According to an affidavit filed in state court by the Nevada Republican Party, citing state Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV) records obtained through a subpoena, nearly 4,000 legal and illegal aliens voted in the 2020 election.
According to Nevada law, the State department of Transportation must automatically register everyone who is given a driver’s license to vote. In Nevada, people can get a driver’s license and identification card whether they live legally or illegally.
In its election lawsuit, the State Republican Party hired Jesse Kamzol, a data expert, to compare 110,164 noncitizen records provided by the DMO with voter records in Nevada, where 6,260 noncitizens registered to vote and 3,987 voted. Kamzor said the results were “credible to medium.”
He notes that with limited information, the results can contain a false positive sample, but even then, the matches are important and worth further investigation.
“One of our most basic checks in the election process is that this sacred right (to vote) is limited to those who have the privileges and responsibilities of citizenship, but these systems have been broken by the DMV,” the Nevada Republican said in a statement.
“And where are our law enforcement officers? We found this evidence in Nevada without the help of the number one police officer. Attorney General Ford: Why don’t you investigate voter fraud? You have made your position very public that you will investigate and prosecute voter fraud.”
“However, we [found] blatant vote-buying, non-plebiscite, dead voters, people voting twice, and so on, and you choose partisan politics, ignore hundreds of pages of evidence, and go on saying there was no fraud.”
The plaintiffs filed Kamzor’s affidavit on Dec. 2, but the suit was dismissed in the state District Court and then in the Supreme Court. The plaintiffs are considering an appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court, but have yet to file. The case says more than 60,000 people voted twice in Nevada, some of them not residents of the state.
During oral arguments, Jesse Binnall, a lawyer for the plaintiffs, said witnesses testified that disks used to store votes from voting machines had changed the numbers several times during the night for no reason at all during early voting. “What they do is they record these flash drives in and out, and they have a series of numbers on them. But a lot of times, when the flash drive is logged out, there’s only one vote in all. But the next morning, when I was logged in again during the voting period, there were different numbers, sometimes more, sometimes less.” “Said Binner.
The office of Aaron Ford, the attorney general, did not respond to emailed requests for comment. On December 10th Mr Ford announced that his office would join 19 other state attorneys-general in opposing Texas’s election case before the US Supreme Court.
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