Maricopa County

Government Coordination of Post-Election Suppression of Arizona Audit Speech – De-Platforming of Election Integrity Aggregator (AZ)

Reasonable Inference [Reasonable Inference – Government coordination – not yet established] On January 13, 2021 – ten days after the election certification – GitHub terminated the account of an Arizona election integrity aggregation website under a “spreading misinformation” rationale, without providing the operator with specific examples of violating content. The website hosted and indexed content […]

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CISA-EIP Post-Election Suppression of Arizona Audit Speech – De-Platforming of Election Integrity Aggregator (AZ)

Established Fact [Established Fact – De-platforming occurred; no specific violations cited] On January 13, 2021 – ten days after the election certification – GitHub terminated the account of an Arizona election integrity aggregation website under a “spreading misinformation” rationale, without providing the operator with specific examples of violating content. The website hosted and indexed content

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Maricopa County Willful Obstruction of Legislative Audit – Destruction of EMS Database

Disputed Fact [Disputed Fact – EMS log-clearing as willful – contested by County] Following a court-ordered subpoena by the Arizona State Senate, Maricopa County officials failed to produce chain-of-custody documentation required by A.R.S. § 16-621(E), and the Cyber Ninjas audit documented that EMS logs and database records for the 2020 General Election had been overwritten

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Maricopa County Obstruction of Legislative Audit – Destruction of EMS Database (AZ)

Established Fact [Established Fact – Subpoena non-compliance, vendor direction to not cooperate] Following a court-ordered subpoena by the Arizona State Senate, Maricopa County officials failed to produce chain-of-custody documentation required by A.R.S. § 16-621(E), and the Cyber Ninjas audit documented that EMS logs and database records for the 2020 General Election had been overwritten or

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Private contractor Runbeck responsible for configuration and deployment of electronic voting systems (GA)

Established Fact Runbeck Election Services (RES), a Phoenix, Arizona-based ballot printing and processing company, served as the direct contractor for absentee ballot production and envelope-level processing for Maricopa County and all 159 Georgia counties in 2020, producing an estimated 3.6 million ballot packets for Maricopa alone and mailing an estimated 40–50 million pieces nationally. RES

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Unauthorized Private Operatives in Maricopa County Election Administration (AZ)

Reasonable Inference CTCL-affiliated operatives and private partner organizations were embedded in Maricopa County election operations without legislative authorization, mirroring the model deployed in Wisconsin and Georgia. Their presence created a parallel, unaccountable decision-making structure operating alongside – and in some instances superseding – the statutory county election authority. The Cyber Ninjas audit subsequently identified chain-of-custody

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Vendor-Directed Obstruction of Legislative Audit – County Directed Dominion Not to Cooperate (AZ)

Established Fact During the Arizona State Senate’s 2021 forensic audit of Maricopa County’s 2020 election results, both Maricopa County and its election system vendor Dominion Voting Systems refused to comply with Senate subpoenas for administrative passwords, security tokens, and routers used in the election. The county informed Senate liaison Ken Bennett on May 3, 2021

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Single Shared Credential Across All EMS Components – Never Rotated Through 2020 Election (AZ)

Established Fact During the Cyber Ninjas audit of Maricopa County’s 2020 election, IT subcontractor Ben Cotton testified before the Arizona Senate on July 15, 2021, that Maricopa County lacked the administrative iButton hardware tokens required for multi-factor authentication into Dominion’s tabulation system at the technician/configuration level. Cotton testified that “only the contract Dominion employees, contracted

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Dominion Vendor Exclusive Control of Administrative iButtons – No County Access (AZ)

Established Fact Maricopa County did not possess the administrative iButtons (hardware authentication tokens) required to independently access, configure, or validate its own Dominion Voting Systems tabulation infrastructure. Only Dominion Voting Systems retained these tokens, meaning the county was structurally incapable of independently verifying that systems were operating in their certified configuration – a direct violation

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CTCL/Alliance Funding and Dropbox–GOTV Bias in Maricopa (AZ)

Established Fact Arizona jurisdictions, led by Maricopa County, accepted CTCL grants that were disproportionately concentrated in Democratic‑leaning areas, with funds used for drop‑box deployment, satellite offices, and targeted voter‑outreach infrastructure. These privately steered operational choices shifted the geographic pattern of convenient voting access in ways that aligned with one party’s base rather than neutral administrative

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