Washington (CNN) All 12 of Roger Stone's jurors wrote in a series of powerful, anonymized statements this week that they feel harassed, afraid and do not want more information about them revealed to the public, especially after President Donald Trump and right-wing media criticized them for their conviction of the longtime Trump friend.

"I try to stay away from danger, but now it seems like the danger is coming to me," one juror, identified as Juror H, wrote in a court filing Wednesday night. "This whole situation blows me away, because all that I expected before the trial was simply appearing for jury duty. I feel that I should be protected for performing my civic duty."

The jurors are fighting in court to keep private forms they filled out before the trial. They and other prospective jurors had written to the court answers about their employment history and other personal details, so that the attorneys and the judge could vet the jury for bias. A right-wing conspiracy theorist and writer is asking to release the questionnaires now publicly.

The jury forewoman, Tomeka Hart, wrote that she still feels unsafe after the President tweeted about her around Stone's sentencing date. Hart and another juror, Seth Cousins, who identified themselves to the media after the trial, said they've received threatening letters and postcards in the mail from strangers -- a veiled threat that implies their home addresses are known.

"It is intimidating when the President of the United States attacks the foreperson of a jury by name," Juror E, who served with Hart, wrote to the judge.

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