, and Stone’s Rules with a forward by Tucker Carlson.
For the last 15 years, Roger Stone has published his International Best & Worst Dressed List. Stone is considered an authority on political and corporate strategy, branding, marketing, messaging, and advertising.
Stone is the host of The StoneZONE on Rumble and is also the host of The Roger Stone Show on WABC Radio.

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