Election Fraud Investigations in Connecticut, Massachusetts, and New Jersey

Election fraud is making headlines in three Democratic states – Connecticut, Massachusetts, and New Jersey. In Connecticut, the situation took a dramatic turn as allegations of fraud led to a court-ordered new primary election. Bridgeport Superior Court Judge William Clark decided to overturn the results of a Democratic mayoral primary due to claims of absentee ballot abuse. What prompted this decision? Well, it all began when a video surfaced online, seemingly showing a supporter of the incumbent Democrat Mayor Joe Ganim, stuffing stacks of papers into a ballot drop box.

Meanwhile, over in Massachusetts, a Democratic mayoral candidate is facing accusations of bribing residents to vote. City officials in Springfield claim they witnessed voters being brought to City Hall for early voting, with some expecting cash in return for voting for Democratic candidate Justin Hurst.

New Jersey has its share of election fraud cases as well. State Attorney General Matthew Platkin’s office announced state election fraud charges related to mail-in ballots and voter registrations in the 2020 and 2021 elections. Paterson City Council President Alex Mendez (D) faces additional charges in a 2020 election fraud case. Allegations suggest that Mendez’s campaign collected unsealed ballots, inspected them to determine if they were cast for him, and replaced those that weren’t. These replacement ballots allegedly came from voters’ mailboxes, painting a concerning picture of voter manipulation.

Mendez’s response to the charges has been one of defense, claiming that the accusations are unjust and only brought because previous charges weren’t progressing as expected.

Another Democratic candidate in New Jersey and a former candidate for Plainfield mayor in 2021, Dr. Henrilynn Ibezim, found himself charged with “election fraud and other crimes.” According to the state’s Attorney General, Ibezim instructed his associates to complete blank voter registration applications and deliver nearly 1,000 of them to a post office.

Dr. Henrilynn Ibezim has been charged with several crimes related to election fraud. These include:

  • Election fraud is a second-degree crime.
  • Criminal attempt to commit false registration or transfer, a third-degree crime.
  • Tampering with public records is a third-degree crime.
  • Forgery is a third-degree crime.
  • Hindering apprehension or prosecution, a third-degree crime.
  • Falsifying or tampering with records is a fourth-degree crime.

These charges stem from an Office of Public Integrity and Accountability’s (OPIA) Corruption Bureau investigation. Ibezim allegedly directed associates and campaign volunteers to complete blank voter registration applications based on forms with voter information he provided to the group. He then allegedly brought a large white garbage bag filled with nearly 1,000 of these fake voter registration applications to the post office to mail to the Union County Commissioner of Registration.

The investigation into Dr. Henrilynn Ibezim’s alleged election fraud and other related crimes fits into the larger context of election fraud in New Jersey in several ways:

  • The election fraud cases in New Jersey, including those involving mail-in voting, are relatively rare and often easy to detect. This is demonstrated by the fact that the Paterson scandal, which involved allegations of mail-in voting fraud, was not the norm but rather an exception.
  • The investigation into Ibezim’s alleged crimes is part of a broader effort to uphold the integrity of the democratic process in New Jersey. The Attorney General’s office has proactively addressed these allegations, as seen in the case of Alex Mendez and other politicians.
  • The allegations of election fraud in New Jersey have been a topic of national discussion, with President Donald Trump using the Paterson scandal to argue against mail-in voting. This has highlighted the importance of maintaining the integrity of the voting process.
  • The election fraud cases in New Jersey, including those involving mail-in voting, have shown that even when such incidents occur, they are typically easy to detect and prosecute. This suggests that while the threat of election fraud exists, the safeguards in place to prevent it are effective.
  • The allegations of election fraud in New Jersey have also highlighted the importance of voter registration and the process of voting. In the case of Ibezim, the alleged crime involved submitting voter registration applications for people who were not eligible to vote.

The incident involving absentee ballot abuse in Connecticut is an unusual case specific to Bridgeport, a working-class city known for its history of voting irregularities. This activity is often called “ballot harvesting,” where campaign workers or volunteers visit potential voters, encourage them to fill out absentee ballots, and then collect and submit them on their behalf. However, this kind of collection effort is banned in Connecticut, raising concerns about the integrity of the election process.

To provide some context, these election-related criminal cases aren’t isolated incidents. There have been at least three such cases nationwide, with two involving this year’s elections and two related to prior elections. As for the future, a new primary date is yet to be set in Connecticut. Judge Clark has given lawyers a 10-day window to work with city and state election officials to determine a potential date for the new election.

©2023. Amil Imani. All rights reserved.

SPECIAL EDITION — Tennessee Mayoral Candidate Gabrielle Hanson and Voter Fraud

Continuously since 2020, Americans have been told, “there was NO election fraud!”

Regardless of the hearings, submittals, testimony, and evidence made public, the political establishment combined from both political parties have worked overtime to squash even a scintilla of evidence and to ridicule, even character assassinate, those who came forward and dared to suggest our electoral process is less than honest, less than reliable. In a tremendous way, We The People have been subjected to a “selection process not an election process” in far too many locations. And yet, the ridicule and nay-sayers continue their litany of shameful denials proclaiming…“nothing to see here move on!”

What you are about to hear is a candid conversation by and between, former Arizona State Rep. Mark Finchem, Franklin, Tennessee Mayoral candidate Gabrielle Hanson and me on this Special Edition of ARIZONA TODAY. What you are about to hear is startling. The testimony by this Mayoral candidate who days ago went through a stolen election is sobering and alarming.

The eye-witness accounts of alleged voter fraud, election tabulator severe interference and remote vote changing are what occurs in third-world dictatorial countries, and they are reported on this Special Edition as having occurred in Franklin, Tennessee just days ago.

On September 18, 1787, Maryland delegate to the Constitutional Convention, James McHenry (1753-1816) heard and then wrote in his records of the last day of the Constitutional convention: “A lady asked Dr. Benjamin Franklin Well Doctor what have we got a republic or a monarchy – a republic replied Benjamin Franklin if you can keep it.” The Lady was Mrs. Powel of Philadelphia. I firmly believe Dr. Franklin and ALL the Delegates to the Constitutional convention would be appalled and very angry at what has transpired the last two years in our electoral process.

The United States of America is teetering on the edge about to fall over and lose forever the gift given to us by our founders. We are about to lose the exceptional nation birthed and called a republic. I sincerely pray YOU reading this and then listening to the shocking conversation on this Special Edition of ARIZONA TODAY do something; shout, demand answers, hold elected officials accountable for explanations and investigations, demand a review of the electoral process in your community, county, state.

Do NOT simply sit and do nothing.

Our republic is hanging by a thread, and I am NOT being conspiratorial.

WATCH: Arizona Today SPECIAL EDITION — Mayoral Candidate Gabrielle Hanson

©2023. Arizona Today. Lyle J. Rapacki, Ph.D. All rights reserved.

A Sleazy Little Means of Taking Over a GOP-Dominated Texas Legislature by Leftists from Team Obama

In Texas politics, a Democrat named Hugh Brady, a lawyer appointed by President Obama to serve as general counsel for the White House Office of administration, and who held that position from 2014-2017, allegedly wields significant influence in the Texas House.

This is indeed a unique political scenario that has captured the attention of Texas watchers across the nation.

It’s relevant because Dade Phelan, a Republican Texas member of its state House of Representatives has been criticized by some county Republican Party groups and earned censure resolutions, as “teaming up with Democrats to kill our Republican priorities.”

These resolutions against Phelan are formal, public condemnations of a party official whose actions allegedly violate or oppose the party platform or legislative priorities. The Republican parties of Travis, Smith, Tarrant, EllisOrange, and Harris (and possibly other) counties have condemned Phelan for ignoring or opposing Republican priorities, appearing intoxicated while presiding over official House business, and pushing through the impeachment vote and voting to impeach Attorney General Ken Paxton.

Phelan has been criticized especially for appointing Democrat Party committee chairs, which had been something of a Texas-specific tradition but which was giving Democrats in the legislative minority majority-like powers. The Republican Party of Texas and other GOP activists called for him to end this tradition. Phelan’s decision to appoint Democrat committee chairs has been seen as a significant move as the party pressured Phelan into banning Democrat chairs outright. He ignored them and nine Democrats were given chairmanships, including Hugh Brady, who got the parliamentarian’s slot.

But to fully understand this unique scenario, we must examine Hugh Brady’s background and present role in Texas politics.

Hugh Brady’s journey into politics and law began with a promising legal career. His path took a pivotal turn when he was appointed as White House Counsel during the Obama administration, requiring him to provide legal advice to the president and make decisions on legal matters. He also had the power to make decisions on legal issues, which can significantly impact the actions and policies of the president and the White House. And this is exactly how he became a prominent figure in Democrat politics. In light of his role as White House Counsel, it is imperative to raise questions like – what responsibilities and powers come with this position, and how might they extend to a state legislature predominantly controlled by Republicans?

The unexpected nature of Brady’s influence in a state known for its conservative politics has raised many other questions. Here are some points on the historical context of party control in Texas and how this scenario departs from the norm:

  • Texas is renowned for its deep-rooted Republican political landscape.
  • The GOP has traditionally dominated the Texas House.
  • Dade Phelan’s decision to appoint Democrat committee chairs has departed from the norm of having committee chairs from the majority party.
  • Phelan’s appointment of Brady and his alleged influence in the GOP-dominated Texas House has left many wondering how such a situation could transpire and what it might signify for the future of Texas politics.

How did that affect the GOP majority? Take the case of GOP Rep. Brian Harrison’s vax mandate amendment, as it was pivotal.

Harrison proposed an amendment to Senate Bill 29, which sought to prohibit government implementation or enforcement of a COVID-19 vaccine mandate.

The proposed amendment should have passed easily in the Texas legislature but unexpectedly was killed off by Rep. Erin Zwiener, a Democrat, citing it as “not germane.”

That is strange stuff. After all, in a Republican-controlled Texas House, the power dynamics are typically straightforward. But with Democrats chairing committees, it’s as if Democrats are controlling the legislative agenda and poor Harrison couldn’t even get airtime for a vote.

Do you see how this situation challenges the established norms and what it means for the political landscape in Texas?

The rarity of a Democrat lawyer like Hugh Brady influencing what a Republican House can vote on merits has these ramifications.

Was it a scandal, or does it have a legitimate explanation?

Given the circumstance of this incident, one cannot help but question the legitimacy of Brady’s influence.

There are several possible explanations for how Democrat Hugh Brady came to be so influential in the GOP-dominated Texas House. More so because this was a scope provided by a Republican Dade Phelan, someone who cruised to victory to the House leadership position in a vote 145-3, secured by cutting across party lines, while some argue that his impact could be attributed to factors such as personal connections, political strategies, and policy priorities, yet a deeper examination of these aspects reveals a more troubling picture.

One of the most troubling aspects of Dade Phelan’s approach is his apparent willingness to work across party lines. Rather than upholding conservative principles and values, Phelan has been unapologetic about appointing Democrats as committee chairs. While seemingly designed to foster bipartisan collaboration, this tactic raises doubts about his loyalty to the Republican Party and its platform.

The allegations against Phelan are particularly alarming. Accusations of ignoring or opposing the party platform and legislative priorities and appearing inebriated while presiding over official House business point to a disturbing lack of commitment to the principles that conservative Republicans hold dear. His push for the impeachment of Attorney General Ken Paxton further underscores his willingness to break from conservative ranks.

If these allegations prove accurate, they could signify a troubling level of mismanagement or corruption within the Texas House. Such behavior is unacceptable and undermines the integrity of the political system. If left unaddressed, Phelan’s actions can significantly alter the political landscape in the Texas House, thereby jeopardizing the values and priorities of conservative Republicans. Turning Texas blue, as the Democrats have fantasized about for years, could become a reality and they won’t even need to get the votes to do it.

In conclusion, the influence wielded by Hugh Brady, a Democrat, in a GOP-dominated House is a deeply disturbing development in Texas politics. The actions and decisions of a person with such close ties to the Democrat party raise questions about his commitment to conservative agendas. While cooperation across the aisle can be beneficial, it must not come at the expense of traditional values. The allegations against Phelan only add to the concerns, suggesting that mismanagement or corruption may be at play. Lately, voting for Republicans has been a flop because they are not true Republicans…whitewashed tombs come to mind.

Conservative Republicans must remain vigilant and steadfast in their commitment to their principles in the face of this challenging and unique political situation. Meanwhile, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton is doing a yeoman’s job by seeking and endorsing solid conservative challengers to “Republican state representatives who voted to impeach him for the upcoming Republican primary.”

©2023. Amil Imani. All rights reserved.

Obama-Appointed Judge Partially Grants Biden DOJ’s Proposed Gag Order On Trump

A federal judge limited the scope of the Department of Justice’s (DOJ) proposed gag order for former President Donald Trump after raising concerns during a hearing Monday.

United States District Judge Tanya S. Chutkan, an Obama appointee, granted the requested order in part, restricting statements about special counsel Jack Smith, his staff, witnesses and court personnel while permitting Trump to make statements about the Biden administration and DOJ, according to reports. Smith’s office requested an order last month that would restrict Trump from making “disparaging and inflammatory, or intimidating” statements about any “party, witness, attorney, court personnel, or potential jurors.”

Chutkan expressed reservations about the broadness of the DOJ’s proposed order Monday.

At one point during the hearing, Trump attorney John Lauro said George Orwell “would be having a field day” over prosecutors’ arguments. Chutkan replied he “definitely” would, per reports.

Yet Chutkan rejected the defense’s argument that Trump had entirely unrestricted First Amendment rights to make statements about any party in the case, noting he is still facing criminal charges.

“First Amendment protections yield to the administration of justice and to the protection of witnesses,” Chutkan said, according to Politico. “His presidential candidacy does not give him carte blanche to vilify … public servants who are simply doing their job.”

Chutkan said Trump can not, for instance, make statements calling prosecutors “deranged” or a “thug.”

“No other defendant would be allowed to do so and I’m not going to allow it in this case,” she said, per NBC News.

Chutkan permitted Trump to make statements criticizing Washington, D.C., and its residents. She said sanctions were on the table if Trump violates the order but did not specify what that may entail, according to Politico.

A Trump spokesperson told the Daily Caller News Foundation in a statement that the order is “an absolute abomination.”

“Today’s decision is an absolute abomination and another partisan knife stuck in the heart of our Democracy by Crooked Joe Biden, who was granted the right to muzzle his political opponent, the leading candidate for the Presidency in 2024, and the most popular political leader in America, President Donald J. Trump,” the spokesperson said. “President Trump will continue to fight for our Constitution, the American people’s right to support him, and to keep our country free of the chains of weaponized and targeted law enforcement.”

AUTHOR

KATELYNN RICHARDSON

Contributor.

RELATED ARTICLE: Obama-Appointed Federal Judge Denies Trump’s Bid To Have Her Recuse Herself From His 2020 Election Case

EDITORS NOTE: This Daily Caller column is republished with permission. ©All rights reserved.


All content created by the Daily Caller News Foundation, an independent and nonpartisan newswire service, is available without charge to any legitimate news publisher that can provide a large audience. All republished articles must include our logo, our reporter’s byline and their DCNF affiliation. For any questions about our guidelines or partnering with us, please contact licensing@dailycallernewsfoundation.org.

[S]ELECTION CODE: Fact-Based Exposé on Election Fraud

On November 30, 2020, members of the Arizona State Legislature held a day long televised hearing in Phoenix addressing national election fraud. Evidence and subject-matter specialists provided testimony with evidence demonstrating such horrendous activity did, indeed, occur. Non-stop since then, Arizona Legislators have led to expose multiple forms of election fraud. The honorable manner by which they fulfilled their sacred oaths of office to represent the people and Preserve and Protect the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, encouraged five additional states to investigate the same. Two and a half years later, a large cache of evidence has been produced demonstrating the election of 2020 and again 2022, was severely compromised in multiple states.

[S]ELECTION CODE will show how an elected official in Colorado fought to expose election fraud and was arrested by federal agents. The film will also show that other elected officials in Colorado worked to negate evidence, smear the county recorder uncovering the election fraud, and the steps taken to create a false election narrative in the first place. Forensic cyber-security specialists nicely demonstrate and discuss how election numbers were changed. Very similar steps have been uncovered in six states besides Arizona. Arizona has led the way the past two and a half years with various investigations and attempts to truly secure our next election. This untiring example and leading has encouraged others to join the fight for election security in a way and manner not known before. But there is still push back promoted by office holders who have a sinister and dark agenda to make our Republic weak and even impotent against addressing such diabolical acts. There are threats and various forms of intimidation against elected officials, and others, who continue to expose the dark side of election rigging.

Arizona State Senate Majority Leader, Sonny Borrelli, who I have enjoyed working with the past ten years, has stated on multiple occasions…”Fear and cowardice is contagious, so is courage.” A retired U.S.M.C. Gunny Sargent, Senator Borrelli has strongly shared with elected officials, “the act of failure is failing to act!” Ladies and Gentlemen, our nation is under a direct threat to be collapsed by forces who despise our founding principles and documents. We need to find leaders who are not afraid to lead, who will stand and be counted for doing what is correct not what is expedient.

I conclude with the following statement from one of our Forefathers.

Thomas Jefferson, “When once a Republic is corrupted, there is no possibility of remedying any of the growing evils but by removing the corruption and restoring its lost principles: every other correction is either useless or a new evil.”

WATCH: [S]ELECTION CODE

Was 2020 stolen? It’s deeper than that.

You’ve heard it said “Those who vote decide nothing. Those who count the votes decide everything.”

What about those who code the vote?

What if our leaders aren’t actually being elected by us, but instead… selected?

[S]ELECTION CODE follows the story of Tina Peters the County Clerk in Mesa Colorado, who made a backup of her counties Dominion Voting System server, only to stumble across evidence of manipulation in a recent local city council election…. and also the 2020 general election. Tina’s discovery ignites a chain reaction upending her life. And upending the world.

You will not be able to unsee what you see.

We stand at an apex in human history. Are we handing too much power to technology – and those that program it?

[S]ELECTION CODE is a political thriller uncovering a secret so critical to the survival of America it transcends political parties. It is not about correcting the past. It’s about correcting the future.

Once you see [S]ELECTION CODE you’ll never again let a machine near your vote.

©2023. Lyle J. Rapacki, Ph.D. All rights reserved.

RELATED ARTICLES:

The Fix Is In: California City Plans to Grant Illegal Immigrants the Right to Vote

KNOWiNK Voting Systems Allow Election Staff to Override Election Results

RELATED TWEETS ON X:

The Wrap-Up Smear: Central Pillar of the Democrat/Media Axis

This is the central pillar of the Democrats and the Democrat media axis. It’s what they have done to every effective counter voice to their poison.

‘The Wrap Up Smear”

“You smear somebody with falsehoods and all the rest and then you merchandise it and then you write it and they’ll say, see, it’s reported in the press that this, this, this and this, so they have that validation that the press reported the smear and then it’s called a wrap-up smear. Now I am going to merchandise the press’ report on the smear that we made. It’s a tactic”

AUTHOR

RELATED ARTICLES: 

The Democrat-Antifa Axis

Alex Soros Holds Mystery Meeting with Nancy Pelosi on Capitol Hill

White House Demands More Media Spin against House Impeachment Inquiry

RELATED TWEETS:

EDITORS NOTE: This Geller Report is republished with permission. ©All rights reserved.

KNOWiNK Voting Systems Allow Election Staff to Override Election Results

Without election reform, it’s over.

KNOWiNK’s national voting systems currently serves more than 1,700 election jurisdictions in 36 states and Washington, D.C., accounting for more than 50 percent of registered voters in the U.S.

SHOCKER: KNOWiNK Systems Allow Election Staff to Override Election Results

By: Joe Hoft, September 13, 2023:

BPro/KNOWiNK contracts include a clause that allows the election staff to override the results of an election.

Yesterday, an in-depth history of BPro/KNOWiNK was provided that shows these election systems are uncertified, Internet-connected, cloud-based, foreign-influenced, and used to illegally process election results.

Overnight, a GP reader provided a contract with KNOWiNK in Oregon. The reader pointed out that the contract includes a clause that mandates that the system “shall allow the County Elections Staff to override results, if necessary”.

As The BRICS Countries Stockpile Gold And Americans Scramble to Protect Themselves, A Faith-Based Company Shows Them How

The below snapshot is from page 143 of the Oregon contract with KNOWiNK included on page 143 or 146 paragraph 46.16 The System shall allow the County Elections Staff to override the results, if necessary

The entire contract is here.

AUTHOR

RELATED ARTICLE: KNOWiNK tripling size of headquarters

RELATED TWEETS:

https://x.com/SickofPC/status/1702144683202191412?s=20

https://x.com/AudittheVoteHI/status/1701726293887529170?s=20

EDITORS NOTE: This Geller Report is republished with permission. ©All rights reserved.

ELECTION FRAUD FLORIDA: Hundreds of Thousands of ‘Blank Ballots’ Cast in 2022 Election

A bombshell revelation by election data expert Chris Gleason is stunning Sarasota County’s Supervisor of Elections with mountains of evidence of bipartisan election fraud/malfeasance. The electoral corruption in Florida includes so-called ‘blank ballots’, dirty voter rolls, election computers that have internet capability, early voting and vote by mail. There were 17,000 so-called ‘blank ballots’ in Sarasota County alone!

If the so-called “mantle” for state election integrity is corrupt, then all 50 states in electoral trouble! Florida boasts “safe elections” but nothing could be further from the truth. Graham Ledger introduces us to election data expert Chris Gleason who has got some stunning revelations along with action items for you – your marching orders – in the effort to end the corruption of our precious franchise.

Gleason is speaking to the Sarasota Patriots in October, but Graham Ledger has a preview which explains exactly how nefariously ‘blank ballots’ corrupt your vote:

Report: Hundreds of Thousands of Florida Ballots Were Flagged as “Blank” and Later Adjudicated (Updated)

This article originally appeared on “Immutable Truth – Election Integrity” and parts were published in this report with permission.

Chris Quackenbush in Lee County uncovered an interesting dataset in the ES&S EL45A Election Summary Results. This find was “the spark” that helped expose election fraud and solve the largest legal problem facing American who were contesting election results.

Chris asked me to help her see if what she had identified in Lee County was going on elsewhere in Florida based on my effectiveness in obtaining data and election fraud evidence via public records requests.

What we found throughout the State of Florida (America’s Gold Standard For Elections) was shocking. Hundreds of thousands of ballots cast by Florida voters were adjudicated as 100% BLANK by ES&S Tabulators.

Read more.

BEWARE THE IDES OF SEPTEMBER IN ORLANDO

This is from the Florida Republican Assembly:

Dear FRA Family, Friends, and Colleagues,

It has come to our attention that the RPOF and DeSantis loyalists have quietly embraced and passed an “unconstitutional” loyalty oath in May 2023 without proper debate and or discussion in an attempt to keep President Trump off the ballot.  Moreover, this type of underhanded behavior is called voter interference and will not be tolerated.

On Friday, September 15, 2023, the Republican Party of Florida (RPOF) will be having their Quarterly meeting at the Rosen Center Hotel @ 9840 International Drive, Orlando, FL 32819-8111, from 6pm – 8pm EST, which is open to the public but expect them to call for executive session kicking everyone out.

It is to our understanding, there will be a motion on the floor to REVOKE the “unconstitutional” loyalty oath, which only the county chairs and state executive committeeman & committeewoman are authorized to vote on.

CALL-TO-ACTION:  We need everyone to attend this meeting and demand the RPOF stop engaging in voter interference as well as encourage RPOF members NOT to support their “unconstitutional” loyalty oath.  ALSO, Tweet Ziegler, Power, & Jones and let them know you disapprove of their underhanded behavior:

RPOF Chair Christian Ziegler | @ChrisMZiegler

RPOF Vice Chair Evan Power | Evan’s Substack

RPOF Operative Stafford Jones | @Staffordjones

Here is Graham Ledger’s response to this phony loyalty oath and this thinly veiled attempt to keep Donald Trump off the ballot in Florida:


This article from Citizens for Renewing America is suggested reading from the President of Sarasota Patriots, Tamzin Rosenwasser, concerning defunding the DOJ, et.al.

