Update to AG Kris Mayes Says Her Office Is Investigating The Fake GQP Electors.
The Arizona Mirror reports, Kris Mayes is investigating Trump’s ‘fake electors,’ focusing on threats to election workers:
While her predecessor used a dedicated election crimes division to investigate hundreds of bogus election fraud claims, Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes says she will redirect the unit’s focus to prosecute election-related threats and protect voting rights.
“We are almost at a crisis situation in our state, in the sense that we now have a third of our counties experiencing the loss, or should I say the resignation, of a high-level election official due to death threats and harassment. That is unacceptable,” Mayes said in an interview with the Arizona Mirror.
Former AG Mark Brnovich, the Republican who Mayes replaced this year, persuaded the state legislature to create the Election Integrity Unit so his office could have a dedicated team to investigate election fraud claims. But Brnovich buried what was arguably its most important work, a 10,000-hour investigation debunking hundreds of fraud claims related to the 2020 election. Mayes released the results of that investigation earlier this month.
And the Election Integrity Unit is also investigating a much larger effort to undermine the will of the voters — one that is also under a federal investigation and has been in the spotlight of investigators in Washington, D.C.
“I’m not certain that my predecessor did an investigation into the fake electors,” Mayes said when asked about investigating schemes by Republicans to send fraudulent slates of electors for former President Donald Trump to Congress on Jan. 6 using the state’s seal. While she was secretary of state, Gov. Katie Hobbs requested Brnovich investigate the use of the state seal on non-official documents, but Brnovich largely remained silent on the issue.
Brnovich’s failure to investigate was a political favor to protect prominent Republicans who engaged in this criminal act, which is a coverup of the crime. It was a “politicization” of his office and an abuse of power.
There were multiple “fake elector” schemes in Arizona. One was tied to the Arizona Republican Party (above) and was allegedly done at the request of the Trump campaign, and it involved officials including former AZGOP chairwoman Kelli Ward, state Sen. Jake Hoffman, state Sen. Anthony Kern and Turning Points USA CEO Tyler Bowyer. That fake electors scheme is also the subject of a federal investigation.
Another group, the Sovereign Citizens of the Great State of Arizona, also created an alternate slate of electors for Trump independent of the campaign’s effort to overturn the election results.
“I will investigate the fake electors’ situation, and I will take very seriously any effort to undermine our democracy,” Mayes said. “Those are the cases that I will take most seriously.”
Mayes would not elaborate on the status of the investigation or comment further.
But Mayes did speak about her plans to use her office as a “deterrent” to behavior that has created an environment where Arizona election officials have begun to leave their jobs at a rapid pace.
“We need to make sure that our election officials feel supported and safe,” Mayes said. “The fact that we have a third of our counties experiencing a resignation of an election official, it should be an alarm bell for the entire state.”
Since the 2020 election, threats to election officials nationwide have been increasing. Arizona has been at the forefront of those threats, with the FBI and U.S. Department of Justice having to get involved in multiple cases.
Most recently, veteran Cochise County Election Director Lisa Marra resigned. In her departure letter, she described a workplace that was hostile due to a monthslong saga in which Marra stood up to election conspiracists within the county’s government who sought a full hand recount that was illegal and, according to experts, would cause “downright chaos.”
Last year, the director of elections in Yavapai County resigned prior to the midterm elections due to more than 18 months of threats she received. GOP-dominated Yavapai County has been a hotbed of hostile activity, with the anti government militia group, the Oath Keepers, originally planning to have armed ballot drop box watchers before the federal courts kept the group from getting involved.
Mayes said the images of armed men watching drop boxes “disturbed” her and set her on a path to begin speaking to law enforcement across the state. So far, Mayes said she has spoken to Maricopa County Sheriff Paul Penzone and Yavapai County Sheriff David Rhodes and is planning over the next year and a half to speak with all 15 county sheriffs, as well as law enforcement across the state.
