Report Finds Numerous Laws Violated in Pima County’s 2020 and 2022 Elections: ‘Malfeasance, incompetence, and Possible Criminal Activity’

A new report investigating Pima County’s 2020 and 2022 elections found multiple ways the Tucson-based county is likely violating the law, allowing opportunities for election tampering. The illegalities were described as “malfeasance, incompetence and possible criminal activity.”

The report came out about the same time as another report which found that over 18,000 ballots lacked chain of custody records in the county’s 2022 election. Coincidentally in the same election cycle, Governor Katie Hobbs edged out Kari Lake for the governor’s office by just 17,117 votes.

The new report, which was issued by two independent election integrity groups – the Pima Integrity Project (PIP) and CONELRAD Group – examined public records and summarized that the “[Pima County] Recorder appears to not be conducting voter list maintenance as they are required by law.” The teams found convicted felons and dead people on the voter rolls. Large numbers of people were added to the voter rolls prior to the elections and then removed afterward. There was no accountability for original ballots mailed to voters who requested a second one, the report found. An “overwhelming number” of inactive voters have been on the voter rolls for years, which the report said violates A.R.S. 16-165.

Tim Laux of PIP told The Arizona Sun Times, “The issues in Pima equal if not exceed those litigated in Maricopa County.”

Read the rest of the article at The Arizona Sun Times
Subscribe to email updates from the Arizona Sun Times

Pima County by Ken Lund is licensed under Flickr