Kari Lake, Appellate Decision
Kari Lake, Appellate Decision
Kari Lake, Appellate Decision
v.
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LAKE v. HOBBS, et al.
Opinion of the Court
OPINION
Chief Judge Kent E. Cattani delivered the opinion of the Court, in which
Presiding Judge Maria Elena Cruz and Judge Peter B. Swann1 joined.
C A T T A N I, Chief Judge:
1 Judge Peter B. Swann retired from this court effective November 28,
2022. In accordance with the authority granted by Article 6, Section 3, of
the Arizona Constitution and pursuant to A.R.S. § 12-145, the Chief Justice
of the Arizona Supreme Court has designated Judge Swann as a judge pro
tempore in the Court of Appeals to participate in the resolution of cases
assigned to this panel for the duration of Administrative Order 2022-162.
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LAKE v. HOBBS, et al.
Opinion of the Court
DISCUSSION
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Opinion of the Court
¶11 Lake also asserts that the superior court erred by requiring
proof that the alleged official misconduct “did in fact affect the result” of
the election, positing instead that some unquantifiable uncertainty suffices.
But election results are not rendered uncertain unless votes are affected “in
sufficient numbers to alter the outcome of the election.” Miller, 179 Ariz. at
180. This rule requires a competent mathematical basis to conclude that the
outcome would plausibly have been different, not simply an untethered
assertion of uncertainty. See Reyes v. Cuming, 191 Ariz. 91, 94 (App. 1997)
(setting aside an election because illegal votes “indisputably changed the
outcome of the election,” proven by the fact that the losing candidate had
been in the lead until illegal votes were counted); Huggins v. Superior Court,
163 Ariz. 348, 352–53 (1990) (holding that although the aggregate number
of illegal votes exceeded the margin of victory, the number was not “of
sufficient magnitude to change the result” after a “pro rata deduction of the
illegal votes according to the number of votes cast for the respective
candidates” in that district) (quoting Grounds, 67 Ariz. at 182).
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Opinion of the Court
A. Printer/Tabulator Claim.
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Opinion of the Court
offered no basis for linking any individual’s alleged failure to vote to the
printer/tabulator issues specifically (as opposed to any other reason), or to
otherwise equate a failure to vote with elections officials depriving
potential voters of an opportunity to do so. Likewise, he offered no basis
for his opinion on the rate of ostensibly-tabulator-induced non-voting—
approximately 16% of election-day voters—other than the fact that he
picked the number precisely because it was “what it would have needed [to
be] in order for it to change the outcome.”
¶18 Whatever the merits of the expert’s actual poll results, his
conclusions regarding alleged “disenfranchise[ment]” were baseless. Thus,
the superior court did not err by finding this testimony insufficient to call
into question the election results. And lacking proof that the results were
in any way uncertain, Lake’s printer/tabulator claim fails.
B. Chain-of-Custody Claim.
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Opinion of the Court
¶24 Finally, the only other evidence Lake presented to show that
the purported chain-of-custody violation affected the election results was
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Opinion of the Court
an affidavit from one of the vendor’s employees who stated that the vendor
permitted its employees to insert their own (and their family members’)
ballots into batches of early ballot packets coming from the Maricopa
County facility. The affiant estimated that she “personally saw about 50
ballots” inserted in this manner. But the superior court “d[id] not give the
Affidavit much weight.” Instead, the court credited testimony by Maricopa
County elections officials that the practice was not permitted and likely did
not happen, noting specifically that “County employees—who follow the
EPM—have eyes on the ballot process” at the vendor’s facility. We defer to
these credibility determinations. See Shooter, 235 Ariz. at 201, ¶ 4.
Moreover, even taking the affidavit as true, 50 ballots (even if all were
against Lake) is orders of magnitude short of having any plausible effect on
the outcome. See Miller, 179 Ariz. at 180. The superior court did not err by
denying Lake’s chain-of-custody claim.
A. Signature-Verification Claim.
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Opinion of the Court
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Opinion of the Court
¶31 Lake argues that the superior court erred by dismissing her
claims asserting equal protection and due process violations. Her
arguments fail, however, because these claims were expressly premised on
an allegation of official misconduct in the form of interference with on-site
tabulators—the same alleged misconduct as in Lake’s printer/tabulator
claim. See supra ¶¶ 14–18. Because these claims were duplicative of a claim
that Lake unsuccessfully pursued at trial, the superior court did not err by
dismissing them.
CONCLUSION
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