PHOENIX โ€” Supporters of President Trump filed suit in federal court Wednesday in their latest bid to throw out the certified popular vote results that awarded Arizonaโ€™s 11 electors to Joe Biden.

The lawsuit alleges โ€œwidespread ballot fraud,โ€ due in part to Dominion Voting Systems machines used in Maricopa County, which they assert were designed purposely to take votes away from Trump.

Arizona officials have certified Joe Bidenโ€™s narrow victory over President Donald Trump in the state. Democratic Secretary of State Katie Hobbs and Republican Gov. Doug Ducey stood up for the integrity of the election even as lawyers for Trump were across town Monday arguing without evidence to nine Republican lawmakers that the election was marred by fraud.

Attorney Sidney Powell specifically blames that on Eric Coomer, an executive with the company, and โ€œhis visceral and public rage against the current U.S. president.โ€ She said it is part of a criminal conspiracy.

Dominion officials have repeatedly said the companyโ€™s software and hardware are secure.

The lawsuit, filed on behalf of Arizona GOP Chairwoman Kelli Ward, among others, also claims poll watchers were unable to adequately monitor that the signatures on envelopes of mail-in ballots were verified. It refers to โ€œbiased and partisan Maricopa County poll referees.โ€

It also says not enough people were allowed to observe the process.

Overall, the lawsuit claims, there were at least 412,494 illegal ballots counted in Arizona, far more than Bidenโ€™s 10,547-vote margin over Trump.

It cites a phone survey that called people who were listed as having requested early ballots.

The lawsuit says there were 518,560 unreturned early ballots. Using estimates based on the sample survey, it says that between 208,333 to 229,337 of these went to people who had not requested them.

โ€œAll of these absentee ballots were sent to someone besides the registered voter named in the request, and thus could have been filled out by anyone and then submitted in the name of another voter,โ€ it says.

And it says up to another 94,975 people โ€” based on the sample โ€” had returned ballots but did not have them recorded as voting.

โ€œThese absentee ballots were either lost or destroyed (consistent with allegations of Trump ballot destruction) and/or were replaced with blank ballots filled out by election workers, Dominion or other third parties,โ€ the lawsuit said.

Another claim is that 5,085 Arizona voters in the 2020 general election moved out of state prior to voting and were therefore ineligible.

โ€œThe fraud was executed by many means, but the most fundamentally troubling, insidious, and egregious ploy was the systematic adaption of old-fashioned โ€˜ballot stuffingโ€™,โ€ Powell wrote. โ€œIt has not been amplified and rendered virtually invisible by computer software created and run by domestic and foreign actors for that very purpose.โ€

Powell and her clients want the court to block the certification of the election results. That, in turn, would give power to the Republican-controlled Arizona Legislature to decide who gets the electoral votes.

Prior lawsuits challenging the election โ€”including some by Powellโ€™s Arizona co-counsel Alexander Kolodin โ€” have been dismissed.

There is another lawsuit pending in Maricopa County Superior Court, this one with similar allegations that signatures on envelopes were not properly checked. A trial on that case is set to begin Thursday, Dec. 3.


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