An attorney representing Maricopa County, Arizona, has sent Republican state Senate President Karen Fann a letter demanding the preservation of all documents relating to the countyโs 2020 election audit.
Maricopa County attorney Allister Adel sent the notice (pdf) to Fann, saying that some of the auditors involved in the process made potentially false or defamatory allegations.
โIt is clear the Arizona Senate and its contractors do not intend to retract false allegations defaming the County and its employees,โ Maricopa County Board of Supervisors Chairman Jack Sellers said in a statement on May 21, in connection with the demand letter sent by Adel. The letterโs language suggested that the county may be readying a lawsuit against Fann and other Republican leaders, as lawyers typically issue litigation holds before filing suits.
โFor that reason, Maricopa County is formally requesting Senate President Fann, Senator Petersen, Senate liaison Ken Bennett, and contractors involved in the โauditโ preserve documents and evidence as they may be subject to future legal claims,โ he stated.
The letter focused onย Fannโs May 13 letterย that said a subcontractor for the auditย โrecently discovered that the entire โdatabaseโ directory from the D driveโ of a machine was deleted.ย An official Twitter accountย run by theย Senate liaison for the Maricopa forensic audit issued a tweet about the drive being deleted, which hasnโt been taken down, and was also referenced in the demand letter from Adel.
Breaking Update: Maricopa County deleted a directory full of election databases from the 2020 election cycle days before the election equipment was delivered to the audit. This is spoliation of evidence! pic.twitter.com/mY0fmmFXAm
— Maricopa Arizona Audit (@ArizonaAudit) May 13, 2021
Amid reports from CNN and other legacy media outlets that an auditor named Ben Cotton had backtracked and said that the drive wasnโt actually deleted, Cottonย toldย The Epoch Times that his comments during a Senate hearing were taken out of context. He said that the EMS Primary Server โWAS deletedโ but he was able to recover it.
โMy testimony on May 19th before the AZ Senate is being taken out of context by some media outlets. To confirm: the โDatabasesโ directory on the EMS Primary Server WAS deleted containing the voting databases. I was able to recover the deleted databases through forensic data recovery processes,โ Cotton, founder of CyFIR, said.
The Maricopa auditโsย Twitter account also postedย Cottonโs statement on May 19.
2/2) I was able to recover the deleted databases through forensic data recovery processes. We are performing data continuity checks to ensure that the recovered databases are usable.
— Maricopa Arizona Audit (@ArizonaAudit) May 19, 2021
BYย JACK PHILLIPS