PHOENIX โ An attorney for failed gubernatorial candidate Kari Lake told a judge Friday he has new โbombshellโโ evidence that on-site ballot tabulators either were intentionally tinkered with or infected with malware.
Kurt Olsen said Maricopa County says the reasons many ballots printed at vote centers could not be read by the tabulators was due to unauthorized changes to the settings on the printers. That resulted in many ballots being printed at the wrong size.
โThe new evidence ... shows that that was absolutely false,โโ he told Superior Court Judge Peter Thompson. โThis could not be caused by a printer setting change on site.โโ
But Deputy Maricopa County Attorney Joseph La Rue told the judge the claimed bombshell is nothing more than a dud. He said Olsen knows that because the county responded point-by-point to each of the allegations.
Thompson has not said when he will issue a ruling.
Lakeโs new claims
Olsen said a post-election review of the problems performed by a team headed by former Arizona Supreme Court Justice Ruth McGregor found machines malfunctioned.
โNone of the technical experts that they consulted with could explain how or why that occurred,โโ he said. โThatโs malware or it is somebody remotely accessing the printer.โโ
Another new piece of information, Olsen said, was that printers failed on Election Day at 58% of vote centers, far more than known at the time of a trial over Lakeโs lawsuit against the election results, when Thompson previously threw out that claim.
Changes made to equipment prior to Election Day voided the legally required โlogic and accuracyโโ tests, Olsen said.
He contended thatโs all โclear misconduct and intent.โโ
โThis evidence would support our allegation that this election was rigged,โโ he said.
However, Thompson ruled in December that Lakeโs legal team presented no evidence of misconduct that would allow him to overturn the results, in which Republican Lake lost the governorโs race to Democrat Katie Hobbs in November. That decision was upheld by the Arizona Supreme Court.
Olsen said Friday, however, all this information was not available at the time, telling Thompson that allows him to relitigate the issue and give Lake a new chance to seek to overturn the results.
The countyโs rebuttal
Maricopa Countyโs La Rue disagreed.
โWhat we said was either ignored or misrepresented,โโ La Rue told the judge. โThere was no shocking bombshell,โโ he said. โThere was no violation of logic and accuracy tests.โโ
In fact, he said, those tests were observed by members of Lakeโs own Republican Party.
La Rue said the same election program that passed the tests was placed in each of the tabulators used in the election. โThatโs the shocking bombshell that Lake wants to grab hold of,โโ he said.
Also, La Rue said Lake effectively is presenting entirely new legal arguments about equipment malfunctions, something he said cannot be done months after the case was decided โ and months after Hobbs already was installed as governor.
Lake alleges misconduct
Whether Lake gets a do-over is only part of what Thompson needs to decide.
The Arizona Supreme Court directed him to look at whether there is evidence that Maricopa County did not follow its own procedures to verify the accuracy of signatures on early ballot envelopes.
Olsen told the judge there is evidence to show at least 175,000 early mail-in ballots out of more than 1.3 million cast in Maricopa County were illegally counted โ far more than Hobbsโ 17,117-vote margin of victory โ because the county ignored signature verification requirements.
โWe have a mathematical basis to show that the election should be overturned,โโ Lakeโs attorney said. Olsen said the countyโs actions constitute misconduct, which is a basis to set aside the results.
But an attorney for Hobbs, Abha Khanna, told the judge the evidence Olsen claims simply does not exist.
Three part-time workers who were doing first-level signature verifications claimed they rejected anywhere from 15% to 40% of signatures as not matching voter registration records.
Khanna said even if that is true, it ignores that this is a multi-level process. She said other, better-trained individuals then reviewed the signatures on the envelopes with others already on file from the same voters.
She acknowledged that Lake contends there were not enough observers overseeing that second-level verification. Lake makes a similar allegation about people watching the โcureโโ process, where county election workers contact the voters and verify if, in fact, they submitted the ballots with the questioned signatures.
But that isnโt enough to sustain a claim and overturn an election, Khanna said.
โAbsent from these declarations is any allegation that Maricopa County failed to comply with the signature-matching statute, with the Elections Procedure Manual or the Maricopa County elections plan,โโ Khanna said.
She similarly told the judge to ignore various claims Lake made about the 2020 election, including findings by then-Attorney General Mark Brnovich, a Republican, that it would have been impossible for the county to verify as many signatures as it claimed.
Even if all that is true โ and Khanna makes no concession โ she said it doesnโt legally matter.
โThe 2020 election is no more relevant or informative of what happened in this (2022) election than is an election that took place in New Mexico or Florida,โโ she said.
Olsen disagreed, saying that, if nothing else, it shows Maricopa County has a pattern and practice of ignoring signature requirements.
He said anywhere from 325,000 to 540,000 early ballots were flagged by first-level reviewers as not matching, all of which had to be reviewed by higher-level staff.
โThere was simply not enough time, minutes in the day, for the Level 2 reviewers to do a review,โโ Olsen said. โThe math simply doesnโt add up. As a consequence, clearly mismatched signatures which were not cured and were illegal, were entered into the system.โโ
But Khanna said Lake has yet to provide any evidence this would have affected the results of the 2022 election.
โMs. Lake, I think, misunderstands the standards to think that by throwing out a host of numbers that that somehow provides a competent mathematical basis,โโ Khanna said. What Lake offers instead, she said, are โuntethered assertions of uncertainty.โโ
โTheyโre untethered to actual ballots, theyโre untethered to this election, and theyโre wholly untethered to reality,โโ she said.
Thompson is under some time pressure: If he agrees to allow Lake to pursue either the claims about the ballot printers or the mismatched signatures, a trial is set to begin Wednesday.