The Arizona Republic

Hobbs refers Cochise supervisor­s for potential criminal violations

Investigat­ion urged into delay of certificat­ion of county election results

- Mary Jo Pitzl

Cochise County Supervisor­s Tom Crosby and Peggy Judd knowingly violated state law and should be investigat­ed for potential criminal and civil offenses for delaying the canvass of the general election results, Secretary of State Katie Hobbs’ office stated on Friday in a referral to Arizona Attorney General Mark Brnovich.

The referral comes a day after the supervisor­s were forced by a court order to certify election results — although the letter specifical­ly notes that Crosby failed to attend the court-ordered canvass.

The letter lays out evidence, culled from public meetings and public statements, to buttress the claim that the law was violated. It included Judd’s

statement earlier this week to the New York Times that the county’s objections to how tabulation machines were certified was “the only thing we have to stand on” to not certify the Nov. 8 returns.

“Supervisor­s Crosby and Judd knew they had a statutory requiremen­t to certify the election results by Nov. 28, but instead chose to act in violation of the law, putting false election narratives ahead of Cochise County voters,” the letter, signed by state Elections Director Kori Lorick, states.

The referral notes that failure by elected officials to carry out their prescribed duties is subject to a Class 6 felony. That felony can carry a penalty of up to 5 3/4 years in prison, first-time offenders are usually sentenced to the presumptiv­e term of 1 1/2 years, although the law

The referral notes that failure by elected officials to carry out their prescribed duties is subject to a Class 6 felony.

allows it to be bumped down to a misdemeano­r.

The referral also cites the state’s Election Procedures Manual, which states that a county supervisor who refuses to carry out duties without just cause is subject to a Class 2 misdemeano­r and a $500 fine payable to the county.

Lorick’s letter notes that the supervisor­s were compelled by state law to canvass election results by Monday’s deadline, noting it is a “non-discretion­ary duty.” That legal obligation also was cited Thursday by Pima County Superior Court Judge Casey McGinley, who granted requests from Hobbs as well as the Arizona Alliance of Retired Americans to order the supervisor­s to certify.

Two of the supervisor­s, board Chairwoman Ann English and Judd, voted to do just that. Crosby did not attend, saying in an email that he did soon the advice of the board’s newly hired attorney. Crosby did not answer a follow-up question asking why that advice was given and if it related to his disagreeme­nt with the court order.

Bronvich’s office said Friday afternoon that it had received the referral letter but noted it had arrived after the media apparently had received it. Katie Connor, spokespers­on for the Attorney General’s Office, declined further comment.

Neither Judd nor Crosby immediatel­y replied to calls for comment.

 ?? SARAH LAPIDUS/THE REPUBLIC ?? The Cochise County Board of Supervisor­s voted to certify election results on Thursday after a judge ordered officials to do it.
SARAH LAPIDUS/THE REPUBLIC The Cochise County Board of Supervisor­s voted to certify election results on Thursday after a judge ordered officials to do it.

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