A spokesperson for the Yavapai County Sheriff’s Office said that Mayes spoke with Rhodes and discussed a number of law enforcement issues but the “election discussion was very minimal with no specifics discussed.”
Reminder: Yavapai County Sheriff David Rhodes spoke at a local Oath Keepers event on Sept. 9, 2022. Experts warn of extremist push to expand sheriffs’ role in elections:
Prominent Arizona Oath Keeper Jim Arroyo turned on his hands-free microphone and stepped in front of the bright yellow banner of the Yavapai County Preparedness Team to explain “Operation: Drop Box.”
“We’ve already coordinated with Sheriff (David) Rhodes,” Arroyo said during a July meeting of the Yavapai County Preparedness Team (YCPT), an Oath Keepers group that broke ties with the national organization after the Jan. 6, 2021 attack on the U.S. Capitol. “He told us if we see somebody stuffing a ballot box and we get a license plate, they will make an arrest and there will be a prosecution.”
The Election Day operation, which aims to station monitors at every ballot-drop location in Yavapai County, is being spearheaded by YCPT’s sister organization, the Lions of Liberty. On its website, the group instructs monitors … “Do NOT engage,” the group advises. “Contact us and we’ll get in touch with Sheriff Rhodes who is already aware of what we are doing and will do what he can.”
Seems to me that the Yavapai County Sheriff’s office has some splainin’ to do to the Attorney General’s office.
Making sure voters feel safe and secure when using a drop box will be a major priority, Mayes said, and that if that means making sure that agents with the Attorney General’s Office are present alongside law enforcement, then that might be the case. Currently, Mayes has 60 agents working directly with her in the office.
“I’m zero tolerance when it comes to people violating the law and when it comes to people intimidating voters and those trying to count the vote,” Maricopa County Sheriff Paul Penzone told the Mirror.
MCSO deputies had to be dispatched in riot gear to deal with angry and armed crowds of election denialists during the 2020 election, when they descended upon the Maricopa County tabulation center. His deputies also have had to dedicate security to election officials who faced threats for their work, Penzone said.
#BREAKING – Large crowd of protestors now gathering in front of #Maricopa Election center pic.twitter.com/8ljM8zoISo
— Gadi Schwartz (@GadiNBC) November 5, 2020
During the midterms, MCSO spent approximately $675,000 on security for the elections, a number Penzone is expecting to be “substantially” higher for the next election as he and his deputies are already preparing for the next wave of threats to election officials, as well as “operations” against drop boxes.
“It has changed it to the point now that my planning for the upcoming election starts when the last election ended,” Penzone said. “We are seeing a surge and a heightened call to action where there are more actors out there looking to undermine the process.”
Penzone said that most of the threats are not ones the office has been able to act on, but there has been a lot of activity. From threats coming in through the physical mail, phone lines and social media, there is a lot to go through.
“There is a lot of chatter that has not exceeded the threshold of being a crime but it is concerning in nature,” Penzone said. “But their intentions make you concerned for the people in the community who handle elections.”
Penzone added that it is the person they are unaware of that concerns him the most — the person who will act on the violent rhetoric who may fly under the radar of law enforcement. Penzone has publicly stated in the past that he would include inflammatory comments made by public officials in charging documents by anyone charged with a crime, a statement he doubled down on in his interview with the Mirror.
The threats against drop boxes have already had impacts on voting rights groups, who saw a shift in tactics in how they communicated with voters during the midterm election. It also saw observers from the Department of Justice descend upon the state in numbers the state had not seen in years.
But for Mayes, the Election Integrity Unit can change those issues and bolster voting rights issues in the state.
“We really want to repurpose the Election Integrity Unit to be an arm of the Attorney General’s Office that is focused on protecting democracy in Arizona and, in particular, is aimed at protecting election officials against the rise of death threats and intimidation against them,” she said, adding that “we also want this unit to be thinking about how we can bolster voting rights in Arizona.”
Mayes said that the office is also still looking at what changes, if any, may need to be made to existing law to help further those goals.
