Days after asking the U.S. Supreme Court to breathe new life into a lawsuit that seeks to ban Dominion Voting Systems’ machines from use in the state of Arizona, Republican U.S. Senate candidate Kari Lake is asking the justices to accept her case on an expedited basis, so that there will be plenty of time to see her quest through before the 2024 election.
Lake, a former local news anchor who lost in the Arizona gubernatorial race of 2022, docketed, along with fellow Arizona Republican Mark Finchem, a motion to expedite on Wednesday. She cited her current pursuit of federal office, the need for a ruling “as far in advance of the 2024 election at possible,” and “new evidence” to support a speedier consideration of the petition.
“Expedited consideration of this matter is warranted by the seriousness of the issues and their effect on the upcoming 2024 election—not only in the battleground State of Arizona where petitioners reside (and are candidates for federal and state office), but also nationwide,” the motion said. “Petitioners introduced new allegations in their petition to support Article III standing in accordance with 28 U.S.C. §1653. The evidence supporting those allegations introduced here is extraordinary.”
In her petition for a writ of certiorari, Lake claimed the potential security issues with Dominion voting machines made “hanging chads — the very problem the machines were meant to solve — seem like a blessing,” a reference to the Florida recount of 2000.
At root, Lake argued that “new evidence” is enough to establish standing and reverse the lower courts so her lawsuit against Maricopa County and state officials can continue as soon as possible, seemingly in the hopes that there may be enough time to ban voting machines before the 2024 election in Arizona and, perhaps, cause a domino effect across the states.
In the motion to expedite, Lake claimed Dominion’s equipment “violates basic cyber security standards by leaving master cryptographic encryption keys on the machines in plain text, thereby allowing any malicious actor to take control over the electronic voting machines and the election results—without likely detection.” She further claimed that Maricopa County “used illegally altered election software in the 2020 and 2022 elections and falsely represented that this software is certified by Election Assistance Commission.” These “vulnerabilities” and misrepresentations, according to Lake, all amounted to a violation her 14th Amendment right to due process.
In a statement to Law&Crime, a Dominion spokesperson called Lake’s cybersecurity claim “conspiratorial.”
“The claim that access to any single credential could affect the result of an election undetected is implausible and conspiratorial,” the spokesperson said. “Dominion’s machines are fully certified by the U.S. Election Assistance Commission, and elections are secured by many layers of robust operational and procedural safeguards, including auditable paper ballots, that are overseen by local election officials.”
Lake’s dismissed lawsuit, which previously led to sanctions against the lawyers who brought it for making “false, misleading, and unsupported factual assertions,” was also rejected by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit.
When the three-judge panel affirmed the dismissal for lack of standing, the jurists concluded that the she “simply” did not “plausibly” allege “‘a real and immediate threat of’ future injury.” Lake did not “contend that any electronic tabulation machine in Arizona has ever been hacked,” the judges noted.
The panel also pointed to “robust safeguards” in place at the state level.
“In the end, none of Plaintiffs’ allegations supports a plausible inference that their individual votes in future elections will be adversely affected by the use of electronic tabulation, particularly given the robust safeguards in Arizona law, the use of paper ballots, and the post-tabulation retention of those ballots,” the court said. “The district court correctly dismissed the operative complaint for lack of Article III standing.”
Still, Lake is pressing SCOTUS to grant her petition on an expedited basis and to reverse the dismissals below, so her lawsuit can proceed. But, if the justices find “orders merits briefing and argument” appropriate, they should schedule arguments quick enough to impact the 2024 election, the motion said.
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