Pinal County Attorney Says No Record Exists Of Mark Lamb Investigation

Pinal County Attorney Says No Record Exists Of Mark Lamb Investigation

By Staff Reporter |

No investigation was ever made concerning GOP congressional candidate and former Pinal County Sheriff Mark Lamb by the Pinal County Attorney’s Office (PCAO), says the current administration.

PCAO made an announcement on Friday that disputed former County Attorney Kent Volkmer’s claim that PCAO had conducted a “cursory investigation” into Lamb under his leadership. 

Volkmer made the claim to the Arizona Republic as part of their recent investigative report into accusations that Lamb threatened the women he’d engaged in affairs with over the years. Volkmer alleged his office acted on Lamb’s request to investigate possible criminal charges for two women speaking out about his affairs.

Volkmer also alleged that the supposed cursory investigation didn’t lead to any possibility of criminal charges. 

PCAO said it could find no records of reports, investigative summaries, witness interviews, referrals due to conflict, or documented findings that could verify Volkmer’s claim. PCAO said their discovery indicated potential issues with the due diligence of past county leadership. 

“Even a limited or ‘cursory’ investigation would ordinarily generate some form of documentation or investigative notes. At this time, the PCAO has not located any such records in its files,” stated the PCAO. “[R]equests for investigations by Sheriff Lamb should have been formally documented, appropriately reviewed, and, if necessary, referred out to avoid any appearance of bias or conflict of interest.”

However, PCAO did find records indicating that Volkmer’s office received word on allegations against Lamb over six years ago and failed to act.

In January 2020, the Pinal County Board of Supervisors received a packet of information outlining allegations of sexual impropriety by Lamb. The packet contained nearly 40 pages of text message screenshots and photographs to support the allegations. Tim Gustafson, a local pastor running to unseat Lamb — who was county sheriff at the time — gave the board the packet. 

Per board meeting records, the board asked PCAO to review potential limitations to speech in public sessions concerning sexual topics. A deputy county attorney with the PCAO at the time promised to look into the matter. 

County Attorney Brad Miller has denied that he was behind the rumor that Lamb was a “swinger” as well as a sexter. 

Rep. Andy Biggs (AZ-05), whose district Lamb is hoping to represent, told KTAR in an interview last week that he would “reserve judgment” on the accusations against Lamb. Biggs is leaving Congress to try to unseat Democratic Gov. Katie Hobbs.

Both Biggs and Lamb are both members of the Mormon church. 

As new developments continue to emerge regarding the sex scandal allegations against Lamb, the former sheriff declined to appear for the Arizona Clean Elections Commission’s Republican primary debate for the 5th Congressional District on Thursday. 

Only Lamb’s primary contender, a Christian builder named Daniel Keenan, appeared for the debate. Keenan discussed his campaign platform for nearly half of an hour. 

There are three Democratic candidates vying to flip Biggs’ seat: Brian Hualde, Chris James, and Elizabeth Lee. 

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Congressional Candidate Travis Grantham Called Into Active Duty, Suspends Campaign

Congressional Candidate Travis Grantham Called Into Active Duty, Suspends Campaign

By Staff Reporter |

Former State Rep. Travis Grantham suspended his congressional race after being called into active-duty service, the former speaker pro tempore announced on Wednesday.

Grantham, a lieutenant colonel in the Arizona Air National Guard, said he had “no idea” the length of his active-duty service. 

“What I do know is that victory is the only acceptable outcome, so I will gladly do whatever is asked of me for however long it is needed,” said Grantham. “It is an honor to serve.”

Grantham planned to submit signatures to qualify for the ballot for the Republican primary in the fifth congressional district, the seat occupied currently by outgoing Rep. Andy Biggs, a gubernatorial candidate. 

The U.S. and Israel launched a joint military campaign against Iran late last month, Operation Epic Fury. The first wave of attacks resulted in the death of Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. 

So far, at least seven servicemembers have been killed in this new war launched by President Donald Trump. None of the slain were from Arizona. 

