Almost as interesting as the flip on "if he's not your president this isn't your country" line.Always interesting to see the leader of the "you lost; get over it" crowd fail to get over it (again and again) because he lost...
The Cyber Ninjas are also not providing internal records, as a judge has ordered.
In August, a judge ruled that Cyber Ninjas must turn over audit-related documents by mid-September, following a pair of public records lawsuits from the Arizona Republic and the transparency group American Oversight.
They're not paying anything. They are dissolving the company...the CEO is already gonzo.Cyber Ninjas tried to bamboozle over bamboo, and lost. They took the money and ran and will have to give it back in fines!
Cyber Ninjas, the firm hired to conduct a partisan review of election results in Maricopa County, Ariz., has been ordered to pay sanctions of $50,000 a day until it turns over records from the review sought by the Arizona Republic newspaper.
A superior court judge in Maricopa County found the Florida-based company in contempt of court Thursday and ordered the sanctions, according to the Republic.
“It is lucidly clear on this record that Cyber Ninjas has disregarded that order,” Hannah said.
Jack Wilenchik, a lawyer representing Cyber Ninjas, said that the company has laid off all employees, including its former chief executive officer Doug Logan, and is now insolvent, according to Newsweek. Wilenchik said the company is unable to go into its records to find the audit documents.
At last, the ninjas live up to their name.
Perhaps. But I think a judge has other plansThey're not paying anything. They are dissolving the company...the CEO is already gonzo.
Which is the worst part you guys may be stuck with the bill....the Arizona Senate Leader/Republican Party owes us Maricopa County taxpayers 4 million dollars for this circus.
a lawyer representing Cyber Ninjas, said that the company has laid off all employees, including its former chief executive officer Doug Logan
So who has trousered all that Republican money?
I hope that works, but grifters gonna grift.Perhaps. But I think a judge has other plans
https://theweek.com/cyber-crime/100...n-after-arizona-judge-fines-it-50000-a-day-in
That's what you get for hiring off-brand ninjas.
The Problem is that you can't have "Cyber Ninjas" plural. Everyone knows that if you send in more than one ninja, they just charge blindly while shouting and get mowed down one after the other. Always go with a single ninja.sorry it is just plain silly to claim "Cyber ninjas" is not the coolest of brands, the problem is caused when you ask them to do boring stuff like count votes instead hacking Kim Jong Un's laptop
Maybe they should try a ninjo this time. Thats a male ninja for those who dont speak Japanese.Why didn't the Arizona Republican Party know this stuff? Now they will have to start all over again, but with just the one ninja thingy.
It could take a while ...
See it a bit different. They are not like a fighting Ninja, they are like a food-blending Ninjasorry it is just plain silly to claim "Cyber ninjas" is not the coolest of brands, the problem is caused when you ask them to do boring stuff like count votes instead hacking Kim Jong Un's laptop
The Cyber Ninjas are also not providing internal records, as a judge has ordered. In August, a judge ruled that Cyber Ninjas must turn over audit-related documents by mid-September, following a pair of public records lawsuits from the Arizona Republic and the transparency group American Oversight.
Wilenchick objected to the court order on two grounds: that Cyber Ninjas should not be subject to public records laws, and that Cyber Ninjas is too busy to release court-ordered records (which a judge ordered Cyber Ninjas to preserve in August).
What lawyers are still working for them and how do they expect to be paid?Six months later, and they still have not made their documents public as the law requires.
Cyber Ninjas Inc. is asking the Arizona Supreme Court to throw out a $50,000 per day fine imposed by a Maricopa County judge because the company has failed to release public records about the state Senate’s 2020 election review.
Cyber Ninjas has tried repeatedly to get the Supreme Court to weigh in on lower court rulings that found it is subject to the state public records law, but the justices have declined to take the case. The latest petition, dated Monday, repeats a petition filed in November, which the court rejected, and adds the claim that the $50,000 fine was improperly imposed.
That daily fine started accumulating in January and has grown to more than $3 million.
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