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Jefferson Griffin, the Republican judge who lost his bid for North Carolina's Supreme Court, is appealing a recent court decision that upheld his 2024 defeat as his legal team continues its effort ...
Jefferson Griffin, a current appeals court judge, lost to Justice Allison Riggs last month in a race for a seat on the state’s Supreme Court. He has protested his loss despite a recount ...
A case study took place this past winter in North Carolina. And though the party ultimately won the state supreme court seat, ...
A Republican judge's effort to throw out 65,000 voters' ballots from the 2024 NC Supreme Court election is valid, his Republican colleagues on the state Court of Appeals ruled in a decision split ...
Contributors to Jefferson Griffin's legal expense fund include a judge on the North Carolina Court of Appeals, which could end up handling Griffin's lawsuit to invalidate more than 65,000 ballots ...
Judge Jefferson Griffin conceded two days after a federal judge delivered a victory for Democratic sitting Justice Allison Riggs by ordering North Carolina's election board to not throw out any ...
The disputed ballots are believed to favor Democratic Associate Justice Allison Riggs, who, after two recounts, held a 734-vote lead over Republican Jefferson Griffin in their race, which saw over ...
Judge Jefferson Griffin, the Republican candidate for the N.C. Supreme Court listens to testimony in Wake County Superior Court on Friday, Feb. 7, 2025.
Justice Allison Riggs, a Democrat, was formally sworn into the North Carolina Supreme Court by Chief Justice Paul Newby after a six-month legal battle with her Republican challenger Judge Jefferson ...
Judge Jefferson Griffin, a Republican who lost his November race for the North Carolina Supreme Court, has created a scene by refusing to concede the race for five months, and recently a 2001 ...
The judges on Friday found that the State Board of Elections got it wrong in December when it dismissed Griffin's election protests. The ruling is expected to be appealed to the Supreme Court.