Kari Lake’s lawsuit against Maricopa County for election fraud begins on Wednesday and we will soon see if Judge Thompson is going to be fair or if he is part of the election theft cover-up.
Lake has three whistleblowers who will testify that they threw out about 130,000 votes because the signatures on the envelopes do not match the signatures from the registration cards.
However, someone from above them told election officials to count the votes anyway.
Did Katie Hobbs give that order and if she did, was she aware that there were forged signatures? One could cost her the election, but the latter could gain her an orange jumpsuit.
I’m hoping for the latter. There is also a video showing someone who was supposed to be verifying signatures automatically approving everything apparently without looking at the signatures.
That one individual approved 27,000 ballots. Lake allegedly lost the election by only 17,000 votes.
VISIT OUR YOUTUBE CHANNELMaricopa County even admits that 240,000 votes were approved in an average of about 3 seconds per vote. How can you possibly be thorough at such a pace?
There were similar findings from the 2020 election when a late-night surge and over a week in finalizing the count gave Joe Biden the win in Arizona.
Former Arizona Attorney General Mark Brnovich determined that 206,648 early ballot signatures were verified on November 4, 2020, with an average time of 4.6 seconds per signature.
Like Judge Judy always says, “If it doesn’t make sense, it never happened.”
Brnovich’s April 2022 report states:
“The early ballot affidavit signature verification system in Arizona, and particularly when applied to Maricopa County, may be insufficient to guard against abuse.”
Maricopa County attorney Joe La Rue admitted Friday that verifying signatures is “subjective” and “something of an art”. He said it is not science, but taking less than 2 seconds to verify signatures is a long stretch of the imagination.
The Gateway Pundit also reported yesterday that Lake attorneys revealed how Maricopa County intentionally caused 60% of tabulators in Maricopa County to fail on election day voters. “This election was rigged,” stated Lake attorney Kurt Olsen.
However, Judge Peter Thompson just dismissed Count II regarding intentional election day tabulator failures, despite newly discovered evidence that Maricopa County rigged the election and secretly tested voting machines to fail Republican voters. We reported this morning that Thompson reaffirmed a previous minute entry, setting trial dates for Kari Lake’s trial on the remanded fraudulent signature verification claims in her lawsuit against the 2022 election.
As noted by leftist hack journalist Garrett Archer, Lake must prove that misconduct by election officials and higher level signature verification employees occurred. He called it a “catastrophically high bar.”

On the last day of work, November 15, we were asked by manager Celia to go through perhaps 5,000 to 7,000 ballots, that had already been rejected at levels 1, 2 and 3. We were asked to go to the SHELL program and to only find one signature that matched the green envelope, even if all other signatures in the program did not match the green envelope. The implication from Celia is that was desperate to get the work complete and that she wanted the ballots approved. These 5,000 to 7,000 ballots had already been through the full level 1, 2, and 3 process and been rejected. Therefore, I do not know why [we were] going through them again, and that is why it seemed that Celia wanted them approved.”
Nystrom Decl. ¶ 21.
Another declarant swore that “nothing prevented a level 1, 2, or 3 worke[r]” from approving insufficient signatures. “observers did not watch any level 3 work and did not watch most of level 2 work,” they state.
Maricopa permitted any signature reviewer to un-reject ballots without accountability using curing stickers. Workers were able to obtain massive amounts of these stickers and use them to cure ballots without oversight. Onigkeit explained:
In order to perform the curing process, we were given a batch of stickers to place on a ballot, which included stickers with abbreviations. Some, but not all, of the ballot stickers and abbreviations were as follows: “VER” meant that we verified the voter’s information, and their ballot was approved to be counted, “WV” meant that a voter did not want to verify their ballot over the phone, and “LM” meant that we called the voter and left a message.




















