Kari Lake

PHOENIX β€” Secretary of State Adrian Fontes wants an investigation of failed GOP gubernatorial candidate Kari Lake after she published signatures of some people from voter registration records.

In a letter late Monday to Attorney General Kris Mayes, Fontes cites a Jan. 23 Twitter post where Lake claims a β€œbombshell discovery,” saying 40,000 ballots were β€œillegally counted.’’

As evidence, she embedded an image of signatures from 16 ballot envelopes and what she said were the signatures of the same people from their voter registration records.

β€œDo you think these Arizona ballot signatures match???’’ the posting says.

Fontes said while state law allows for public inspection of voter registration records for election-related purposes, it says those containing a signature β€œshall not be accessible or reproduced by any person other than the voter.’’

There are other exceptions in the statute, ranging from government officials in the scope of official duties and verifying signatures on petitions and candidate filings, to news reporters and those with a court order. But Fontes said what Lake did falls outside of all that.

β€œThe protections afforded by this subsection prohibit posting any information derived from voter registration forms or precinct registers to the internet,’’ he told Mayes, a newly elected Democrat, as is he. β€œAnd under no circumstance may a person other than the voter or a statutorily authorized person reproduce a voter’s signature.’’

The law also says violations are a Class 6 felony, which carry a presumptive penalty of a year in state prison, Fontes said.

β€œTherefore, the Secretary of State’s Office is referring this matter to you for further investigation and possible prosecution,’’ both for violating the law cited β€œand any other applicable state laws,” Fontes wrote.

Arizona Secretary of State Adrian

Tim La Sota, an attorney for Lake, told Capitol Media Services the complaint is β€œanother attempt to weaponize the justice system with a phony allegation against a Republican.’’

β€œAdrian Fontes selectively quotes the statute in an attempt to distort the law and smear Kari Lake in the process,’’ he said, saying Mayes should announce β€œshe will have no part in this shameful, disgusting effort.’’

La Sota also pointed out that the documents came out of the state Senate investigation of the 2020 election when the Senate subpoenaed ballot envelopes and voting records. Part of that inquiry, he said, was looking at β€œacceptance of clearly mismatched signatures on early ballots’’ by Maricopa County.

β€œKari Lake has an absolute right under the First Amendment to republish the information presented to the Senate,’’ La Sota said.

Lake has continued to insist, both at public events and in court filings, that the outcome of the November election was affected by intentional actions and Election Day mistakes.

Maricopa County Superior Court Judge Peter Thompson refused last month to overturn the official returns, which showed Lake losing to Democrat Katie Hobbs by 17,117 votes.

Thompson said Lake provided no evidence she should have been declared the winner. Her theories about what went wrong, and why, were not backed by facts, the judge said.

Lake still contends issues with ballot printers and tabulators at some Maricopa County vote centers were part of a scheme to depress the votes of Republicans, who tend to vote on Election Day rather than cast early ballots. Yet the final election results showed some GOP contenders not only won but did so by wide margins.

The state Court of Appeals is set to review her claims on Wednesday, Feb. 1.

Lake also has had a series of overflow rallies, including one Sunday at a Scottsdale resort where she showed some ballot signatures on screen, took a cell phone call from former President Donald Trump that she played for the audience, called Hobbs a β€œsquatter in the governor’s office’’ and said of the new governor, β€œdon’t get too comfortable, sweetie.’’

In a speech to a crowd of young conservative activists in Phoenix Sunday, Dec. 18, 2022, Republican Kari Lake alleged again that her election loss to Democrat Katie Hobbs was illegitimate. She called Maricopa County a "house of cards" and said "we're going to burn it to the ground."


Become a #ThisIsTucson member! Your contribution helps our team bring you stories that keep you connected to the community. Become a member today.