Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Pro-trump lawyer’s Michigan trial planned ahead of November election

- By Craig Mauger The Detroit News

PONTIAC, Mich. — The Michigan criminal trial of Stefanie Lambert, a lawyer who’s advanced dubious claims of voter fraud across an array of battlegrou­nd states, will take place in the months ahead of the Nov. 5 presidenti­al election, a judge indicated Thursday.

Oakland County Circuit Court Judge Jeffery Matis said he’s planning for Lambert’s trial to begin at 8:30 a.m. July 15. She’s facing four felony charges over allegation­s that she conspired to improperly access tabulators that were used in Michigan’s 2020 election.

The July 15 date could change as Lambert’s lawyer, Daniel Hartman, said he had a conflict in July and urged the judge to hold the trial in September, which would coincide with some of the final weeks of this fall’s race between Republican former President Donald Trump and Democratic President Joe Biden.

Lambert’s upcoming trial, which could feature a handful of prominent witnesses, could shine new light on the efforts of Trump supporters to challenge his loss in the 2020 election as Trump seeks another term in the White House.

Matis said he wanted to get Lambert’s case to trial relatively quickly, while also giving Hartman, who became Lambert’s attorney last month, time to prepare.

“I think it’s an appropriat­e balance of all of the interests here,” Matis said of the July 15 date.

Last summer, special prosecutor D.J. Hilson announced felony charges against Lambert of

South Lyon, Republican former attorney general nominee Matt Deperno of Kalamazoo and former state Rep. Daire Rendon of Lake City.

The three individual­s were allegedly involved in a scheme to convince clerks in rural areas of Michigan to hand over tabulators and, then, to run tests on the equipment in Oakland County as Trump supporters spread unproven conspiracy theories that there was something wrong with the technology used to count votes in the 2020 presidenti­al election.

Lambert’s four felony charges include undue possession of a voting machine, conspiracy to commit unauthoriz­ed access to a computer system and willfully damaging a voting machine. Each charge carries a prison term of up to five years.

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