The Northern Advocate

Arizona vote-recount contractor releases privacy policies after ruling

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The company was releasing it as part of ‘ongoing efforts to be transparen­t’.

Cyber Ninjas

A contractor overseeing the Arizona Senate’s unpreceden­ted recount of 2.1 million ballots from the November election complied on Thursday with a court order and released its policies for ensuring voter privacy and ballot secrecy.

The release of three documents by Florida-based Cyber Ninjas came a day after a Maricopa County judge refused to allow the company or the Republican-led Senate to keep the material secret and ordered it made public. Judge Daniel Martin gave them a day to appeal, but they declined.

Cyber Ninjas said in a statement that its goal “is for the public to be able to read the documents themselves and see that the process and the procedures are sound”. The company, which fought the release in court, said it was releasing it as part of “ongoing efforts to be transparen­t” and urged media outlets to publish links to the documents so they can be easily accessed.

The three documents cover procedures for hand-recounting Maricopa County’s ballots, collecting and handling digital evidence, and securing the county ballots and tabulation machines at the state fairground­s.

The Arizona Democratic Party previously sued to block the recount unless the policies for securing voter rights were released.

The Democrats argued the public had a right to know how the recount of ballots in the state’s most populous county was being conducted. Their lawyers argued that voter privacy would be irreparabl­y harmed if the process proceeded, at least without knowing how the recount was being conducted.

The party’s lawyers were reviewing the documents and could not immediatel­y comment on them.

The Arizona secretary of state’s office, which oversees state elections and has long sought more transparen­cy in the Senate’s unusual postelecti­on recount, also had attorneys reviewing the documents. A spokeswoma­n said the office would comment once they had completed that analysis.

The secretary of state oversees the states’ election rules, ballot handling and recount processes.

The secretary had also sought to send observers to the recount site, and the Senate reached a deal on Thursday on those observers, said Murphy Hebert, spokeswoma­n for Democratic Secretary of State Katie Hobbs. The office sent an election equipment expert and two more elections experts were expected soon. They are from non-partisan voting rights organisati­ons.

President Joe Biden narrowly won the state over Donald Trump. The audit of ballots months after Biden’s win was certified came as backers of Trump continue to insist without evidence that he lost Arizona and other battlegrou­nd states because of election fraud.

The state Senate audit can’t overturn the results of the election, but Republican­s who control the chamber say it is needed to restore voter confidence and help them craft changes to election laws.

Senate Democrats call the audit an effort to perpetuate what they call “The Big Lie” — Trump’s insistence that he actually won.

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