An obscure Texas security company helped persuade many Americans that the 2020 election was stolen from Trump Author: Emma Brown, Aaron C. Davis, Jon Swaine, Josh Dawsey, The Washington Post Updated: 5 days ago Published 5 days ago
Share on Facebook
Print article ADDISON, Texas - Key elements of the baseless assertion that the 2020 election was stolen from President Donald Trump took shape in an airplane hangar here two years earlier, promoted by a Republican businessman who has sold many things, from Tex-Mex food in London to a wellness technology that beams light into the human bloodstream. At meetings beginning late in 2018, as Republicans were smarting from midterm losses in Texas and across the country, Russell Ramsland and his associates delivered alarming presentations on electronic voting to a procession of conservative lawmakers, activists and donors.
How the election-fraud myth was spread by Russell Ramsland and the Texas security company ASOG washingtonpost.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from washingtonpost.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
4 Min Read
Three vice presidents, two directors, an associate director,
Liberty magazine editor, and the president of the Guam-Micronesia Mission (GMM) have been newly elected to serve the North American Division (NAD) until 2025.
Randy Robinson, NAD treasurer, offers prayer as members of the NAD Executive Committee prepare to vote on names presented by the division’s Nominating Committee. [Photo: Pieter Damsteegt/NAD Communication Production].
The election on April 29, 2021, took place during a meeting of the NAD Executive Committee. The committee’s meeting date had been chosen by the same governing body through a vote on Feb. 25, after the postponement of the 2021 General Conference Session.
By Dan O Donnell
Apr 22, 2021
In tragedy, there is hopelessness, but in America, the land of hope, there is always faith that even on the darkest days there is a glimmer of light. Even when evil seems to win the day, good can rally the soul of a nation through heroism in the face of unimaginable odds.
This is the Forgotten History of A Cry in the Darkness.
It was a sunny Wednesday morning, and Don Hull had a million things to do. A detective sergeant with the Oklahoma City Police Department, the veteran cop mulled over the busy day ahead of him as he drove to work.