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AZ Official Who Refused To Certify 2022 Election Data Pleads Guilty

Crime and Justice News

One of two rural Arizona county supervisors who faced criminal charges for refusing to certify the 2022 midterm results by a state deadline pleaded guilty Monday to a misdemeanor of failing to perform her duty as an election officer. Two weeks before the Nov. 5 election, the acknowledgment of guilt by Cochise County Supervisor Peggy Judd was seen by some as a warning to other county officials who might once again be pressured by election conspiracists not to certify the results, the Associated Press reports. “Judd’s official guilty plea represents an important development in securing election integrity in Arizona,” said Thomas Volgy, a former Tucson mayor and professor at the University of Arizona, where he specializes in democratic processes. “It should be a loud wake-up call to county elected officials that they cannot fiddle with the vote intentions of Arizonans for cheap partisan gain.” Peter Bondi of the nonprofit group Informing Democracy said Judd’s plea “is a clear reminder that the duty to certify is not optional, and should deter every election official from attempting to subvert the will of voters.”


“This is a victory for democracy, the rule of law, and most importantly for every voter who casts a ballot this year,” Bondi said. Judd avoided a possible felony charge by entering the plea under an agreement reached in Maricopa County Superior Court. Judd will be sentenced to unsupervised probation for not less than 90 days and she will pay a maximum $500 fine, said a spokesperson for Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes. Judd and Tom Crosby, her fellow Republican on the three-member board, were indicted on felony charges of conspiracy and interference with an election officer after they delayed the state’s canvass. The third member of the board, Democrat Ann Crosby, had voted to certify the election. The Cochise County results were ultimately certified past the deadline after a judge ordered Judd and Crosby to carry out their legal duties “Today’s plea agreement and sentencing should serve as a strong reminder that I will not hesitate to use every tool available to uphold the rule of law and protect the integrity of Arizona’s elections,” Mayes said. Judd and Crosby had sought to require a hand count of all the county’s ballots amid rampant conspiracy theories about the integrity of the vote and chaotic public hearings. They also raised doubts about the accuracy of vote tabulation machines. Republicans lost the races for governor and attorney general in November 2022.


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A daily report co-sponsored by Arizona State University, Criminal Justice Journalists, and the National Criminal Justice Association

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