A former election integrity and technology expert who worked at the Soros Foundation recently revealed that, in order to ensure Obama’s re-election in 2012, Biden personally traveled to Serbia to meet with cyber hackers and finalize Dominion’s software to be controlled by Serbian personnel.
In order to give Dominion a large share of the U.S. market, Obama instructed then-Attorney General to use antitrust as a pretext to force the divestiture of another U.S. company acquired by ES&S, the largest U.S. voting machine company, which was sold to Dominion, and then approved Dominion’s purchase of Sequoia, a company linked to Venezuela’s Smartmatic, giving Dominion control of at least one-third of the election equipment market before the 2010 midterm elections.
Dana Jill Simpson was interviewed in a Nov. 24 exclusive story on the news website National File.
Dana and her husband, Jim, both experts in election technology, worked for the Soros-owned Tide Canada Foundation. There she discovered that the Tide Foundation was connected to the corporate offices of Dominion Canada, Inc. and proceeded to investigate Dominion for many years. They found private equity, the Soros Foundation, the Hillary Foundation, the Obama Administration, and foreign governments such as the Chinese Communist Party and Serbia hiding behind Dominion.
Fearing that Dominion would create fraud to interfere with the election results, Dana reported her investigation to the FBI in 2016, but the FBI did not take it seriously.
In 2020, Dana intends to speak out about the information she has. She told the National Archives, “My only goal in this election is to destroy Dominion.
Justice Department Forces ES&S to Divest Premier to Pave Way for Dominion
Obama nominated Eric Holder to be Attorney General upon taking office in 2009. Holder, like Obama, is African-American, and Obama’s appointment makes Holder the first African-American Attorney General in U.S. history.
Obama nominated Eric Holder (right) to be Attorney General upon taking office in 2009. Under Holder’s leadership, the DOJ forced ES&S to divest Premier on March 8, 2010, paving the way for Dominion.
Under Holder’s leadership, the DOJ issued a settlement agreement on March 8, 2010, which required ES&S, then the nation’s largest voting machine manufacturer, to divest itself of Premier, the market’s second oldest company, which it had acquired less than six months earlier. That is, ES&S was forced to sell Premier to another buyer, which had to be done within 60 days.
The DOJ issued the agreement on the grounds that ES&S, which had acquired Premier, had a monopoly on 70% of the U.S. voting machine market. The DOJ filing states that ES&S, which covers 41 states, had revenues of nearly $150 million in 2008, while Premier had revenues of $88 million from its 33-state market. The DOJ argued that a monopoly would lead to higher product prices and reduced market competitiveness and technological creativity.
The settlement agreement required ES&S to divest Premier of all of its assets, and specified the details. The divested assets include all technical materials and instructions used in the production of equipment for scanning, recording, tabulating, etc., as well as Premier’s past and present intellectual property, production tools, inventory, etc. The settlement agreement also provides for the divestiture of all of Premier’s assets.
In addition, the settlement gives prospective buyers broader access to other ES&S products, including AutoMARK, which ES&S acquired prior to acquiring Premier and which manufactures voting machine systems designed for the blind, mobility-impaired, and in multiple languages. The Department of Justice required that ES&S not only allow the new buyer to use AutoMARK products, but also give the latter the right to update and modify the software.
In the detailed settlement agreement, the DOJ also emphasized an important point: the new buyer must be approved by the DOJ. That is, the buyer selected by ES&S must first obtain the DOJ’s approval before Premier can be sold.
Otherwise, the DOJ will appoint a trustee to effect a forced divestiture of ES&S, subject to court approval, as provided in the settlement agreement.
Dominon’s Two-Month Transformation: From New Kid to Market Maiden
On May 15, 2010, ES&S signed a sale agreement with Dominion Voting Systems, a Canadian company. Because both companies are private, the amount of the purchase price agreed upon is unknown.
Dominion, which was founded in 2002, did not have the experience to participate in large-scale electronic voting, counting, and management, as the Canadian government still counts votes by hand in federal elections and several state elections.
Following the acquisition of Premier, Dominion acquired Sequoia, another American company, the following month. In this way, Dominion made a beautiful turnaround in two months, going from a newborn in the U.S. market to number two in the market, behind ES&S. Four months later, in 2010, Dominion acquired Sequoia.
Four months later, in the midterm elections for the Senate and House of Representatives in November 2010, Dominion, which had merged the Premier and Sequoia markets, officially entered U.S. politics.
For the average American voter, it’s who they vote for that matters, and whether their vote is counted by Dominion’s electronic scanning, counting and tabulation system for the candidates they support is out of their control.
But for the Simpsons, who are concerned about election integrity and are also technologists, their reaction was different when they noticed the unusual way Dominion had blinked its way into the United States, controlling more than a third of the U.S. election market in two months.
They first discovered that Biden had met with some special people when he visited the former Commonwealth of Independent States country of Serbia in May 2009.
Biden personally traveled to Serbia to lock down the software team for Dominion.
Dana said in the National Archives interview that she and her husband, Jim, were working with Harvard-educated attorney Cliff Arnebeck on an election research team. They went through all the relevant Department of Justice documents and discovered that Attorney General Holder had facilitated Dominion’s acquisition.
