In Maricopa County Superior Court, Meadows' legal team, led by lawyer Ann Chapman, has filed motions asking Judge Sam Myers to first separate Meadows' case from those of other co-defendants and subsequently to drop all charges against him.
The case concerns the prosecution of those accused of planning to fraudulently certify Trump as the winner of the 2020 Arizona election, despite Biden actually winning by a margin of 10,457 votes, as determined by Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes. As part of the deception, false paperwork purporting that Trump had won Arizona's 11 electoral votes were submitted to Congress.
Chapman's argument focuses on federal immunity provisions, arguing that states cannot bring charges against federal officials for acts taken in their official capacity by using the Supremacy Clause. Citing his duties as "coordinating the president's time and attention with the campaign" rather than actual campaign activity, she argues that Meadows did not act as a campaign operative but rather only in his capacity as chief of staff.
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In addition, Chapman extends the protection of presidential immunity from criminal prosecution for official activities to senior White House employees who operate within the "outer perimeter" of their duties, a legal reasoning that prominently references a recent Supreme Court ruling. According to her, federal law gives presidents wide latitude in determining the official duties of their aides, prohibiting states from enacting extra limitations or changes.
Chapman has already made identical claims on the same underlying conduct before U.S. District Court Judge John Tuchi, so this is his second attempt to obtain federal immunity from state prosecution for Meadows. As these legal challenges continue, it is unclear how the indictment against Meadows and other defendants is now progressing.