The Arizona Supreme Court has denied Arizona Attorney General’s bid to revive her lawfare against 2020 electors in Arizona after an appeals court dismissed the case, saying Mayes misled and improperly improperly a grand jury.
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 were 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.
The Gateway Pundit previously reported that Mayes sought to revive her case by appealing to the state’s high court last November.
The court did not explain its decision to deny the appeal in its Tuesday order.
According to Politico, Mayes’ spokesperson Richie Taylor said in a statement, “The Arizona Attorney General’s Office will return this case to the grand jury.”
“We decline to comment further at this time,” he added.
Mayes has come under fire over an alleged bribery scandal involving Mayes and left-wing groups that paid her to prosecute the Trump electors. The Gateway Pundit reported that Mayes handed unprecedented prosecutorial authority to States United Democracy Center, a far-left nonprofit founded by Norm Eisen. States United sent a memo to Mayes 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.
Rep. Abe Hamadeh (R-AZ) has demanded a federal investigation into Mayes over the illegal scheme and the weaponization of her office. Still, the feds have taken no action.
This is a developing story.
The post Arizona Attorney General Shot Down by AZ Supreme Court in Lawfare Case Against 2020 Trump Electors – Plans to Seek New Grand Jury Indictment appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.