Others have died at home over this new war, far from the Middle East.

Since this military campaign there have been what appear to be retaliatory terrorist attacks by Islamic individuals in the U.S. 

The latest terrorist attack occurred on Thursday at Old Dominion University in Virginia. The gunman, a naturalized citizen from Sierra Leone named Mohamed Bailor Jalloh, was arrested in 2016 for attempting to help a designated foreign terrorist organization, the Islamic State of Iraq and Levant (ISIL), coordinate a terrorist attack in the U.S. Jalloh also attempted to buy a gun as part of his plot to murder U.S. military personnel. 

Jalloh faced a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison; he was ultimately sentenced to 11 years in prison and five years’ supervised release in 2017. 

However, Jalloh was released early from federal custody in the final month of the Biden administration in December 2024. 

During Wednesday’s attack, Jalloh shouted “Allahu Akbar,” a call used by Islamic terrorists before committing their attacks.

One individual was killed in the attack: Army officer Brandon Shah, a military science professor and combat veteran. Jalloh was beaten to death by ROTC students shortly after he opened fire. 

Another naturalized citizen-turned-terrorist also struck on Thursday in another state. Ayman Mohamad Ghazali, a native of Lebanon, drove a truck into a synagogue. None were killed in the attack. 

Last week, two terrorists targeted anti-Islam protesters and police officers with homemade explosive devices. One was thrown into a crowd protesting Islam outside the residence of New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani, and the other was dropped amid a group of police officers. The two men, Emir Balat and Ibrahim Kayumi, allegedly acted in support of ISIS. Both men were born to immigrant parents.

Balat wrote the following on a piece of paper after his detainment:

“All praise is due to Allah lord of all worlds! I pledge my allegiance to the Islamic State. Die in your rage you kuffar!”

“Kuffar” means “non-believers” or “infidels” in Arabic, and ISIS uses the phrase “die in your rage” as a slogan.

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Pinal County Attorney Says No Record Exists Of Mark Lamb Investigation

President Trump Endorses Former Pinal County Sheriff Mark Lamb For Congress

By Staff Reporter |

President Donald Trump endorsed former Pinal County Sheriff Mark Lamb for the 2026 fifth congressional district race.

Trump dubbed Lamb a “MAGA Warrior,” with a subtle remark of appreciation given to Lamb’s primary opponent, former NFL player Jay Feely (Atlanta Falcons, New York Giants, Miami Dolphins, New York Jets, Arizona Cardinals, and Chicago Bears).

Lamb and Feely are competing for the seat that will be vacated by Congressman Andy Biggs, who is retiring from Washington to challenge Arizona Governor Katie Hobbs for her seat. 

“As the former Sheriff of Pinal County, Mark strongly supports our incredible law enforcement, military, and veterans, and knows the wisdom and courage it takes to ensure law and order,” said Trump. “In Congress, Mark will work hard to keep our now very secure border, secure, stop migrant crime, grow our economy, cut taxes and regulations, promote made in the U.S.A., champion American energy dominance, and protect our always under siege Second Amendment.”

Lamb responded with thanks to the president, not only for the endorsement but for his work accomplished in just under a year back in office.

“In just nine months, President Trump has truly made America Great Again, and shown what true leadership and courage is all about,” said Lamb. “He has secured our borders and got our economy moving.”

As for Feely, who settled in Arizona after retiring from the NFL in 2014, Trump encouraged him to take on another race.

“I also like Jay Feely very much, and would like to see him run in a different district, or for a different office,” said Trump. “[Lamb] will never let you down!”

Feely was outspoken about his political beliefs throughout his NFL career. During the Obama administration, Feely was a guest on Fox News where he criticized the former president. It was this outspokenness that many believe led to his being cut from the Miami Dolphins despite setting a franchise record.

“I’ve always felt that if I do my job the best I can and I’m one of the best at what I do and am honest with what I say, then people will respect that,” said Feely at the time. 

