Arizona judge sanctions cyber ninjas $50,000 a day till they...

butters

High on a Hill
Joined
Jul 2, 2009
Posts
85,955
the start complying and turn over requested documents ...they were already on $1,000 a day sanctions since the summer
Hannah’s ruling came three days after the state’s court of appeals ordered Cyber Ninjas to pay the Republic over $31,000 in legal fees following a failed appeal by the firm, according to the outlet.

Cyber Ninjas has turned over some of the documents from its review to the state senate, per the Republic. It remains unclear how many related records the firm still has that are subject to court orders.

Cyber Ninjas previously suggested to the court that the Republic should pay the federal rate for providing public records, claiming that producing them would cost the firm around $65,000 to $70,000, the outlet noted.
*bold text= 'pushing their fucking luck'

https://thehill.com/regulation/cour...-cyber-ninjas-50000-a-day-until-it-turns-over
 
I'd ask you to read the Maricopa report which replied to the audit, but I know you never will.

You should, but you won't.

Link it and I will.

Did you watch the Dr. Molone video?
 
Link it and I will.

Did you watch the Dr. Molone video?

I did link it. See the Arizona thread.

I don't care about a discredited antivaxer. But I know hes the new guy you want to blow.
 
Shortly after that penalty came down, Cyber Ninjas announced it was shutting down and laying off all employees rather than turn over the records — although Logan has said he intends to found a new company with many former Cyber Ninjas employees.

this has led to:
advocates from four voting rights groups are seeking to have the cybersecurity firm "Cyber Ninjas" and its CEO barred from working on federal contracts.
"Citing work that fell below election-auditing standards, a refusal to abide by a court order to produce public records tied to the review, the promulgation of conspiracies and federal scrutiny tied to the operation, the advocacy organizations on Monday asked the Interagency Suspension & Debarment Committee to consider the company and its CEO Doug Logan for 'debarment,'" reported the Washington Post's Yvonne Wingett Sanchez. "The Brennan Center for Justice at NYU Law sent the letter on behalf of the groups."
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/poli...pc=U531&cvid=7e74851a2760456a8e61c9b460b05c7c
 
That whole laying off of workers and rehiring them is literally against the law.
 
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