© 2023 Sarasota Patriots. All rights reserved.

Open Letter to the Democratic National Committee from Robert F. Kennedy Jr.

On September 13th, 2023 presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. wrote an open letter (below) to the Democratic National Committee (DNC) asking it to lead by example and hold the most transparent, equal, accessible, and accountable election that has ever been seen in this country.

Today, September 14th, 2023, the DNC will likely adopt rules that will punish candidates who campaign in Iowa or New Hampshire, the traditionally first to vote states, where President Biden did very badly in 2020, and replace them with South Carolina, where Biden won. The DNC also proposes to appoint more delegates, who will not be selected by the voters, to assure that Biden will be selected regardless of the outcome in the primaries.


Dear Chairman Harrison and Members of the DNC,

I know some of you well. A few of you are among my oldest friends. Others of you I have never met. But all of you are my family, as public servants and fellow Americans.

Families tell one another the truth, as best we are able with grace and love and, above all, with candor. When we take wrong turns, or fail to live up to our best selves, it is our family’s responsibility to hold up a mirror and recall us back to our true purpose and highest self-expression. And so I feel compelled to write to you now, because in my view, limited though it may be, the Democratic Party has gone off track. 

We live in times of division, disease, and turmoil, but they are not the first such times in our nation’s history. Rulers always face the temptation to maintain social control by denying the people their sovereignty and their voice. But from our nation’s founding, through many struggles, we have upheld freedom instead. Our founders shed their blood for it. The civil rights movement fought for it, and the Democratic Party supported that movement under the Kennedy and Johnson administrations, culminating in the Voting Rights Act. Throughout the modern era, the Democratic Party fought back against censorship, upheld civil liberties, resisted corporate influence, and sought to enfranchise as many voters as possible. The Democratic party truly lived up to its name — the party of democracy, the party of the people.

Unfortunately, in recent years our party leaders have succumbed to the siren of control. They have compromised the defining democratic principle of one person, one vote through repeated interference in the primary elections. They have hijacked the party machinery and, in recent years, directed the power of censorship onto their political opponents, raising political victory onto the altar in place of honest democracy.

In school rooms across this country, we teach our children that they have an inalienable right to self-determination, that no matter the town or creed or condition into which they were born, they each have an equal right to vote for the life and society of their choosing. And that someday, they too will have the chance to put forth their own ideas and be elected or passed over, based on the equal votes of diverse peers.

Never, in all the civics lessons in all the schools in America, did the teacher add “except for in states that the President lost in the previous election.” Never, in all the glorious retellings of our fight for universal voting rights, has any teacher added, “and the decision of the people should be overturned if it doesn’t comply with the preference of the ruling elites.” Yet this is exactly the new page in history that the DNC’s pending rules propose, casting out New Hampshire’s votes, limiting ballot access in Iowa, and deploying party operatives to water down the popular vote and ensure a controlled victory.

Equally disheartening is the DNC’s refusal to hold debates. The matter of precedent is spurious, as there has been no serious primary challenge to an incumbent in more than 40 years. (Although Al Gore, a sitting vice-president, did debate challengers in 2000.) Voters deserve — and democracy requires — a competitive process by which to determine nominees. It should be a party’s voters who choose a candidate, not party insiders who anoint one.

The DNC and the Joe Biden campaign have essentially merged into one unit, financially and strategically, despite the promise of neutrality in its charter and bylaws. The DNC is not supposed to favor one candidate over another. It is supposed to oversee a fair, democratic selection process, and then support the candidate that its voters choose.

Much has been said in recent years about our country’s endangered democracy. As someone who has spent decades battling corrupt corporate polluters, I can attest that endangered species are not saved by idle talk. We didn’t bring the Bald Eagle back to the Hudson River Valley by holding a press conference. We did it by cleaning up the pollution that threatened its survival and introducing new chicks to the wild.

Our endangered democracy is no different. Its salvation lies in cleansing our society of the toxic divisions and corporate greed that pollute our political waters. Its salvation lies not in sound bites, but in the careful seeding and nurturing and protection of healthy examples of democracy in action.

To my dear family of fellow public servants and caretakers of democracy, I would like to offer a heartfelt invitation. Please, lead by example and hold the most transparent, equal, accessible, and accountable election that has ever been seen in this country. You have the power to do this. You have the power to restore the faith of the people — faith in the Democratic Party, and faith in democracy itself.

Family to family, I urge you to reflect, privately and in consultation with your higher power, on what legacy you wish to leave. Will it be a fearful, desperate grasping for power at all costs? Or will it be the confident and graceful letting go that marks those who truly believe in democracy? And if, in those reflections, you find yourself seeking sage counsel, I offer the parting words of George Washington — a leader whose voluntary handover of power set a precedent that echoes to this day.

“Parties,” Washington warned, “become potent engines, by which cunning, ambitious, and unprincipled men will be enabled to subvert the power of the people and to usurp for themselves the reins of government, destroying afterwards the very engines which have lifted them to unjust dominion.”

I write to you now in the hope that you hold the engine of democracy as sacred as I do. I pray that, at a time of public discontent, you cede more power to the public, not less, and thereby do right by yourselves, by the American people, and by the ideal of self-determination that inaugurated our great nation.

In service of a more perfect union,

Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.


Learn more at Kennedy24.com.


©2023. Dr. Rich Swier. All rights reserved.

RELATED ARTICLE: There’s A Simple Way RFK Jr. Can Screw Over Biden And Get Revenge On The DNC

TAKE ACTION: Ask your District Attorney to Empanel a Grand Jury to Indict Joseph Robinette Biden Jr. for his High Crimes and Misdemeanors

“Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.” — Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.


Time to take action!

In order restore equal justice under the law it is time to take action by sending the letter below with attachments to your District or State Attorney asking him or her to empanel a Grand Jury to investigate and indict Joseph Robinette Biden Jr. for his high crimes and misdemeanors.

We have witnessed America citizens charged by District Attorneys in Washington, D.C., New York, Georgia and Florida in a coordinated “top down” effort to attack we the people.

Now is the time to take action!

As Malcolm X wrote, If not now then when, if not me then who?

This is a “bottom up” citizen driven effort to restore law and order to our nation.

We the people must do this because it is the duty of every patriot to insure that our U.S. Constitution, federal and state laws are upheld.

We the people must take action now!

We provide these documents so that you, if you wish, can use them as a template to contact your local District or State Attorneys (see list below) and members of Congress, as well.

NOTE: This action is not about impeachment. It’s about empaneling a grand jury, which under the U.S. Constitution and U.S. Codes 18 USC 2381; 18 USC 1091; 18 USC 1111; 18 USC 872; 18 USC 201; 18 USC 2382; 18 USC 241; 18 USC 242; 18 USC 749; 18 USC 2383; 18 USC 2384, any U.S. citizen can accuse any elected official of high crimes and misdemeanors and every District or State Attorney is authorized, and required, to empanel a grand jury, indict and bring to trial any elected official for high crimes and misdemeanors against we the people. The below letter with attachments should be printed out, notarized and then mailed, return receipt requested, to your local District or State Attorney for action. We also recommend you copy your member of Congress to inform him or her that you took action against Biden, Joseph Robinette, Jr. et. al. for the crimes of Treason, Genocide, Murder, Extortion, Bribery, Misprision, Conspiracy Against Rights, Depravation of Rights Under Color of Law, Espionage, Rebellion or Insurrection, and Seditious Conspiracy.


Date

TO: District/State Attorney

RE: Request to empanel a Grand Jury to investigate and indict Joseph Robinette Biden Jr. for his High Crimes and Misdemeanors

Dear District Attorney ____________________,

Before entering your current office, you took the following oath:

I do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will support, protect, and defend the U.S. Constitution and Government of the United States.

This letter is to apprise you of egregious violations against the U.S. Constitution of the United States of America by Joseph Robinette Biden, Jr., his family, and members of his importuning putative administration.

These violations include the crimes of bribery, extortion, murder, collusion, election interference, treason, seditious conspiracy, deprivation of rights under color of law, and more.

Other State Attorneys and District Attorneys have contacted Congressman James Comer (R-KY) to obtain the necessary grounds and evidence to empanel grand juries to prosecute the above and other crimes by said individuals. Congressman Comer may be reached at his Washington, D.C. office at (202) 225-3115.

We have attached documents that provide information on your authority and a sample charge sheet with evidence sufficient to empanel a grand jury to convene and determine if it is reasonable to prosecute each of these criminal acts, including treason.

We ask that you do your duty to restore equal justice under the law and reinstate the American people’s confidence in the justice and judicial systems, by arresting and prosecuting these offenders, in what amounts to an unprecedented coup d’état and pernicious attack upon our Republic, the several States and the American People.

Kindly, advise your intentions.

Sincerely,

-Signed-

Appendix A: Sample Charge Sheet
Appendix B: Attorney Brief – Constitutional Enforcement under The Supreme Law of The Land


Click here to download Appendix A: Charge Sheet and Appendix B: Attorney Brief for your use as deemed appropriate.

©2023. Dr. Rich Swier/DrRichSwier.com. All rights reserved.

LIST OF DISTRICT ATTORNEYS BY STATE

District attorneys in Alabama are assigned by circuit. There are 41 circuits in the state.

 
CIRCUIT COUNTIES DISTRICT ATTORNEY
1 ChoctawClarkeWashington Stephen K. Winters (R)
2 ButlerCrenshawLowndes Charlotte M. Tesmer (D)
3 BarbourBullock Ben C. Reeves, Jr. (D)
4 BibbDallasHalePerryWilcox Michael W. Jackson (D)
5 ChambersMaconRandolphTallapoosa Douglas Jeremy Duerr (R)
6 Tuscaloosa Robert Hays Webb (R)
7 CalhounCleburne Brian A. McVeigh (R)
8 Morgan R. Scott Anderson (R)
9 CherokeeDeKalb Michael E. O’Dell (R)
10 Jefferson Lynneice O. Washington (Bessemer Division) (D)
Danny Carr (Birmingham Division) (D)
11 Lauderdale Christopher E. Connolly (R)
12 CoffeePike James H. Tarbox (R)
13 Mobile Ashley M. Rich (R)
14 Walker William R. Adair (R)
15 Montgomery Daryl D. Bailey (D)
16 Etowah Joseph Willoughby (R)
17 GreeneMarengoSumter Gregory S. Griggers (D)
18 Shelby Matthew Casey (R)
19 AutaugaChiltonElmore Randall V. Houston (R)
20 HenryHouston Patrick B. Jones III (R)
21 Escambia Stephen M. Billy (D)
22 Covington Walter M. Merrell III (R)
23 Madison Robert L. Broussard (R)
24 FayetteLamarPickens Andy Hamlin (R)
25 MarionWinston Scott A. Slatton (R)
26 Russell Kenneth E. Davis (D)
27 Marshall Jennifer Bray (R)
28 Baldwin Robert E. Wilters (R)
29 Talladega Steven D. Giddens (R)
30 St. Clair Lyle Harmon (R)
31 Colbert Hal Hughston (R)
32 Cullman C. Wilson Blaylock (R)
33 DaleGeneva T. Kirke Adams (R)
34 Franklin Jeffrey Wade Barksdale (D)
35 ConecuhMonroe Stephen A. Wadlington (D)
36 Lawrence Errek P. Jett (R)
37 Lee Jessica Ventiere (R)
38 Jackson Jason R. Pierce (R)
39 Limestone Brian C.T. Jones (R)
40 ClayCoosa Joseph D. Ficquette (R)
41 Blount Pamela L. Casey (R)

Source:[1]

Alaska

District attorneys in Alaska are based on the locations of district courts. Some districts share district attorneys, however. Alaskan district attorneys are appointed by the Alaska Attorney General, currently Treg Taylor.
 
DISTRICT DISTRICT ATTORNEY
Anchorage/Dillingham Brittany L. Dunlop
Bethel Christopher Knowles
Fairbanks/Utqiagvik Joseph B. Dallaire
Juneau/Sitka Jessalyn Gillum
Kenai Scot H. Leaders
Ketchikan Kristian B. Pickrell
Kodiak Gustaf W. Olson
Kotzebue/Nome John A. Earthman
Palmer Melissa J. Wininger-Howard

Source:[2]

Arizona

Each county in Arizona has its own prosecutor, called a county attorney.

 
COUNTY ATTORNEY
Apache Michael D. Whiting (D)
Cochise Brian McIntyre (R)
Coconino Bill Ring (D)
Gila Bradley Beauchamp (R)
Graham Scott Bennett (R)
Greenlee Scott Adams (Ind.)
La Paz Tony Rogers (D)
Maricopa Rachel Mitchell (R)
Mohave Matthew Smith (R)
Navajo Brad Carlyon (D)
Pima Laura Conover (D)
Pinal Kent Volkmer (R)
Santa Cruz George Silva (D)
Yavapai Sheila Polk (R)
Yuma Jon Smith (D)

Source:[3]

Arkansas

District attorneys are assigned to Arkansas’s 23 judicial circuits. Arkansas’s prosecutors are known as Prosecuting Attorneys. Their elections are non-partisan.

JUDICIAL CIRCUIT COUNTY(IES) PROSECUTING ATTORNEY
1st CrossLeeMonroePhillipsSt. FrancisWoodruff Todd Murray
2nd ClayCraigheadCrittendenGreeneMississippiPoinsett Scott Ellington
3rd JacksonLawrenceRandolphSharp Henry H. Boyce
4th MadisonWashington Matt Durrett
5th FranklinJohnsonPope Jeff Phillips
6th PerryPulaski Larry Jegley
7th GrantHot Spring Teresa Howell
8th–North HempsteadNevada Christi McQueen
8th–South LafayetteMiller Stephanie Potter-Barrett
9th–East Clark Dan Turner
9th–West HowardLittle RiverPikeSevier Bryan Chesshir
10th AshleyBradleyChicotDeshaDrew Thomas Deen
11th–East Arkansas Tim Blair
11th–West JeffersonLincoln Kyle Hunter
12th Sebastian Daniel Shue
13th CalhounClevelandColumbiaDallasOuachitaUnion Jeff Rogers
14th BaxterBooneMarionNewton David Ethredge
15th ConwayLoganScottYell Tom Tatum II
16th CleburneFultonIndependenceIzardStone Eric Hance
17th PrairieWhite Rebecca Reed McCoy
18th–East Garland Michelle C. Lawrence
18th–West MontgomeryPolk Andy Riner
19th–East Carroll Tony Rogers
19th–West Benton Nathan Smith
20th FaulknerSearcyVan Buren Carol Crews
21st Crawford Robert Presley
22nd Saline Chris Walton
23rd Lonoke Chuck Graham

Source:[4]

California

Each county in California has its own prosecutor, known as a district attorney. Their elections are non-partisan.

 
COUNTY DISTRICT ATTORNEY
Alameda Pamela Price
Alpine Robert Priscaro
Amador Todd Riebe
Butte Michael L. Ramsey
Calaveras Barbara Yook
Colusa Brenden Farrell
Contra Costa Diana Becton
Del Norte Katherine Micks
El Dorado Vernon Pierson
Fresno Lisa Smittcamp
Glenn Dwayne Stewart
Humboldt Stacey Eads
Imperial George Marquez
Inyo Thomas L. Hardy
Kern Cynthia Zimmer
Kings Sarah Hacker
Lake Susan Krones
Lassen S. Melyssah Rios
Los Angeles George Gascón
Madera Sally O. Moreno
Marin Lori Frugoli
Mariposa Walter Wall
Mendocino C. David Eyster
Merced Nicole Silveira
Modoc Cynthia Campbell
Mono David Anderson
Monterey Jeannine M. Pacioni
Napa Allison Haley
Nevada Jesse Wilson
Orange Todd Spitzer
Placer Morgan Gire
Plumas David Hollister
Riverside Michael Hestrin
Sacramento Thien Ho
San Benito Joel Buckingham
San Bernardino Jason Anderson
San Diego Summer Stephan
San Francisco Brooke Jenkins
San Joaquin Ron Freitas
San Luis Obispo Dan Dow
San Mateo Stephen M. Wagstaffe
Santa Barbara John Savrnoch
Santa Clara Jeffrey Rosen
Santa Cruz Jeff Rosell
Shasta Stephanie A. Bridgett
Sierra Sandra Groven
Siskiyou James Kirk Andrus
Solano Krishna A. Abrams
Sonoma Carla Rodriguez
Stanislaus Jeff Laugero
Sutter Jennifer Dupre
Tehama Matthew Rogers
Trinity David Brady
Tulare Tim Ward
Tuolumne Cassandra Jenecke
Ventura Erik Nasarenko
Yolo Jeffrey Reisig
Yuba Clint Curry

Source:[5]

Colorado

District attorneys are assigned to each of Colorado’s 22 judicial districts.

 
DISTRICT COUNTIES DISTRICT ATTORNEY
1st GilpinJefferson Alexis King (D)
2nd Denver Beth McCann (D)
3rd HuerfanoLas Animas Henry Solano (D)
4th El PasoTeller Michael Allen (R)
5th Clear CreekEagleLakeSummit Heidi McCollum (D)
6th ArchuletaLa PlataSan Juan Christian Champagne (D)
7th DeltaGunnisonHinsdaleMontroseOuraySan Miguel Seth D. Ryan (R)
8th JacksonLarimer Gordon McLaughlin (D)
9th GarfieldPitkinRio Blanco Jeff Cheney (R)
10th Pueblo Jeff Chostner (D)
11th ChaffeeCusterFremontPark Linda Stanley (R)
12th AlamosaConejosCostillaMineralRio GrandeSaguache Anne Kelly (R)
13th Kit CarsonLoganMorganPhillipsSedgwickWashingtonYuma Travis Sides (R)
14th GrandMoffatRoutt Matthew Karzen (Ind.)
15th BacaCheyenneKiowaProwers Joshua Vogel (R)
16th BentCrowleyOtero William Culver (R)
17th AdamsBroomfield Brian Mason (D)
18th ArapahoeDouglasElbertLincoln John Kellner (R)
19th Weld Michael J. Rourke (R)
20th Boulder Michael Dougherty (D)
21st Mesa Daniel P. Rubenstein (R)
22nd DoloresMontezuma Matthew G. Margeson (R)

Source:[6]

Connecticut

Prosecutors in Connecticut are known as state’s attorneys. Each judicial district is assigned its own state’s attorney. They are appointed by a state commission.

 
DISTRICT STATE’S ATTORNEY
Ansonia/Milford Margaret E. Kelley
Danbury Stephen J. Sedensky III
Fairfield Joseph T. Corradino
Hartford Gail P. Hardy
Litchfield Dawn Gallo
Middlesex Michael A. Gailor
New Britain Brian W. Preleski
New Haven Patrick J. Griffin
New London Michael L. Regan
Stamford/Norwalk Paul J. Ferenck
Tolland Matthew C. Gedansky
Waterbury Maureen Platt
Windham Anne F. Mahoney

Source:[7]

Delaware

All prosecutions in the state of Delaware are handled by the Attorney General of Delaware. The current Attorney General is Kathy Jennings (D).[8]

Florida

Florida prosecutors are known as state attorneys and are assigned by circuit.

 
CIRCUIT COUNTIES STATE ATTORNEY
1st EscambiaOkaloosaSanta RosaWalton Ginger Bowden Madden (R)
2nd FranklinGadsdenJeffersonLeonLibertyWakulla Jack Campbell (D)
3rd ColumbiaDixieHamiltonLafayetteMadisonSuwanneeTaylor John Durrett (R)
4th ClayDuvalNassau Melissa W. Nelson (R)
5th CitrusHernandoLakeMarionSumter William M. Gladson (R)
6th PascoPinellas Bruce L. Bartlett (R)
7th FlaglerPutnamSt. JohnsVolusia R.J. Larizza (R)
8th AlachuaBakerBradfordGilchristLevyUnion Brian Kramer (R)
9th OrangeOsceola Monique Worrell (D)
10th HardeeHighlandsPolk Brian Haas (R)
11th Miami-Dade Katherine Fernandez-Rundle (D)
12th DeSotoManateeSarasota Ed Brodsky (R)
13th Hillsborough Susan Lopez
14th BayCalhounGulfHolmesJacksonWashington Larry Basford (R)
15th Palm Beach Dave Aronberg (D)
16th Monroe Dennis W. Ward (R)
17th Broward Harold F. Pryor, Jr. (D)
18th BrevardSeminole Phil Archer (R)
19th Indian RiverMartinOkeechobeeSt. Lucie Thomas Bakkedahl (R)
20th CharlotteCollierGladesHendryLee Amira D. Fox (R)

Source:[9]

Georgia

District attorneys in Georgia are assigned to its 50 circuits.

 
CIRCUIT COUNTIES DISTRICT ATTORNEY
Alapaha AtkinsonBerrienClinchCookLanier Chase Studstill (R)
Alcovy NewtonWalton Randy McGinley (R)
Appalachian FanninGilmerPickens B. Alison Sosebee (R)
Atlanta Fulton Fani Willis (D)
Atlantic BryanEvansLibertyLongMcIntoshTattnall Billy Joe Nelson Jr. (R)
Augusta BurkeRichmond Jared Williams (D)
Bell-Forsyth Forsyth Penny Penn (R)
Blue Ridge Cherokee Susan K. Treadway
Brunswick ApplingCamdenGlynnJeff DavisWayne Keith Higgins (I)
Chattahoochee ChattahoocheeHarrisMarionMuscogeeTalbotTaylor Stacey Jackson (R)
Cherokee BartowGordon Samir J. Patel (R)
Clayton Tasha M. Mosley (D)
Cobb Flynn D. Broady, Jr. (D)
Columbia Bobby Christine (R)
Conasauga MurrayWhitfield Bert Poston (R)
Cordele Ben HillCrispDoolyWilcox Brad Rigby (R)
Coweta CarrollCowetaHeardMeriwetherTroup John H. Cranford (R)
Dougherty Gregory W. Edwards (D)
Douglas Dalia Racine (D)
Dublin JohnsonLaurensTreutlenTwiggs Craig Fraser (R)
Eastern Chatham Shalena Cook-Jones (D)
Enotah LumpkinTownsUnionWhite Jeff Langley (R)
Flint Henry Darius Pattilo (D)
Griffin FayettePikeSpaldingUpson Marie Greene Broder (R)
Gwinnett Patsy Austin-Gatson (D)
Houston William Kendall (R)
Lookout Mountain CatoosaChattoogaDadeWalker Chris A. Arnt (R)
Macon BibbCrawfordPeach Anita Reynolds Howard (D)
Middle CandlerEmanuelJeffersonToombsWashington Tripp Fitzner (R)
Mountain HabershamRabunStephens George R. Christian (R)
Northeastern DawsonHall Lee Darragh (R)
Northern ElbertFranklinHartMadisonOglethorpe D. Parks White (R)
Ocmulgee BaldwinGreeneHancockJasperJonesMorganPutnamWilkinson T. Wright Barksdale (R)
Oconee BleckleyDodgeMontgomeryPulaskiTelfairWheeler Timothy Vaughn (D)
Ogeechee BullochEffinghamJenkinsScreven Daphne Jarriel Totten (R)
Pataula ClayEarlyMillerQuitmanRandolphSeminoleTerrell Ronald McNease, Jr. (D)
Paulding Matthew Rollins (R)
Piedmont BanksBarrowJackson Brad Smith (R)
Rockdale Alisha Johnson (D)
Rome Floyd Leigh Patterson (R)
South Georgia BakerCalhounDecaturGradyMitchell Joe Mulholland (D)
Southern BrooksColquittEcholsLowndesThomas Bradfield Shealy (R)
Southwestern LeeMaconSchleyStewartSumterWebster Lewis Lamb (R)
Stone Mountain DeKalb Sherry Boston (D)
Tallapoosa HaralsonPolk Jack Browning (R)
Tifton IrwinTiftTurnerWorth Bryce Johnson (R)
Toombs GlascockLincolnMcDuffieTaliaferroWarrenWilkes William Doupe (D)
Towaliga ButtsLamarMonroe Jonathan Adams (R)
Waycross BaconBrantleyCharltonCoffeePierceWare George Barnhill (R)
Western ClarkeOconee Deborah Gonzalez (D)

Source:[10]

Hawaii

Hawaii’s prosecuting attorneys are assigned by county. Those in Hawaii, Honolulu, and Kauai Counties are elected on a non-partisan basis, while Maui’s is appointed.