Feely has not issued a statement responding to Trump’s endorsement. 

Others fell in line to endorse Lamb after Trump took action.

The House Freedom Fund issued its endorsement of Lamb hours later.

Trump issued his endorsement only a few weeks into Lamb’s candidacy. 

Lamb announced his congressional run last month during an interview with Real America’s Voice. 

“I believe in America, I believe in our history and our birthright,” said Lamb. “I believe in God, family freedom, I believe in the rule of law.”

Lamb served as Pinal County Sheriff from 2017 to 2024. Lamb ran for Senate last year, but was defeated in the primary by Kari Lake. 

The fifth congressional district includes Apache Junction, Gilbert, Queen Creek, San Tan Valley, and parts of Sun Lakes, Chandler, and Mesa.

AZ Free News is your #1 source for Arizona news and politics. You can send us news tips using this link.

Pinal County Attorney Says No Record Exists Of Mark Lamb Investigation

Mark Lamb Enters Crowded GOP Primary For CD5 To Replace Biggs

By Matthew Holloway |

Former Pinal County Sheriff Mark Lamb filed a statement of interest Monday to seek Arizona’s 5th Congressional District seat and announced his candidacy Wednesday, placing himself into a growing Republican field.

The filing, reported by AZFamily on Tuesday citing sources close to Lamb, confirmed speculation that the two-term former Sheriff would bring his national name recognition from his 2023 U.S. Senate bid into the race. Lamb announced his campaign publicly on The Charlie Kirk Show late Wednesday morning, telling guest host Tyler Bowyer, “I believe in God, family, freedom, I believe in the rule of law, believe in America, believe in all the things that built this country, and, like you said, we need proven fighters in this in this realm right now.”

Arizona State Senator Jake Hoffman quickly took to X, claiming the title of Lamb’s first official endorsement, writing, “Proud to be the first person to officially endorse Mark Lamb for Congress in AZ-CD5! I’ve spent months talking with Mark about running. I’m grateful God has called him to the fight for liberty in Congress. Mark will win. It’s time for conservatives to rally behind Mark.”

Lamb’s entry bolsters a competitive GOP primary in the conservative district, which stretches from Gilbert and Chandler to Queen Creek and eastern Mesa. Early contenders include former state Rep. Travis Grantham and ex-NFL kicker Jay Feely, with more speculated names like Gilbert Councilman Monte Lyons and home-builder Daniel Keenan, as well as Theologian and Army Chaplain (ret.) Alex Stovall. 

A poll from NextGen Polling on October 12th, reflecting the Fifth Congressional District’s demographics, was based on 830 responses with a margin of error of ±3.3 percent at 95 percent confidence, according to the pollster. The poll showed Lamb with a commanding 54 percent lead in a ballot test among likely GOP voters against his top four likely challengers.

Lamb’s name recognition appeared to be a decisive advantage. NextGen Polling wrote, “In terms of name recognition, Keenen was identified by 49 percent of respondents, and Stovall by only 43 percent, indicating that more than half of likely voters are either unfamiliar with them or lack a clear opinion.” Meanwhile, 96 percent of respondents gave Lamb near-universal name recognition according to the poll.

“The polling is sending us a clear message,” said Gregg Pekau, managing partner at NextGen Polling. “Voters in congressional district 5 want to elect Sheriff Mark Lamb to Congress, and campaigning from other candidates is doing little to change their minds. After our last 3 quarters of polls, we’ve seen zero real improvement or movement from Feely, Grantham or Keenan. Without a major move by any of them soon, this race is over if and when Sheriff Lamb enters the race.”

Lamb’s platform details have yet to be announced, but his past campaigns emphasized border security and election integrity, America First tent poles he’s likely to carry forward. The district’s R+10 rating from Cook Political favors Republicans, but the late entrants could muddy the waters.

Lamb’s campaign did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Matthew Holloway is a senior reporter for AZ Free News. Follow him on X for his latest stories, or email tips to Matthew@azfreenews.com.