

Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes is still fighting to keep her case against 2020 Trump electors alive and is reportedly asking the Arizona Supreme Court to reverse the dismissal of her case after misleading and improperly instructing a grand jury.
This comes amid an alleged bribery scandal involving Mayes and leftwing groups that paid her to prosecute electors, as well as a Trump’s pardon of 77 alternative electors who were persecuted by leftist prosecutors in Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, and Nevada.
Per 12 News:
Mayes will ask the Arizona Supreme Court to review a lower court ruling that would have sent the case back to a grand jury, 12News confirmed Friday.
The Friday deadline was set by the Arizona Supreme Court after Mayes asked for time to decide on how to respond to a lower court ruling that had stalled the case for the last six months.
In a statement released later Friday, Mayes said:
As Arizona’s top law enforcement officer and top prosecutor, it’s my job to uphold the law and protect Arizonans. An independent grand jury of ordinary Arizonans found that there was sufficient cause to charge the defendants with the alleged crimes. These defendants were charged based on two things: the facts and the law. We remain squarely focused on ensuring the defendants are held accountable because there is nothing more important than enforcing the rule of law.
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 counts 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.”
But her case fell apart after a far-left judge allowed the defendants to argue that the charges are politically motivated. 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 even to consider the case in September.
Mayes has come under intense scrutiny and calls for federal investigation amid bribery charges amid an alleged bribery scheme involving the Democratic Attorneys General Association and leftwing nonprofit States United Democracy Center, led by former Obama White House ethics counsel Norm Eisen.
The corrupt Attorney General gave unprecedented prosecutorial authority to States United Democracy Center, which sent a memo to her in July 2023, building her entire case, even outlining “potential criminal charges” and “potential defenses,” as well as a deadline for Mayes to arrange the indictments under the statute of limitations. In exchange for following their orders, the Democratic Attorneys General Association gave Mayes $200,000, according to a whistleblower memorandum filed with the Department of Justice by Christina Bobb in June 2025.
However, the Justice Department has not taken any action on the allegations of corruption and weaponization of justice against President Trump and his supporters. Bobb recently told The Gateway Pundit that the filing is “pretty radioactive” and expressed uncertainty that the Department of Justice “wants to take this up.”
This led Rep. Abe Hamadeh to demand an investigation last week, five months after federal authorities were alerted.
“I have made my position very clear to the top officials at the White House that I’m going to keep pursuing this,” Hamadeh told The Gateway Pundit in an exclusive interview. “Now, we have to see action.”
Hamadeh further noted that despite calls for the Republicans to move on from the stolen 2020 election, “It looks like the Democrats are the ones who are not moving on from 2020.” He added, “They’re the ones going after these grandmothers and patriotic Americans.”
Hamadeh further noted that despite calls for the Republicans to move on from the stolen 2020 election, “It looks like the Democrats are the ones who are not moving on from 2020.” He added, “They’re the ones going after these grandmothers and patriotic Americans.”
Pinal County Attorney Brad Miller, who previously represented former Arizona GOP Chairwoman Kelli Ward and her husband, Michael Ward, both of whom were defendants in the case, recently called for Mayes to be “personally sued for botching the Arizona electors case” and “forced to repay the electors out of her own pocket.”
The post JUST IN: Arizona Attorney General Launches Desperate AZ Supreme Court Bid to Revive Sham 2020 Electors Case Amid Bribery Scandal and Potential Federal Investigation appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.
