Malicious Prosecution, Favored Tool of Thugs
"Special Counsel" engaged in on-going malicious prosecution of an innocent man...
December 10, 2023, Prescott, AZ… When it comes to abuse of the legal system, and the vilification of ordinary citizens who seek justice through the civil society process of appealing to a neutral arbiter in a court of law, the absurd truth is that it is government itself that abuses the system. Let’s take for example the persecution, and I do mean PERSECUTION of two perhaps reluctant, but duty-minded patriots, by the arguably illegitimate Arizona Attorney General, Kris Mayes.
Cochise County Arizona County Supervisors Tom Crosby and Peggy Judd, both indicted by Mayes, who sought to engage in something commonly known as due diligence. And, the radical left went crazy with litigation to prevent what would indeed restore voter confidence in the election process. The claims that audits and comparison counts undermine public confidence in elections, the exact opposite is true.
Due diligence: reasonable steps taken by a person in order to satisfy a legal requirement, especially in buying or selling something; a comprehensive appraisal of a business.1
It is a felony for an elected official to sign any document that is based in fraud. Fraud has nine elements: (1) a representation, (2) its falsity, (3) its materiality, (4) the speaker’s knowledge of its falsity or ignorance of its truth, (5) the speaker’s intent that it should be acted upon by the hearer and in the manner reasonably contemplated, (6) the hearer’s ignorance of its falsity, (7) the hearer’s reliance on its truth, (8) the hearer’s right to rely thereon, and (9) the hearer’s consequent and proximate injury. Carrel v. Lux, 101 Ariz. 430, 434, 420 P.2d 564, 568 (1966).2 So due diligence is a really big deal.
County officials are the closest to the people…
There is a reason that elections are entrusted to the elected officials closest to the People. Local control! County elections officials from Supervisors/Commissioners to Elections Directors are closest to accountability. With accountability comes the expectation to “take great care” while carrying out their official duties.
Given the mountain of evidence that machines have demonstrated with defective operations, what some might call fraudulent representations, and the expectation of the People that their elected officials would take great care during the execution of their oath of office, there is little question that the persecution by Mayes is an attempted power grab, and a serious intrusion into the world of separation of powers. The Supervisors had reservations, their argument was heard in the Cochise County Superior Court, and the Supervisors lost their case. That should have been the end of the matter.
Mayes actions are clearly designed to threaten any county supervisor who would dare consider a future challenge to the alter of unverifiable technology. That’s right, unverifiable, we are prevented from inspecting the machine code for malware. Yes, the People pray that not only will the indictments fail, but that Mayes will receive the rebuke she so richly deserves from the court, and that sanctions and penalties be issued against her personally, not just in the capacity of the Attorney General.
Why is this a big deal? Mayes was not satisfied, what with all of these upstart County Supervisors around Arizona demanding a move to hand count of paper ballots as best evidence of an accurate vote count. Her excursion into thuggish and tyrannical overreach doesn’t square with the spirit of justice, and while it doesn’t exactly rise to the level of treason, it is enough to earn her a position of disgrace worthy of recall.
Meanwhile at the other end of the spectrum of abuse of power…
At the outset of the entire Jack Smith pursuit of President Trump, a number of things just did not add up. Aside from the absurd filings of a radical leftist hater attorney, using the law as a tool not of justice but as a political truncheon, rumors of the persecutor’s history surfaced. Now we know why. Department of Justice (DoJ) whistleblower John Moynihan has detailed how Jack Smith acted as an agent for himself and for foreign powers.
For the full complaint sent to Michael E. Horowitz, Inspector General, United States Department of Justice visit this link worthy of a treason tribunal.
For the profile of a dirtbag, read on.
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