Why “Free Tina Peters” Became a Colorado Double Standard
When “Intent” Becomes a Firewall: How AI Harm Rules Can Silence Whistleblowers
By Ben Townsend
Townsend Real Estate, Ltd.
December 28, 2025
Introduction: The Problem No One Wants to Name
Modern information control rarely looks like outright censorship.
Instead, it appears through moderation systems, policy frameworks, and automated enforcement designed to prevent harm. In the AI era, these policies are often grouped under what platforms call harassment, hate, and harmful content rules.
In theory, these systems exist to protect the public.
In practice, they can also suppress inconvenient narratives—especially when those narratives challenge official conclusions.
The prosecution of former Mesa County Clerk Tina Peters, contrasted with a separate password exposure incident involving Colorado Secretary of State Jena Griswold, illustrates how legal determinations of “intent” can shape both courtroom outcomes and the information that survives online moderation.
The question is not whether courts can determine intent.
The question is what happens when AI systems automatically treat institutional conclusions about intent as unquestionable truth.
The Law Everyone Agrees On—At Least on Paper
Colorado election security laws criminalize the knowing disclosure of sensitive voting system information.
The key word in statutes such as C.R.S. § 1-13-708.5 is “knowingly.”
Colorado criminal law defines “knowingly” as awareness that one’s conduct is of a certain nature or circumstance.
In other words:
Intent matters.
Publishing protected election credentials accidentally is legally different from publishing them deliberately.
But determining intent is often subjective—and that’s where controversy begins.
The Tina Peters Case
Tina Peters served as the elected clerk for Mesa County, Colorado.
She became nationally known after allowing unauthorized access to Mesa County election equipment during a 2021 software update. Investigators said the breach resulted in sensitive election data and passwords appearing online.
In August 2024, a Mesa County jury convicted Peters on seven charges including:
- Attempting to influence a public servant
- Conspiracy to commit criminal impersonation
- Official misconduct
- Violation of duty in elections
Read coverage of the conviction here:
Mesa County clerk Tina Peters sentenced to nine years in prison
In October 2024, the judge sentenced her to nine years in prison.
During sentencing, the judge stated he believed Peters would repeat her actions and criticized her continued claims that election fraud occurred.
Supporters argue she was attempting to preserve election data.
Prosecutors argued she intentionally compromised election systems.
The jury ultimately accepted the prosecution’s interpretation.
The Griswold Password Exposure
In 2024, the office of Colorado Secretary of State Jena Griswold faced a separate controversy.
A spreadsheet published on the Secretary of State website contained hidden tabs exposing partial BIOS passwords for voting equipment across multiple Colorado counties.
An independent investigation led by attorney Beth Doherty Quinn found the disclosure resulted from:
“A series of inadvertent and unforeseen events.”
Read the Associated Press investigation summary
The investigation found:
- No evidence of intentional wrongdoing
- Two internal policy violations
- Staff unaware hidden spreadsheet tabs contained password information
Because investigators concluded the disclosure was unintentional, prosecutors declined to file criminal charges.
Again, the same legal principle applied:
No intent, no crime.
Why the Comparison Matters
| Situation | Outcome | Determination |
|---|---|---|
| Peters election system breach | Conviction and prison sentence | Intent inferred |
| Secretary of State password exposure | No charges filed | Intent ruled accidental |
Courts determine intent using testimony, evidence, and jury findings.
But AI moderation systems do not conduct trials.
Instead they rely heavily on:
- Court rulings
- Government statements
- Major news organizations
This means institutional conclusions about intent can quickly become algorithmic fact.
Where AI Moderation Changes the Conversation
Platforms increasingly use AI systems to detect and limit election misinformation.
These systems prioritize:
- Official government sources
- Court decisions
- Major news outlets
As a result:
- Claims aligned with official conclusions are treated as authoritative
- Claims challenging those conclusions may be labeled misinformation
The AI system is not independently evaluating evidence.
It is deferring to institutional credibility.
The Whistleblower Paradox
Whistleblowers often challenge institutions.
But modern moderation systems are designed to reduce narratives that could undermine trust in those institutions.
| Dynamic | Result |
|---|---|
| Intent inferred from dissent | Speech can become evidence |
| AI trained on institutional sources | Counter-narratives suppressed |
| Harm-prevention policies | Claims labeled misinformation |
| Automated moderation | Limited context or appeal |
This does not prove a coordinated cover-up.
But it demonstrates how automation can unintentionally amplify institutional authority.
A New Political Flashpoint
The debate over the Peters case continues.
Colorado Governor Jared Polis has indicated he is willing to review clemency requests regarding Peters’ sentence.
Reuters coverage of the clemency discussion
Supporters argue the sentence is disproportionate for a non-violent offense.
Critics argue the breach undermined election security.
Why This Matters for Real Estate and Property Rights
You might ask why a real estate professional would write about election law.
The reason is simple:
Property rights depend on consistent rule of law.
Real estate markets rely on:
- Enforceable contracts
- Predictable regulations
- Equal application of statutes
When citizens believe laws are applied differently depending on politics or institutional standing, trust in the legal system weakens.
And when legal trust erodes, property rights become less secure.
That affects everything from zoning decisions to contract disputes and regulatory enforcement.
The Bigger Question
Colorado courts applied the law as written.
But AI systems now replicate those outcomes across the digital world—often without context or nuance.
If whistleblowing requires challenging institutional conclusions, and AI systems automatically punish that challenge, who protects dissent in the digital age?
The answer may shape not only election debates, but the future of public trust and accountability.
Author
Ben Townsend
#ElectionIntegrity
#ColoradoPolitics
#RuleOfLaw
#ElectionSecurity
#GovernmentTransparency
#PublicTrust
#WhistleblowerProtection





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