Testifying before the Michigan Senate Oversight Committee on Thursday, the state’s current Unemployment Insurance Agency director could not tell lawmakers who was in charge of security during the roughly three-month period when the agency paid out roughly $9 billion in fraudulent claims.
https://www.afinalwarning.com/482946.html (Natural News) Legitimate concerns have been raised regarding how the voting machines provided by Dominion Voting Systems adjudicate votes that have irregularities. Prior investigations have revealed that one county in Michigan had a suspiciously high tabulation error rate. This indicates that Dominion’s software may be sending far too many ballots for adjudication.
In many states, if a ballot has been incorrectly filled out, instead of tossing the vote away it can be sent to election officials for adjudication under the supervision of poll observers from both parties. The election officials then try their best to determine who a voter intended to vote for. Poll observers can raise objections if they do not agree with the outcome of the adjudication. At least, that is how it is supposed to work.
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Source: AP Photo/David Goldman, File
Judge Kevin Elsenheimer of the 13th Circuit Court on Monday ordered a forensic imaging of the Dominion Voting Systems machines and software used in Antrim County, Michigan, where 6,000 votes for President Trump were incorrectly attributed to former Vice President Joe Biden. The Michigan Secretary of State stated the error took place because of human error not a software glitch.
The order was made after Antrim County resident William Bailey filed a lawsuit challenging the integrity of the election results. Specifically, he brought up concerns about how county election officials originally reported their unofficial results. The focus of the election results weren t on the outcome of the presidential contest but rather on a local proposal to allow a marijuana dispensary in town, the Detroit Free Press reported.
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The chief executive of Dominion Voting Systems said a report based off of an examination of voting machines in Antrim County was “severely flawed” and released by a “biased” group.
John Poulos, the CEO of the company, voluntarily testified under oath before the Michigan Senate’s Oversight Committee on Tuesday in response to allegations of election fraud, one day after a judge allowed the release of a report compiled by a cyberfirm affiliated with legal challenges in other battleground states to be unveiled, with some light redactions, about its audit of Dominion devices in Antrim County.
The report was produced by the Allied Security Operations Group and signed by Russell Ramsland, a former GOP congressional candidate and cybersecurity analyst, who claimed that Dominion machines are “intentionally and purposefully designed with inherent errors to create systemic fraud and influence election results” and that the results must be decertified.