She said, “We looked at all the documents and proved that Dominion was able to get a 30% market share thanks to the Attorney General under Obama and Biden, who brokered the deal in the name of antitrust.”
Dana and her husband Jim are both Democrats, but are in the non-radical Sanders camp. She thinks it’s so corrupt that Biden and Obama, through the Attorney General, are selling companies to companies they control.
Dana then realizes that Obama and Biden intended to take control of an election company in order to ensure Obama’s re-election in 2012, and that Biden had already begun preparations in 2009, before ES&S was asked to divest.
Dana told the National Archives that Obama and Biden began working on the voting machines as soon as they took office in order to ensure their re-election in 2012. She said she received a tip that when Biden visited Serbia in May 2009, he made a dirty deal with hackers there.
To ensure his re-election and Obama’s re-election in 2012, Biden made a deal with hackers in Belgrade that not only gave them control of the ES&S equipment information, but also, through an antitrust action by the Justice Department, ensured that Dominion would later take more than half of the ES&S software and put it under the control of the Serbian hackers,” she said. “
The “State Archive” showed a photo of the exterior of an ordinary building in Belgrade, where the article indicated that the hackers who programmed the software for Dominion worked.
After November 3, 2020, when more and more revelations about Dominion’s cheating scandals in several states came to light, more than a hundred Dominion employees deleted their Linkedin records, including the hackers who worked for Biden in Belgrade.
The “National Archives” article revealed that Biden and the former Crown Prince of the Republic of Serbia were close and had exchanged numerous visits. The crown prince was the son of the last king of Serbia, whose father’s dynasty was overthrown five months after he was born, and at 75 the crown prince apparently has no chance of restoring the dynasty, but he is actively involved in Serbia’s international affairs. The crown prince is one of the first “heads of state” to send a congratulatory letter to Biden since his self-declared “victory” on November 14.
Dominion Hardware Production Safety in China Questioned
In addition to discovering that Dominion’s software engineers in Serbia were working for Biden and Obama, Dana went on to discover that Dominion’s hardware was manufactured in the Chinese foundry of Flex, a leading U.S. electronics manufacturing contractor whose largest customer in China is Huawei.
Flex, one of the world’s largest telecoms OEMs, is headquartered in Singapore and has the largest foundry in China, employing more than 50,000 Chinese workers, a quarter of its global workforce.
Flextronics undertakes the manufacturing of several cell phone brands, with Huawei as an important partner. Huawei’s base stations, smartphones, and especially new 5G-capable models are manufactured at Flextronics. In terms of net revenue comparisons, Flextronics’ dependence on Huawei is the highest among U.S. technology companies.
Dana, who personally visited Dominion’s headquarters in Denver, Texas, told The National Archives that “they are misleading the public that these machines are made there, and what it’s doing is selling foreign-programmed machines to American voters.”
“The machines were made in China by Flex, and the programming was done in Serbia and Canada.”
On January 9, 2020, the CEOs of three major U.S. election equipment providers, Election Systems & Software, Dominion Voting Systems, and Hart InterCivic, were asked to appear before Congress for a hearing. Several members of Congress have asked questions about the actual ownership of the three companies and whether there has been any foreign government interference.
Frank Figliuzz, former deputy director of counterintelligence at the FBI, has told NBC News that Chinese manufacturers could be forced to cooperate with requests from Chinese intelligence officials to provide technical information to the Communist Party that could pose a threat to U.S. companies. He cited additional concerns that equipment shipped from China may have undetectable vulnerabilities and tamperable backdoors.
Dominion’s Concealed Owners
In an interview with Forbes Business Desk last week, prominent attorney Sidney Powell said that the real owners of voting machine companies are hiding behind multiple shell companies and private equity firms.
On December 10, 2019 three Democratic senators, Elizabeth Warren, Amy Klobuchar, and Ron Wyden, and Congressman Mark Pocan, sent a joint letter to three private equity firms that own three major voting machine companies, asking them to provide detailed information about the portfolio, performance, ownership, and financial structure of their respective companies.
In the letter, the four members of Congress asked the private equity firms to provide transparent information out of concern about the influence of private equity in many sectors of the economy, including the election technology industry, and because they noted that voting machines have a long history of “convenience over security” and that they pose a threat to American democracy.
The letter also reveals that over the past 20 years, voting machine vendors for U.S. elections have grown from two dozen in 2000 to three major players that currently account for 90% of the national market, but that the public rarely receives transparent financial and business operations information from the private equity firms behind them.
In July 2018, Dominion announced that its management and private equity firm, Staple Street Capital, had acquired Dominion.
Staple Street Capital’s website does not provide any portfolio or performance reports for the fund, or even a description of the founders. Other publicly available information indicates that the fund was founded in 2009 by Hootan Yaghoobzadeh and Stephen D Owens.
Prior to co-founding Staple Street Capital, Hootan Yaghoobzadeh and Stephen D. Owens both worked at the Carlyle Group, one of the world’s top private equity firms, in 1998.
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