Federal Officials Seek Wayne County Michigan 2024 Election Ballots

Federal authorities have requested that Wayne County, Michigan hand over all voting records from the 2024 election, marking an expansion of similar efforts previously focused on 2020 election materials in Georgia and Arizona.

While earlier federal requests targeted 2020 presidential election documents from the race former President Trump lost, this new demand centers on the most recent election cycle in a battleground state that Trump carried.

The April 14 correspondence from U.S. Assistant Attorney General Harmeet K. Dhillon seeks ballots and additional documentation from Wayne County, home to Detroit and its heavily Democratic voter base. The county recorded nearly 865,000 votes in 2024, according to state officials.

Michigan’s top Democratic leaders have united in opposition to the federal request. In a joint Sunday statement, Democratic Attorney General Dana Nessel accused the current administration of turning the Justice Department into a political weapon aimed at meddling in state-run elections.

“If this administration wants to bring this circus to our state, my office is prepared to protect the people’s right to vote,” Nessel stated.

The federal letter cites concerns about potential voting irregularities in the 2024 contest, pointing to three documented fraud cases from 2020 and a civil court challenge involving absentee ballot handling. However, Nessel’s office notes that Michigan authorities already identified and prosecuted those three incidents, while a judge threw out the civil case after determining that allegations of “sinister and fraudulent motives” were “incorrect and not credible.”

Governor Gretchen Whitmer joined the criticism in the coordinated response. “Michigan’s elections are safe and secure,” Whitmer said in the joint statement. “This demand is a poorly disguised attempt to justify more doubt and misinformation about our elections as well as direct federal interference.”

State officials have 14 days from receiving the request to provide the materials, or federal authorities could pursue a court mandate. However, Nessel appears unlikely to cooperate quickly, raising several procedural objections including the outdated nature of the cited fraud cases, their rarity, and jurisdictional issues since the request targets Wayne County Clerk Cathy Garrett while voting materials remain with 43 individual municipal clerks throughout the county.

Garrett has not yet responded to requests for comment on the matter.

This Michigan request follows successful federal efforts to obtain election documentation from other competitive states. FBI agents executed a court-approved search warrant in January at the election offices of Fulton County, Georgia, a Democratic stronghold that has faced numerous conspiracy theories related to Trump’s 2020 defeat. Fulton County authorities are currently fighting in court to recover their confiscated records.

In Arizona, federal prosecutors used a grand jury subpoena last month to compel the state Senate to surrender FBI records connected to a controversial 2020 election review in Maricopa County, which encompasses Phoenix. State Democrats criticized the Republican Senate leader for cooperating, emphasizing that numerous independent reviews, investigations and legal challenges have found no evidence supporting claims of widespread electoral fraud.