 
COUNTY PROSECUTING ATTORNEY
Hawaii Kelden B. A. Waltjen[11]
Honolulu Steven S. Alm[12]
Kauai Rebecca Like[13]
Maui Andrew Martin[14]

Idaho

Prosecuting attorneys in Idaho are assigned by county.

 
COUNTY PROSECUTING ATTORNEY
Ada Jan Bennetts (R)
Adams Chris Boyd (R)
Bannock Stephen F. Herzog (D)
Bear Lake Joseph Hayes (R)
Benewah Brian Thie (R)
Bingham Paul Rogers (R)
Blaine Matthew Fredback (D)
Boise Adam Strong (R)
Bonner Louis Marshall (R)
Bonneville Daniel Clark (R)
Boundary Andrakay J. Pluid (R)
Butte Steve Stephens (R)
Camas Matthew Pember
Canyon Bryan Taylor (R)
Caribou S. Doug Wood (R)
Cassia McCord Larsen (R)
Clark Craig Simpson
Clearwater Clayne Tyler (R)
Custer Justin Oleson (R)
Elmore Daniel Page (R)
Franklin Vic Pearson (R)
Fremont Lindsey A. Blake (R)
Gem Erick Thomson (R)
Gooding Trevor Misseldine (R)
Idaho Kirk MacGregor (R)
Jefferson Mark Taylor (R)
Jerome Michael J. Seib (R)
Kootenai Barry McHugh (R)
Latah Bill Thompson (D)
Lemhi Bruce Withers (R)
Lewis Zach Pall (Ind.)
Lincoln Richard Roats[15]
Madison Rob H. Wood (R)
Minidoka Lance Stevenson (R)
Nez Perce Justin Coleman (Ind.)
Oneida Cody Brower (R)
Owyhee Jeffrey Phillips (R)
Payette Mike Duke (R)
Power Anson Call (R)
Shoshone Benjamin J. Allen (R)
Teton Bailey Smith (R)
Twin Falls Grant Loebs (R)
Valley Brian Naugle (R)
Washington Delton Walker (R)

Source:[16]

Illinois

Illinois prosecutors are known as state’s attorneys. They are assigned by county.

COUNTY STATE’S ATTORNEY
Adams Gary Farha (R)
Alexander Erik Zachary Gowin (D)
Bond Dora Mann (D)
Boone Tricia L. Smith (R)
Brown Michael Hill (R)
Bureau Thomas Briddick
Calhoun Richard Ringhausen (D)
Carroll Scott Brinkmeier (R)
Cass Craig Miller (R)
Champaign Julia Rietz (D)
Christian John H. McWard (R)
Clark Kyle Hutson (R)
Clay Andrew Koester (R)
Clinton Doug Gruenke (R)
Coles Jesse Danley (R)
Cook Kimberly M. Foxx (D)
Crawford Cole Shaner (R)
Cumberland Bryan Robbins (R)
DeKalb Rick Amato (R)
DeWitt Dan Markwell (R)
Douglas Kate Watson (R)
DuPage Robert Berlin (R)
Edgar Mark R. Isaf (R)
Edwards Eric St. Ledger (R)
Effingham Bryan Kibler (R)
Fayette Joshua Morrison (R)
Ford Andrew L. Killian (R)
Franklin Abigail D. Dinn (R)
Fulton Justin Jochums (D)
Gallatin Douglas E. Dyhrkopp (D)
Greene Caleb Briscoe (R)
Grundy Jason Helland (R)
Hamilton Justin E. Hood (D)
Hancock Rachel Bloom Mast (R)
Hardin Todd Bittle (R)
Henderson Colby G. Hathaway (R)
Henry Catherine Runty (R)
Iroquois James Devine (R)
Jackson Joe Cervantez (R)
Jasper Chad Miller (R)
Jefferson Sean Featherstun (R)
Jersey Benjamin L. Goetten (D)
Jo Daviess Christopher Allendorf (R)
Johnson Tambra Cain Sharp (R)
Kane Jamie Mosser (D)
Kankakee Jim Rowe (D)
Kendall Eric Weis (R)
Knox Jeremy Karlin (D)
Lake Eric Rinehart (D)
LaSalle Joseph Navarro (D)
Lawrence Michael M. Strange (R)
Lee Charles Boonstra (R)
Livingston Randy Yedniak (R)
Logan Bradley Hauge (R)
Macon Scott A. Rueter (R)
Macoupin Jordan Garrison (D)
Madison Tom Haine (R)
Marion Tim Hudspeth (R)
Marshall Patrick Murphy (R)
Mason Zachary A. Bryant (D)
Massac Josh Stratemeyer (R)
McDonough Matt Kwacala (R)
McHenry Patrick Kenneally (R)
McLean Don Knapp (R)
Menard Gabe Grosboll (R)
Mercer Grace Simpson (R)
Monroe Lucas Liefer (R)
Montgomery Andrew Affrunti (R)
Morgan Gray Herndon Noll (R)
Moultrie Tracy L. Weaver (R)
Ogle Eric Morrow (R)
Peoria Jodi Hoos (D)
Perry David Searby (R)
Piatt Sarah Perry (R)
Pike Zachary P. Boren (R)
Pope Jason Olson (R)
Pulaski Lisa Casper (R)
Putnam Christina Mennie (R)
Randolph Jeremy Walker (D)
Richland John A. Clark (R)
Rock Island Dora Villarreal-Nieman (D)
Saline Molly Wilson Kasiar (R)
Sangamon Dan Wright (R)
Schuyler Emily Sullivan (D)
Scott Richard J. Crews (R)
Shelby Nichole Kroncke (R)
St. Clair James Gomric (D)
Stark Caroline Borden Campion (R)
Stephenson Carl Larson (R)
Tazewell Stewart J. Umholtz (R)
Union Tyler Tripp (R)
Vermilion Jacqueline Lacy (R)
Wabash Kelly Storckman (R)
Warren Thomas Siegel (R)
Washington Daniel Jankowski (R)
Wayne Kevin Kakac (R)
White Denton Aud (R)
Whiteside Terry Costello (D)
Will James Glasgow (D)
Williamson Ted Hampson (R)
Winnebago J. Hanley (R)
Woodford Gregory Minger (R)

Source:[17]

Indiana

Indiana’s prosecutors, known as prosecuting attorneys, are elected to the state’s 91 judicial circuits. Each circuit, with one exception, covers a single county.

COUNTY/COUNTIES CIRCUIT PROSECUTING ATTORNEY
Adams 26 Jeremy W. Brown (R)
Allen 38 Karen E. Richards (R)
Bartholomew 9 William M. Nash (R)
Benton 76 John C. Wright (R)
Blackford 71 Kevin N. Basey (R)
Boone 20 Kent T. Eastwood (R)
Brown 88 Theodore F. Adams (R)
Carroll 74 Nicholas C. McLeland (R)
Cass 29 Noah Schafer (R)
Clark 4 Jeremy T. Mull (R)
Clay 13 Emily Clarke (R)
Clinton 45 Anthony J. Sommer (R)
Crawford 77 Cheryl J. Hillenburg (D)
Daviess 49 Daniel S. Murrie (R)
Dearborn & Ohio 7 Lynn M. Deddens (R)
Decatur 69 Nathan W. Harter IV (R)
DeKalb 75 ClaraMary Winebrenner (R)
Delaware 46 Eric M. Hoffman (D)
Dubois 57 Anthony D. Quinn (D)
Elkhart 34 Vicki E. Becker (R)
Fayette 73 Bette J. Jones (R)
Floyd 52 Keith A. Henderson (R)
Fountain 61 Daniel L. Askren (R)
Franklin 37 Christopher Huerkamp (R)
Fulton 41 Michael T. Marrs (R)
Gibson 66 Michael R. Cochren (R)
Grant 48 Rodney L. Faulk (R)
Greene 63 Jarrod D. Holtsclaw (R)
Hamilton 24 D. Lee Buckingham II (R)
Hancock 18 Brent E. Eaton (R)
Harrison 3 J. Otto Schalk (R)
Hendricks 55 Loren P. Delp (R)
Henry 53 Joseph J. Bergacs (R)
Howard 62 Mark A. McCann (R)
Huntington 56 Amy Christine Richison (R)
Jackson 40 Jeffrey A. Chalfant (R)
Jasper 30 Jacob Taulman (R)
Jay 58 Wesley A. Schemenaur (D)
Jefferson 5 David R. Sutter (D)
Jennings 86 Brian J. Belding (R)
Johnson 8 Joseph Villanueva (R)
Knox 12 J. Dirk Carnahan (R)
Kosciusko 54 Daniel H. Hampton (R)
LaGrange 35 Gregory J. Kenner (R)
Lake 31 Bernard A. Crater (D)
LaPorte 32 John Lake (D)
Lawrence 81 Samuel C. Arp II (R)
Madison 50 Rodney J. Cummings (R)
Marion 19 Ryan Mears (D)
Marshall 72 E. Nelson Chipman, Jr. (R)
Martin 90 Aureola S. Wright (R)
Miami 51 Jeff Sinkovics (R)
Monroe 10 Erika Oliphant (D)
Montgomery 22 Joseph R. Buser (R)
Morgan 15 Steven P. Sonnega (R)
Newton 79 Jeffrey D. Drinski (R)
Noble 33 James B. Mowrey (R)
Orange 87 Holly N. Hudelson (R)
Owen 78 Donald R. VanDerMoere II (R)
Parke 68 Steve A. Cvengros (R)
Perry 70 Jason R. Hoch (D)
Pike 83 Darrin E. McDonald (R)
Porter 67 Gary S. Gerrmann (D)
Posey 11 Thomas Clowers (R)
Pulaski 59 Kelly M. Gaumer (R)
Putnam 64 Timothy L. Bookwalter (R)
Randolph 25 David M. Daly (R)
Ripley 80 Richard J. Hertel (R)
Rush 65 Philip J. Caviness (R)
St. Joseph 60 Kenneth P. Cotter (D)
Scott 6 Chris A. Owens (D)
Shelby 16 James B. “Brad” Landwerlen (R)
Spencer 84 Victor Ippoliti (R)
Starke 44 Leslie A. Baker (R)
Steuben 85 Jeremy T. Musser (R)
Sullivan 14 Ann Smith Mischler (R)
Switzerland 91 Monica L. Hensley (D)
Tippecanoe 23 Patrick K. Harrington (R)
Tipton 36 Jay D. Rich (R)
Union 89 Andrew “A.J.” Bryson (D)
Vanderburgh 1 Nicholas G. Herrmann (R)
Vermillion 47 Bruce D. Aukerman (D)
Vigo 43 Terry R. Modesitt (R)
Wabash 27 William C. Hartley, Jr. (R)
Warren 21 John A. Larson (R)
Warrick 2 Michael J. Perry (R)
Washington 42 Dustin L. Houchin (R)
Wayne 17 Michael W. Shipman (R)
Wells 28 Andrew J. Carnall (D)
White 39 Robert J. Guy (R)
Whitley 82 Daniel J. Sigler, Jr. (R)

Source:[18]

Iowa

Iowa’s prosecutors are known as county attorneys. Two county attorneys serve two counties, while the rest serve one.

COUNTY COUNTY ATTORNEY
Adair Melissa Larson (D)
Adams Andrew Knuth (R)
Allamakee Anthony Gericke (R)
Appanoose Susan Scieszinski (R)
Audubon Sarah A. Jennings (R)
Benton Ray Lough (R)
Black Hawk Brian Williams (D)
Boone Matthew John Speers (R)
Bremer Darius P. R. Robinson (R)
Buchanan Shawn M. Harden (D)
Buena Vista Paul Allen (R)
Butler Greg Lievens (R)
Calhoun Tina Meth-Farrington (R)
Carroll John C. Werden (R)
Cass Vanessa Strazdas (R)
Cedar Jeff Renander (R)
Cerro Gordo Carlyle D. Dalen (D)
Cherokee Ryan Kolpin (R)
Chickasaw David C. Launder (R)
Clarke Adam Ramsey (R)
Clay Kristi Busse (R)
Clayton Zach Herrmann (R)
Clinton Mike Wolf (R)
Crawford Colin Johnson (D)
Dallas Chuck Sinnard (R)
Davis Rick Lynch (D)
Decatur Lisa Hynden Jeanes (Ind.)
Delaware John Burneau (R)
Des Moines Lisa Schaefer (D)
Dickinson Amy E. Zenor (R)
Dubuque Scott Nelson (R)
Emmet Melanie Summers Bauer (R)
Fayette W. Wayne Saur (R)
Floyd Richard Ginbey (R)
Franklin Brent Symens (R)
FremontMills Naeda Elliott (R)
Greene Thomas Laehn (L)
Grundy Erika L. Allen (R)
Guthrie Brenna Bird (R)
Hamilton Patrick Chambers (D)
Hancock Blake H. Norman (R)
Hardin Darrell Meyer (R)
Harrison Jennifer Mumm (D)
Henry Darin Stater (R)
Howard Kevin Schoeberl (R)
Humboldt Jon Beaty (R)
Ida Meghann Cosgrove Whitmer (D)
Iowa Tim McMeen (R)
Jackson Sara Davenport (D)
Jasper Scott Nicholson (D)
Jefferson Chauncey Moulding (D)
Johnson Janet M. Lyness (D)
Jones Kristoffer Lyons (Ind.)
Keokuk Amber Thompson (R)
Kossuth Todd Holmes (D)
Lee Ross Braden (D)
Linn Jerry Vander Sanden (D)
Louisa Adam D. Parsons (R)
Lucas Brandon Shelton (R)
Lyon Shayne Mayer (R)
Madison Matthew Schultz (R)
Mahaska Andrew Ritland (R)
Marion Ed Bull (R)
Marshall Jennifer Miller (R)
Mitchell Mark L. Walk (R)
Monona Ian McConeghy (R)
Monroe John A. Pabst (R)
Montgomery Drew B. Swanson (R)
Muscatine Alan Ostergren (R)
O’Brien Rachel Becker (R)
Osceola Nolan McGowan (R)
Page Carl Sonksen (R)
Palo Alto Peter Hart (D)
Plymouth Darin J. Raymond (R)
Pocahontas Daniel Feistner (R)
Polk Kimberly Graham (D)
Pottawattamie Matthew Wilber (R)
Poweshiek Bart Klaver (R)
RinggoldTaylor Clinton L. Spurrier (R)
Sac Ben Smith (R)
Scott Kelly Cunningham Haan (R)
Shelby Marcus Gross, Jr. (D)
Sioux Thomas Kunstle (R)
Story Tim Meals (D)
Tama Brent D. Heeren (R)
Union Timothy R. Kenyon (R)
Van Buren H. Craig Miller (R)
Wapello Ruben Neff (R)
Warren Doug Eichholz (R)
Washington John Gish (R)
Wayne Alan M. Wilson (R)
Webster Darren Driscoll (D)
Winnebago Kelsey Beenken (R)
Winneshiek Andrew Vandermaaten (R)
Woodbury James Loomis (R)
Worth Jeff Greve (R)
Wright Eric Simonson (R)

Source:[19]

Kansas

Kansas prosecutors are elected by county, although some prosecutors serve multiple counties. Most are called county attorneys, but six are designated as district attorneys.

COUNTY DISTRICT ATTORNEY
Allen Jerry B. Hathaway (R)
AndersonFranklin Brandon Jones (R)
Atchison Sherri Becker (R)
Barber Gaten Wood (R)
Barton M. Levi Morris (R)
Bourbon Jacqie Spradling (R)
Brown Kevin M. Hill (R)
Butler Darrin C. Devinney (R)
Chase William Halvorsen (R)
Chautauqua Ruth Ritthaler (R)
Cherokee Jacob Conard (R)
Cheyenne Leslie Beims
ClarkComanche Allison Kuhns (R)
Clay Richard E. James (R)
Cloud Robert A. Walsh (D)
Coffey Wade Bowie (R)
Cowley Larry Schwartz (R)
Crawford Michael Gayoso, Jr. (R)
Decatur Steven W. Hirsch (R)
Dickinson Andrea Purvis (R)
Doniphan Charles Baskins (R)
Douglas Charles Branson (D)
Edwards Mark Frame (D)
ElkGreenwood Joe Lee (R)
Ellis Tom Drees (D)
Ellsworth Paul J. Kasper (R)
Finney Susan Richmeier (R)
Ford Kevin Salzman (R)
Geary Krista Blaisdell (R)
Gove Mark F. Schmiedler (R)
Graham Jill Elliott (R)
Grant Jessica Akers (R)
Gray Curtis E. Campbell (D)
Greeley Charles F. Moser (D)
Hamilton Rob Gale (D)
Harper Richard Raleigh (R)
Harvey David E. Yoder (D)
Haskell Lynn Koehn (R)
Hodgeman Mark Cowell (R)
Jackson Shawna Miller (R)
Jefferson Josh Ney (R)
Jewell Darrell E. Miller (D)
Johnson Stephen M. Howe (R)
Kearny Kenny Estes (D)
Kingman Matthew W. Ricke (R)
Kiowa Chay Howard (R)
Labette Stephen Jones (R)
Lane Dale E. Pike (R)
Leavenworth Todd Thompson (R)
Lincoln Jennifer O’Hare (R)
Linn Burton Harding (R)
Logan Craig Ulrich (R)
Lyon James Marcus Goodman (R)
Marion Joel Ensey
Marshall Meghan Votacek (R)
McPherson Gregory T. Benefiel (R)
Meade Clay Kuhns (R)
Miami Elizabeth Sweeney-Reeder (R)
Mitchell Mark Noah (Ind.)
Montgomery Larry Markle (R)
Morris Laura E. Allen (R)
Morton Adam Carey (R)
Nemaha Brad M. Lippert (R)
Neosho Linus Thuston (R)
Ness Kevin B. Salzman (R)
NortonPhillips Melissa Schoen (R)
Osage Jack Hobbs
Osborne Paul Gregory (R)
Ottawa Richard Buck (R)
Pawnee Douglas W. McNett (R)
Pottawatomie Sherri Schuck (R)
Pratt Tracey T. Beverlin (R)
Rawlins Charles A. Peckham (R)
Reno Thomas Stanton (R)
Republic Justin L. Ferrell (R)
Rice Remington S. Dalke (R)
Riley Barry Wilkerson (R)
Rooks Danielle N. Muir (R)
Rush Tony Rues (D)
Russell Daniel W. Krug (R)
Saline Ellen Mitchell (R)
Scott Rebecca J. Faurot (R)
Sedgwick Marc Bennett (R)
Seward Russell Hasenbank (R)
Shawnee Michael F. Kagay (R)
Sheridan Harry Joe Pratt (R)
ShermanWallace Charles Moser (R)
Smith Tabitha Owen (R)
Stafford Michael Robinson (R)
Stanton David C. Black (R)
Stevens Paul Kitzke (R)
Sumner Kerwin Spencer (R)
Thomas Rachel Lamm (R)
Trego Chris Lyon (R)
Wabaunsee Timothy Alan Liesmann (R)
Washington Elizabeth Baskerville Hiltgen (R)
Wichita Laura Lewis (R)
Wilson Kenley Thompson (R)
Woodson Zelda Schlotterbeck (R)
Wyandotte Mark Dupree (D)

Source:[20]

Kentucky

Kentucky prosecutors, known as Commonwealth’s Attorneys, are assigned by circuit.

CIRCUIT COUNTIES COMMONWEALTH’S ATTORNEY
First Circuit BallardCarlisleFultonHickman Mike Stacy (D)
Second Circuit McCracken Daniel Boaz (D)
Third Circuit Christian Richard Boling (R)
Fourth Circuit Hopkins Kathryn Senter (D)
Fifth Circuit CrittendenUnionWebster Zac Greenwell (D)
Sixth Circuit Daviess Bruce Kuegel (D)
Seventh Circuit LoganTodd Neil Kerr (R)
Eighth Circuit Warren Chris Cohron (D)
Ninth Circuit Hardin Shane Young (D)
Tenth Circuit HartLaRueNelson Terry Geoghegan (D)
Eleventh Circuit GreenMarionTaylorWashington Shelly Miller (D)
Twelfth Circuit HenryOldhamTrimble Courtney Baxter (R)
Thirteenth Circuit GarrardJessamine Clinton “Andy” Sims (R)
Fourteenth Circuit BourbonScottWoodford Sharon Muse (R)
Fifteenth Circuit CarrollGrantOwen Leigh T. Roberts (R)
Sixteenth Circuit Kenton Rob Sanders (R)
Seventeenth Circuit Campbell Michelle Snodgrass (D)
Eighteenth Circuit HarrisonNicholasPendletonRobertson E. Douglas Miller (D)
Nineteenth Circuit BrackenFlemingMason Kelly Clarke (D)
Twentieth Circuit GreenupLewis Mel Leonhart (D)
Twenty-first Circuit BathMenifeeMontgomeryRowan Ronnie Goldy (D)
Twenty-second Circuit Fayette Lou Anna Red Corn (D)
Twenty-third Circuit EstillLeeOwsley Heather Combs (R)
Twenty-fourth Circuit JohnsonLawrenceMartin Floyd “Tony” Skeans (R)
Twenty-fifth Circuit ClarkMadison David Smith (D)
Twenty-sixth Circuit Harlan Parker Boggs (D)
Twenty-seventh Circuit KnoxLaurel Jackie Steele (R)
Twenty-eighth Circuit LincolnPulaskiRockcastle David Louis Dalton (R)
Twenty-ninth Circuit AdairCasey Brian Wright (R)
Thirtieth Circuit Jefferson Tom Wine (D)
Thirty-first Circuit Floyd Brent Turner (D)
Thirty-second Circuit Boyd Rhonda Copley (R)
Thirty-third Circuit Perry Scott Blair (D)
Thirty-fourth Circuit McCrearyWhitley Ronnie Bowling (R)
Thirty-fifth Circuit Pike Billy Slone (D)
Thirty-sixth Circuit KnottMagoffin Todd Martin (D)
Thirty-seventh Circuit CarterElliottMorgan Brandon Ison (D)
Thirty-eighth Circuit ButlerEdmonsonHancockOhio Blake Chambers (R)
Thirty-ninth Circuit BreathittPowellWolfe Miranda S. King (D)
Fortieth Circuit ClintonCumberlandMonroe Jesse Stockton (R)
Forty-first Circuit ClayJacksonLeslie Gary Gregory (R)
Forty-second Circuit CallowayMarshall Dennis Foust (Ind.)
Forty-third Circuit BarrenMetcalfe John Gardner (D)
Forty-fourth Circuit Bell Karen Blondell (R)
Forty-fifth Circuit McLeanMuhlenberg Clayton Douglas Adams (D)
Forty-sixth Circuit BreckinridgeGraysonMeade Rick Allen Hardin (R)
Forty-seventh Circuit Letcher Edison Banks (R)
Forty-eighth Circuit Franklin Larry Cleveland (D)
Forty-ninth Circuit AllenSimpson Corey Morgan (R)
Fiftieth Circuit BoyleMercer Richie Bottoms (D)
Fifty-first Circuit Henderson Bill Markwell (D)
Fifty-second Circuit Graves Richie Kemp (D)
Fifty-third Circuit AndersonShelbySpencer Laura Witt (R)
Fifty-fourth Circuit BooneGallatin Louis Kelly (R)
Fifty-fifth Circuit Bullitt Bailey Taylor (R)
Fifty-sixth Circuit CaldwellLivingstonLyonTrigg Carrie Ovey-Wiggins (D)
Fifty-seventh Circuit RussellWayne Matthew Leveridge (R)

Source:[21]

Louisiana

Louisiana prosecutors are elected by district.

