Their hypothesis is that amid the many "dirty," out-of-date voter rolls and the unprecedented distribution of mail-in ballots, a highly coordinated operation in the key battleground states collected ballots and paid "mules" to literally stuff them in the unattended drop boxes that became a center of controversy.
Phillips, the founder of a health-care-data company, began lending his tech savvy to Engelbrecht's non-profit True the Vote in 2013 to analyze voter records across the nation, helping officials remove duplicates and registrations of non-residents, non-citizens and deceased voters.
They say they have the hard evidence to back their finding that there were 4.8 million fraudulent votes in the states they targeted – including Arizona, Wisconsin, Michigan, Pennsylvania and Georgia – but they've been shunned by authorities, and the media won't touch it.
Much of the evidence of criminal behavior is indisputable. In Georgia, for example, it's illegal for any person to place more than one ballot in a drop box unless he or she has registered as an "assistor."
In Gwinnett County, where there is video footage of people with latex gloves stuffing multiple ballots in a drop box and then recording the deed with a photograph, there were no "assistors" registered for the 2020 election.
"This is a conspiracy," Phillips told Kirk. "This is organized crime."
No comments:
Post a Comment