Nevada AG quiet on GOP fake electors’ probe

Nevada GOP Chairman Michael McDonald addresses a crowd in front of the Nevada Capitol,  March 4, 2021, in Carson, City, Nev., where they party delivered what they described as 120,000 "election integrity violation reports" that allege widespread voter fraud during the 2020 election. (Ricardo Torres-Cortez/Las Vegas Sun via AP)

Nevada GOP Chairman Michael McDonald addresses a crowd in front of the Nevada Capitol, March 4, 2021, in Carson, City, Nev., where they party delivered what they described as 120,000 "election integrity violation reports" that allege widespread voter fraud during the 2020 election. (Ricardo Torres-Cortez/Las Vegas Sun via AP)

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LAS VEGAS – Nevada Attorney General Aaron Ford won't say if the state is investigating the six Republican electors who submitted fake electoral certificates declaring Donald Trump the winner of the presidential 2020 election.

“The moment I decide to comment on the fake electors, someone's going to say this is a partisan investigation because I comment on nothing anyway,” Ford, a Democrat, told the Las Vegas Review-Journal.

Ford said Friday during a press call with the Democratic Attorneys General Association about the second anniversary of the Jan. 6, 2021, riot at the U.S. Capitol that he “would not jeopardize anything that we are doing or that we may do by commenting on whether we're investigating.”

Ford did say that he's cooperating with and participating in the Justice Department's investigation, according to the Review-Journal.

Authorities say six Republican electors gathered outside the Nevada Capitol in Carson City on Dec, 14, 2020 and signed a fake certificate of ascertainment certifying the election results for Trump.

That was despite Trump losing by about 30,000 votes to Joe Biden and the real electors certifying the results for Biden in the presence of Nevada Secretary of State Barbara Cegavske, who is a Republican.

The Nevada GOP electors joined Republicans in other battleground states in submitting the certificates to Congress and the National Archives in hopes that Vice President Mike Pence would use them to certify the election for Trump.