DISTRICT PARISHES DISTRICT ATTORNEY
1st Caddo James E. Stewart, Sr. (D)
2nd BienvilleClaiborneJackson Danny Newell (D)
3rd LincolnUnion John F. Belton (Ind.)
4th MorehouseOuachita Robert S. Tew (Ind.)
5th FranklinRichlandWest Carroll Penny Douciere (R)
6th East CarrollMadisonTensas James E. Paxton (D)
7th CatahoulaConcordia Bradley R. Burget (D)
8th Winn R. Chris Nevils (Ind.)
9th Rapides Philip Terrell, Jr. (Ind.)
10th Natchitoches Billy Joe Harrington (Ind.)
11th Sabine Don M. Burkett (R)
12th Avoyelles Charles A. Riddle III (D)
13th Evangeline Trent Brignac (R)
14th Calcasieu Stephen Dwight (R)
15th AcadiaLafayetteVermilion Donald Landry (R)
16th IberiaSt. MartinSt. Mary M. Bofill Duhé (R)
17th Lafourche Kristine M. Russell (R)
18th IbervillePointe CoupeeWest Baton Rouge Richard J. Ward (D)
19th East Baton Rouge Hillar C. Moore II (D)
20th West FelicianaEast Feliciana Samuel C. D’Aquilla (Ind.)
21st LivingstonSt. HelenaTangipahoa Scott M. Perrilloux (R)
22nd St. TammanyWashington Warren Montgomery (R)
23rd AscensionAssumptionSt. James Ricky Babin (R)
24th Jefferson Paul D. Connick, Jr. (D)
25th Plaquemines Charles J. Ballay (R)
26th BossierWebster John “Schuyler” Marvin (R)
27th St. Landry Chad P. Pitre (R)
28th LaSalle J. Reed Walters (R)
29th St. Charles Joel T. Chaisson II (D)
30th Vernon Terry Lambright (Ind.)
31st Jefferson Davis Lauren Heinen (R)
32nd Terrebonne Joseph L. Waitz, Jr. (R)
33rd Allen Joseph Green, Jr. (Ind.)
34th St. Bernard Perry M. Nicosia (D)
35th Grant James “Jay” P. Lemoine (R)
36th Beauregard James Lestage (R)
37th Caldwell Brian Frazier (Ind.)
38th Cameron Thomas Barrett, III (R)
39th Red River Julie C. Jones (D)
40th St. John the Baptist Bridget A. Dinvaut (D)
Orleans Leon A. Cannizzaro, Jr. (D)
42nd DeSoto Charles B. Adams (R)

Source:[22]

Maine

Maine’s prosecutors are elected by district.

DISTRICT COUNTIES DISTRICT ATTORNEY
1st York Kathryn M. Slattery (D)
2nd Cumberland Jacqueline A. Sartoris (D)
3rd AndroscogginFranklinOxford Neil E. McLean Jr. (R)
4th KennebecSomerset Maeghan Maloney (D)
5th PenobscotPiscataquis R. Christopher Almy (D)
6th KnoxLincolnSagadahocWaldo Natasha C. Irving (D)
7th HancockWashington Robert C. Granger (I)
8th Aroostook Todd R. Collins (D)

Source:[23]

Maryland

Maryland’s prosecutors are known as state’s attorneys and are assigned by county.

COUNTY/INDEPENDENT CITY STATE’S ATTORNEY
Allegany James Elliott (R)
Anne Arundel Anne Colt Leitness (D)
Baltimore City Ivan Bates (D)
Baltimore County Scott Shellenberger (D)
Calvert Robert Harvey (R)
Caroline Joe Riley (R)
Carroll Haven Shoemaker (R)
Cecil James Dellmyer (R)
Charles Anthony Covington (D)
Dorchester Amanda Rae Leonard (R)
Frederick Charles Smith (R)
Garrett Lisa Thayer-Welch (R)
Harford Albert Peisinger (R)
Howard Rich Gibson (D)
Kent Brian DiGregory (D)
Montgomery John McCarthy (D)
Prince George’s Aisha Braveboy (D)
Queen Anne’s Lance Richardson (R)
Somerset Wess Garner (R)
St. Mary’s Richard Fritz (R)
Talbot Scott Patterson (D)
Washington Gina Cirincion (R)
Wicomico Jamie Dykes (R)
Worcester Kristin Heiser (R)

Source:[24]

Massachusetts

Massachusetts’s district attorneys are elected in districts, two of which include multiple counties.[25]

DISTRICT COUNTIES DISTRICT ATTORNEY
Berkshire Timothy J. Shugrue (D)[26]
Bristol Thomas M. Quinn III (D)[27]
Cape and Islands BarnstableDukesNantucket Robert J. Galibois (D)[28]
Eastern Essex Paul F. Tucker (D)[29]
Hampden Anthony D. Gulluni (D)[30]
Middlesex Marian T. Ryan (D)[31]
Norfolk Michael W. Morrissey (D)[32]
Northwestern FranklinHampshire, and the town of Athol[MA 1] David E. Sullivan (D)[33]
Plymouth Timothy J. Cruz (R)[34]
Suffolk Kevin Hayden (D)[35]
Middle Worcester Joseph D. Early, Jr. (D)[36]
  1. ^ The town of Athol is in Worcester County but included in the Northwestern District.

Michigan

Michigan’s prosecuting attorneys are assigned by county.

COUNTY PROSECUTING ATTORNEY
Alcona Thomas J. Weichel (R)
Alger Robert T. Steinhoff (D)
Allegan Myrene K. Koch (R)
Alpena Cynthia Muszynski (R)
Antrim James Rossiter (R)
Arenac Curtis Broughton (D)
Baraga Joseph P. O’Leary (R)
Barry Julie Nakfoor Pratt (R)
Bay Nancy Borushko (D)
Benzie Sara Swanson (R)
Berrien Steven Pierangeli (R)
Branch Zachary Stempien (R)
Calhoun David Gilbert (R)
Cass Victor A. Fitz (R)
Charlevoix Allen Telgenhof (R)
Cheboygan Melissa Goodrich (R)
Chippewa Robert L. Stratton III (R)
Clare Michelle J. Ambrozaitis (R)
Clinton Anthony Spagnuolo (R)
Crawford Sierra Koch (R)
Delta Brett H. Gardner (Ind.)
Dickinson Lisa Richards (R)
Eaton Douglas R. Lloyd (R)
Emmet James R. Linderman (R)
Genesee David S. Leyton (D)
Gladwin Aaron W. Miller (R)
Gogebic Nicholas Jacobs (R)
Grand Traverse Noelle Moeggenberg (R)
Gratiot Keith J. Kushion (R)
Hillsdale Neal A. Brady (R)
Houghton Brittney Bulleit (D)
Huron Timothy J. Rutkowski (Ind.)
Ingham Carol Siemon (D)
Ionia Kyle B. Butler (R)
Iosco James A. Bacarella (Ind)
Iron Chad DeRouin (R)
Isabella David R. Barberi (R)
Jackson Jerry Jarzynka (R)
Kalamazoo Jeffrey Getting (D)
Kalkaska Ryan Ziegler
Kent Christopher Becker (R)
Keweenaw Charles Miller (D)
Lake Craig Cooper (R)
Lapeer John Miller (R)
Leelanau Joseph T. Hubbell (R)
Lenawee R. Burke Castleberry (R)
Livingston David Reader (R)
Luce Joshua Freed (R)
Mackinac J. Stuart Spencer (R)
Macomb Peter J. Lucido (R)
Manistee Jason Haag (R)
Marquette Matt J. Wiese (D)
Mason Lauren Kreinbrink (R)
Mecosta Brian Thiede (R)
Menominee Jeffrey T. Rogg (R)
Midland J. Dee Brooks (R)
Missaukee Melissa Ransom (R)
Monroe Michael G. Roehrig (R)
Montcalm Andrea Krause (R)
Montmorency Vicki Kundinger (R)
Muskegon D.J. Hilson (D)
Newaygo Ellsworth J. Stay, Jr. (R)
Oakland Karen D. McDonald (D)
Oceana Joseph Bizon (R)
Ogemaw LaDona Schultz (D)
Ontonagon Michael Findlay (D)
Osceola Anthony Badovinac (R)
Oscoda Kristi L. McGregor (R)
Otsego Michael Rola (R)
Ottawa Lee Fisher (R)
Presque Isle Ken Radzibon (R)
Roscommon Mary Beebe (R)
Saginaw John McColgan (D)
St. Clair Michael Wendling (R)
St. Joseph David Marvin (R)
Sanilac Brenda Sanford (R)
Schoolcraft Timothy R. Noble (R)
Shiawassee Deana Finnegan (R)
Tuscola Mark E. Reene (R)
Van Buren Susan Zuiderveen (R)
Washtenaw Eli Savit (D)
Wayne Kym L. Worthy (D)
Wexford Corey Wiggins (R)

Source:[37]

Minnesota

Minnesota prosecutors are assigned by county and known as county attorneys. Their elections are non-partisan.

COUNTY COUNTY ATTORNEY
Aitkin James P. Ratz
Anoka Brad Johnson
Becker Brian W. McDonald
Beltrami David Hanson
Big Stone Joseph Glasrud
Benton Philip Miller
Blue Earth Patrick McDermott
Brown Chuck Hanson
Carlton Lauri Ketola
Carver Mark Metz
Cass Ben Lindstrom
Chippewa Matthew Haugen
Chisago Janet Reiter
Clay Brian J. Melton
Clearwater Kathryn Lorsbach
Cook Molly Hicken
Cottonwood Nicholas A. Anderson
Crow Wing Donald F. Ryan
Dakota Kathryn M. Keena
Dodge Paul Kiltinen
Douglas Chad Larson
Faribault Kathryn Karjala-Curtis
Fillmore Brett Corson
Freeborn David J. Walker
Goodhue Stephen F. O’Keefe
Grant Justin R. Anderson
Hennepin Mary Moriarty
Houston Samuel Jandt
Hubbard Jonathan Frieden
Isanti Jeffrey R. Edblad
Itasca Matti R. Adam
Jackson Sherry E. Haley
Kanabec Barbara McFadden
Kandiyohi Shane D. Baker
Kittson Robert Albrecht
Koochiching Jeffrey Naglosky
Lac Qui Parle Richard Stulz
Lake Russell H. Conrow
Lake of the Woods James C. Austad
Le Sueur Brent Christian
Lincoln Glen A. Petersen
Lyon Richard R. Maes
Mahnomen Mitchell Schluter
Marshall Donald J. Aandal
Martin Terry W. Viesselman
McLeod Michael Junge
Meeker Brandi Schiefelbein
Mille Lacs Joe Walsh
Morrison Brian Middendorf
Mower Kristen Nelsen
Murray Travis Smith
Nicollet Michelle M. Zehnder Fischer
Nobles Joseph Sanow
Norman James D. Brue
Olmsted Mark A. Ostrem
Otter Tail Michelle Eldien
Pennington Seamus Duffy
Pine Reese Frederickson
Pipestone Damain D. Sandy
Polk Gregory A. Widseth
Pope Neil Nelson
Ramsey John Choi
Red Lake Mike LaCoursiere
Redwood Jenna Peterson
Renville David Torgelson
Rice John Fossum
Rock Jeffrey L. Haubrich
Roseau Kristy Kjos
St. Louis Kimberly J. Maki
Scott Ronald Hocevar
Sherburne Kathleen A. Heaney
Sibley David E. Schauer
Stearns Janelle P. Kendall
Steele Daniel McIntosh
Stevens Aaron Jordan
Swift Danielle Olson
Todd Chuck Rasmussen
Traverse Matthew Franzese
Wabasha Karrie S. Kelly
Wadena Kyra L. Ladd
Waseca Rachel V. Cornelius
Washington Kevin Magnuson
Watonwan Stephen Lindee
Wilkin Carl Thunem
Winona Karin Sonneman
Wright Brian Lutes
Yellow Medicine Keith R. Helgeson

Source:[38]

Mississippi

Mississippi prosecutors are assigned by circuit.

CIRCUIT COUNTIES DISTRICT ATTORNEY
1 AlcornItawambaLeeMonroePontotocPrentissTishomingo John Weddle (R)
2 HancockHarrisonStone Joel Smith (R)
3 BentonCalhounChickasawLafayetteMarshallTippahUnion Ben Creekmore (R)
4 LefloreSunflowerWashington W. Dewayne Richardson (D)
5 AttalaCarrollChoctawGrenadaMontgomeryWebsterWinston Doug Evans (D)
6 AdamsAmiteFranklinWilkinson Shameca S. Collins (D)
7 Hinds Jody Owens (D)
8 LeakeNeshobaNewtonScott Steven S. Kilgore (R)
9 IssaquenaSharkeyWarren Richard (Ricky) Smith, Jr. (D)
10 ClarkeKemperLauderdaleWayne Kassie Coleman (R)
11 BolivarCoahomaQuitmanTunica Brenda F. Mitchell (D)
12 ForrestPerry Lin Carter (R)
13 CovingtonJasperSimpsonSmith Matt Sullivan (D)
14 LincolnPikeWalthall Dewitt (Dee) T. Bates, Jr. (D)
15 Jefferson DavisLamarLawrenceMarionPearl River Hal Kittrell (R)
16 ClayLowndesNoxubeeOktibbeha Scott W. Colom (D)
17 DeSotoPanolaTallahatchieTateYalobusha John W. Champion (D)
18 Jones Anthony J. Buckley (R)
19 GeorgeGreeneJackson Angel Myers McIlrath (R)
20 MadisonRankin John K. Bramlett, Jr. (R)
21 HolmesHumphreysYazoo Akillie Malone Oliver (D)
22 ClaiborneCopiahJefferson Daniella M. Shorter (D)

Source:[39]

Missouri

Missouri’s prosecutors are known as prosecuting attorneys and serve a single county.

COUNTY PROSECUTING ATTORNEY
Adair David Goring (R)
Andrew Steven L. Stevenson (R)
Atchison Brett Hurst (R)
Audrain Jacob W. Shellabarger (D)
Barry Amy L. Boxx (R)
Barton Mike Smalley (R)
Bates Hugh C. Jenkins (R)
Benton Karen Woodley (R)
Bollinger Stephen Gray (R)
Boone Roger Johnson (D)
Buchanan Michelle Davidson (R)
Butler Kacey L. Proctor (R)
Caldwell Brady C. Kopek (R)
Callaway Christoper Wilson (R)
Camden Heather L. Miller (R)
Cape Girardeau Mark J. Welker (R)
Carroll Cassandra Brown (D)
Carter Hannah Pender (D)
Cass Ben Butler (R)
Cedar Ty Gaither (R)
Chariton Clifford Thornburg (D)
Christian Amy Fite (R)
Clark Holly Conger-Koenig (R)
Clay Zachary Thompson
Clinton Brandi McClain (R)
Cole Locke Thompson (R)
Cooper Eric B. Phelps (R)
Crawford David S. Smith (R)
Dade Kaitlin Greenwade (R)
Dallas Jonathan Barker (R)
Daviess Annie Gibson (D)
DeKalb Erik C. Tate (R)
Dent Andrew M. Curley (R)
Douglas Christopher D. Wade (R)
Dunklin Nicholas D. Jain (R)
Franklin Matthew C. Becker (R)
Gasconade Mary E. Weston (R)
Gentry Jessica J. Jones (R)
Greene Dan Patterson (R)
Grundy Kelly W. Puckett
Harrison Johnathan L. Meyer (R)
Henry Richard Shields (R)
Hickory Michael Brown (R)
Holt Robert R. Shepherd (R)
Howard Deborah K. Riekhof (R)
Howell Michael P. Hutchings (R)
Iron Brian Parker (D)
Jackson Jean Peters Baker (D)
Jasper Theresa Kenney (R)
Jefferson Trisha C. Stefanski (R)
Johnson Robert W. Russell (R)
Knox Andrew Boster
Laclede Jon A. Morris (R)
Lafayette Kristen Ellis Hilbrenner (D)
Lawrence Don Trotter (R)
Lewis Chelsea L. Fellinger (R)
Lincoln Michael L. Wood (R)
Linn Tracy Carlson (R)
Livingston Adam L. Warren (R)
Macon Josh Meisner (D)
Madison Michael Ligons (R)
Maries Anthony Skouby (R)
Marion Luke A. Bryant (R)
McDonald Bill Dobbs (R)
Mercer Lauren Horsman (R)
Miller Benjamin Winfrey (R)
Mississippi Claire Poley (R)
Moniteau Mary Kay Lutz (R)
Monroe Nicole Volkert (R)
Montgomery Nathan Carroz (R)
Morgan Dustin G. Dunklee (R)
New Madrid Andrew Lawson (R)
Newton Jake Skouby (R)
Nodaway Robert (Bob) L. Rice (R)
Oregon Justin Kelley (R)
Osage Amanda L. Grellner (R)
Ozark Lee Pipkins (R)
Pemiscot Joshua Tomlin
Perry Caitlin Pistorio (R)
Pettis Phillip Sawyer (R)
Phelps Brendon Fox (R)
Pike Alex Ellison (R)
Platte Eric Zahnd (R)
Polk Ken Ashlock (R)
Pulaski Kevin Hillman (R)
Putnam Brian Keedy (Ind.)
Ralls Rodney J. Rodenbaugh (D)
Randolph Stephanie Luntsford (R)
Ray Camille Johnston (R)
Reynolds Brad VanZee (D)
Ripley Matt Michel (D)
Saline Tim Thompson (R)
Schuyler Lindsay Gravett (R)
Scotland April Wilson (R)
Scott Amanda Oesch (R)
Shannon William Camm Seay (D)
Shelby Jordan Force
St. Charles Tim Lohmar (R)
St. Clair Daniel Dysart (R)
St. Francois Blake Dudley (R)
St. Louis County Wesley Bell (D)
St. Louis City[MO 1] Kimberly M. Gardner (D)
Ste. Genevieve Wayne Williams (D)
Stoddard Russell D. Oliver (R)
Stone Matt Selby (R)
Sullivan Brian Keedy (R)
Taney William Duston (R)
Texas Parke Stevens, Jr. (R)
Vernon Brandi McInroy (R)
Warren Kelly King (R)
Washington John Jones IV (R)
Wayne Ginger Joyner (R)
Webster Benjamin Berkstresser (R)
Worth Janet Larison (R)
Wright John Tyrell (R)
  1. ^ St. Louis City’s prosecutor is known as a Circuit Attorney.

Source:[40]

Montana

Montana prosecutors are known as county attorneys. 54 out of 56 counties elect their prosecutors, with 2/3 holding partisan elections.

COUNTY COUNTY ATTORNEY
Beaverhead Jed C. Fitch (Ind.)
Big Horn Jeanne Torske[MT 1]
Blaine Kelsie Harwood (D)
Broadwater Cory Swanson[MT 1]
Carbon Alex Nixon[MT 1]
CarterFallon[MT 2] Darcy Wassman (R)
Cascade Josh Racki (D)
Chouteau Stephen Gannon (R)
Custer Wyatt Glade[MT 1]
Daniels Logan Olson (R)
Dawson Brett Irogoin (R)
Deer Lodge Ben Krakowa[MT 1]
Fergus Kent Sipe[MT 1]
Flathead Travis Ahner (R)
Gallatin Audrey Cromwell (D)
Garfield Gary Ryder[MT 1]
Glacier Terryl Matt (D)
Golden Valley Adam M. Larsen (R)
Granite Blaine Bradshaw (R)
Hill Lacey Lincoln (R)
Jefferson Steve Haddon[MT 1]
Judith Basin Joni Oja[MT 1]
Lake James Lapotka (R)
Lewis and Clark Kevin Downs[MT 1]
Liberty Robert Padmos (R)
Lincoln Marcia Boris (R)
Madison David Buchler[MT 1]
McCone John Hrubes (R)
Meagher John Hurwitz (R)
Mineral Debra Jackson (R)
Missoula Kirsten Pabst (D)
Musselshell Adam M. Larsen (R)
Park Kendra Lassiter[MT 1]
Petroleum Monte Boettger[MT 3]
Phillips Dan O’Brien (R)
Pondera Shari Lennon (R)
Powder River Jeffrey Noble (R)
Powell Kathryn McEnery (R)
Prairie Daniel Rice (R)
Ravalli Bill Fulbright (R)
Richland Charity McClarty (R)
Roosevelt Frank Piocos[MT 1]
Rosebud C. Kristine White (R)
Sanders Naomi Leisz[MT 1]
Sheridan Benjamin Fosland (R)
Silver Bow Eileen Joyce[MT 1]
Stillwater Nancy Rohde (R)
Sweet Grass Pat Dringman (R)
Teton Joe Coble[MT 1]
Toole Merle Raph (R)
Treasure Hanna Schantz (R)
Valley Dylan Jensen[MT 1]
Wheatland Lynn Grant (R)
Wibaux Ronald S. Efta (D)
Yellowstone Scott Twito (R)
  1. Jump up to:a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Elected in a nonpartisan election
  2. ^ Carter and Fallon Counties share their county attorney. In Fallon County, the county attorney faces election, but he or she is appointed in Carter County. (Hessick 2020, p. 183)
  3. ^ Petroleum County appoints its prosecutor. (Hessick 2020, p. 183)

Source:[41]

Nebraska

Nebraska prosecutors are known as county attorneys. Though each attorney technically serves a single county, attorneys elected in one county are sometimes appointed to serve in others

COUNTY(IES) COUNTY ATTORNEY
Adams Donna Fegler Daiss (R)
Antelope Joseph Abler (R)
ArthurPerkins Richard Roberts (R)
Banner Mark Kovarik
Blaine Glenn Clark (R)
Boone John V. Morgan (D)
Box Butte Marissa L. Curtiss
Boyd Thomas Herzog
Brown Andy Taylor
Buffalo Shawn R. Eatherton (R)
Burt Edmond E. Talbot III
Butler Julie L. Reiter (R)
Cass S. Colin Palm (R)
Cedar Edward H. Matney
Chase Arlan G. Wine (R)
Cherry Eric Scott (R)
Cheyenne Paul B. Schaub (R)
Clay Ted S. Griess (R)
Colfax Denise J. Kracl (D)
Cuming Daniel Bracht (R)
Custer Steven Bowers (R)
Dakota Kimberly M. Watson (D)
Dawes Vance E. Haug (R)
Dawson Elizabeth F. Waterman (R)
Deuel Jonathon Stellar (R)
Dixon Leland K. Miner (R)
Dodge Pam Hopkins (R)
Douglas Donald Kleine (R)
Dundy Gary Burke (R)
Fillmore Jill R. Cunningham (R)
Franklin Henry C. Schenker (R)
Frontier Jon S. Schroeder (R)
Furnas Morgan Farquhar
Gage Roger L. Harris (R)
Garden Philip E. Pierce (R)
Garfield Dale Crandall (R)
Gosper Beverly Bogle Louthan (R)
Grant Terry Curtiss
Greeley Cindy Bassett (D)
Hall Martin Klein (R)
Hamilton Michael H. Powell (R)
Harlan Bryan S. McQuay (R)
HayesHitchcock D. Eugene Garner (R)
Holt Brent Kelly (R)
Hooker George G. Vinton
Howard David T. Schroeder (R)
Jefferson Joseph Casson
Johnson Rick Smith (R)
Kearney Melodie Bellamy (R)
Keith Randy Fair (R)
Keya Paha Eric Scott
Kimball David Wilson (R)
Knox John Thomas (R)
Lancaster Patrick F. Condon (R)
Lincoln Rebecca R. Harling (R)
Logan Colten Venteicher
Loup Jason White (R)
Madison Joseph M. Smith (R)
McPherson Whitney S. Lindstedt
Merrick Lynelle Homolka (R)
Morrill Travis R. Rodak (R)
Nance Rodney Wetovick (R)
Nemaha Louie M. Ligouri (R)
NuckollsWebster Sara Bockstadter (R)
Otoe Jennifer Panko-Rahe
Pawnee Jennifer Stehlik Ladman (D)
Phelps Michael Henry (R)
Pierce Ted M. Lohrberg (R)
Platte Carl K. Hart, Jr. (D)
Polk Ronald E. Colling (R)
Red Willow Paul Wood (R)
Richardson Doug Merz (D)
Rock Avery L. Gurnsey (R)
Saline Tad Eickman (D)
Sarpy Lee Polikov (R)
Saunders Joseph Dobesh (R)
Scotts Bluff Dave Eubanks (D)
Seward Wendy Elston (R)
Sheridan Jamian Simmons (R)
Sherman Heather Sikyta (R)
Sioux J. Adam Edmund (R)
Stanton Bert Lammli (R)
Thayer Daniel L. Werner (R)
Thomas Kurt Arganbright (R)
Thurston Lori Ubbinga (D)
Valley Kayla C. Clark (R)
Washington Scott VanderSchaaf (R)
Wayne Amy K. Miller (R)
Wheeler James J. McNally (Ind.)
York John Lyons

Source:[42]

Nevada

Nevada district attorneys are elected by county.

