Mark Meadows unmasked in Arizona fake electors indictment
Mark Meadows unmasked in Arizona fake
electors indictment, faces 9 felony charges: Report
FILE – Mark
Meadows speaks with reporters at the White House, Oct. 21, 2020, in Washington.
Meadows, chief of staff for former President Donald Trump, was among those
indicted Wednesday, April 24, 2024, in an Arizona election interference case.
(AP Photo/Alex Brandon, File)
Charges have formally been made public against Mark
Meadows, the onetime chief of staff to former President Donald Trump, in the
expansive fake electors case now underway in Arizona.
Trump is not charged in Arizona but is considered
an unindicted co-conspirator.
As Law&Crime recently reported, 18 fake
electors in the state were indicted by a grand jury on April 24 for their
alleged efforts to overturn the legitimate results of the 2020 election. Though
several Republicans were named directly in the fraud and forgery indictment
including, among others, leaders of the state’s Republican party and two
incumbent state lawmakers, some of those charged had their identities redacted,
including Meadows and Trump’s former attorney also facing indictment in
Georgia, Rudy Giuliani.
F0rmal charges have still not been confirmed for
Giuliani in Arizona.
The Associated Press reported first on Wednesday
that the state’s attorney’s general office confirmed Meadows was being charged
with nine felony counts and has been served.
An attorney for Meadows did not immediately respond
to a request for comment to Law&Crime on Friday.
Those charged with trying to pass off bogus elector
slates in 2020 and named openly when the indictment first went public included
Arizona GOP chair Kelli Ward, her husband Michael Ward, Tyler Bowyer, Nancy
Cottle, Jacob Hoffman, Anthony Kern, James Lamon, Robert Montgomery, Samuel
Moorhead, Lorraine Pellegrino, and Gregory Safsten.
The identities of some individuals whose names were
redacted was not difficult to piece together given the indictment’s description
of them. In addition to Meadows and Giuliani, they appeared to include current
Trump campaign lawyer Boris Epshteyn and a bevy of former campaign lawyers
included Jenna Ellis — who pleaded guilty to racketeering charges in Georgia —
Trump’s onetime lawyer Christina Bobb, former campaign aide Mike Roman, and
John Eastman, a retired law professor who pushed out a memo outlining what
steps to take to keep Trump in office despite his electoral defeat. Eastman is
also charged in the racketeering indictment alongside Trump in Georgia.
The reason they were not named openly is because
they had not yet been formally served.
Per the Arizona indictment, Meadows was described
as:
“[REDACTED] was Unindicted Coconspirator 1’s Chief
of Staff in 2020. He worked with members of the Trump Campaign to coordinate
and implement the false Republican electors’ votes in Arizona and six other
states. [REDACTED] was involved in the many efforts to keep Unindicted
Coconspirator 1 in power despite his defeat at the polls.
The nine felony charges Meadows faces in Arizona
include conspiracy, fraudulent schemes and artifices, and fraudulent schemes
and practices. The remaining charges are felony forgery allegations.
Prosecutors say Meadows and others engaged in a
scheme where Trump’s allies held themselves out to be “duly elected and
qualified electors” for Arizona, thereby deceiving the citizens of the state by
claiming that only their votes were legal.
“In reality, defendants intended that their false
votes for Trump-Pence would encourage Pence to rejected the Biden-Harris votes
on Jan. 6, 2021, regardless of the outcome of the legal challenge.”
This only failed because then-Vice President Mike
Pence did accept electoral votes for now-President Joe Biden.
In Georgia, Meadows faces just one charge and
sought to dismiss it a month ago. He argues he has immunity from state
prosecution under the Constitution’s Supremacy Clause. Fulton County District
Attorney Fani Willis argued Meadows has already failed to convince the courts
on at least two separate occasions that he is being prosecuted in the state for
his official duties as Trump’s former chief of staff.
Fulton County Superior Court Judge Scott McAfee has
not yet rendered a decision.
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