It’s already been made clear the leader of the failed Maricopa County, Arizona “audit” and subsequently failed company “Cyber Ninjas” Doug Logan really doesn’t want people reading his correspondences with other “Stop the Steal” figures from the post-2020 election period as he’s been fighting in court for nearly two years to keep the private. What’s already been made public just makes him look like an asshole who had no idea what he was doing, like when he told an associate “It’s on my list to read through the Arizona election laws. I guess I should move that up on the list,” literally just days before he was officially hired by the Arizona state Senate to Maricopa “audit.”
Pretty embarrassing, but probably pretty short of criminal activity unless it somehow contradicted sworn testimony. His texts in January 2021 concerning the breach of a county clerk’s office in rural Georgia on the other hand are probably a little more on the “Oh shit I could end up in prison” side.
So we can get why Logan wants to continue fighting a public records lawsuit brought by the Arizona Republic for access to his texts. Maybe it’s the embarrassment factor as, per the Republic, Logan’s already been informed he won’t face charges in connection to the recent indictments brought against three (or more) of the MAGA assholes who possessed and tampered with a Dominion vote tabulator absconded from a town clerk’s office in the Great Lakes state, which happened around the same time he exchanged 2,400 texts with conspiracy freak defendant Stefanie Lambert – reportedly more than any other person – before, during, and after the Maricopa shitshow.
It’s not clear what Logan’s level of involvement was in the Michigan plot, but we would hazard the evidence fell short of getting caught on tape walking into a clerk’s office like he was during the January 2021 Coffee County, Georgia heist. So the texts with Lambert are likely at minimum embarrassing to Logan’s non-existent professional reputation. But if they’re not incriminating in Michigan then they might be interest to prosecutors in Georgia or even Arizona.