“What we’re going to be doing in the next six months is taking a look at all the applicable laws in this area to see if we need any language changes or updates,” Mayes said, adding that they haven’t yet seen any need to that it will need to be done hand-in-hand with the governor, secretary of state and the legislature.
That unanimity could be difficult, given that Democrats hold the executive offices and Republicans control the legislature. And that GOP majority this year has continued its focus on unfounded conspiracy theories around the 2020 and 2022 elections, the same kind that have led to the type of threats that have led to election officials resigning from their positions.
See: Arizona GOP legislators continue to give oxygen to disproven election conspiracies.
Still, Mayes believes it is a bipartisan issue, reiterating that the threats to both volunteer workers, hired and elected officials has occurred in “red and blue counties.”
“For me, it is the top priority,” she said.
The Arizona Republic editorializes, Mark Brnovich disgraced Arizona and its institutions. That can’t go unpunished:
Mark Brnovich has a verbal tic.
When he speaks, he says, “At the end of the day …” as a kind of filler, over and over, as if he needs a moment to think of what he’ll say next.
After about 10 of these “end of the day” segues in an April 2021 interview with the conservative Newsmax channel, Brnovich said it was important to respect the Arizona Senate’s highly partisan review of votes, a process many in the state called “The Fraudit” or “clown show.”
Why?
“So we make sure we do everything we can to ensure the integrity of the (2020 election) results, because we want people to have confidence in the results.”
At the end of the day, that was a crock.
Mark Brnovich sat on his office’s reports
Today we know that then-Attorney General Mark Brnovich would eventually bury and distort a detailed investigation that would have vindicated the people who ran the 2020 Maricopa County presidential election and helped restore trust in our democracy.
His own investigators had spent more than 10,000 hours examining some 430 reports of election fraud and suspected malfeasance. They debunked virtually all of them, but no one told the people of Arizona.
At the end of the day, Mark Brnovich sat on the results. In March 2022, his investigators prepared their report and their boss smothered it.
Then in April 2022 he released his own “interim report” [a lá AG Bill Barr’s “summation” of the Mueller Report] pointing to “serious vulnerabilities” in the electoral system and ignoring the pre-publication edits suggested by his investigators, who were inclined to tell the truth.
In September 2022, his team produced an “Election Review Summary” that again defended the integrity of the election. And again, Brnovich sat on it.
He valued his election more than the truth
Last week, new Attorney General Kris Mayes revealed Brnovich’s investigative shell game and asserted it was not only a betrayal of the people of Arizona and his office, but a colossal waste of time.
It was also a political favors coverup to protect prominent Republicans, and an abuse of the power of his office.
“The results of this exhaustive and extensive investigation show what we have suspected for over two years – the 2020 election in Arizona was conducted fairly and accurately by elections officials,” Mayes said. “The 10,000-plus hours spent diligently investigating every conspiracy theory under the sun distracted this office from its core mission of protecting the people of Arizona from real crime and fraud.”
County election workers and officials were enduring smears and death threats from extremists who believed every conspiracy theory spun by their defeated president, Donald Trump. But none of that moved Brnovich to put out the truth, that the election in Maricopa County was honest.
At the time, Brnovich was running for U.S. Senate and needed those Trump voters to win the Republican primary. But Trump would ultimately reject and berate him and give his endorsement to upstart Blake Masters.
The then-Arizona attorney general was playing both sides against the middle, asserting to general audiences that Trump had lost the 2020 election, while intimating to conservative audiences that Trump got robbed.
Why did he hide the results? He won’t say.
On an April 2022 podcast, he told former Trump aide Steve Bannon that there was yet no evidence of election-rigging. “It is frustrating. It’s frustrating to all of us, because I think we all know what happened in 2020.”
“I assure you Steve, I understand how serious this is. I understand why people are frustrated.”
Last week, as the news was breaking on the Brnovich investigations, he remained largely silent. He told ABC 15, “While subjected to severe criticism from all sides of the political spectrum during the course of our investigations, we did our due diligence to run all complaints to ground.”
