Why aren't they complying with the subpoena?
Do they have something to hide?
Maricopa County supervisors and Dominion Voting Systems refused to produce additional election material on Monday in response to new subpoenas filed by the Arizona Senate.
The subpoenas, issued July 26 by Republican Senate leaders, demanded that representatives for the county Board of Supervisors and Dominion appear and produce the materials by 1 p.m. Monday at the state Capitol.
Instead, county officials and a Dominion attorney sent Senate President Karen Fann a letter outlining why they will not comply. However, county officials said they will work with the Senate to provide some documents sought via a public-records request.
Fann, in a released statement, said she saw some progress in the Senate's efforts to get county cooperation, but took a wait-and-see stance on the refusal to produce subpoenaed materials.
"It is unfortunate the noncompliance by the County and Dominion continues to delay the results and breeds distrust," she said.
The subpoenas demanded routers, machine passwords and voter registration records from the county, and the same machine passwords from Dominion.
Instead of complying, attorneys for Dominion and the supervisors sent letters to the Senate. The supervisors said they have given what they are legally and responsibly able to provide, and Dominion said that they don't legally have to provide anything, given they are a public company.
PHOENIX, AZ - NOVEMBER 05: Votes are counted by staff at the Maricopa County Elections Department office on November 5, 2020 in Phoenix, Arizona. Ballots continue to be counted in many critical battleground states as the final results in the U.S. presidential election remain too close to call. (Photo by Courtney Pedroza/Getty Images)