COUNTY DISTRICT ATTORNEY
Carson City Jason Woodbury[NV 1]
Churchill Arthur Mallory (R)
Clark Steven Wolfson (D)
Douglas Mark Jackson (R)
Elko Tyler Ingram (R)
Esmeralda Robert Glennen (R)
Eureka Theodore Beutel (R)
Humboldt Kevin Pasquale (R)
Lander Theodore Herrera (R)
Lincoln Dylan Frehner (R)
Lyon Stephen Rye (R)
Mineral Jaren Stanton (R)
Nye Chris Arabia (R)
Pershing Bryce Shields (R)
Storey Anne Langer (R)
Washoe Christopher Hicks (R)
White Pine Michael Wheable (R)
  1. ^ Carson City uses non-partisan elections. (Hessick 2020, p. 202)

Source:[43]

New Hampshire

New Hampshire prosecutors are known as county attorneys.

COUNTY COUNTY ATTORNEY
Belknap Andrew Livernois (R)
Carroll Michaela O’Rourke Andruzzi (D)
Cheshire D. Chris McLaughlin (D)
Coos John G. McCormick (D)
Grafton Martha Ann Hornick (D)
Hillsborough John J. Coughlin (R)
Merrimack Paul Halvorsen (R)
Rockingham Patricia Conway (R)
Strafford Thomas P. Velardi (D)
Sullivan Marc Hathaway (R)

Source:[44]

New Jersey

New Jersey prosecutors are appointed by the Governor and confirmed by the state senate. They are assigned by county.

COUNTY COUNTY PROSECUTOR
Atlantic William E. Reynolds
Bergen Mark Musella
Burlington LaChia Bradshaw
Camden Grace C. MacAulay
Cape May Jeffrey H. Sutherland
Cumberland Jennifer Webb-McRae
Essex Theodore N. Stephens II
Gloucester Christine A. Hoffman
Hudson Esther Suarez
Hunterdon Renee Robeson
Mercer Angelo J. Onofri
Middlesex Yolanda Ciccone
Monmouth Raymond Santiago
Morris Robert Carroll
Ocean Bradley D. Billhimer
Passaic Camelia M. Valdes
Salem Kristin J. Telsey
Somerset John P. McDonald
Sussex Francis A. Koch
Union William A. Daniel
Warren James L. Pfeiffer

Source:[45]

New Mexico

New Mexico district attorneys are assigned by district.

DISTRICT COUNTIES DISTRICT ATTORNEY
1 Los AlamosRio ArribaSanta Fe Mary V. Carmack-Altwies (D)
2 Bernalillo Sam Bregman (D)
3 Doña Ana Gerald M. Byers (D)
4 GuadalupeMoraSan Miguel Thomas A. Clayton (D)
5 ChavesEddyLea Dianna Luce (R)
6 GrantHidalgoLuna Michael R. Renteria (D)
7 CatronSierraSocorroTorrance Clint Wellborn (R)
8 ColfaxTaosUnion Marcus J. Montoya (D)
9 CurryRoosevelt Quentin Ray
10 De BacaHardingQuay Timothy L. Rose (I)
11[NM 1] San Juan Robert P. “Rick” Tedrow (R)
McKinley Bernadine Martin (D)
12 LincolnOtero Scot D. Key (R)
13 CibolaSandovalValencia Barbara A. Romo (D)
  1. ^ The 11th district has two district attorneys.

Source:[46]

New York

COUNTY DISTRICT ATTORNEY
Albany David Soares (D)
Allegany Keith Slep (R)
Bronx Darcel D. Clark (D)
Broome Michael Korchak (R)
Cattaraugus Lori Rieman (R)
Cayuga Jon E. Budelmann (R)
Chautauqua Jason Schmidt (R)
Chemung Weeden A. Wetmore (R)
Chenango Michael Ferrareese (R)
Clinton Andrew J. Wylie (D)
Columbia Paul Czajka (R)
Cortland Patrick Perfetti (R)
Delaware John Hubbard (R)
Dutchess William V. Grady (R)
Erie John J. Flynn (D)
Essex Kristy L. Sprague (R)
Franklin Craig Carriero (D)
Fulton Chad Brown (R)
Genesee Lawrence Friedman (R)
Greene Joseph Stanzione (R)
Hamilton Christopher Shambo (R)
Herkimer Jeffrey Carpenter (R)
Jefferson Kristyna Mills (R)
Kings (Brooklyn) Eric Gonzalez (D)
Lewis Leanne K. Moser (D)
Livingston Gregory J. McCaffrey (D)
Madison William G. Gabor (R)
Monroe Sandra Doorley (R)
Montgomery Lorraine Diamond (R)
Nassau Anne T. Donnelly (R)
New York (Manhattan) Alvin Bragg (D)
Niagara Brian Seaman (R)
Oneida Scott D. McNamara (D)
Onondaga William J. Fitzpatrick (R)
Ontario James Ritts (R)
Orange David Hoovler (R)
Orleans Joseph V. Cardone (R)
Oswego Gregory Oakes (R)
Otsego John M. Muehl (R)
Putnam Robert V. Tendy (R)
Queens Melinda Katz (D)
Rensselaer Mary Pat Donnelly (D)
Richmond (Staten Island) Michael McMahon (D)
Rockland Thomas Walsh (D)
St. Lawrence Gary Pasqua (R)
Saratoga Karen Heggen (R)
Schenectady Robert M. Carney (D)
Schoharie Susan Mallery (R)
Schuyler Joseph Fazzary (R)
Seneca Mark Sinkiewicz (D)
Steuben Brooks Baker (R)
Suffolk Raymond A. Tierney (R)
Sullivan Meagan Galligan (D)
Tioga Kirk Martin (R)
Tompkins Matthew Van Houten (D)
Ulster Dave Clegg (D)
Warren Jason Carusone (R)
Washington Tony Jordan (R)
Wayne Michael Calarco (D)
Westchester Mimi Rocah (D)
Wyoming Donald O’Geen (R)
Yates Todd Casella (I)

Source:[47]

North Carolina

North Carolina elects its district attorneys in multi-county districts.

DISTRICT COUNTIES DISTRICT ATTORNEY
1 CamdenChowanCurrituckDareGatesPasquotankPerquimans Andy Womble (R)
2 BeaufortHydeMartinTyrrellWashington Seth Edwards (D)
3 Pitt Faris Dixon (D)
4 CarteretCravenPamlico Scott Thomas (R)
5 DuplinJonesOnslowSampson Ernie Lee (D)
6 New HanoverPender Ben David (D)
7 BertieHalifaxHertfordNorthampton Valerie Asbell (D)
8 EdgecombeNashWilson Robert Evans (D)
9 GreeneLenoirWayne Matt Delbridge (R)
10 Wake Lorrin Freeman (D)
11 FranklinGranvillePersonVanceWarren Mike Waters (D)
12 HarnettLee Suzanne Matthews (R)
13 Johnston Susan Doyle (R)
14 Cumberland Billy West (D)
15 BladenBrunswickColumbus Jon David (R)
16 Durham Satana Deberry (D)
17 Alamance Sean Boone (R)
18 ChathamOrange Jeff Nieman (D)
19 [data unknown/missing]
20 Robeson Matt Scott (D)
21 AnsonRichmond, Scotland Reece Saunders (D)
22 CaswellRockingham Jason Ramey (R)
23 StokesSurry Ricky Bowman (R)
24 Guilford Avery Crump (D)
25 Cabarrus Roxann Vaneekhoven (R)
26 Mecklenburg Spencer Merriweather (D)
27 Rowan Brandy Cook (R)
28 Stanly Lynn Clodfelter (R)
29 Hoke, Moore Mike Hardin (R)
30 Union Trey Robison (R)
31 Forsyth Jim O’Neill (R)
32 AlexanderIredell Sarah Kirkman (R)
33 DavidsonDavie Garry Frank (R)
34 AlleghanyAsheWilkesYadkin Tom Horner (R)
35 AveryMadisonMitchellWataugaYancey Seth Banks (R)
36 BurkeCaldwellCatawba Scott Reilly (R)
37 MontgomeryRandolph Andy Gregson (R)
38 Gaston Travis Page
39 ClevelandLincoln Mike Miller (R)
40 Buncombe Todd Williams (D)
41 McDowellRutherford Ted Bell (R)
42 HendersonPolkTransylvania R. Andrew Murray
43 CherokeeClayGrahamHaywoodJacksonMaconSwain Ashley Hornsby Welch (R)

Source:[48]

North Dakota

North Dakota assigns state’s attorneys by county. Their elections are non-partisan, while two counties (Golden Valley and Steele) appoint their prosecutors.[49]

COUNTY STATE’S ATTORNEY
Adams Aaron Roseland
Barnes Tonya Duffy
Benson James Wang
Billings Pat Weir
Bottineau Michael McIntee
Bowman Andrew Weiss
Burke Amber Fiesel
Burleigh Julie Lawyer
Cass Birch Burdick
Cavalier Scott Stewart
Dickey Gary Neuharth
Divide Seymour Jordan
Dunn Stephenie Davis
Eddy Ashley Lies
Emmons Joseph Hanson
Foster Kara Brinster
Golden Valley Chistina Wenko
Grand Forks Haley Wamstad
Grant Grant Walker
Griggs Jayme Tenneson
Hettinger David Crane
Kidder Eric Hetland
LaMoure James Shockman
Logan Isaac Zimmerman
McHenry Joshua Frey
McIntosh Mary DePuydt
McKenzie Ty Skarda
McLean Ladd Erickson
Mercer Jessica Binder
Morton Allen Koppy
Mountrail Wade Enget
Nelson Jayme Tenneson
Oliver John Mahoney
Pembina Rebecca Flanders
Pierce Galen Mack
Ramsey Kari Agotness
Ransom Fallon Kelly
Renville Seymour Jordan
Richland Megan Kummer
Rolette Brian Grosinger
Sargent Jayne Pfau
Sheridan Ladd Erickson
Sioux Chris Redmann
Slope Erin Melling
Stark Tom Henning
Steele Charles Stock
Stutsman Fritz Fremgen
Towner Joshua Frey
Traill Charles Stock
Walsh Kelley Cole
Ward Roza Larson
Wells Kathleen Murray
Williams Marlyce Wilder

Source:[50]

Ohio

Ohio assigns prosecuting attorneys by county.

COUNTY PROSECUTING ATTORNEY
Adams C. David Kelley (R)
Allen Juergen Waldick (R)
Ashland Christopher R. Tunnell (R)
Ashtabula Colleen Mary O’Toole (R)
Athens Keller Blackburn (D)
Auglaize Edwin A. Pierce (R)
Belmont Kevin Flanagan (R)
Brown Zac Corbin (R)
Butler Michael T. Gmoser (R)
Carroll Steven D. Barnett (R)
Champaign Kevin S. Talebi (R)
Clark Dan Driscoll (R)
Clermont Mark Tekulve (R)
Clinton Andrew T. McCoy
Columbiana Vito Abruzzino (R)
Coshocton Jason W. Given (R)
Crawford Matthew E. Crall (R)
Cuyahoga Michael O’Malley (D)
Darke R. Kelly Ormsby (R)
Defiance Morris J. Murray (R)
Delaware Melissa Schiffel (R)
Erie Kevin J. Baxter (D)
Fairfield R. Kyle Witt (R)
Fayette Jess C. Weade (R)
Franklin Gary Tyack (D)
Fulton Scott Haselman (R)
Gallia Jason Holdren (R)
Geauga James R. Flaiz (R)
Greene David Hayes (R)
Guernsey Lindsey Angler (R)
Hamilton Joseph T. Deters (R)
Hancock Phillip Riegle (Ind.)
Hardin Bradford Bailey (R)
Harrison Lauren Knight (R)
Henry Gwen Howe-Gebers (D)
Highland Anneka Collins (R)
Hocking Ryan Black (R)
Holmes Matt Muzic (R)
Huron James J. Sitterly (R)
Jackson Justin Lovett (R)
Jefferson Jane Hanlin (D)
Knox Charles T. McConville (R)
Lake Charles E. Coulson (R)
Lawrence Brigham McKinley Anderson (R)
Licking Bill Hayes (R)
Logan Eric Stewart (R)
Lorain J.D. Tomlinson (D)
Lucas Julia R. Bates (D)
Madison Nicholas Adkins (R)
Mahoning Paul J. Gains (D)
Marion Raymond A. Grogan (R)
Medina S. Forrest Thompson (R)
Meigs James K. Stanley (R)
Mercer Matthew K. Fox (R)
Miami Anthony E. Kendell (R)
Monroe James L. Peters (D)
Montgomery Mathias H. Heck, Jr. (D)
Morgan Mark J. Howdyshell (R)
Morrow Thomas Smith (R)
Muskingum Ron Welch (R)
Noble Jordan Croucher (R)
Ottawa James VanEerten (R)
Paulding Joseph R. Burkard (R)
Perry Joseph A. Flautt (R)
Pickaway Judy Wolford (R)
Pike Robert Junk (D)
Portage Victor Vigluicci (D)
Preble Martin Votel (R)
Putnam Gary Lammers (D)
Richland Gary D. Bishop (R)
Ross Jeffrey C. Marks (R)
Sandusky Beth Tischler (R)
Scioto Shane A. Tieman (R)
Seneca Derek W. DeVine (Ind.)
Shelby Timothy S. Sell (R)
Stark Kyle Stone (R)
Summit Sherri L. Bevan Walsh (D)
Trumbull Dennis Watkins (D)
Tuscarawas Ryan D. Styer (R)
Union David Phillips (R)
Van Wert Eva Yarger (R)
Vinton James Payne
Warren David P. Fornshell (R)
Washington Nicole Coil (R)
Wayne Daniel R. Lutz (R)
Williams Katherine J. Zartman (R)
Wood Paul A. Dobson (R)
Wyandot Douglas D. Rowland (R)

Source:[51]

Oklahoma

Oklahoma assigns its district attorneys by district.

DISTRICT COUNTIES DISTRICT ATTORNEY
1 BeaverCimarronHarperTexas George Buddy Leach III (R)
2 BeckhamCusterEllisRoger MillsWashita Angela Marsee (R)
3 GreerHarmonJacksonKiowaTillman David Thomas (R)
4 BlaineCanadianGarfieldGrantKingfisher Mike Fields (R)
5 ComancheCotton Kyle Cabelka (R)
6 CaddoGradyJeffersonStephens Jason Hicks (R)
7 Oklahoma Vicki Behenna (D)
8 KayNoble Brian Hermanson (R)
9 LoganPayne Laura Thomas (R)
10 OsagePawnee Mike Fisher (R)
11 NowataWashington Will Drake (R)
12 CraigMayesRogers Matt Ballard (R)
13 DelawareOttawa Kenny Wright (R)
14 Tulsa Steve Kunzweiler (R)
15 Muskogee Larry Edwards (R)
16 LatimerLe Flore Kevin S. Merritt (R)
17 ChoctawMcCurtainPushmataha Mark Matloff (R)
18 HaskellPittsburg Chuck Sullivan (R)
19 AtokaBryanCoal Timothy Webster (R)
20 CarterJohnstonLoveMarshallMurray Craig Ladd (R)
21 ClevelandGarvinMcClain Greg Mashburn (R)
22 HughesPontotocSeminole Erik Johnson (R)
23 LincolnPottawatomie Adam Pantner (R)
24 CreekOkfuskee Max Cook (R)
25 OkmulgeeMcIntosh Carol Iski (R)
26 AlfalfaDeweyMajorWoodsWoodward Christopher Boring (R)
27 AdairCherokeeSequoyahWagoner Jack Thorp (R)

Source:[52]

Oregon

Oregon assigns district attorneys by county. Their elections are non-partisan.

COUNTY DISTRICT ATTORNEY
Baker Greg Baxter
Benton John Haroldson
Clackamas John Wentworth
Clatsop Ron L. Brown
Columbia Jeffrey D. Auxier
Coos R. Paul Frasier
Crook Wade Whiting
Curry Joshua A. Spansail
Deschutes John Hummel
Douglas Rick Wesenberg
Gilliam Marion Weatherford
Grant Jim Carpenter
Harney Hughes Ryan
Hood River Carrie Rasmussen
Jackson Beth Heckert
Jefferson Stephen F. Lariche
Josephine Joshua J. Eastman
Klamath Eve A. Costello
Lake Ted K. Martin
Lane Patricia W. Perlow
Lincoln Lanee Danforth
Linn Doug Marteeny
Malheur David M. Goldthorpe
Marion Paige E. Clarkson
Morrow Justin Nelson
Multnomah Mike Schmidt
Polk Aaron Felton
Sherman Wade McLeod
Tillamook William Porter
Umatilla Daniel R. Primus
Union Kelsie McDaniel
Wallowa Rebecca Frolander
Wasco Matthew Ellis
Washington Kevin Barton
Wheeler Gretchen M. Ladd
Yamhill Brad Berry

Source:[53]

Pennsylvania

Pennsylvania assigns district attorneys by county.

COUNTY DISTRICT ATTORNEY
Adams Brian R. Sinnett (R)
Allegheny Stephen A. Zappala (D)
Armstrong Katie Charlton (R)
Beaver David J. Lozier (R)
Bedford Lesley R. Childers-Potts (R)
Berks John T. Adams (D)
Blair Peter J. Weeks (R)
Bradford Albert Ordney (R)
Bucks Matthew Weintraub (R)
Butler Richard A. Goldinger (R)
Cambria Gregory J. Neugebauer (R)
Cameron Paul J. Malizia (R)
Carbon Mike Greek (R)
Centre Bernie F. Cantorna (D)
Chester Deborah Ryan (D)
Clarion Drew Welsh (Ind.)
Clearfield Ryan P. Sayers (R)
Clinton David A. Strouse (D)
Columbia Thomas E. Leipold (R)
Crawford Francis J. Schultz (R)
Cumberland Skip Ebert (R)
Dauphin Francis T. Chardo (R)
Delaware Jack Stollsteimer (D)
Elk Beau M. Grove (R)
Erie Jack Daneri (R)
Fayette Richard Bower (R)
Forest Alyce M. Busch (D)
Franklin Matthew Fogal (R)
Fulton Travis L. Kendall (R)
Greene David Russo (R)
Huntingdon David G. Smith (R)
Indiana Robert F. Manzi, Jr. (R)
Jefferson Jeffrey D. Burkett (R)
Juniata Corey Snook (R)
Lackawanna Mark J. Powell (D)
Lancaster Heather L. Adams (R)
Lawrence Joshua Lamancusa (D)
Lebanon Pier Hess Graf (R)
Lehigh James B. Martin (R)
Luzerne Samuel M. Sanguedolce (R)
Lycoming Ryan C. Gardner (R)
McKean Stephanie Vettenburg-Shaffer (R)
Mercer Peter C. Acker (R)
Mifflin Christopher Torquato (R)
Monroe E. David Christine, Jr. (D)
Montgomery Kevin R. Steele (D)
Montour Angela L. Mattis (R)
Northampton Terence Houck (D)
Northumberland Anthony Matulewicz (R)[PA 1]
Perry Lauren Eichelberger (R)
Philadelphia Lawrence S. Krasner (D)[54]
Pike Raymond J. Tonkin (D)[PA 2]
Potter Andy Watson (R)
Schuylkill Michael O’Pake (D)
Snyder Michael Piecuch (R)
Somerset Molly Metzgar (R)
Sullivan Julie Gavitt Shaffer (R)
Susquehanna Marion O’Malley (R)
Union Krista L. Deats (R)
Tioga D. Peter Johnson (R)
Venango D. Shawn White (R)
Warren Robert C. Greene (R)
Washington Jason Walsh (R)
Wayne A. G. Howell (R)
Westmoreland Nicole Ziccarelli (R)
Wyoming Joe Peters (R)
York David W. Sunday, Jr. (R)
  1. ^ Matulewicz ran in the Democratic primary and lost. He then ran in the general election as a Republican and won. (Hessick 2020, p. 263)
  2. ^ Tonkin ran in the Republican primary and lost. He then ran in the general election as a Democrat and won. (Hessick 2020, p. 263)

Source:[55]

Rhode Island

All prosecutions in the state of Rhode Island are handled by the Attorney General of Rhode Island.[56] The current Attorney General is Peter Neronha (D).

South Carolina

South Carolina prosecutors are known as solicitors. They are assigned by judicial circuit.

CIRCUIT COUNTIES SOLICITOR
1st CalhounDorchesterOrangeburg David Pascoe, Jr. (D)
2nd AikenBambergBarnwell Bill Weeks (R)[57]
3rd ClarendonLeeSumterWilliamsburg Ernest A. “Chip” Finney III (D)
4th ChesterfieldDarlingtonDillonMarlboro William B. Rogers, Jr. (D)
5th KershawRichland Byron Gipson (D)
6th ChesterFairfieldLancaster Randy E. Newman, Jr. (R)
7th CherokeeSpartanburg Barry J. Barnette (R)
8th AbbevilleGreenwoodLaurensNewberry David M. Stumbo (R)
9th BerkeleyCharleston Scarlett A. Wilson (R)
10th AndersonOconee David R. Wagner, Jr. (R)
11th EdgefieldLexingtonMcCormickSaluda S.R. (Rick) Hubbard III (R)
12th FlorenceMarion E.L. (Ed) Clements III (D)
13th GreenvillePickens W. Walter Wilkins III (R)
14th AllendaleBeaufortColletonHamptonJasper Isaac McDuffie (Duffie) Stone III (R)
15th GeorgetownHorry Jimmy A. Richardson II (R)
16th UnionYork Kevin S. Brackett (R)

Source:[58]

South Dakota

South Dakota assigns state’s attorneys by county. Four pairs of counties share a state’s attorney.

