The Providence Journal

Mich. brings charges in alleged voter data breach

- Clara Hendrickso­n

DETROIT – Criminal charges related to the 2020 election continue to mount, with the latest announced by Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel this week against a pro-Trump lawyer and a former township clerk accused of allowing unauthoriz­ed access to voter data.

Former Adams Township Clerk Stephanie Scott allegedly ignored instructio­ns from the Michigan Secretary of State’s office to submit a voting tabulator for maintenanc­e. Under Scott’s direction, attorney Stefanie Lambert allegedly shared 2020 election data from the township’s poll book. And together the pair allegedly gave an unauthoriz­ed computer examiner access to 2020 election data, according to Nessel’s office.

Almost a year after the 2020 presidenti­al election, the state’s Bureau of Elections ordered Scott to stop administer­ing elections after the clerk prevented maintenanc­e on voting equipment, according to a news release from the Secretary of State’s Office. Shortly after the order, Michigan State Police recovered election equipment from Adams Township that had gone missing, prompting an investigat­ion into possible tampering with the equipment.

Michigan State Police referred the matter to Nessel’s office following its own investigat­ion, according to the news release from the Attorney General’s Office announcing the charges against Lambert and Scott.

Lambert also faces criminal charges brought by a special prosecutor for allegedly gaining illegal access to voting machines after the 2020 election. That case is set to go to trial in October.

Lambert first gained prominence as a pro-Trump lawyer in Michigan for her involvemen­t in a lawsuit to overturn the 2020 election. A federal appeals court panel reversed the financial penalty

Lambert Michigan state troopers leave the Adams Township Hall with a computer tablet seized during the execution of a search warrant on Oct. 29, 2021. A former town clerk and a Michigan lawyer are charged in connection with an alleged voter data breach.

imposed on her by a lower court while making others involved in the legal challenge pay for their participat­ion in the conspiracy-laden lawsuit.

The decision prompted the Michigan Attorney Grievance Commission to voluntaril­y dismiss its allegation­s of misconduct leveled against Lambert and recommenda­tions for disciplina­ry action against her.

“Nessel tried to sanction me. I won. She tried to take my bar license, I won. I’m ready for round three. Nessel will never silence me. I have the evidence. I am not intimidate­d. I will win this one too,” Lambert wrote in a social media post following the latest charges against her announced by Nessel.

Scott did not immediatel­y respond to a voice message seeking comment.

In announcing the charges, Nessel accused the pair of underminin­g trust in the electoral process.

“When elected officials and their proxies use their positions to promote baseless conspiraci­es, show blatant disregard for voter privacy, and break the law in the process, it undermines the very essence of the democratic process,” Nessel said in a statement.

Scott is charged with five felony counts and a misdemeano­r. Lambert is charged with three felony counts.

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