Former Arizona Attorney General Mark Brnovich passes away at age 59
Mark Brnovich served two terms as Arizona Attorney General, led election fraud investigations, and was nominated for U.S. ambassador to Serbia before dying suddenly at age 59 from a heart attack.
- On Tuesday, the Brnovich family announced Mark Brnovich, former Arizona Attorney General, died at 59 and requested privacy, with memorial details to be shared later.
- Brnovich served two terms as Arizona attorney general, previously worked as Assistant U.S. Attorney for the District of Arizona, and led the Arizona Department of Gaming.
- His tenure included the resumption of executions with multiple Death Row inmates executed, while Kris Mayes said Brnovich concealed investigators' reports into 2020 election claims that debunked fraud allegations.
- Last year, Brnovich was tapped to be United States Ambassador to Serbia, but that nomination was later withdrawn and not confirmed by The Senate, with The White House not providing a reason.
- Brnovich, a first-generation American whose parents were born in Serbia, grew up in Phoenix, Arizona, while supporters across the state and country expressed sympathy as the cause of death remains unknown.
58 Articles
58 Articles
Mark Brnovich, former Attorney General of the US state of Arizona, who was nominated by US President Donald Trump to be the United States ambassador to Serbia, has died at the age of 59. The news of his death was confirmed by his family, while US media report that Brnovich passed away unexpectedly. In a public statement, the family expressed their deep sorrow for the loss, describing him as a devoted father, husband, son and brother, reports N1.…
Mark Brnovich, Arizona attorney general during Trump's push to find 2020 election fraud, has died
Former Arizona Attorney General Mark Brnovich has died. He served as Arizona’s top law enforcement officer when the state became the epicenter of efforts by Donald Trump to find proof that the 2020 election was marred by fraud.
From 1996 to 2005, he served in the U.S. Army National Guard.
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