There have been 7,000 affidavits delivered to the lawmakers, so called, of Michigan, claiming various aspects of electoral fraud. On the “where there is smoke, there is likely to be fire, at least of some sort,” principle, a forensic audit is sorely needed. In principle, one witness is enough to convict for a crime, let alone, 7,000!
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“Hundreds of people concerned about the integrity of the Nov. 2020 election gathered outside the Michigan Capitol Thursday to protest and deliver roughly 7,000 affidavits claiming fraud and demanding a forensic audit.
Michigan Conservation Coalition spokesperson Matt Seely said thousands of Michigan voters have questioned the integrity of the 2020 election.
"If we do a deep-dive forensic audit similar to Arizona, it will do either one of two things," he said in a phone interview. "It will prove that all of the politicians who say there's nothing to see there, that they were right. Or it will prove that there's a big problem with the integrity of our elections and that we need to address it in a major way."
Seely said election integrity isn't a Democrat or Republican issue. He cited one poll saying 70% of Republicans don't believe the 2020 election was free or fair.
Another survey says between 20-30% of Democrats said it was "very likely" that Democrats "stole votes or destroyed pro-Trump ballots in several states to ensure that Biden would win."
"If the politicians who are trying to stop this from taking place truly believe there's nothing to see there, then what would be the harm in just proving to the electorate that the concerns are unwarranted?" Seely asked.
Seely said five governors in swing states changed election rules and procedures that ended up determining the election.
"Why did 45 other governors dealing with states of emergency and COVID, didn't feel it was necessary to change election rules and procedures and violate the U.S Constitution?" he asked. "We owe voters the truth."
Those gathered say Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson's audit only recounted votes and didn't go far enough to inspect votes and ensure those voting were on the Qualified Voter Roll (QVR).
Former state Sen. Patrick Colbeck said it only took 150 affidavits to get the attention of Arizona legislators.
Colbeck called for a new hearing, alleging election machines were hackable. He claims Antrim County now can't find 1,061 voters in the QVR.
Colbeck said he's aiming for legislators to complete a forensic audit. If such an audit shows evidence of fraud, it would significantly affect the election. He says lawmakers could demand an audit.”
“Twenty-nine page memo obtained by Just the News cites double counting, insecure storage, "massive chain of custody problem" and a worker's threat to "f*ck sh*t up."
In a nationally televised interview in January, Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger rattled off an impressive list of measures his state used to ensure the November election count was accurate. "We had safe, secure, honest elections," he declared to "60 Minutes."
That rosy assessment, however, masked an ugly truth inside his agency's own files: A contractor handpicked to monitor election counting in Fulton County wrote a 29-page memo back in November outlining the "massive" election integrity failures and mismanagement that he witnessed in the Atlanta-area's election centers.
The bombshell report, constructed like a minute-by-minute diary, cited a litany of high-risk problems such as the double-counting of votes, insecure storage of ballots, possible violations of voter privacy, the mysterious removal of election materials at a vote collection warehouse, and the suspicious movement of "too many" ballots on Election Day.
"This seems like a massive chain of custody problem," the contractor Carter Jones warned in the memo delivered by his firm Seven Hill Strategies to Raffensperger's office shortly after the election.
That glaring notation was written around 4:00 p.m. on Election Day, when Jones observed absentee ballots arriving at the county's central absentee scanning center at Atlanta's State Farm Arena "in rolling bins 2k at a time."
"It is my understanding is that the ballots are supposed to be moved in numbered, sealed boxes to protect them," he wrote, noting these ballots weren't.
He also feared the flow of absentee ballots seemed too voluminous. "Too many ballots coming in for secure black ballot boxes," he observed.”
https://justthenews.com/sites/default/files/2021-06/Unabridged%20Notes.pdf