COUNTY STATE’S ATTORNEY
Aurora Rachel Mairose (R)
Beadle Michael Moore (D)
Bennett Sarah Harris (R)
Bon Homme Lisa Rothschadl (R)
Brookings Daniel Nelson (R)
Brown Ernest Thompson (R)
Brule Theresa Maule Rossow (R)
Buffalo David Larson (D)
Butte Cassie Wendt (R)
Campbell Mark Kroontje (R)
Charles Mix Steven Cotton (R)
Clark Chad Fjelland (R)
Clay Alexis Tracy (R)
Codington Rebecca Morlock Reeves (R)
CorsonPerkinsZiebach Shane Penfield (R)
Custer Tracy Kelley (R)
Davison James Miskimins (R)
Day John D. Knight (D)
Deuel Jared I. Gass (R)
Dewey Steven Aberle (D)
Douglas Craig Parkhurst (R)
Edmunds Vaughn Beck (R)
Fall RiverOglala Lakota Lance S. Russell (R)
Faulk Emily Marcotte (R)
Grant Jackson Schwandt (D)
Gregory Amy Bartling (R)
Haakon Thomas Maher (R)
Hamlin John R. Delzer
Hand Elton R. Anson (R)
Hanson James Davies (D)
Harding Dusty Ginsbach (R)
Hughes Jessica LaMie
Hutchinson Glenn Roth (R)
Hyde Merlin Voorhees (Ind.)
Jackson Daniel Van Gorp (R)
Jerauld Dedrich Koch (R)
Jones Kirby Krogman (Ind.)
Kingsbury Gary W. Schumacher (R)
Lake Wendy Kloeppner (R)
Lawrence John Fitzgerald (R)
Lincoln Thomas Wollman (R)
Lyman Steven R. Smith (Ind.)
Marshall Victor Rapkoch (Ind.)
McCook Mike Fink (R)
McPherson Austin Hoffman (R)
Meade Michele Bordewyk (R)
MelletteTripp Zach Pahlke (R)
Miner Kristian D. Ellendorf (R)
Minnehaha Daniel Haggar (R)
Moody Paul M. Lewis (R)
Pennington Mark Vargo (R)
Potter Craig Smith (R)
Roberts Dylan D. Kirchmeier
Sanborn Jeffrey Larson (R)
Spink Victor Fischbach (D)
Stanley Thomas P. Maher (R)
Sully Emily Sovell (R)
Todd Alvin Pahlke (R)
Turner Katelynn Hoffman (R)
Union Jerry Miller (R)
Walworth James Hare (Ind.)
Yankton Robert Klimisch (R)

Source:[59]

Tennessee

Tennessee elects district attorneys by judicial district.

JUDICIAL DISTRICT COUNTIES DISTRICT ATTORNEY
1st CarterJohnsonUnicoi, and Washington Steven R. Finney (Ind.)
2nd Sullivan Barry P. Staubus (R)
3rd GreeneHamblenHancock, and Hawkins Dan E. Armstrong (R)
4th CockeGraingerJefferson, and Sevier Jimmy B. Dunn (R)
5th Blount Mike L. Flynn (R)
6th Knox Charme Allen (R)
7th Anderson Dave S. Clark (D)
8th CampbellClaiborneFentressScott, and Union Jared R. Effler (Ind.)
9th LoudonMeigsMorgan, and Roane Russell Johnson (Ind.)
10th BradleyMcMinnMonroe, and Polk Stephen D. Crump (R)
11th Hamilton Neal Pinkston (R)
12th BledsoeFranklinGrundyMarionRhea, and Sequatchie Mike Taylor (D)
13th ClayCumberlandDeKalbOvertonPickettPutnam, and White Bryant C. Dunaway (R)
14th Coffee Craig Northcott (R)
15th JacksonMaconSmithTrousdale, and Wilson Tom P. Thompson, Jr. (Ind.)
16th Cannon and Rutherford Jennings H. Jones (R)
17th BedfordLincolnMarshall, and Moore Robert J. Carter (Ind.)
18th Sumner Ray Whitley (R)
19th Montgomery and Robertson John W. Carney, Jr. (Ind.)
20th Davidson Glenn Funk (D)
21st Williamson Kim R. Helper (R)
22nd GilesLawrenceMaury, and Wayne Brent A. Cooper (R)
23rd CheathamDicksonHoustonHumphreys, and Stewart Ray Crouch, Jr. (Ind.)
24th BentonCarrollDecaturHardin, and Henry Matthew F. Stowe (R)
25th FayetteHardemanLauderdaleMcNairy, and Tipton Mark E. Davidson
26th ChesterHenderson, and Madison Jody Pickens (R)
27th Obion and Weakley Tommy A. Thomas (D)
28th CrockettGibson, and Haywood Jason C. Scott
29th Dyer and Lake Danny Goodman, Jr. (Ind.)
30th Shelby Steven J. Mulroy (D)
31st Van Buren and Warren Christopher R. Stanford (R)
32nd HickmanLewis, and Perry Hans L. Schwendimann (R)

Source:[60]

Texas

Texas prosecutors cover districts that include multiple counties, single counties, or even parts of counties. They can be known as “District Attorneys” or “County Attorneys.”

District Attorneys
 
DISTRICT COUNTIES DISTRICT ATTORNEY
1 Sabine, San Augustine J. Kevin Dutton (R)
2 Cherokee Elmer Beckworth (R)
8 Delta, Franklin, Hopkins Will Ramsay (R)
9 Archer (part) David A. Levy (R)
Montgomery Brett W. Ligon (R)
18 Johnson, Somervell Dale Hanna (R)
21 Burleson Susan R. Deski (R)
Washington Julie Renken (R)
22 Comal Jennifer Anne Tharp (R)
23 Matagorda Steven E. Reis (D)
24 DeWitt, Goliad, Refugio Rob Lassmann (R)
26 Williamson Shawn Dick (R)
27 Bell Henry L. Garza (R)
29 Palo Pinto Kriste Burnett (R)
31 Gray, Hemphill, Lipscomb, Roberts, Wheeler Franklin McDonough (R)
32 Fisher, Mitchell, Nolan Ricky N. Thompson (R)
33 Blanco, Burnet, Llano, San Saba Wiley B. “Sonny” McAfee (R)
34 Culberson, El Paso, Hudspeth Bill Hicks (R)
35 Brown, Mills Michael B. Murray (R)
36 San Patricio Sam Smith (R)
38 Medina Mark P. Haby (R)
Real, Uvalde Christina Mitchell Busbee (R)
39 Haskell, Kent, Stonewall, Throckmorton Mike Fouts (D)
42 Coleman Heath Hemphill (R)
43 Parker Jeff Swain (R)
46 Foard, Hardeman, Wilbarger Staley Heatly (D)
47 Armstrong, Potter Randall C. Sims (R)
49 Webb, Zapata Isidro R. Alaniz (D)
50 Baylor, Cottle, King, Knox Hunter Brooks (R)
51 Irion, Schleicher, Sterling, Tom Green (part) Allison Palmer (R)
52 Coryell Dustin “Dusty” Boyd (R)
53 Travis José Garza (D)
63 Kinney, Terrell, Val Verde Suzanne West (R)
64 Hale Wally Hatch (R)
66 Hill Mark Pratt (R)
69 Dallam, Hartley, Moore, Sherman Erin Lands (R)
70 Ector Dusty Gallivan (R)
76 Camp, Titus David Colley (R)
79 Brooks, Jim Wells Carlos R. Garcia (D)
81 Atascosa, Frio, Karnes, La Salle, Wilson Audrey Gossett Louis (R)
83 Brewster, Jeff Davis, Pecos (part), Presidio Ori Tucker White (R)
84 Hansford, Hutchinson Mark W. Snider (R)
85 Brazos Jarvis Parsons (R)
88 Hardin Rebecca R. Walton (R)
90 Stephens, Young Dee H. Peavy (R)
97 Archer (part), Clay, Montague Casey Polhemus (R)
100 Carson, Childress, Collingsworth, Donley, Hall Luke Inman (R)
105 Kenedy, Kleberg John T. Hubert (R)
Nueces Mark A. Gonzalez (D)
106 Dawson, Gaines, Garza, Lynn Phillip Mack Furlow (R)
109 Crane, Winkler Amanda Navarette (R)
110 Briscoe, Dickens, Floyd, Motley Wade Jackson (R)
112 Crockett, Pecos (part), Reagan, Sutton, Upton Laurie K. English (R)
118 Howard, Martin Hardy L. Wilkerson (R)
119 Concho, Runnels, Tom Green (part) John Best (R)
123 Shelby Karren S. Price (R)
132 Borden, Scurry Ben R. Smith (R)
142 Midland Laura A. Nodolf (R)
143 Loving, Reeves, Ward Randall W. “Randy” Reynolds (D)
145 Nacogdoches Andrew Jones (R)
156 Bee, Live Oak, McMullen Jose Aliseda (R)
159 Angelina Janet R. Cassels (R)
173 Henderson Jenny Palmer (R)
196 Hunt Noble D. Walker, Jr. (R)
198 Bandera, Kerr (part) Stephen Harpold (R)
216 Gillespie, Kerr (part) Lucy Wilke (R)
220 Bosque, Comanche, Hamilton Adam Sibley (R)
229 Duval, Jim Hogg, Starr Gocha Ramirez (D)
235 Cooke John Warren (R)
253 Liberty Jennifer L. Bergman (R)
258 Trinity Bennie Schiro (R)
259 Jones, Shackelford Joe Edd Boaz (R)
266 Erath Alan Nash (R)
268 Fort Bend Brian M. Middleton (D)
271 Jack, Wise James Stainton (R)
286 Cochran, Hockley Angela Overman (R)
287 Bailey, Parmer Kathryn Gurley (R)
293 Dimmit, Maverick, Zavala Roberto Serna (D)
329 Wharton Dawn Allison (R)
344 Chambers Cheryl Lieck (R)
349 Houston Donna G. Kaspar (R)
355 Hood Ryan Sinclair (R)
369 Leon Hope Knight (R)
451 Kendall Nicole Bishop (R)
452 Edwards, Kimble, Mason, McCulloch, Menard Tonya S. Ahlschwede (R)
506 Grimes Andria Bender (R)
Harris Kim Ogg (D)

County Attorneys

 
COUNTY COUNTY ATTORNEY
Anderson Allyson Mitchell (R)
Andrews Sean B. Galloway (D)
Aransas Amanda Oster (R)
Austin Travis Koehn (R)
Bastrop Bryan Goertz (R)
Bexar Joe Gonzales (D)
Bowie Jerry Rochelle (R)
Brazoria Thomas J. “Tom” Selleck (R)
Caldwell Fred H. Weber (D)
Calhoun Dan Heard (D)
Callahan Shane Deel (R)
Cameron Luis V. Saenz (D)
Cass Courtney Shelton (R)
Castro Shalyn Hamlin (R)
Collin Greg Willis (R)
Colorado Jay Johannes (R)
Crosby Michael Sales (R)
Dallas John Creuzot (D)
Deaf Smith Chris Strowd (R)
Denton Paul Johnson (R)
Eastland Brad Stephenson (R)
Ellis Ann Montgomery (R)
Falls Kathryn J. “Jodi” Gilliam (R)
Fannin Richard Glaser (R)
Fayette Peggy S. Supak (D)
Freestone Brian Evans (R)
Galveston Jack Roady (R)
Glasscock Hardy L. Wilkerson (R)
Gonzales Paul Watkins (R)
Grayson J. Brett Smith (R)
Gregg Tom Watson (R)
Guadalupe David Willborn (R)
Harris Christian Menefee (D)
Harrison Reid McCain (R)
Hays Kelly Higgins (D)
Hidalgo Ricardo Rodriguez (D)
Jackson Pam Guenther (R)
Jasper Anne Pickle (R)
Jefferson Keith Giblin (D)
Kaufman Erleigh Norville Wiley (R)
Lamar Gary Young (R)
Lamb Scott A. Say (R)
Lampasas John Greenwood (R)
Lavaca Kyle A. Denney (R)
Lee Martin Placke (R)
Limestone Roy DeFriend (R)
Lubbock Sunshine Stanek (R)
Madison Brian Risinger (R)
Marion Angela Smoak (R)
McLennan Barry Johnson (R)
Milam Bill Torrey (R)
Morris Rick Shelton (R)
Navarro Will Thompson (R)
Newton Courtney Tracy Ponthier (R)
Ochiltree Jose N. Meraz (R)
Oldham Kent Birdsong (R)
Orange John D. Kimbrough (R)
Panola Danny Buck Davidson (R)
Polk William Lee Hon (R)
Rain Robert Vititow (R)
Randall Robert Love (R)
Red River Val Varley (R)
Robertson W. Coty Siegert (R)
Rockwall Kenda Culpepper (R)
Rusk Michael Jimerson (R)
San Jacinto Robert Trapp (R)
Smith Jacob Putman (R)
Swisher J. Michael Criswell (R)
Tarrant Sharen Wilson (R)
Taylor James Hicks (R)
Terry Jo’Shae Ferguson-Worley (R)
Tyler Lucas Babin (R)
Upshur Billy Byrd (R)
Van Zandt Tonda Curry (R)
Victoria Constance Filley Johnson (R)
Walker Will Durham (R)
Waller Elton Mathis (R)
Wichita John Gillespie (R)
Willacy Annette C. Hinojosa (D)
Wood Angela Albers (R)
Yoakum Bill Helwig (R)

Source:[61]

Utah

Utah assigns district attorneys by county. They are called “County Attorneys.”

 
COUNTY COUNTY ATTORNEY
Beaver Von J. Christiansen (D)
Box Elder Stephen R. Hadfield (R)
Cache John Luthy (R)
Carbon Christian Bryner (R)
Daggett Kent Snider
Davis Troy S. Rawlings (R)
Duchesne Stephen D. Foote (R)
Emery Michael D. Olsen (R)
Garfield Barry Huntington (R)
Grand Christina Sloan
Iron Chad Dotson (R)
Juab Ryan Peterson (R)
Kane Robert C. Van Dyke (R)
Millard Patrick S. Finlinson (R)
Morgan Garret Smith (R)
Piute Scott Burns
Rich Benjamin Willoughby
Salt Lake Sim Gill (D)[UT 1]
San Juan Brittney M. Ivins (Ind.)
Sanpete Kevin Daniels (R)
Sevier Casey Jewkes (R)
Summit Margaret Olson (D)
Tooele Scott Broadhead (R)
Uintah Jaymon Thomas (R)
Utah Jeff Gray (R)
Wasatch Scott H. Sweat (Ind.)
Washington Eric Clarke (R)
Wayne Michael Winn (R)
Weber Christopher F. Allred (R)
  1. ^ The prosecutor in Salt Lake County is known as a “District Attorney.”[62]

Source:[63]

Vermont

Vermont prosecutors are known as “State’s Attorneys.” They are assigned by county.

 
COUNTY STATE’S ATTORNEY
Addison Eva P. Vekos (D)
Bennington Erica Albin Marthage (D/R)
Caledonia Jessica Zaleski (R/D)
Chittenden Sarah Fair George (D/R)
Essex Vincent Illuzzi (D/R/Prog.)
Franklin John Lavoie (D)
Grand Isle Douglas DiSabito (D/R)
Lamoille Todd A. Shove (D)
Orange Dickson Corbett (D/R)
Orleans Farzana Leyva
Rutland Ian Sullivan (D)
Washington Michele Donnelly (D)
Windham Tracy Kelly Shriver (D)
Windsor Ward Goodenough (D)

Source:[64]

Virginia

Virginia prosecutors are known as “Commonwealth’s Attorneys.” Most are assigned by county or independent city, although some independent cities lack their own prosecutor.

 
COUNTY/INDEPENDENT CITY COMMONWEALTH’S ATTORNEY
Accomack J. Spencer Morgan (Ind.)
Albemarle James Hingeley (D)
Alexandria City Bryan Porter (D)
Alleghany (incl. Covington City) Ann Gardner (Ind.)
Amelia Lee Randolph Harrison (Ind.)
Amherst W. Lyle Carver (Ind.)
Appomattox Leslie M. Fleet (Ind.)
Arlington County and Falls Church City Parisa Dehghani-Tafi (D)
Augusta Tim Martin (R)
Bath John C. Singleton (Ind.)
Bedford Wesley Nance (R)
Bland Patrick D. White (R)
Botetourt John R.H. Alexander (R)
Bristol City Jerry Allen Wolfe (R)
Brunswick Lezlie S. Green (Ind.)
Buchanan Gerald D. Arrington (D)
Buckingham Kemper M. Beasley III (Ind.)
Buena Vista City Josh O. Elrod (Ind.)
Campbell Paul A. McAndrews (Ind.)
Caroline John Mahoney (Ind.)
Carroll (incl. Galax City[VA 1]) Roger D. Brooks (R)
Charles City County Robert H. Tyler (Ind.)
Charlotte William E. Green (Ind.)
Charlottesville City Joseph Platania (D)
Chesapeake City Matthew R. “Matt” Hamel (R)
Chesterfield Stacy Davenport (R)
Clarke Anne McCardell Williams (R)
Colonial Heights City Alfred G. Collins (Ind.)
Craig Matthew Dunne (R)
Culpeper Paul Walther (R)
Cumberland Patricia D. Scales (D)
Danville City Michael Newman (Ind.)
Dickenson Josh Newberry (R)
Dinwiddie Ann Cabell Baskervill (Ind.)
Essex Vince S. Donoghue (R)
Fairfax County (incl. Fairfax City) Steve T. Descano (D)
Fauquier Scott Hook (R)
Floyd Eric Branscom (R)
Fluvanna Jeffrey Haislip (Ind.)
Franklin Allen Dudley (Ind.)
Frederick Ross P. Spicer (R)
Fredericksburg City Libby K. Humphries (Ind.)
Giles Robert M. Lilly, Jr. (Ind.)
Gloucester John Dusewicz (R)
Goochland D. Michael Caudill (R)
Grayson (incl. Galax City[VA 1]) Brandon Boyles (R)
Greene Edwin Consolvo (Ind.)
Greensville (incl. Emporia City) Patricia Taylor Watson (Ind.)
Halifax Tracy Quackenbush Martin (Ind.)
Hampton City Anton A. Bell (D)
Hanover Trip Chalkley (R)
Henrico Shannon L. Taylor (D)
Henry Andrew Nester (Ind.)
Highland Melissa A. Dowd (Ind.)
Hopewell City Richard Newman (Ind.)
Isle of Wight Georgette Phillips (Ind.)
James City County (incl. Williamsburg City) Nathan Green (R)
King and Queen Meredith Adkins (Ind.)
King George Keri Gusmann (Ind.)
King William Matthew R. Kite (Ind.)
Lancaster Anthony G. Spencer (R)
Lee H. Fuller Cridlin (D)
Loudoun Buta Biberaj (D)
Louisa R.E. McGuire (R)
Lunenburg Jordan Spiers (Ind.)
Lynchburg City Bethany Harrison (R)
Madison Clarissa Berry (Ind.)
Martinsville City G. Andy Hall (Ind.)
Mathews Tom C. Bowen III (Ind.)
Mecklenburg Allen Nash (Ind.)
Middlesex Michael Hurd (Ind.)
Montgomery Mary K. Pettitt (R)
Nelson Daniel Rutherford (R)
New Kent T. Scott Renick (Ind.)
Newport News City Howard E. Gwynn (D)
Norfolk City Ramin Fatehi (D)
Northampton Beverly Leatherbury (Ind.)
Northumberland Jane Wrightson (Ind.)
Nottoway Leanne Watrous (Ind.)
Orange Diana Wheeler O’Connell (Ind.)
Page Kenneth L. Alger II (R)
Patrick Stephanie Brinegar Vipperman (Ind.)
Petersburg City Tiffany Buckner (D)
Pittsylvania Bryan Haskins (R)
Portsmouth City Stephanie Morales (D)
Powhatan Richard Cox (Ind.)
Prince Edward Megan Clark (D)
Prince George Susan Fierro (R)
Prince William (incl. Manassas City and Manassas Park City) Amy Ashworth (D)
Pulaski Justin L. Griffith (R)
Radford City Christian Edward Rehak (D)
Rappahannock Arthur L. Goff (Ind.)
Richmond City Colette Wallace McEachin (D)
Richmond County Elizabeth Trible (Ind.)
Roanoke City Donald S. Caldwell (Ind.)
Roanoke County Brian Holohan (R)
Rockbridge (incl. Lexington City) Jared L. Moon (R)
Rockingham (incl. Harrisonburg City) Marsha L. Guest (R)
Russell Zachary Stoots (D)
Salem City Thomas E. Bowers (Ind.)
Scott Daniel Fellhauer
Shenandoah Amanda McDonald Wiseley (R)
Smyth Roy F. Evans (D)
Southampton (incl. Franklin City) Eric A. Cooke (Ind.)
Spotsylvania Travis Bird (R)
Stafford Eric L. Olsen (R)
Staunton City Jeffrey Gaines (Ind.)
Suffolk City Narendra R. Pleas (D)
Surry Derek Davis (Ind.)
Sussex Vincent L. Robertson, Sr. (Ind.)
Tazewell James Christopher Plaster (R)
Virginia Beach City Colin Stolle (R)
Warren John S. Bell (R)
Washington Joshua Cumbow (D)
Waynesboro City David L. Ledbetter (Ind.)
Westmoreland Julia Hutt Sichol (Ind.)
Winchester City Heather D. Hovermale (Ind.)
Wise (incl. Norton City) Chuck H. Slemp III (R)
Wythe Michael D. Jones (R)
York (incl. Poquoson City) Benjamin M. Hahn (R)
  1. Jump up to:a b The city of Galax is split between two prosecutors.

Source:[65]

Washington

Washington assigns district attorneys by county. They are known as “Prosecuting Attorneys.”

 
COUNTY PROSECUTING ATTORNEY
Adams Randy Flyckt (R)
Asotin Benjamin Nichols (Ind.)
Benton Eric Eisinger (R)
Chelan Robert Sealby (R)
Clallam Mark Nicholas (R)
Clark Tony Golik[WA 1]
Columbia Dale Slack (Ind.)
Cowlitz Ryan Jurvakainen (Ind.)
Douglas Gordon Edgar (Ind.)
Ferry Kathryn Burke (R)
Franklin Shawn Sant (R)
Garfield Matthew Newberg (R)
Grant Kevin McCrae (R)
Grays Harbor Norma Tillotson (D)
Island Gregory Banks (Ind.)
Jefferson James Kennedy (D)
King Leesa Manion[WA 2]
Kitsap Chad Enright (D)
Kittitas Gregory Zempel (R)
Klickitat David Quesnel (Ind.)
Lewis Jonathan Meyer (R)
Lincoln Adam Walser (R)
Mason Michael Dorcy (R)
Okanogan Albert Lin (R)
Pacific Michael Rotham (R)
Pend Oreille Dolly Hunt (R)
Pierce Mary Robnett (Ind.)
San Juan Amy Vira (D)
Skagit Rich Weyrich (Ind.)
Skamania Adam Kick (Ind.)
Snohomish Jason Cummings (D)
Spokane Larry Haskell (R)
Stevens Erika George (R)
Thurston Jon Tunheim (D)
Wahkiakum Dan Bigelow (D)
Walla Walla Gabriel Acosta (R)
Whatcom Eric Richey (D)
Whitman Denis Tracy (R)
Yakima Joseph Brusic (R)
  1. ^ The Clark County Prosecuting Attorney is a non-partisan position.[66]
  2. ^ The King County Prosecuting Attorney is a non-partisan position.[67]

Source:[68]

West Virginia

West Virginia assigns district attorneys by county. They are known as “Prosecuting Attorneys.”

 
COUNTY PROSECUTING ATTORNEY
Barbour Thomas B. Hoxie (R)
Berkeley Catie Wilkes-Delligatti (R)
Boone Donna Taylor (R)
Braxton Dara Accord
Brooke Joseph Barki III (D)
Cabell Sean K. Hammers (D)
Calhoun Nigel Jeffries (R)
Clay Jim E. Samples (D)
Doddridge A. Brooke Fitzgerald (R)
Fayette Anthony Cilberti, Jr. (D)
Gilmer Gerald B. Hough (D)
Grant John Ours (R)
Greenbrier Patrick Via (R)
Hampshire Rebecca L. Miller (R)
Hancock Stephen Dragisich (R)
Hardy Lucas J. See (D)
Harrison Rachel Romano (D)
Jackson David Kyle Moore (R)
Jefferson Matthew Harvey (R)
Kanawha Charles T. Miller (R)
Lewis Christina T. Flanigan (R)
Lincoln W.J. Stevens II (D)
Logan David Wandling (D)
Marion Jeffrey L. Freeman (D)
Marshall Joseph Canestraro (D)
Mason Seth Gaskins (R)
McDowell Brittany Puckett (D)
Mercer Brian K. Cochran (R)
Mineral F. Cody Pancake III (R)
Mingo Jonathan “Duke” Jewell (D)
Monongalia Perri J. DeChristopher (D)
Monroe Justin St. Clair (D)
Morgan Dan James (R)
Nicholas Jonathan Sweeney (D)
Ohio Scott R. Smith (D)
Pendleton April Mallow (R)
Pleasants Brian K. Carr (D)
Pocahontas Teresa Helmick (R)
Preston James Shay, Jr. (R)
Putnam Mark A. Sorsaia (R)
Raleigh Ben Hatfield (R)
Randolph Michael Parker (D)
Ritchie Samuel C. Rogers II (D)
Roane Josh Downey (R)
Summers Kristin R. Cook (R)
Taylor John R. Bord (R)
Tucker Savannah Wilkins (D)
Tyler D. Luke Furbee (R)
Upshur Bryan S. Hinkle (R)
Wayne Matthew Deerfield (D)
Webster Dwayne Vandevender (D)
Wetzel Timothy Haught (D)
Wirt Ted Davitian (R)
Wood Pat Lefebure (R)
Wyoming Michael Cochrane (D)

Source:[69]

Wisconsin

Wisconsin assigns district attorneys by county.

