Avoiding to change the address to South Carolina Linwood: Joe State is deeply influenced by the Chinese Communist Party

Lin Wood, an attorney who continues to investigate the pursuit of electoral integrity in the wake of the November 2020 U.S. presidential election, said he changed his legal residence from Georgia to South Carolina.

“I have changed my legal residence, from Georgia to South Carolina!” Linwood announced the news on his Telegram channel, adding that he was “pretty excited” about the move.

“I lived in Georgia from the Time I was 3 years old (until I was 65). I still love the Peach State, but Georgia has continued to deteriorate over the years and to this day is one of the most corrupt states, if not the most corrupt state in the nation.” He wrote.

“Every state has its own problems, and just like people, every state is imperfect. But Georgia is out of control, and through corrupt state officials, the Chinese Communist Party has had a serious impact on the Joe State.” He alleged.

Linwood added, “I love the Lowcountry (Lowcountry, referring to the geographic and cultural region of coastal South Carolina) in South Carolina, and the people here are simply wonderful. South Carolina has welcomed me. The state of Joe falsely accused me and shunned me.”

“I have lived in North Carolina since 1952 and planned to move to South Carolina until the Lord called me back north to my eternal Home in heaven.” He added, “In some cases, it was really a good thing to go from the North to the South. Now I can vote against Lindsey Graham (R)!”

Previously, the Joe State Bar Association had informed Linwood that he would have to undergo and submit a mental health evaluation in order to maintain his license to practice law. However, Linwood flatly refused.

“I have done nothing wrong. I simply exercised my right to free speech,” Wood wrote in a Jan. 29 post, “and I will not allow the State Bar to use this to make things difficult for me, thereby violating my constitutional rights.”

“The State Bar of Georgia formally requires me to undergo a mental health examination in order to retain my license to practice law, which I will respectfully decline to do, and I am of sound mind and have not violated any code of professional conduct.” He wrote at the time.

Sarah Coole, chief operating officer of the State Bar of Georgia, confirmed to Reuters that Linwood had been asked to undergo a mental health evaluation, but declined to comment further.

The request from the State Bar of Georgia comes just weeks after Linwood was banned from Twitter.

Separately, in January, a Delaware judge even blocked Linwood from defending Carter Page, a former Trump campaign adviser. The judge said Linwood’s tweeted criticism of Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts was “too disgusting and outrageous to repeat.

After the November 2020 election, Linwood made headlines when he filed a lawsuit in Georgia for alleged election fraud, and in December 2020, Linwood said in an interview that the court rejected evidence of election fraud because the judge was compromised or threatened, and that the Chinese Communist Party was behind the issue.