Santa Fe New Mexican

Ex-Ariz. AG concealed records debunking vote conspiraci­es

Brnovich campaigned on election claims disproved by a report he didn’t release

- By Yvonne Wingett Sanchez and Isaac Stanley-Becker

PHOENIX — Nearly a year after the 2020 election, Arizona’s then-attorney general Mark Brnovich launched an investigat­ion into voting in the state’s largest county that quickly consumed more than 10,000 hours of his staff’s time.

Investigat­ors prepared a report in March 2022 stating virtually all claims of error and malfeasanc­e were unfounded, according to internal documents reviewed by The Washington Post. Brnovich, a Republican, kept it private.

In April, the attorney general — who was running in the GOP primary for a U.S. Senate seat — released an “Interim Report” claiming his office had discovered “serious vulnerabil­ities.” He left out edits from his own investigat­ors refuting his assertions.

His office then compiled an “Election Review Summary” in September that systematic­ally refuted accusation­s of widespread fraud and made clear none of the complainin­g parties — from state lawmakers to self-styled “election integrity” groups — had presented any evidence to support their claims. Brnovich left office last month without releasing the summary.

That timeline emerges from documents released to The Post this week by Brnovich’s successor, Kris Mayes, a Democrat. She said she considered the taxpayer-funded investigat­ion closed and, earlier this month, notified leaders on Maricopa County’s governing board they were no longer in the state’s crosshairs.

The records show how Brnovich used his office to further claims about voting in Maricopa County his own staff considered inaccurate. They suggest his administra­tion privately disregarde­d factchecks provided by state investigat­ors while publicly promoting incomplete accounts of the office’s work. The innuendo and inaccuraci­es, circulated not just in the far reaches of the internet but with the imprimatur of the state’s attorney general, helped make Arizona an epicenter of distrust in the democratic process, eroding confidence not just in the 2020 vote but in subsequent elections.

Brnovich did not respond to questions about his conduct of the probe, his decision not to release additional documents or difference­s between his public statements and his office’s private findings.

Brnovich quickly affirmed then-President Donald Trump’s loss in Arizona in November 2020, angering fellow Republican­s. And he went on to resist Trump’s efforts to overturn the vote. Yet he flirted with claims of fraud as he courted GOP support over the subsequent two years, trumpeting his interim report on a far-right radio show and saying, “It’s frustratin­g for all of us because I think we all know what happened in 2020.” It was only in the final days before the November 2022 midterm election, several months after Brnovich had lost his Senate primary, that he began to denounce politician­s who denied Trump’s defeat, calling them “clowns” engaged in a “giant grift.”

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Mark Brnovich

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