But he didn’t answer the pressing question: Why did he hide the results?
Now the new governor of Arizona, Katie Hobbs, is calling on the Arizona State Bar to investigate Brnovich for “likely unethical conduct.”
At least 18 bar charges have been filed to date against Brnovich, according to a bar spokesperson. The former attorney general also has become a figure of state and national derision.
Brnovich said in a statement that “Katie Hobbs is wrong. This is another misguided attempt by her to defame and cancel a political opponent instead of addressing the serious issues facing our state.”
Crybaby whiner, you engaged in a political favors coverup to protect prominent Republicans, and abused the powers of your office. You are going down. Hopefully you will be disbarred.
Brnovich’s flaw? A lack of core values
But he is not a “political opponent” of Katie Hobbs.
Brnovich is a spent force in Arizona politics. He was the moment he lost his party’s primary to a hardly known Masters.
He is further disgraced and diminished by an investigation that would have helped create greater confidence in our electoral process.
Mark Brnovich’s fatal flaw was a lack of core values.
He put winning Donald Trump’s affection ahead of the responsibilities of his office. He blew with whatever wind could help him win his next election.
At the end of the day, that is a blight on this state and our institutions, and it cannot go unpunished.
Are you listening State Bar of Arizona? No more slaps on the wrist for lawyers who assisted the Trump Election Deniers.
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E.J. Montini of The Republic writes, “Arizona’s fake electors will finally answer to a real prosecutor”, https://www.azcentral.com/story/opinion/op-ed/ej-montini/2023/03/03/arizona-fake-electors-face-real-prosecutor-kris-mayes-jack-smith/69967156007/
The arrogance of the fake electors in Arizona who tried to pawn themselves off as legitimate in order to give Joe Biden’s electoral college votes to Donald Trump is best seen in an email to a Trump adviser from Arizona attorney Jack Wilenchik.
Former Arizona Republican Party Chair Kelli Ward and her merry band of operatives were trying to overturn the will of Arizona voters when Wilenchik wrote to Trump adviser Boris Epshteyn, “We (Arizona Republicans) would just be sending in ‘fake’ electoral votes to Pence so that ‘someone’ in Congress can make an objection when they start counting votes, and start arguing that the ‘fake’ votes should be counted.”
Later, Wilenchik sent a follow-up email saying, “‘alternative’ votes is probably a better term than ‘fake’ votes,” followed by a smiley face emoji.
Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes may do something her predecessor Mark Brnovich was unwilling to do … wipe that smiley face grin off their faces.
Mayes will do what Brnovich would not
“We are planning to reach out to federal officials on that matter,” Mayes said told The Guardian. “Beyond that, I’m not going to comment on it.”
It’s about damn time.
Special counsel Jack Smith, on the federal level, may at some point hold Trump accountable for what the Jan. 6 committee described as “influencing or impeding an official proceeding of the US government”, “conspiring to defraud the US”, “unlawfully, knowingly or willingly making false statements to the federal government” and “assisting or engaging in insurrection against the United States.”
Smith, appointed by the attorney general to oversee the criminal investigations into the Jan. 6 insurrection, has subpoenaed officials in Arizona, Michigan and Wisconsin for communications with Trump, his campaign and his allies in the days following Jan. 6.
Among those receiving subpoenaes are current Arizona Senate President Warren Petersen, Sen. Sonny Borrelli and House Speaker Ben Toma, along with former state Sen. Michelle Ugenti-Rita.
How to prevent what almost happened here
Smith’s investigation is important.
But it’s important as well for Arizona’s top prosecutor to look into what happened here. And what almost happened here.
At the same time Ward and the other Trump minions were whining about nonexistent voter fraud, spouting wild conspiracy theories and claiming that the election had been stolen, the GOP’s fake electors in Arizona were trying to pull off the biggest vote heist in state history.
When investigators from Mayes’ office “reach out” on that matter, I hope they’re holding handcuffs.