
The Department of Justice (DOJ) is intensifying its scrutiny on threats to election officials and alleged collusion in the rental housing market. Twenty individuals have been charged over threats to election officials, including notable figures like Arizona's Katie Hobbs. Concurrently, the DOJ has expanded its investigation into landlord collusion, focusing on RealPage, a rental software firm accused of price-fixing with large rental landlords and property managers. This probe, initially civil, has now turned criminal. Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes, who launched an investigation last year into the actions of 11 Arizona Republicans who falsely claimed Trump won the state in 2020, is also conducting a separate investigation. This investigation is part of broader efforts to address the surge in threats against election officials nationwide, spurred by conspiracy theories regarding the 2020 presidential election outcome. Indictments in Mayes' investigation could send shockwaves through the political landscape.
Arizona GOP lawmakers seek investigation of AG’s ‘abuse of power’ https://t.co/Fm0qMvBspw
DOJ’s investigation into RealPage and alleged rental housing price-fixing has turned criminal, @joshua_sisco reports. RP software collects sensitive data from competing, big landlords and uses an algorithm to suggest rents. RealPage denies wrongdoing. https://t.co/l6WEX15dok
Arizona GOP legislative leader launches probe of Democratic attorney general https://t.co/XmicjgzTXQ














