
Pinal County Attorney Brad Miller released a statement on Monday, condemning Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes over her attempts to persecute Trump supporters who objected to the stolen 2020 election, following President Trump’s pardon of 2020 presidential electors, targeted by Democrats across the country.
Miller previously told The Gateway Pundit that Mayes is targeting the individuals for “something that she knows was a legitimate election challenge” following a shock admission Mayes made in a leaked phone call recording before the 2024 election, where she told Arizona Governor Katie Hobbs and Arizona Secretary of State Adrian Fontes that the 2020 and 2022 elections in Arizona “are challengeable.” This followed the discovery that the state failed to verify the citizenship of voters over the last 20 years.
Governor Katie Hobbs also chimed in, admitting that the missing citizenship verification validates “theories about illegal voting in our elections.” They absolutely destroyed their own case!
The charges in Arizona were “never about justice, only power,” Miller said, declaring the case a “politically motivated prosecution designed to intimidate conservatives and rewrite the law.”
Miller represented former Arizona GOP Chairwoman Kelli Ward and her husband, Michael Ward, both of whom were defendants in the case, before he was elected County Attorney last November.
The Gateway Pundit reported that 77 alternate electors, unjustly persecuted by the Biden Regime and local prosecutors in Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, and Wisconsin, were issued a pardon on Saturday.
In April, 18 individuals, including Trump White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows, former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani, RNC attorney Christina Bobb, conservative attorney John Eastman, and Trump campaign adviser Boris Epshteyn, were indicted by Kris Mayes’ grand jury for challenging the stolen 2020 election and casting an alternative slate of electors for President Trump.
The charges include nine count of conspiracy, fraudulent schemes and artifices, fraudulent schemes and practices, and forgery. “Defendants and unindicted coconspirators schemed to prevent the lawful transfer of the presidency to keep Unindicted Coconspirator 1 in office against the will of Arizona’s voters,” Mayes’s indictment alleged. President Trump was named “Unindicted Coconspirator 1.”
Mayes's indictment was designed by leftwing nonprofit States United Democracy Center, led by former Obama White House ethics counsel Norm Eisen, which sent a memo building the entire case for Mayes, even outlining "potential criminal charges" and "potential defenses," as well as a deadline for Mayes to arrange the indictments under the statute of limitations. Mayes later indicted the defendants on three out of six charges recommended by the nonprofit group.
But her case fell apart after even a far-left judge allowed the defendants to argue the charges are politically motivated, and the same judge later recused himself after he was busted bashing white men and making demands that other judges in Arizona support Kamala Harris against her conservative critics.
A judge later ruled that state prosecutors improperly presented the case to a grand jury and failed to inform jurors of the Electoral Count Act, which dictates the rules of electoral vote counting and exonerates the defendants. An appeals court sided with the lower court judge, refusing to even consider the case in September.
Still, Mayes hasn't dropped the case as of today and may try to appeal or take it back to a grand jury-- nearly five years after the alleged crime.
County Attorney Brad Miller issued a press release on Monday evening, following the Trump pardon, slamming Kris Mayes and the Washington Democrats she colluded with to "try to rewrite" the law.
"I hope Attorney General Kris Mayes is personally sued for botching the Arizona electors case and that she is forced to repay the electors out of her own pocket. If you wage a political war against innocent citizens, you should be held accountable — not taxpayers," Miller stated.
"This pardon stops the weaponization of prosecutions. No political viewpoints in Arizona or across America should be silenced. Drs. Michael and Kelli Ward are not criminals — they were electors acting under the law," Miller stated. "I will always stand with citizens whose rights are targeted by government overreach. Arizona deserves prosecutors who follow the law — not politicians who twist it."
He further slammed Mayes's inexperience as a prosecutor, writing, "Kris Mayes spent her career as a regulator and a politician — not a prosecutor."
Miller posted his statement on X, where he reiterated his calls for Mayes to be sued personally:
Miller further discussed the case with The Gateway Pundit correspondent Jordan Conradson on today's episode of The Gateway Pundit's DC Dive.
"I think she has to drop the case. She knows that she has no case. She knows that she invented a crime," Miller stated. "I think the writing is on the wall. She has to drop the case. She has no choice, and we expect that probably within the next week."
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