Nothing will show the political bias of the DOJ than their refusal to address what was just discovered in Arizona.
? B O O M ! ?
They had no problem when the claim was the audit would destroy election information that was required to be retained, by law.
Now there is evidence election information had been deleted, which is against the same laws they were trying to use to intimidate the audit team.
And it is a near certainty that whoever deleted the files would have needed an administrator level password to accomplish that task.
Are those the passwords that are being withheld by dominion? Thus proving who had access
From what I can see, the admin passwords that are requested are for the routers, and the voting machines. I have not seen anything to indicate that what was deleted was stored directly on either of those pieces of hardware.
However, if the files were deleted through a remote access point, then it is likely that the router data records would be vital to confirming, or tracing a remote connection that was capable of deleting files, and revealing who did it. And that would require an admin password to view those data logs.
Yes, thanks for the clarification I wasn't sure what the requested passwords were for.