COUNTY DISTRICT ATTORNEY
Adams Tania M. Bonnett (Ind.)
Ashland David Meany (R)
Barron Brian Wright (R)
Bayfield Kimberly Lawton (D)
Brown David L. Lasee (R)
Buffalo Tom Bilski (R)
Burnett James Jay Rennicke (R)
Calumet Nathan Haberman (R)
Chippewa Wade C. Newell (R)
Clark Melissa Inlow (D)
Columbia Brenda Yaskal (D)
Crawford Lukas L. Steiner (D)
Dane Ismael R. Ozanne (D)
Dodge Kurt F. Klomberg (R)
Door Colleen Nordin (R)
Douglas Mark Fruehauf (D)
Dunn Andrea Nodolf (R)
Eau Claire Gary King (D)
Florence Doug Drexler (R)
Fond du Lac Eric Toney (R)
Forest Charles Simono (D)
Grant Lisa Riniker (R)
Green Craig R. Nolen (R)
Green Lake Andrew Christenson (R)
Iowa Zach Leigh (D)
Iron Matthew Tingstad (R)
Jackson Daniel Diehn (R)
Jefferson Monica Hall
Juneau Kenneth Hamm (R)
Kenosha Michael D. Graveley (D)
Kewaunee Andrew Naze (D)
La Crosse Tim Gruenke (D)
Lafayette Jenna Gill (R)
Langlade Elizabeth R. Gebert (R)
Lincoln Galen Bayne-Allison (D)
Manitowoc Jacalyn LaBre (R)
Marathon Theresa Wetzsteon (D)
Marinette DeShea D. Morrow (R)
Marquette Brian Juech
Milwaukee John T. Chisholm (D)
Monroe Kevin D. Croninger (R)
Oconto Edward Burke (R)
Oneida Michael W. Schiek (R)
Outagamie Mindy Tempelis (R)
Ozaukee Adam Y. Gerol (R)
Pepin Jon D. Seifert (D)
Pierce Halle Hatch (D)
Polk Jeffrey L. Kemp (R)
Portage Louis J. Molepske, Jr. (D)
Price Karl Kelz (R)
Racine Tricia Hanson (R)
Richland Jennifer Harper (R)
Rock David J. O’Leary (D)
Rusk Annette Barna (D)
Saint Croix Karl Anderson (R)
Sauk Michael X. Albrecht (D)
Sawyer Bruce R. Poquette (R)
Shawano/Menominee Greg Parker (R)
Sheboygan Joel Urmanski (R)
Taylor Kristi Tlusty (D)
Trempealeau John Sacia (D)
Vernon Timothy J. Gaskell (R)
Vilas Martha Milanowski (R)
Walworth Zeke Wiedenfeld (R)
Washburn Aaron Marcoux (R)
Washington Mark D. Bensen (R)
Waukesha Susan L. Opper (R)
Waupaca Veronica Isherwood (R)
Waushara Matthew R. Leusink (R)
Winnebago Christian A. Gossett (R)
Wood Craig Lambert (R)

Source:[70]

Wyoming

Wyoming assigns district attorneys by county, who are thus known as “County Attorneys.”

COUNTY COUNTY ATTORNEY
Albany Edward Kurt Britzius (D)
Big Horn Marcia Bean (R)
Campbell Mitch Damsky (R)
Carbon Ashley Mayfield Davis (R)
Converse Quentin Richardson (R)
Crook Joseph M. Baron (D)
Fremont Patrick LeBrun (R)
Goshen Eric Boyer (R)
Hot Springs Jill Logan (R)
Johnson Tucker J. Ruby (R)
Laramie Sylvia Miller Hackl (R)
Lincoln Spencer Allred (R)
Natrona Dan Itzen (R)
Niobrara Anne Wasserburger (R)
Park Brian Skoric (R)
Platte Douglas W. Weaver (R)
Sheridan Dianna Bennett (R)
Sublette Michael Crosson (R)
Sweetwater Daniel Erramouspe (R)
Teton Erin Weisman (D)
Uinta Loretta Rae Howieson (R)
Washakie John P. Worrall (R)
Weston Alex Berger (R)

VIDEO: President Donald J. Trump, ‘We will not comply’ with Covid authoritarianism

A panel of independent advisers to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) will meet on September 12th, 2023 to make recommendations on updated COVID-19 vaccines ahead of the fall season, according to a U.S. government website on Friday.

This panel is another effort to impact the 2024 elections as it did the 2020 election.

WATCH: We Will not Comply

In an August 30, 2023 article Reason article titled Don’t Bring Back COVID Authoritarianism wrote,

People should be free to choose how cautious to be. Mask mandates, lockdowns, and closing schools won’t stop the virus.

COVID-19 cases are up. Hospitalizations climbed 24 percent last week.

But the media make everything seem scarier than it is. The headline “Up 24 Percent!” comes after dramatic lows. Hospitalizations are still less than half what they were when President Joe Biden said, “The pandemic is over.”

Yet the shallow media keep pounding away: “It may be time to break out the masks,” headlined CNN.

Frightened people believe. The movie studio Lionsgate reinstated an office mask mandate. Atlanta’s Morris Brown College mandated masks and even banned parties.

This month, several school districts in Kentucky and Texas closed. “The safety and wellbeing of our students, staff, and community is a top priority,” said the school superintendent in Texas.

But kids rarely get very sick from COVID, and schools aren’t COVID hotspots. Studies on tens of thousands of people found “no consistent relationship between in-person K-12 schooling and the spread of the coronavirus.”

Lancet study found Florida had the 12th-fewest excess COVID deaths in the country, even though Florida students went back to school without masks relatively soon.

At least Texas’ and Kentucky’s closures were isolated and brief. Long-term closures during the pandemic brought America’s lowest math and reading scores in decades. Florida’s kids suffered less learning loss than kids in other states.

Read full article.

We agree. This flu virus is best dealt with between one’s doctor and patient. Government lockdowns and mandates don’t work.

President Trump is right, we the people must not comply.

©2023. Dr. Rich Swier. All rights reserved.

RELATED ARTICLES:

Trump Pleads Not Guilty, Waives Arraignment In GA Case

ONS: 95% of Covid Deaths were Vaccinated As Biden Calls For New Nationwide Covid Shot Program

How the Pandemic Shattered Social Skills and Destroyed Public Spaces

Socialists Rally in NYC

RELATED TWEET:

RELATED VIDEOS:

Congresswoman MTG Holds Hearing on Injuries Caused by COVID-19 Vaccines with Special Witnesses

Dr. John Campbell on the newest scariant and Biden’s promise to inject us all

BRIGITTE GABRIEL – TRAVEL RESTRICTIONS FOR THE GLOBAL RESET?

National Archives Has 5,400 Joe Biden Emails Using Aliases and Fake Names To Discuss Business with Hunter and Forward Classified Govt Info

For what, aliases? What was he hiding? Criminals use aliases.

This nation is under siege by the most powerful organized crime racket in the world.

National Archives reveals it has 5,400 Biden emails in which the president potentially used FAKE NAMES to forward government information and discuss business with son Hunter

By JAMES GORDON FOR DAILYMAIL.COM

President Joe Biden may have used pseudonyms in nearly 5,400 emails, electronic records and documents when he was vice president, a bombshell letter from the National Archives and Records Administration reveals.

The trove of communications was confirmed after the Southeastern Legal Foundation (SLF) filed a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) for emails connected to aliases allegedly used by Biden, including Robin Ware, Robert L. Peters, and JRB Ware.

Republicans have been demanding the release of the emails they say could show Biden used the names to discuss foreign business with his son and share information on countries where he was doing deals.

The White House has insisted Biden was never in business with his son, and vice presidents and high-level government officials often use pseudonyms to prevent being inundated with spam and emails from the public.

At the time, the Obama administration dismissed criticism the communications were ‘secret’ because they were all archived.

But the sheer volume of emails raises questions over whether then-VP Biden broke the ‘absolute wall’ he said he maintained between the ‘the personal and private, and the government’.

Emails from Hunter’s laptop also reveal business partners referred to Biden as the ‘big guy’.

[ … ]

NARA has acknowledged holding around 5,400 emails, electronic records, and documents suggesting President Biden used pseudonyms while Obama’s VP

The existence of the emails came to light in response to a Freedom of Information Act request submitted in June 2022

Emails are connected to the aliases Robin Ware, Robert L. Peters, and JRB Ware — all pseudonyms the 80-year-old president was known to utilize while serving

National Archives Has 5,400 Biden Alias Emails

National Archives Has 5,400 Biden Emails With Pseudonyms

By Jeffrey Rodack| Newsmax, 29 August 2023:

The National Archives and Records Administration acknowledged it has about 5,400 emails that potentially show President Joe Biden hid behind phony names while vice president, the New York Post is reporting.

The existence of the records was confirmed by the NARA and came in response to a June 2022 Freedom of Information Act request by the Southeastern Legal Foundation.

Specifically, the SLF, a nonprofit constitutional legal group, requested emails relating to the accounts of Robin Ware, Robert L. Peters, and JRB Ware — pseudonyms Joe Biden was known to use in the White House during his time as vice president under Barack Obama, the Post said.

The legal foundation sued the NARA for the release of the records on Monday. The group claims the records could show Joe Biden may have provided government information to his son, Hunter Biden.

Kimberly Hermann, SLF general counsel, said in a statement: “All too often, public officials abuse their power by using it for their personal or political benefit. When they do, many seek to hide it. The only way to preserve governmental integrity is for NARA to release Joe Biden’s nearly 5,400 emails to SLF and thus the public. The American public deserves to know what is in them.”

Stephannie Oriabure, director of NARA’s archival operations division, wrote the SLF on June 24, 2022, saying: “We have performed a search of our collection for vice presidential records related to your [June 9, 2022] request and have identified approximately 5,138 email messages, 25 electronic files and 200 pages of potentially responsive records that must be processed in order to respond to your request,” according to the lawsuit.

The SLF said none of the emails or documents have been turned over to the group.

Read more.

AUTHOR

RELATED ARTICLES:

LEAKED DOCUMENT: Biden’s Terror-Supporting Iran Envoy Robert Malley Lost Clearance over “Personal Misconduct”

COVER-UP: What is Going On In Hawaii? FEMA Orders Full Media ‘Blackout’

RELATED VIDEO: CAUGHT: Biden SECRET Emails!

EDITORS NOTE: This Geller Report is republished with permission. ©All rights reserved.

A Travesty of Justice’: Donald Trump Booked as Inmate No. P01135809 in Atlanta

As he departed an Atlanta-area jail Thursday night, former President Donald Trump derided his fourth indictment as a form of “election interference” designed to thwart his presidential campaign and stifle constitutionally protected free speech rights.

“This is a very sad day for America,” said Trump as he left the Fulton County Sheriff’s Office, where he voluntarily surrendered to authorities over allegations that his questioning the controversial outcome of the 2020 election violated the state’s Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations (RICO) Act. In a short period, Trump went through booking as Inmate No. P01135809 and paid a $200,000 bond.

“We have every right — every single right — to challenge an election we think is dishonest,” he said, noting Hillary Clinton and Stacey Abrams had denied the outcome of the 2016 presidential election and the 2018 Georgia governor’s election, respectively. “What has taken place here is a travesty of justice,” said Trump.

The charges display “the continued weaponization of the justice system against a political opponent,” said Rep. Byron Donald (R-Fla.).

The indictments are intended to disadvantage Trump’s 2024 presidential bid to oust Joe Biden and Kamala Harris, the 45th president said. In all, Democratic prosecutors have filed 91 charges against Trump spread across four indictments:

  • A local indictment of 34 counts handed down by Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg in March that Trump falsified business records when paying off pornstar Stormy Daniels before the 2016 election. Critics say punishing federal election violations belongs exclusively to federal authorities and that the statute of limitations has lapsed;
  • A federal case brought by Biden administration Justice Department special counsel Jack Smith in June for 37 felonies, claiming Trump illegally retained classified information after leaving the White House and attempted to obstruct justice. This led to the first-ever government raid on the home of a former president;
  • Another four-count federal indictment which Smith issued in August, alleging that Trump illegally attempted to sway the 2020 presidential election; and
  • The Atlanta indictment charging Trump with 13 election-related charges, including conspiracy to defraud the United States, conspiracy to impede the January 6 congressional proceeding, and a conspiracy against the right to vote, and an attempt to obstruct and impede the certification of the electoral vote. Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis pressed a total of 41 charges against 19 defendants, whom she says she plans to try as a group.

“What they’re doing is election interference,” said Trump. “This is their way of campaigning.”

Jack Smith, who was appointed by Attorney General Merrick Garland, proposed the federal trial over the 2020 election begin on January 2, 2024 — 13 days before the Iowa caucus. The New York City trial will follow on March 25, the heat of the presidential primary season.

The latest case could also chill Trump’s ability to campaign, as it threatens to jail him if he makes any “direct or indirect threat,” including via social media. Smith claimed a remark Trump made on Truth Social — “If you go after me, I’m coming after you!” — could intimidate witnesses. Trump’s campaign said the post came “in response to the RINO, China-loving, dishonest special interest groups and Super PACs.”

At age 77, nearly any conviction on “any count could be a terminal sentence,” said George Washington University law professor Jonathan Turley.

If the criminalization of political differences does not end, any Republican could share Trump’s fate, the president said. “If somebody else got in other than me, they’ll go after him just as viciously as me,” Trump told Tucker Carlson on Wednesday evening. “These people are sick.”

Trump’s remarks came at 8:55 p.m. Eastern Wednesday night — five minutes before eight other Republican presidential hopefuls held their first debate. Trump opted instead to appear on episode 19 of “Tucker on X,” formerly “Tucker on Twitter.”

Trump and Tucker’s tête-à-tête represented a revenge of sorts from both men against Fox News, which observers say has aggressively moved leftward since pivoting away from Trump and firing Carlson in April. Its ratings have plunged, with the news channel briefly losing its position as the leading network in cable news to MSNBC. Fox News viewership dropped 49% this July compared to July 2022. The audience for Tucker’s replacement, Jesse Watters, still lags behind his predecessor by 700,000 viewers.

Trump skipped the debate, in part because it would be held “at a network that isn’t particularly friendly to me, quite frankly.” His “Tucker on X” interview tweet was seen by 252 million people within less than 36 hours — 16 times higher than the 12.8 million people who watched the Fox News debate. Trump dominates the Republican field, leading his nearest competitor, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, by 41 points, according to a Real Clear Politics average of polls.

“If you’re elected president again, what’s your number one priority?” asked Carlson.

“The first thing I would do is seal up the border good-and-tight, except for people who want to come in legally,” Trump replied. “You can do numerous things at the same time,” including deporting “hundreds of thousands” of criminal aliens admitted into the United States by the Biden-Harris administration, improving security, and completing the border wall promised in the 2016 election. “Terrorists are pouring into our country,” he said. Border agents encountered 591 people on the U.S. terror watchlist in July. “Last month, we had 149 countries represented from places that many people never even heard of, coming into our country,” said Trump.

Trump also proposed a number of electoral reforms to prevent future voter fraud. “We should go back to all paper ballots, voter ID, same-day voting,” said Trump. “Anytime you have mail-in ballots, you’re going to have massive cheating in your election,” something he said the Democrats’ must resort to after their policies fail.

“Who wants open borders? Who wants high taxes? Who wants high interest rates? Who wants not to be able to use a gas stove?”

Fox News moderators Bret Baier and Martha MacCallum did not ask a single question about immigration, legal or illegal, which voters rank as their third most important issue.

If he avoids a criminal conviction, Trump feels confident about his ability to defeat Joe Biden in a 2020 rematch. “I think he’s worse mentally than physically. … He looks like he’s walking on toothpicks, then you see him at the beach, he can’t lift the chair,” Trump said. “You’re waiting for him to collapse, and he almost always does.”

He also criticized Biden for vacationing at Delaware’s Rehoboth Beach as forest fires consumed Maui. “The beach doesn’t represent what the president’s supposed to be doing. He’s supposed to be working. He’s supposed to be getting us out of that horrible, horrible war that we’re very much involved in with Russia and Ukraine,” Trump said, adding “That’s a war that we should end immediately, not because of one side or the other; because hundreds of thousands of people are being killed.”

Kamala Harris’s mental acuity is “almost as bad as” Biden’s, Trump said. “She speaks almost in rhyme. …. ‘The bus will go here, and then the bus will go there, because that’s what buses do.’ It’s weird.”

The 46-minute-long interview gave Trump the opportunity to address such idiosyncratic issues as whether Jeffrey Epstein killed himself. (“I think he probably committed suicide,” said Trump. But the former president allowed that Epstein “knew a lot on a lot of people,” and “A case could be made either way.”)

When asked if he was convinced the FBI and CIA informed him of all their activities during his term as president, Trump replied, “No, I’m not.” He vowed to control intelligence agencies, citing his firing of James Comey as director of the FBI. “If I didn’t fire Comey, maybe I wouldn’t be talking to you,” he said, referring to the Russian collusion investigation as “a coup.” But, he said, taking on the Deep State touched off yet more massive resistance to the popular will, including his present legal troubles.

“When I fired Comey, it was like throwing a rock into a hornet’s nest.”

AUTHOR

Ben Johnson

Ben Johnson is senior reporter and editor at The Washington Stand.

RELATED ARTICLES:

This phone call is the piece of evidence that proved Donald Trump’s innocence

Top 3 Abortion Lies in and around the GOP Primary Debate

EDITORS NOTE: This Washington Stand column is republished with permission. All rights reserved. ©2023 Family Research Council.


The Washington Stand is Family Research Council’s outlet for news and commentary from a biblical worldview. The Washington Stand is based in Washington, D.C. and is published by FRC, whose mission is to advance faith, family, and freedom in public policy and the culture from a biblical worldview. We invite you to stand with us by partnering with FRC.

House of the Rising Son: Alexander Soros takes control of his father’s $25 billion funding empire.

New York hedge fund manager George Soros has long been one of the most politically powerful individuals on earth. Since the mid-1980s in particular, he has used his immense influence to help reconfigure the political landscapes of several countries around the world—in some cases playing a key role in toppling regimes that had held the reins of government power for years, even decades. Vis à vis the United States, a strong case can be made for the claim that Soros has affected American politics and culture more profoundly that any other person in living memory. Armed with a multi-billion-dollar personal fortune, he has cast himself as a missionary with a semi-divine mandate to transform the world and its institutions into something which he deems better—by promoting all manner of leftwing values and political agendas.

But George Soros is 93 years old, and he understands that it’s now time for him to pass the baton of his crusade for radical leftism to someone younger. Hence, a couple of months ago he officially named his 38-year-old son, Alexander Soros, as board chairman of the Open Society Foundations (OSF), the $25 billion philanthropic empire through which the elder Soros has funded the Left for decades. “We think alike,” said George Soros when discussing Alexander’s prospects as his successor. Alexander, meanwhile, told The Wall Street Journal that he considers himself to be an even “more political” person than his father. Thus, his ascent to the top of the OSF hierarchy suddenly makes him one of the most consequential human beings anywhere on the planet. Let us examine, then, exactly who Alexander Soros is.

Background

Alexander “Alex” Soros was born in 1985 to the famous leftwing financier George Soros, who was then 55 years old, and the latter’s second wife, historian Susan Webner.

The fourth of five children from George Soros’ first two marriages, Alex was raised in a 14-room house on an estate in upscale Katonah, New York. The family also owned a duplex apartment in Manhattan. From pre-K through grade 12, Alex attended King Low Heywood Thomas, an elite private school located in Stamford, Connecticut.

Alex and his younger brother Gregory rarely saw their father when they were children. A 2012 New York Times profile quoted Alex saying, “I was very angry at him [the father], I felt unwanted. He had a very hard time communicating love, and he was never really around.” “He was there, but he wasn’t there,” Alex said on another occasion. “He was thinking about [financial] markets the whole time.” Most of Alex’s childhood days were spent under the supervision of a Chinese immigrant nanny named Ping.

At a young age, Alex was introduced, through his father, to figures like Hillary ClintonNelson Mandela, and Bono. He claims that he began to engage with his father more during his teenage years, in conversations that sometimes included debates about the merits of Karl Marx’s ideas. In particular, the boy grew closer to his father after his mother filed for divorce in 2004, when Alex was a freshman at New York University (NYU). “In a way, he [George Soros] took fathering more seriously after the divorce,” the son recalls.

Between 2004 and 2006, Alex worked part time at his father’s Open Society Institute, later renamed the Open Society Foundations (OSF), which has long been one of the world’s leading funders of leftwing groups and causes.

Alex graduated from NYU with a BA degree in history in 2009, before later obtaining both an MA and PhD in history from UC Berkeley in 2018. He also served stints as: (a) a post-doctoral fellow at the Hannah Arendt Center for Politics and the Humanities at Bard College, a school whose activities and programs had already been bankrolled by his father for a number of years; (b) an honorary fellow at the Institute for Advanced Study at Central European University in Budapest, an institution founded by his father in 1991; and (c) a visiting fellow at the Institute for Human Sciences in Vienna, a nonprofit educational institute whose relationship with George Soros, who was one of its board members, dated back to at least 1989.

In his young adulthood, Alex was best known for his high-profile social life. As a Daily Mail headline once put it: “Gorgeous models, NBA pals and hide-and-seek at his mansion: Welcome to the lavish life of investor George Soros’ playboy son.” Indeed, he garnered much media attention simply for attending extravagant parties with celebrities in places like the Hamptons and Cannes.

A New Sense of Purpose

When he reached his early to mid-twenties, Alex Soros resolved to bolster his credibility and become known for something other than hobnobbing with celebrities. Toward that end, he traveled, on his own initiative, to remote parts of the Amazon rainforest to meet with indigenous leaders for the purpose of drawing public attention to their needs.

Rising New Philanthropist for the Democratic Left

Soros began to make a name for himself as a philanthropist in 2010, when he contributed nearly $74,000 to Democrat candidates during that year’s midterm election cycle. At the time, he stated that America “will be better off if Democrats keep control” (of the U.S. House and Senate). He especially took issue with Republicans’ “extreme” rhetoric on social issues, stating: “I am the son of a Hungarian Jew who survived the Nazis … my politics are shaped by my family history and being Jewish. I was raised to sympathize with other minorities and targets of bigotry.” Asserting further that the then-ascendant Tea Party movement was “a movement of intolerance,” Soros articulated his hope that “my donations will help combat this intolerance.” He also noted that he felt an inner sense of “conflict” about contributing large sums of money to political campaigns as a matter of principle, stating: “I do not believe that elections should be privately financed. Ultimately, that’s incompatible with democratic principles.” “I detest the idea that money is speech,” he would elaborate in 2012, “but if the other side is going to do it, you have to do it.”

