A Michigan lawyer involved in the Antrim County case said a forensic audit of Dominion Machines showed the devices were deliberately designed to produce numerous statistical errors that should have been acted upon by President Trump.
On Monday (Dec. 14), “Bailey v Antrim County” (Bailey v. Antrim County) of the plaintiff’s attorney, Matthew DE palin’s (Matthew DePerno) for “extreme news” (Newsmax), said he hopes to trump and the White House to read data company “alliance Special action Group” (Allied Special Operations Group, abbreviated to ASOG) given by the audit report, “how important is it to understand these findings.
“We hope to give him (Trump) something based on our investigation. Because if antrim County uses these machines and this happens, there are 48 other counties in Michigan that use the same machines, and hundreds of other counties across the country that use them. Foreign interference like this has to be dealt with, and I think the president will take action.” He said.
ASOG and its co-founder, Russell Ramsland, an election security expert, said they found that the Dominion machine in Anslim County had deleted ballot determination logs and security logs from Election Day (Nov. 3), while other pre-election records were still in place.
“The adjudication process is the easiest way to manipulate votes by hand. The lack of records prevents any form of audit accountability, and their apparent absence is highly questionable as previous years’ files using the same software still exist.” “We must conclude that the record for the 2020 election cycle has been manually deleted,” Mr. Ramsland wrote.
Ramsland also said his team found that antrim County machines turned down a significant number of votes to transmit manual rulings. This process allows election workers to repair ballots and then resubmit them. He said the machines had an error rate of 68.05 percent, compared with the 0.0008 percent allowed by the FEDERAL Election Commission.
The report also says the Dominion machine has “deliberately and purposefully designed inherent errors” to create “systematic fraud” during elections.
“Deliberate errors led to a massive vote count — without oversight, without transparency, without audit trail. This leads to voter fraud or election fraud. Based on our research, we concluded that the Dominion Voting system should not be used in Michigan. Our further conclusion is that the Antrim County results should not be certified.”
On Monday, Michigan state election officials responded that the report was inaccurate; Jocelyn Benson, Democrat, Michigan’s secretary of state, and Dana Nessel, state attorney general, said the report lacked “credible evidence of widespread fraud or wrongdoing”.
State elections director Jonathan blatter (Jonathan Brater) in a document submitted to the court’s countered that the report concluded that the “a series of unsubstantiated conclusion, blamed the motives of fraud and fuzzy processing on the regular elections is easy to explain the program or error correction, and without explanation suggests that the election of Michigan doesn’t use of software components, for does not exist, or easy to explain the tabulation or report errors have a certain responsibility.”
Dominion said the counting errors in Antrim County were man-made and unrelated to the company. “Antrim County did not permit or use numerical adjudication. Any absentee ballots that the county has to resolve are outside the system… manually.”
On Monday, Trump tweeted, “This report shows massive fraud and the election changed the outcome!”
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