'Kill them': Arizona election workers face midterm threats
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[November 07, 2022]
By Linda So, Peter Eisler and Jason Szep
(Reuters) - Election workers in Arizona’s
most fiercely contested county faced more than 100 violent threats and
intimidating communications in the run-up to Tuesday’s midterms, most of
them based on election conspiracy theories promoted by former President
Donald Trump and his allies.
The harassment in Maricopa County included menacing emails and social
media posts, threats to circulate personal information online and
photographing employees arriving at work, according to nearly 1,600
pages of documents obtained by Reuters through a public records request
for security records and correspondence related to threats and
harassments against election workers.
Between July 11 and Aug. 22, the county election office documented at
least 140 threats and other hostile communications, the records show.
“You will all be executed,” said one. “Wire around their limbs and tied
& dragged by a car,” wrote another.
The documents reveal the consequences of election conspiracy theories as
voters nominated candidates in August to compete in the midterms. Many
of the threats in Maricopa County, which helped propel President Joe
Biden to victory over Trump in 2020, cited debunked claims around fake
ballots, rigged voting machines and corrupt election officials.
Other jurisdictions nationwide have seen threats and harassment this
year by the former president’s supporters and prominent Republican
figures who question the legitimacy of the 2020 election, according to
interviews with Republican and Democratic election officials in 10
states.
The threats come at a time of growing concern over the risk of political
violence, highlighted by the Oct. 28 attack on Democratic House Speaker
Nancy Pelosi's husband by a man who embraced right-wing conspiracy
theories.
In Maricopa, a county of 4.5 million people that includes Phoenix, the
harassment unnerved some election workers, according to previously
unreported incidents documented in the emails and interviews with county
officials.
A number of temporary workers quit after being accosted outside the main
ballot-counting center following the Aug. 2 primary, Stephen Richer, the
county recorder who helps oversee Maricopa’s elections, said in an
interview. One temporary employee broke down in tears after a stranger
photographed her, according to an email from Richer to county officials.
The unidentified worker left work early and never returned.
She wasn’t a political person, she told Richer. She just wanted a job.
On Aug. 3, strangers in tactical gear calling themselves “First
Amendment Auditors” circled the elections department building, pointing
cameras at employees and their vehicle license plates. The people vowed
to continue the surveillance through the midterms, according to an Aug.
4 email from Scott Jarrett, Maricopa's elections director, to county
officials.
“It feels very much like predatory behavior and that we are being
stalked,” wrote Jarrett.
ATTACKS PERSISTED
Since the 2020 election, Reuters has documented more than 1,000
intimidating messages to election officials across the country,
including more than 120 that could warrant prosecution, according to
legal experts.
Many officials said they had hoped the harassment would wane over time
after the 2020 results were confirmed. But the attacks have persisted,
fueled in many cases by right-wing media figures and groups that
continue without evidence to cast election officials as complicit in a
vast conspiracy by China, Democratic officials and voting equipment
manufacturers to rob Trump of a second presidential term.
In April, local election officials in Arizona participated in a drill
simulating violence at a polling site in which several people were
killed, according to an April 26 email from Lisa Marra, the president of
the Election Officials of Arizona, which represents election
administrators from the state's 15 counties. The drill aimed to help
officials prepare for Election Day violence, and left participants
“understandably, disturbed” said the email to more than a dozen local
election directors.
In a statement, Marra said: "This is just one other tool we can use to
ensure election safety for all."
Maricopa officials appeared at times overwhelmed by threatening posts on
social media and right-wing message boards calling for workers to be
executed or hung. Some messages sought officials' home addresses,
including one that promised “late night visits.” Employees were filmed
arriving and leaving work, according to emails among county officials.
Two days after the Aug. 2 primary election, the county’s information
security officer emailed the FBI pleading for help.
“I appreciate the limitations of what the FBI can do, but I just want to
underline this,” wrote Michael Moore, information security officer for
the Maricopa County Recorder’s Office. “Our staff is being intimidated
and threatened,” he added. “We’re going to continue to find it more and
more difficult to get the job done when no one wants to work for
elections.”
A special agent for the FBI acknowledged the agency’s limitations,
according to the emails. “As you put it, we are limited in what we can
do - we only investigate violations of federal law,” the FBI agent
responded in an Aug. 4 email. Reporting threats to local law enforcement
is ”the only thing I can suggest,” the agent wrote, “even if at this
point it has not resulted in any action.”