In 2011, Soros joined the OSF board of directors. Initially, however, he was scarcely noticed in that role. “Alex used to come to board meetings, but he hardly spoke,” recalls former OSF president Aryeh Neier.

Also in 2011, Soros and his younger brother Gregory collaborated to launch the Soros Brothers Investments firm, where Alex served as a managing partner.

In 2011 as well, Alex Soros joined the board of Global Witness (GW), an organization dedicated to exposing human-rights abuses by mining companies and governments around the world. In its self-description, GW says: “We want justice for those disproportionately affected by the climate crisis: people in the global south, indigenous communities and communities of colour, women and younger generations. We want corporations to respect the planet and human rights, governments to protect and listen to their citizens, and the online world to be free from misinformation and hate.”

While still a graduate student at UC Berkeley, Soros in April 2012 launched an eponymous philanthropy called the Alexander Soros Foundation (ASF). His objective was to fund “more experimental and perhaps controversial projects that larger mainstream foundations might not be able to take on.” As InfluenceWatch.org reports, ASF’s “stated mission is to promote social justice and human rights, though its grants also focus on environmentalism, education, cultural causes, and more.” In July 2012, Soros told The Wall Street Journal: “I don’t want to become a full-time philanthropist, because I don’t think it is a job, per se. I think it is something one should do—a responsibility.”

Shortly after its launch, ASF awarded grants to the National Domestic Workers Alliance and Make the Road New Yorkboth of which support increased levels of immigration to the United States, as well as amnesty for illegal aliens currently residing there.

In 2012, Soros contributed slightly more than $400,000 to Democratic campaigns and political action committees during that year’s election cycle.

During the 2014 election season, Soros matched his 2012 output by donating yet another $400,000 to Democratic campaigns and PACs.

In April 2015, Politico reported that Soros had poured $1.2 million into the preceding three election cycles, including support for Friends of Democracy, “a super PAC started by his half-brother Jonathan Soros, who has focused his political efforts on getting money out of politics.”

In August 2015, Soros attended a Hollywood fundraiser for presidential hopeful Hillary Clinton, an event that featured the presence of luminaries like Tom Hanks, Kanye West, and Kim Kardashian.

In 2015 as well, Soros took a full-time role with OSF. “He worked with George’s longtime adviser, Michael Vachon, and others, to hone his public speaking and political skills,” reports The Wall Street Journal. “He emerged as his father’s deputy.”

In a January 2016 interview with Forbes magazine, Soros publicly identified himself as “an avid supporter of many progressive politicians, including Gavin Newsom, who is running for Governor of California in 2018, Tammy Duckworth, who is running for Senator in the state of Illinois in 2016 election cycle, and Hillary Clinton.”

By May 2016, Soros had contributed $1 million to the pro-Clinton political action committee, Priorities USA.

In August 2016, Soros took to Instagram to post a photo of himself and Democrat vice presidential nominee Tim Kaine after an exclusive dinner that the two had shared. “Love this man!” read the post. “Was great to have dinner with a man we need to call one day #vicepresident@timkaine last night! He is definitely the real deal! #clintonkaine2016#strongertogether.” As noted by Breitbart News, Soros’ Instagram account, by that point in time, had also featured photos of Soros alongside such high-profile Democrats as Barack ObamaChuck SchumerNancy PelosiValerie JarrettCecile RichardsAl FrankenElizabeth WarrenKirsten Gillibrand, and Keith Ellison.

During the 2016 election season, Soros donated more than $4.5 million to Democratic campaign committees and political action committees. The leading recipient of his largesse was the Senate Majority PAC, a political action committee associated with Senator Chuck Schumer, which took in $3.5 million from Soros between August and November of that year. Soros also gave $1 million to Priorities USA Action$127,800 to the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, and $133,400 to the Democratic National Committee Services Corporation. Among the individuals whose campaigns Soros supported with the $5,400 maximum contributions allowable by law were Hillary ClintonChuck SchumerRuss Feingold, and Keith Ellison.

In 2017, Soros donated $650,000 to Democratic causes. This included the legal maximum of $33,900 to the Democratic National Committee (DNC) in April, plus contributions to such notable Democrats as congressional candidate Jon Ossoff (Georgia) and Senators Claire McCaskill (Missouri), Jon Tester (Montana), Maria Cantwell (Washington), and Chris Murphy (Connecticut). And during the 2017 gubernatorial primary campaign in Virginia, Soros donated hundreds of thousands of dollars to Democrat Tom Perriello. who ultimately was trounced in the primary race by establishment-backed Ralph Northam.

Also in 2017, Soros gave $500,000 to the International Crisis Group, on whose board of directors he sat.

As of 2017 as well, Soros was also an active board member with the Open Society FoundationsBend the Arc Jewish Action PAC, Global Witness, Libraries Without Borders, Central European University, and the Gordon Parks Foundation. In addition, he was a trustee with the Alexander Soros Foundation.

In early 2018, Soros donated hundreds of thousands of dollars to support Florida gubernatorial candidate Andrew Gillum, a Democrat who ultimately was defeated by Republican Ron DeSantis and was later arrested for a drug-fueled encounter with a homosexual male prostitute.

By September 2018, Soros had contributed almost $3 million to Democratic committees during that year’s midterm election cycle. This included a $100,000 donation to an independent expenditure committee supporting Rep. Keith Ellison‘s bid to become attorney general of Minnesota – nearly half of all the money raised by that committee.

In June 2019, Soros was among 19 liberal-left philanthropists to publicly endorse the imposition of “a moderate wealth tax on the fortunes of the richest 1/10 of the richest 1% of Americans.”

On October 21, 2019, Soros hosted a dinner event in his own home to benefit the National Democratic Redistricting Committee (NDRC), which sought to redraw America’s nationwide election map in a manner that would benefit Democrats at the polls. The three featured guests at this event were NDRC chairman Eric Holder, former Virginia Governor Terry McAuliffe, and former President Barack Obama.

During the 2020 presidential election season, Soros gave $700,000 to the Biden Victory Fund in support of Joe Biden’s White House bid.

In September 2021, Soros and his father spent time with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi. On September 9, Alex Soros tweeted a photo of the three of them smiling together, with a caption that read: “In Pelosi we trust! Was good seeing @SpeakerPelosi this weekend.”

In 2022, Soros was named president of Democracy PAC, which had served as his father’s major campaign-spending vehicle since 2019. Among other things, this political action committee had backed the election campaigns of numerous district attorneys and law-enforcement officials who viewed the criminal justice system as inherently racist and therefore sought to reduce the incarceration rates of nonwhite minorities. All told, the PAC had funneled more than $80 million to Democratic organizations and candidates during the 2020 election cycle, and was re-seeded with an additional infusion of $125 million by George Soros in January 2022 – money that would be used to help Democrats in the midterm elections later that year.

In December 2022, Soros attended a state dinner for French President Emmanuel Macron at the Biden White House.

From 2018 through March 2023, Soros gave approximately $5.7 million to left-leaning political action committees and Democratic campaigns. Also during that same period, he met at least 9 times with Chuck Schumer (who served some of that time as Senate Majority Leader), and at least 8 times with Nancy Pelosi (who served some of that time as House Speaker). Further, Soros contributed a combined total of more than $130,000 to Pelosi’s congressional campaign and to a Super PAC victory fund associated with Pelosi.

By early July 2023, Soros had visited the Biden White House at least 20 times since the new administration was installed in January 2021. Among the officials with whom Soros had met were Madeline Strasser and Nina Srivastava (advisors to White House chief of staff Ron Klain); Hazel Castillo (National Security Council staff assistant); Mariana Adame (advisor to Steve Ricchetti, counselor to President Biden); Kimberly Lang (national security advisor); Jonathan Finer (deputy national security advisor); and Amanda Sloat, the National Security Council’s senior director for Europe.

Soros’ Views on Israel, the Jewish People, & Anti-Semitism

In a July 2012 interview with Philanthropy News Digest, Soros articulated his thoughts regarding the American Jewish community’s perspectives on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict:

“When it comes to Israel and Palestine, I believe in consistency. If there’s one problem I have with the American Jewish community, it’s that it is at times rather inconsistent on the subject. I think that Jews have supported progressive causes because of the better part of their nature and that’s a great legacy; it’s really a part of Jewish exceptionalism. But I worry when Jews in America start to support policies in Israel which they wouldn’t support in America, which don’t allow for separation of church and state, which don’t give full rights to people who are technically living under occupation, and which don’t allow for immigration of people who aren’t Jews, or for non-Jews to become citizens. This is a problem because it gives credence to the old adage that Jews are liberal or left-wing only for their own self-interest; that they want a color-blind society with all these different ethnic groups because it makes them safer. So I think that whether you keep your values consistent is a true test. A lot of Americans Jews do support one thing here and another thing there, and that’s inconsistent.”

In 2012 as well, Soros:

  • donated at least $200,000 to the Jewish Council for Education and Research, a leftwing super PAC that strongly supported both of Barack Obama’s presidential campaigns
  • was one of the nation’s top donors to J Street, a Jewish organization highly critical of Israel’s dealings with the Palestinians and Hamas terrorists

In an April 2018 interview with the Israeli news outlet Ynetnews, Soros charged that conservative criticisms directed against his father were largely motivated by Jew-hatred:

“Since I was a child, I realized that—beyond all political reasons—the attacks against my father have an anti-Semitic tone. I read what they said about him in Hungary. They described him as the creator of an international Jewish plot. All the Elders of Zion and the Protocols in one man, in my father. They asked how dare this man come to central and Eastern European countries and dictate norms to them; who is this immigrant fighting against the discrimination of Muslims in America. They stepped up the attacks on him because they saw how influential he was.”

In the same interview:

  • Soros asserted that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s “ties with radical right-wing, anti-Semitic and corrupt elements contradicts Israel’s commitment as a Jewish state.”
  • When asked whether some of the money that he had donated to J Street might possibly have been used to support the anti-Israel Boycott, Divestment & Sanctions movement, Soros answered: “In my opinion, the call for boycott and divestment of Israel is wrong. This movement is trying to follow in the footsteps of the South African precedent. Israel is a different story. I believe the occupation is bad, but we can’t hold every Israeli accountable for the occupation.”

On July 31, 2020, Soros authored a piece for NBCnews.com about his family’s “fight to eradicate systemic racism in America” in the face of what he portrayed as widespread anti-Semitic opposition. Some key excerpts:

“The senseless killings of George Floyd and countless other Black Americans while in police custody have sparked the largest and most diverse mass protests in the history of the United States. You might think everyone would now be focusing on how to fix a system that has mercilessly subjugated, brutalized and killed Black and brown people in this country. But you would be wrong.

“Instead of trying to come together and figure out how America can live up to its promise of equality for all, too many people prefer to stoke the flames of anti-Semitism. The wave of outrage over systemic racism has provoked anti-Semitic accusations that Jews — specifically my father, George Soros — are organizing the protests behind the scenes. […]

“Blaming Jews for mass civil rights movements is a textbook white supremacy tactic that has been around for longer than anyone reading this article has been alive. The logic is simple: Those who promote these lies want you to believe that Black and brown people are not smart or strategic enough to organize such actions themselves, so Jews must be pulling the strings.

“This construct also ties into the abhorrent ‘replacement’ conspiracy theory that flourishes in the darker corners of the internet, such as on 4chan, Gab and Reddit’s now-suspended The Donald subreddit: Evil Jewish financiers want to somehow replace white people with supposedly more pliant people of color.

“This despicably racist online poison uses ideas and imagery that are directly drawn from the anti-Jewish propaganda of Nazi Germany — although the ‘replacement’ theory remains a distinctly American manifestation of white supremacy.”

Bend The Arc

In anticipation of the pivotal 2016 elections in the United States, Soros in April 2015 co-founded and became chairman of Bend The Arc Jewish Action PAC, a political action committee “focused on representing the views of Jewish Americans” on domestic policy issues like immigration, sexuality, and social change of a leftwing variety. “There’s an opportunity to launch something that actually speaks to what the American Jewish community cares the most about and to show the narrative of what the real American Jewish experience is,” Soros stated at the time. (The Bend The Arc Jewish Action PAC is affiliated with Bend The Arc: A Jewish Partnership for Justice (BTA), an organization that grew out of the June 2011 merger of the California-based Progressive Jewish Alliance and the New York-based Jewish Funds for Justice.)

Contempt for Donald Trump

Soros was deeply upset by Donald Trump’s victory in the U.S. presidential election of 2016. “When Trump was elected,” said Soros in April 2018, “I wasn’t surprised—I was sad. Since Trump’s election, I have been waking up every morning and saying to myself, the world is in danger. I have to do whatever I can to prevent that danger.”

Later in 2018, reports emerged that packages containing pipe bombs had been shipped to prominent Democrats like George Soros and former President Barack Obama. Blaming President Trump for having created a political atmosphere in which such potentially destructive acts could take place, Alex Soros wrote an October 2018 op-ed in The New York Times claiming that this “profoundly disturbing” development was a manifestation of “the new normal of political demonization that plagues us today.” Characterizing Trump as someone who sought to foment “division and hate,” Soros added: “We must find our way to a new political discourse that shuns the demonization of all political opponents. A first step would be to cast our ballots to reject those politicians cynically responsible for undermining the institutions of our democracy. And we must do it now, before it is too late.”

In the same op-ed piece, Soros again suggested that opposition to the work of his father and the Open Society Foundations was rooted in a breed of “anti-Semitism” promoted and fostered by Trump:

“[S]omething changed in 2016. Before that, the vitriol he faced was largely confined to the extremist fringes, among white supremacists and nationalists who sought to undermine the very foundations of democracy.

“But with Donald Trump’s presidential campaign, things got worse. White supremacists and anti-Semites like David Duke endorsed his campaign. Mr. Trump’s final TV ad famously featured my father; Janet Yellen, chairwoman of the Federal Reserve; and Lloyd Blankfein, chairman of Goldman Sachs — all of them Jewish — amid dog-whistle language about ‘special interests’ and ‘global special interests.’ A genie was let out of the bottle, which may take generations to put back in, and it wasn’t confined to the United States.”

Supporter of Joe Biden for President

On July 3, 2020, Soros touted the many benefits that he believed America would reap if Joe Biden were to be elected president that November:

“While European pundits are correct to doubt that the old transatlantic alliance will simply return to its pre-Trump state, they are underestimating what a Biden victory would mean for US foreign policy. The Democratic Party is still a party of values, and a Biden administration would pursue a full reset after four years of Trump, restoring America’s historic commitment to responsible leadership on the world stage.

“Whereas Trump has spent his time in office starting fights with Europe over climate change, trade, and human rights, Biden would bring America back to the diplomatic table. The United States would rejoin the Paris climate agreement, pursue new trade deals, and participate in cooperative efforts to ensure that technological innovation conforms with human-rights standards.

“In the European Union, America’s image is at an all-time low, thanks to the Trump administration’s slow, incoherent, and ineffective response to the covid-19 crisis, a major part of which comprised blaming other countries, rather than cooperating with them. Instead of combating the crisis using the resources of the World Health Organisation (WHO) and other multilateral organisations, the US banned travel from Europe without warning and announced it would defund the WHO. One of Biden’s first foreign-policy objectives would surely be to rectify this and to treat covid-19 as the global crisis it is. That means leveraging international cooperation to protect Americans from the pandemic (and its attendant economic devastation), as well as leading global efforts to combat the threat.

“With Biden in the White House, European telecoms firms such as Nokia and Ericsson would be recognised and supported as the transatlantic alliance’s 5G champions, and the US would help Europe wean itself off Russian gas as it worked on a clean-energy transition. A Biden administration would also recognise the wisdom of negotiating a renewal of the New START nuclear-weapons agreement with Russia when it expires in 2021. And it would pursue other forms of arms control to advance European and US security interests and prevent a new arms race.”

Combating America’s “Systemic Racism” and Supporting the “Black Lives Matter” Movement

On July 13, 2020 —  seven weeks after the infamous May 25 death of George Floyd at the hands of a white police officer in Minneapolis — the Open Society Foundations announced their intent to advance the cause of “racial justice” by channeling $220 million toward the mission of “merging organizations and leaders building power in Black communities across the country.” “This is the time for urgent and bold action to address racial injustice in America,” said Alex Soros. “These investments will empower proven leaders in the Black community to reimagine policing, end mass incarceration, and eliminate the barriers to opportunity that have been the source of inequity for too long.”

On July 31, 2020, Soros authored a piece for NBCnews.com titled “My Father, George Soros, Is White Supremacists’ Favorite Target. But They Won’t Stop Us.” Some key excerpts:

“The senseless killings of George Floyd and countless other Black Americans while in police custody have sparked the largest and most diverse mass protests in the history of the United States. You might think everyone would now be focusing on how to fix a system that has mercilessly subjugated, brutalized and killed Black and brown people in this country. But you would be wrong.

“Instead of trying to come together and figure out how America can live up to its promise of equality for all, too many people prefer to stoke the flames of anti-Semitism. The wave of outrage over systemic racism has provoked anti-Semitic accusations that Jews — specifically my father, George Soros — are organizing the protests behind the scenes. […]

“Blaming Jews for mass civil rights movements is a textbook white supremacy tactic that has been around for longer than anyone reading this article has been alive. The logic is simple: Those who promote these lies want you to believe that Black and brown people are not smart or strategic enough to organize such actions themselves, so Jews must be pulling the strings.

“This construct also ties into the abhorrent ‘replacement’ conspiracy theory that flourishes in the darker corners of the internet, such as on 4chan, Gab and Reddit’s now-suspended The Donald subreddit: Evil Jewish financiers want to somehow replace white people with supposedly more pliant people of color.

“This despicably racist online poison uses ideas and imagery that are directly drawn from the anti-Jewish propaganda of Nazi Germany — although the ‘replacement’ theory remains a distinctly American manifestation of white supremacy. […]

“The hatred, which is ripping apart the fabric of this country, does not deter my father or me…. [F]or us, the surge in online attacks on my father and me in the wake of the renewed energy around the Black Lives Matter movement is simply one more installment of a long, ugly story — the predictable reaction of those whose power and position are threatened by the demands of justice.

“And we are not stopping. Earlier this month, our Open Society Foundations announced a $220 million commitment to help achieve racial equality in America, building on our existing work with groups engaged on issues including voting rights, education, drug policy reform and ending the blight of mass incarceration of Black Americans.

“We will continue to fight to eradicate systemic racism in America. And we will never stop fighting the bigotry of those who sow discord, spread lies and engage in hateful, anti-Semitic rhetoric.”

Conclusion

Alexander Soros is the new leader of the $25 billion philanthropy that, at the direction of his father, has done more in recent decades to fund leftwing organizations than virtually any other entity on earth. Among the most significant of those beneficiaries are organizations that:

  • accuse America of routinely violating the civil rights and liberties of racial and ethnic minorities
  • depict the U.S. as a nation whose enduring racism must be counterbalanced by racial and ethnic preferences in favor of nonwhites
  • portray the American criminal-justice system as racist and inequitable
  • call for the recruitment and training of activist leaders to help foment massive social change
  • disparage capitalism while promoting a dramatic expansion of social-welfare programs funded by ever-escalating taxes
  • support socialized medicine in the United States
  • strive to move American politics to the left by promoting the election of radical political candidates
  • promote leftist ideals and worldviews in the media and the arts
  • seek to inject the American judicial system with leftist values
  • advance leftist agendas by infiltrating churches and religious congregations
  • promote open borders, mass migration, a watering down of existing immigration laws, increased rights and benefits for illegal aliens, and ultimately amnesty for all illegals
  • depict virtually all American military actions as unwarranted and immoral
  • advocate America’s unilateral disarmament and/or a steep reduction in its military spending
  • promote radical environmentalism
  • oppose the death penalty in all circumstances
  • promote women’s right to taxpayer-funded abortion on demand
  • favor global government which would bring American foreign policy under the control of the United Nations or other international bodies
  • support drug legalization
  • pressure mortgage lenders to make loans to undercapitalized borrowers, a practice that helped spark the subprime mortgage crisis of 2008
  • exhort the U.S. and Israel to negotiate with, and to make concessions to, Arab terrorist groups and regimes that have pledged to destroy America and Israel alike:

George Soros already has proudly told us that he and his son “think alike.” Thus, there is every reason to expect that Alexander will dutifully follow in the cataclysmically destructive footsteps of his father.

EDITORS NOTE: This Discover the Networks column is republished with permission. ©All rights reserved.

‘Savage Animals’: Trump Talks Indictments, Political Assassinations With Tucker During GOP Debate

Former President Donald Trump counter-programmed the 2024 Republican primary debate Wednesday night by sitting down for an exclusive interview with Daily Caller co-founder Tucker Carlson in Bedminster, New Jersey.

The former president told Carlson why he skipped the first Republican Nation Committee (RNC) debate in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. The former president confirmed Sunday he would skip the primary debates in a Truth Social post, and instead agreed to sit down for a pre-recorded interview with Carlson to compete with the debates.

“Why aren’t you at the Fox News debate tonight in Milwaukee?” Carlson asked.

“Well, you know, a lot of people have been asking me that and many people said you shouldn’t do them but you know, the polls have come out and I’m leading by 50-60 points and you know, some of them are at 1 and 0 and two. And I’m saying do I sit there for an hour or two hours whatever it’s going to be and gets harassed by people that shouldn’t even be running for president. They shouldn’t be doing that and a network [Fox News] that isn’t particularly friendly to me, frankly.”

Trump said Fox News is friendly to Republican Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, his biggest rival in the race, but that the network’s support is not paying off.

Trump said the ratings will be higher on Carlson’s “crazy forum” than the debate.

He then claimed his political opponents will attempt to steal the 2024 presidential election if he wins and explained why they would possibly even want to kill him.

“It started with protesting against you, then it moved to impeachment twice, and now indictments,” Carlson said. “Are you worried that they’re going to try and kill you? Why wouldn’t they try to kill you, honestly?”

“They’re savage animals. They are people that are sick,” Trump answered.

The former president also told Carlson whether the U.S. is “on the brink of civil war.”

Trump touted his lead in the Republican primary race in his Truth Social post Sunday.

“New CBS POLL, just out, has me leading the field by ‘legendary’ numbers,” Trump wrote on Truth Social. “TRUMP 62%, 46 Points above DeSanctimonious (who is crashing like an ailing bird!), Ramaswamy 7%, Pence 5%, Scott 3%, Haley 2%, Sloppy Chris Christie 2%, “Aida” Hutchinson 1%. The public knows who I am & what a successful Presidency I had, with Energy Independence, Strong Borders & Military, Biggest EVER Tax & Regulation Cuts, No Inflation, Strongest Economy in History, & much more. I WILL THEREFORE NOT BE DOING THE DEBATES!”

The first primary debate was held in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and moderated by Fox News’ Martha MacCallum and Bret Baier.

The former president has continued to be the frontrunner in the primary race consisting of 14 declared candidates. He currently polls at 52.2% as of Monday, while Republican Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis is in second with 15.2% favorability, according to FiveThirtyEight.

Trump’s aides have said he is unlikely to participate in the debates in previous months. Republican consultants told the Daily Caller News Foundation that it is “not in his interest” for Trump to participate in the debates.

Carlson has conducted interviews with every major Republican presidential candidate. He interviewed every candidate besides Trump during a July 14 event hosted by Blaze TV in Iowa. He recently interviewed Republican presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy in an hour-long discussion released Thursday.

The Daily Caller co-founder launched his show, “Tucker on Twitter,” after departing from Fox News in April. Fox News has accused Carlson of breaching their $20 million contract by releasing interviews before the agreement’s expiration in January 2025.

AUTHOR

NICOLE SILVERIO

Contributor. Follow Nicole Silverio on Twitter @NicoleMSilverio

RELATED ARTICLES:

Post-Debate Poll Shows Surprise Winners and Losers

‘Lied To From The Beginning’: RFK Jr Discusses JFK Assassination, Ukraine War With Tucker Carlson

RELATED TWEETS:

EDITORS NOTE: This Daily Caller column is republished with permission. ©All rights reserved.