Yuma Sun

‘Buckle up, America!’

Lake vows to take case to ariz. Supreme Court after her latest court loss over election claims

- BY HOWARD FISCHER

PHOENIX – The state Court of Appeals has rejected the latest bid by Kari Lake to overturn the results of the 2022 gubernator­ial race.

In a 12-page opinion, Judge Kent Cattani said that Lake’s legal arguments highlighte­d various Election Day “difficulti­es.’’

“But her request for relief fails because the evidence presented to the superior court ultimately supports the court’s conclusion that voters were able to cast their ballots, that votes were counted correctly, and that other other basis justifies setting aside the election results,’’ he wrote for the threejudge panel.

And in doing so, the appellate judges rejected Lake’s contention that a new vote is required based on the mere possibilit­y that whatever occurred on Election Day could have changed the results.

In a Twitter post, Lake said she told supporters she would take the case all the way to the Arizona Supreme Court.

“And that’s exactly what we are going to do,’’ she wrote. “Buckle up, America!’’

Lake sued after the final tally showed her losing to Democrat Katie Hobbs by 17,117 votes.

Maricopa County Superior Court Judge Peter Thompson dismissed eight of her claims as either being outside the scope of what Arizona law permits in election challenges or for other reasons.

That left jher contention that Maricopa County officials, either negligentl­y or intentiona­lly, altered onsite ballot printers.

All that surrounds the machines printing out ballots with a 19-inch format rather than the standard 20 inches. That made them unreadable to the tabulators at vote centers.

Cattani said there was “ample evidence’’ that the problem resulted from mechanical malfunctio­ns that were ultimately remedied.

“More importantl­y, Lake presented no evidence that voters whose ballots were unreadable by on-site tabulators were not able to vote,’’ he said. In fact, Cattani said, Lake’s own cybersecur­ity expert confirmed that those misconfigu­red ballots – and other that could not be read for any reason – could be placed in a locked container, taken to county election offices to be duplicated onto a readable ballot by a bipartisan board, and ultimately counted.

“Lake’s claim thus boils down to a suggestion that Election Day issues led to long lines as vote centers, which frustrated and discourage­d voters, which allegedly resulted in a substantia­l number of predominat­ely Lake voters not voting,’’ Cattani said. That was based on her argument that Republican­s are more likely to go to the polls, versus voting early, than Democrats.

“But Lake’s only purported evidence that these issues had any potential effect on election results was, quite simply, sheer speculatio­n,’’ Cattani said.

The judge said her claim was based on testimony from a pollster who said, based on fewer people than expected completing an exit poll on Election Day, he could “infer’’ that meant about 16% of those who turned out that day had been deprived of their right to vote, and that the deprivatio­n was the result of printer and tabulator issues.

“But the expert failed to provide any reasonable basis for using survey responses or non-responses to draw inferences about the motivation­s or preference­s of people who did not vote,’’ Cattani wrote. And he said that 16% figure appears to have no basis “other than the fact that he picked the number precisely because it was what it would have needed to be in order for it to change the outcome.’’

Lake had no better luck with her claim that Maricopa County failed to maintain proper chain-of-custody documentat­ion or follow proper procedures for early ballot packets submitted in drop boxes in Election Day. That failure, she alleged, might have permitted some unspecifie­d number of ballots to be wrongfully inserted into the system before being counted.

Cattani, however, said there was ample basis for the trial judge, who heard the evidence, to conclude that Lake failed to prove that claim.

Lake claimed various other impropriet­ies, evidenced by the fact that County Recorder Stephen Richer initially said there were “over 275,000’’ early ballots dropped off at polling places on Election Day when the actual count done by the private company with whom the county contract was 291,890. But Cattani said the difference between the initial estimate and the final count does not mean about 25,000 votes were illegal.

The appellate court also found that Thompson did nothing wrong in dismissing out of hand Lake’s claims that signatures on many early ballot envelopes did not match what was on file. That was based on statements by people reviewing those envelopes.

But Cattani pointed out these statements came from first-level reviewers and did not reflect the ultimate decision by others farther down the line on the review process on whether to accept a signature.

Beyond that, he said Lake was aware for “months before the election’’ of the signature verificati­on process used by Maricopa county. That, Cattani said, made her post-election challenges too late.

 ?? NIKOS FRAZIER/QUAD CITY TIMES VIA AP ?? KARI LAKE, FORMER REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE for Arizona governor, speaks during a lunch hosted by the Scott County Republican Women last Friday in Bettendorf, Iowa. An Arizona appeals court on Thursday rejected Lake’s challenge of her defeat in the Arizona governor’s race to Democrat Katie Hobbs, denying her request to throw out election results in the state’s most populous county and hold the election again.
NIKOS FRAZIER/QUAD CITY TIMES VIA AP KARI LAKE, FORMER REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE for Arizona governor, speaks during a lunch hosted by the Scott County Republican Women last Friday in Bettendorf, Iowa. An Arizona appeals court on Thursday rejected Lake’s challenge of her defeat in the Arizona governor’s race to Democrat Katie Hobbs, denying her request to throw out election results in the state’s most populous county and hold the election again.

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