Nonprofit American Oversight has filed a lawsuit Wednesday against the Cochise County, its Board of Supervisors and the County Recorder, alleging the county failed to fully abide by Arizona Public Records Law.
The Washington D.C.-based nonprofit advocates for government accountability. It alleges the county failed to fully fulfill public records requests made for communications and documents that relate to the County Supervisors’ attempt to conduct a hand count audit of all the votes cast in Cochise County precincts in the 2022 general election — as well as budget records for outside legal counsel the board obtained and the board’s failure to certify the election by the state’s deadline. The records requests also included communications and documentation from the Cochise County Recorder's office and Elections Department.
Executive Director of American Oversight Heather Sawyer said one of the reasons the organization requested records is to shed light on the board’s reasoning behind why they wanted to do a hand-count audit of votes cast in the county in the 2022 General Election.
“It’s not entirely clear why, and what justified that, who all was trying to influence that decision, and honestly, whether what the board was saying behind closed doors matches what they were saying in public,” Sawyer told AZPM Wednesday evening.
Sawyer said another reason the nonprofit requested records from the county is to bring to light the motivations behind the decisions.
“It’s really so that the public understands what motivated these decisions to transfer election authority and bring in Bob Bartelsmeyer, who was involved in those decisions, you know, what was going on honestly behind closed doors with these very significant changes to election administration in the county,” she said.
The Cochise County Superior Court confirmed the lawsuit has been filed, but the County Attorney told AZPM as of Wednesday afternoon they have not been served with the complaint yet.
American Oversight began to focus on Cochise County around the 2022 midterm election.
"In the four years since the 2020 election, the election-denier movement has remained a very significant threat to democracy," said Sawyer. "Cochise County, and in particular in the run up to the midterms, was really an area where there was a lot of fomenting about unwarranted concerns about election security and integrity — potential concerns about voter fraud. And it was made clear in the run up when there were proposals about moving to hand-counts, which would inevitably delay certification of the vote, that there was potential mischief afoot. So we started monitoring, we sent in records requests, we sent in records requests back then in November of 2022. Many of those requests remain unanswered and that's why we have now moved to filing a lawsuit to enforce the public's right to those records."
Sawyer said if the county agrees to turn the requested records over to American Oversight without going to court, they will drop the suit.
"We sue only when we have to," she said. "If we believe the defendant has fully complied with the request, you know, we're thrilled — case over. We do then settle the matter ... Our goal is to get the records. The quicker we can do that, all the better."
The full complaint can be viewed through American Oversight's website.
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