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August 6, 2014

Mr. Mitch Tyner, Sr.


5750 I-55 North
Jackson, MS 39211


Dear Mitch:

On Monday August 4, 2014, I received a copy of your cover letter dated the same date, and one
hard copy of your challenge notebook. Last evening, Tuesday August 5, I received links to your
"verified" electronic copy of this roughly 300 page document, and I promptly forwarded these
links to our 52-member State Executive Committee. Unfortunately most committee members so
far have only been able to access the audio files, but have not yet been able to access the large
challenge document file.

As you know, Section 23-15-927 of the Mississippi Code entitled "Petition for Judicial Review"
was amended in 2012 to provide that "a petition for judicial review must be filed within ten (10)
days after any contest or complaint has been filed with an executive committee." (emphasis
added). This means that any petition for judicial review must be filed in court by Thursday,
August 14, 2014. This same section also provides that the filing of such a petition "shall
automatically supersede and suspend the operation and effect" of any executive committee
action.

The Mississippi Republican Party Bylaws require 7 days notice of any meeting of the State
Executive Committee. Therefore, if we sent notice of a meeting today (even before most
committee members have even been able to receive all of the evidence), the earliest we could
have a meeting would be August 13, 2014.

Since a petition for judicial review would by law terminate our committee's jurisdiction over this
matter at the latest on August 14, 2014, this would afford our committee, at most, one day to at
a minimum:

1. consider and determine the proper procedural rules that should govern an unprecedented
proceeding of this type;
2. hear and vote on legal arguments regarding the timeliness of this challenge, see Kellum v.
Johnson, 115 So. 2d 147 (Miss. 1959) (which appears to impose a 20 day time limit from the
runoff to file a challenge);
3. issue fiats to the various county executive committee chairmen across the state implicated
by the challenge, have each committee investigate the complaint and return their findings to
the chairman of the state committee;
4. hear testimony from the potentially dozens of witnesses who have been named in the
challenge;
5. examine the wide variety of evidence cited in the challenge and presented by other
interested parties; and
6. finally, engage in proper deliberation and render a decision on the challenge.
Mr. Mitch Tyner Page 2 August 6, 2014


Obviously, it is not possible for our committee of 52 volunteers to attempt to engage in such an
exercise in a prudent manner in one day. In fact, given the extraordinary relief requested of
overturning a United States Senate primary in which over 360,000 Mississippians cast votes,
the only way to ensure the integrity of the election process and provide a prudent review of this
matter is in a court of law. The public judicial process will protect the rights of the voters as well
as both candidates, and a proper decision will be made on behalf of our Party and our State.



Sincerely,



Joe Nosef
Chairman
Mississippi Republican Party

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