The fix is in everyone and it’s incredibly blatant.
WLTR recently reported that Judge Amy Totenberg cited the numerous problems and critical vulnerabilities of voting machines. Ballots should be paper, hand counted, and auditable.
It isn’t a mystery why—voting machines are rife with issues and can be easily manipulated to show any result with very few traces of voter fraud left behind for auditors to detect.
Many countries around the world have outright banned these digital voting machines altogether.
Despite all of this and more, Arizona’s Attorney General Kris Mayes has threatened officials in Mohave County, Arizona with legal action if they decide to hand-count ballots in the upcoming election.
Last year, Mayes announced that she would be going after the Cochise County officials for refusing to certify the results of the questionable 2020 election, Arizona Mirror reports:
Supervisors Tom Crosby and Peggy Judd, both Republicans, were served subpoenas last week by Mayes’ office explaining that they are under investigation and ordering them to appear before the state grand jury on Nov. 13, according to a Votebeat review of Judd’s subpoena and a Herald Review report of Crosby’s subpoena.
Judd’s subpoena has not been previously reported. This article was originally published by Votebeat, a nonprofit news organization covering local election administration and voting access. The subpoenas do not specify the criminal violations that the office is investigating.
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Here’s the letter Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes sent to the Mohave County Board of Supervisors:
This is insane – just 1 day after Argentina hand-counted 20 million ballots and declared their Presidential winner in the same night, the illegitimate Attorney General of Arizona threatens Mohave County officials w/criminal prosecution for trying to…hand count ballots https://t.co/OWYtjUK5Df
— DC_Draino (@DC_Draino) November 20, 2023
Yahoo News featured an article that provided ample background on Mayes:
The race came down to a razor-thin margin, with Mayes prevailing by just over 500 votes.
After a recount, her lead decreased to 280 votes, and this was one of the closest Arizona state elections ever, according to The Associated Press.
Mayes became the first openly gay Arizona attorney general, as well as the first who’s also a mom, AZ Central noted.
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