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A post has been circulating on social media which claims that the Nevada Attorney General, Aaron Ford, admitted to changing signature verifications manually for over 200,000 votes. His office told Reuters this is false. Following the 2020 U.S. presidential election the Trump campaign and its allies filed several lawsuits in Nevada related to automated signature matching, none of which were successful.
“Nevada AG admits to changing signature verifications manually for over 200,000 votes. Everyone knows this, right?” says the post (here). The same post also circulated in November 2020, after the U.S. presidential election (here , here , here), and was debunked at the time by fact checkers PolitiFact and USA Today (here , here).
Appeals court rules against Nevada cap on church attendance auburnpub.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from auburnpub.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
(CN) Citing a recent precedent set by a Supreme Court reshaped by President Donald Trump, the Ninth Circuit on Tuesday blocked Nevada from enforcing Covid-19 restrictions on churches that are stricter than those imposed on casinos and other businesses.
A unanimous three-judge Ninth Circuit panel, borrowing the same reasoning laid out in the high court’s Nov. 27 ruling on New York’s Covid-19 limits for houses of worship, ordered Democratic Nevada Governor Steve Sisolak to stop imposing attendance limits stricter than 25% building capacity on religious services.
Calvary Chapel Dayton Valley, a rural church east of Reno, argued that the state treated religious services less favorably than casinos, gyms, restaurants and other businesses that are subject to different sets of restrictions.