I don't think the Dem elite want to put their names on it in case there is fraud.
All the propaganda from Perkins Coie looks like they are working pro bono in a "heroic" effort to preserve democracy (in reality, they get a lot of business from the dem elite, which pay the bills for the rest of their cases, but they don't have to directly pay them in this audit).
In general, rule #1 about commiting fraud is to avoid a paper trail. People generally know that "follow the money" is how people get caught. Plausibility deniability is rule #2.
I don't think the Dem elite want to put their names on it in case there is fraud.
All the propaganda from Perkins Coie looks like they are working pro bono in a "heroic" effort to preserve democracy (in reality, they get a lot of business from the dem elite, which pay the bills for the rest of their cases, but they don't have to directly pay them in this audit).