Key records related to Security and ballot decisions are missing from the Dominion Voting machine in Antrim County, Mich., according to a Forensics report released Dec. 14 by Allied Security Operations Group.
“What the system shows is obviously voting records from previous years, and all the decisions from the 2020 election are gone. The adjudication process is the easiest to manipulate.” The report (see here) says, “Without these records, there can be no audit accountability. These incidents of missing records have raised concerns and are highly suspicious. Previous years’ records in the system were recorded using the same voting software.”
“From this we must conclude that the record during the 2020 election has been artificially erased.”
In the course of the forensic investigation, investigators discovered that the Dominion voting machines were refusing to adjudicate large numbers of ballots, which were manually determined by election workers.
“The ERROR rate allowed by the FEDERAL Election Commission is only one in 250,000, and the Dominion voting machine error rate that we found was 68.05 percent. This shows that there was a major and fatal error in the security and integrity of the election.”
“These errors led to an error in the overall count in Antrim County. “This high error rate demonstrates a vulnerability in the Dominion Voting system that is inconsistent with state and federal election laws.” “This deliberate high error rate resulted in a large number of votes being counted by election officials,” the report said. Since records have disappeared, we do not know where such votes have been taken or who is responsible. We are continuing to study it.”
The forensic report was written by Russell Ramsland, a partner in the Joint Security Operating Group. The group also includes former officials from the Department of Defense, The Department of Homeland Security and the Central Intelligence Agency. The group specializes in network security and open source network penetration testing.
In early December, Judge Kevin Elsenheimer of the 13th Circuit Ordered a review of voting machines in Antrim County. The plaintiff, William Bailey, who is suing Antrim County, then hired Mr. Ramsland’s team to conduct the inspection.
The team examined and copied the county’s election management server (for operating version 5.5.3-002 of the Dominion System Democracy Suiteversion), the Dominion ImageCast Compressed flash memory card, the Dominion Voter Auxiliary terminal USB MS card, and the Voter roster USB MS card for legal evidence purposes.
In addition to missing ballot adjudication records, the Dominion Voting machine had no record of safety until 11 p.m. on November 4.
“What this shows is that security records have been lost the day after election day, the day before election day and the day before election day,” said Ramslan. Security records within voting machines are critical in several ways: audit trails; Forensic investigation; Expose high-level, long-term threats and external attacks, particularly against past system files.”
“Those missing security records may include domain name control, authentication failures, error codes, number of user logins, file server networking, Internet connections, data conversion. Other server records exist prior to November 4.” “Ramslan said.
Spokespeople for Michigan Democratic Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson, Dominion Corporation and Antrim County were not immediately available for comment.
Erik Grill, Michigan’s deputy attorney general, told the judge early Dec. 14 that Ramslan’s preliminary report was “inaccurate, incomplete and misleading.” Haider Kazim, an attorney for Antrim County, said the report contained several errors “based on inappropriate assumptions.”
The REPORT also states that Dominion’s involvement in U.S. elections is a national security issue and needs to be addressed urgently. The report recommends an independent statewide investigation into the extent of vote-counting errors in Michigan.
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