An Arizona grand jury handed up an indictment Wednesday that accuses 18 people of crimes related to the attempt to throw the 2020 presidential election for former President Donald Trump. The list of defendants includes not only the 11 Arizonans who were appointed as “fake electors” in that state but also lawyers Rudy Giuliani and Christina Bobb, members of the Trump campaign’s inner circle.
Even though Trump isn’t directly named in the indictment, appearing only as “unindicted co-conspirator 1,” the timing couldn’t be worse for him. The Arizona charges were unsealed the day before the former president’s lawyers appeared before the Supreme Court to claim that his actions in the aftermath of the election were all official and, thus, are covered by a blanket presidential immunity. But the Arizona indictments serve as an important reminder that Trump’s actions after the 2020 election weren’t a mere byproduct of Trump’s serving as president. Instead, Trump was allegedly the head of a criminal enterprise, as the indictment in Georgia calls it, and his efforts can’t be handwaved away as just part of the job.
The Arizona indictments serve as an important reminder that Trump’s actions after the 2020 election weren’t a mere byproduct of Trump’s serving as president.
The charges that Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes sought and the grand jury handed up focus on one facet of the broader scheme that a Washington grand jury, at the request of special counsel Jack Smith, said existed in a 2023 federal indictment. As part of the attempt to throw the election’s results into doubt, according to that federal indictment, Republicans in several swing states that Joe Biden won cast fraudulent Electoral College votes declaring Trump the winner.
Fake electors cast ballots in seven states, and Arizona is the last of the seven to conclude their investigations into the scheme. Three of the state’s fake electors are co-defendants with Trump in a sprawling conspiracy case in Georgia. State prosecutors in Michigan and Nevada have charged people accused of being fake electors, as well. (The Wisconsin investigation is ongoing, but many of the participants there have admit to their roles to settle a civil suit.) Only prosecutors in Pennsylvania and New Mexico declined to bring charges. They’ve noted that the participants there insisted their certificates included language making it clear that they were truly contingencies and not “real” Electoral College votes.
At the time, the public claim from the Trump campaign was that those “alternate slates” of electors were merely backups in case a court ruled Trump had won those states. But as the Arizona grand jury found, there was a clear belief among those charged that the real reason to produce the fake electoral certificates was to turn Trump’s false claims of election fraud into a vehicle for him to remain in office.
Thursday’s Supreme Court oral arguments took place against that backdrop. Arguing for Trump, D. John Sauer claimed that hidden in the Constitution is total immunity from criminal prosecution for presidents after they leave office for their official acts. His argument depends on an extremely broad interpretation of the Supreme Court’s 1982 Nixon v. Fitzgerald ruling, which found that presidents possess immunity from civil suits brought in response to their decisions, even those taken on the “outer perimeter” of their official capacity.








