In May, we sued the Arizona Senate for records related to its partisan election “audit.” More than 6 months later, the Senate is still fighting transparency.
But we’ve already uncovered thousands of records that show three key things. Here’s a thread with a lot of receipts.
First, the Trump administration and its intermediaries were involved from the beginning in urging the Arizona Senate to discredit the election results by claiming there was widespread fraud.
On Nov. 14, 2020, Arizona Senate President Karen Fann emailed Senate Republicans and said: “We are working with our Congressmen, State Party, Boards of Supervisors, Trump team etc to either prove or disprove concerns.” documentcloud.org/documents/2107…
On Dec. 2, Sen. Fann told a constituent she had “spoken with Mayor Giuliani at least 6 times over the past two weeks.” She also mentioned a private meeting with Giuliani and the Trump legal team. documentcloud.org/documents/2079…
On Dec. 4, Christina Bobb of the right-wing outlet OAN emailed Fann with “affidavits” from Rudy Giuliani alleging fraud. documentcloud.org/documents/2079…
On Dec. 28, Fann told a constituent she had “been in numerous conversations with Rudy [Giuliani] over the past two weeks trying to get this done. I have the full support of him and a personal call from President Trump thanking us for pushing to prove any fraud.”
Second, hardcore partisans and conspiracists were involved in the planning and execution of the "audit."
We uncovered a Jan. 25 email from conspiracy theorist Jovan Pulitzer, the likely source of the claim that fraudulent ballots had been shipped in from Asia. The email from Pulitzer appears to be a follow-up from a call with Fann.
Pulitzer outlined what his team would do: “All that my team does is high-speed scan in all ballots in their native state … and allow machines to inspect without bias and produce a report.” documentcloud.org/documents/2079…
Fann forwarded the email to Sen. Warren Petersen, and Eddie Farnsworth, a former state senator who prior to leaving office in January had issued the original subpoenas to Maricopa County for the ballots and election materials.
On April 6, the group Protect Democracy sent a letter to Cyber Ninjas and other contractors, demanding that the groups cease any planned direct outreach to voters, which was mentioned in Cyber Ninjas’ statement of work.
Fann forwarded the letter to Josh Barnett, a candidate for U.S. Congress who has posted frequently about the Q Anon conspiracy theory. “Now I know they are worried,” Fann wrote. documentcloud.org/documents/2079…
Fann also forwarded to “audit” leaders a Sept. 14 email regarding “7825 dead voters” that the writer claimed were found by Pulitzer. documentcloud.org/documents/2107…
Finally, by design, the "audit" was crowdsourced and funded through opaque dark money groups.
We obtained an early statement of work dated March 3, which includes a reference to an in-person canvassing operation led by former state legislative candidate Liz Harris and Bobby Piton (now a U.S. Senate candidate in Illinois) as part of the “Electronic Voting System Team.”
This version of the statement of work indicated that funding would be provided by “patriots across the country” who “have desired for this audit to take place and have contributed funds to make that happen and lessen the load on the State of Arizona.” documentcloud.org/documents/2106…
We uncovered texts between “audit” spokesman Randy Pullen and Trump campaign COO Jeff DeWit. DeWit asked about where to send $175k and Pullen suggested the Guardian Defense Fund. azmirror.com/blog/a-gop-law…
On July 28, Pullen discussed payments totaling $1 million with Cleta Mitchell, a lawyer who had assisted with Trump’s attempt to overturn the election. documentcloud.org/documents/2105…
We also obtained records that suggest Arizona’s sham “audit” cost approximately $9 million — 50% more than previous reports had indicated.
We sued the DOJ and the FBI for any records of interviews with Donald Trump in connection with the government’s investigation of convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein and his associate Ghislaine Maxwell. americanoversight.org/american-overs…
The FBI previously refused to confirm whether records of interviews with Trump exist. We filed suit amid continued revelations about Trump’s connections to Epstein — including reports that the president’s name appeared repeatedly in internal government reviews of related records.
“The American people deserve to know whether the president of the United States was questioned by federal investigators about his ties to one of the nation’s most notorious sexual predators,” our Executive Director Chioma Chukwu said.
The DeSantis administration has turned an airfield in the Everglades into a detention center cruelly dubbed “Alligator Alcatraz.”
We filed a suite of public records requests to investigate.
Trump wants to deport 1 million people annually.
But with limited immigration detention capacity, the administration is scrambling to find more places to detain people.
So the administration has turned to local and state governments, private industry, and the use of military bases to attempt to fulfill its anti-immigrant ambitions. But the lack of oversight at these facilities opens the door for mistreatment and worsening conditions.
The Trump admin. has taken aim at public education. But the far-right incursion into public schools has been happening at the state level for years — especially in Florida.
Here’s what we’ve uncovered about the harmful effects of Gov. DeSantis’ education policies.
In 2022, Florida adopted a slew of laws upending public education by mandating reviews of books for prohibited content, allowing parents greater ability to challenge classroom lessons, and barring instruction on sexual orientation or gender identity for certain grade levels.
These laws have left educators and others uncertain and confused, unleashing a chilling effect that has made teachers’ jobs harder and limited what children can learn.
The public’s right to know is under unprecedented threat. For years, we’ve remained steadfast in our commitment to exposing the truth and protecting public access to information so that the people can hold government accountable. americanoversight.org/celebrating-am…
Since last year’s Sunshine Week, we have had several victories for transparency at both the national and state level.
In May, an appeals court ruled in our favor in a years-old case regarding the release of records about 2017 efforts to weaken the ACA. americanoversight.org/democracy-forw…
The ruling made clear that agencies couldn’t use what is known as the “consultant corollary” to evade public disclosure of records when supposed “consultants” (in this case, Congress) have their own interests at stake when it comes to agency decision-making.
We’re pleased that our lawsuit for records from the federal investigation of Matt Gaetz was a key part of the public pressure that led to his decision to withdraw from attorney general consideration. americanoversight.org/statement-from…
Gaetz’s withdrawal is a clear indication that public demand for information and a transparent process will remain a powerful force for holding leaders accountable. Through our litigation, we will continue to demand answers about the alleged conduct of Mr. Gaetz.
Earlier this week, we filed a motion for preliminary injunction in our ongoing lawsuit for the release of interview records, known as “302s,” from the FBI’s investigation of Gaetz for serious criminal allegations, including sex trafficking of a minor. documentcloud.org/documents/2534…
We recently launched an investigation into efforts to undermine direct democracy and sabotage abortion access ballot measures, which will be considered by voters in ten states this November. #FoiaFriday americanoversight.org/investigation/…
Since 2022, 7 states have protected abortion rights through ballot initiatives.
In November, 10 states will have initiatives related to abortion rights on their ballots: Arizona, Colorado, Florida, Maryland, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New York, and South Dakota.
In addition to a litany of lawsuits from conservative activists challenging the qualifying status of abortion-related ballot measures, legislators in many states have proposed laws that would change the requirements for ballot initiatives to make passage more difficult.