The FBI declined to comment on the agent’s response to Moore. It also
declined to confirm or deny the existence of ongoing investigations into
the threats.
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Protesting supporters of U.S. President
Donald Trump are reflected in a window, as election workers handle
ballots at the Maricopa County Tabulation and Election Center (MCTEC),
days after former Vice President Joe Biden was declared the winner
of the 2020 U.S. presidential election, in Phoenix, Arizona, U.S.,
November 9, 2020. REUTERS/Jim Urquhart/File Photo
Moore did not respond to requests for comment, but Richer, his boss,
said in a statement that he greatly appreciated the FBI’s
partnership and vigilance. "This is an inherently emotional topic -
communications of the most vile nature have been repeatedly sent to
my team,” the statement said.
One anonymous sender using the privacy-protective email service
ProtonMail sent “harassing emails” for almost a year, Moore, wrote
in an Aug. 4 email to the FBI. One message warned Richer that he’d
be “hung as a traitor.”
“I’d like to have a black and white poster in my office of you
hanging from the end of a rope,” the sender wrote.
The harassment and threats were affecting the mental health of
election workers, Jarrett wrote in his Aug. 4 memo. “If our
permanent and temporary staff do not feel safe, we will not be able
(to) recruit and retain staff for upcoming elections.”
In all, county officials referred at least 100 messages and social
media posts to FBI and state counter-terrorism officials. Reuters
found no evidence in the correspondence that officials saw any of
the messages as breaching the expansive definition of
constitutionally protected free speech and crossing into the
territory of a prosecutable threat.
The U.S. Justice Department declined to comment on specific ongoing
investigations but said it has opened dozens of cases nationwide
involving threats to election workers. Eight people face federal
charges for threats, including two who targeted Maricopa County
officials.
DOJ spokesperson Joshua Stueve said that while the “overwhelming
majority” of complaints the agency receives “do not include a threat
of unlawful violence,” he said the messages are “often hostile,
harassing, and abusive” towards election officials and their staff.
“They deserve better,” Stueve said.
ONLINE INSPIRATION
Misinformation on right-wing websites and social media fueled much
of the hostility towards election staff, according to the internal
messages among Maricopa officials.
On July 31, the Gateway Pundit, a pro-Trump website with a history
of publishing false stories, reported that a Maricopa County
election official allowed a staff technician to gain unauthorized
access to a computer server room, where he deleted 2020 election
data that was set to be audited. The website published the names and
photos of the official and the tech; readers responded with threats
against both.
“Until we start hanging these evil doers nothing will change,” one
reader wrote in the Gateway Pundit’s comment section. Another
suggested death for the computer tech identified in the story: “hang
that crook from (the) closest tree so people can see what happens to
traitors.”
The tech hadn’t deleted anything, according to a Maricopa
spokesperson. The county election director had instructed him to
shut down the server for delivery to the Arizona State Senate in
response to a subpoena. A review of server records confirmed nothing
was deleted, the spokesperson told Reuters, and all data from the
2020 election had been archived and preserved months earlier.
Election employees singled out in Gateway Pundit stories “tend to
see a surge in being targeted” for threats and harassing messages,
Moore, the county’s information security officer, said in a Nov. 18,
2021, email to the FBI. Those stories, he added, are often
“flagrantly inaccurate.” A Reuters investigation published last
December found the Gateway Pundit cited in more than 100 threatening
and hostile communications directed at 25 election workers in the
year after the 2020 election.
Other right-wing news outlets and commentators elicited similar
hostile comments in response to their allegations against Maricopa
officials. In August, right-wing provocateur Charlie Kirk posted a
comment in Telegram accusing Richer, the county recorder, and “his
cronies” of making Arizona’s elections “a Third-World circus.”
“When do we start hanging these people for treason?” one reader
commented. Another simply added, “Kill them.”
The Gateway Pundit and Kirk did not respond to requests for comment.
After a security assessment by the U.S. Department of Homeland
Security in late 2021, Maricopa strengthened doors, added
shatterproof film on windows and bought more first aid kits,
according to the documents.
But the harassment has continued.
“This goes beyond just onsite security. It is a mental health
issue,” Jarrett, the county elections director, wrote in an email to
county officials two days after the primary.
“I very much respect freedom of speech and welcome public scrutiny,”
Jarrett added. “However, allowing this predatory activity to occur
is damaging and threatening the viability of the elections
department.”
(Reporting by Linda So, Peter Eisler and Jason Szep; Editing by
Suzanne Goldenberg)
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