I'm going to post on the situation out of St. Clair County , Michigan. Our county has an election lawsuit against Jocelyn Benson and St. Clair County Clerk Jay DeBoyer. We cite violations of the contract for state of Michigan Dominion contract after getting transfer numbers associated with purchase orders made under that contract to be coming from Maine into Michigan and the contract says that the tabulators were supposed to be "newly Manufactured in Plano, TX" to be void in relief. It's a big piece of the puzzle and we also provide courts in Eastern District of Michigan.
Filed: 7/12/2022
Case #: 22-11572
Court: Eastern District of Michigan
Subject: Violations of 52USC20701 "Preservation of Records and Papers" associated with federal elections.
Status of Suit: Pending Magistrate Judge Kimberly Altman's ruling on both defendant's motions to dismiss Gary F. Smith's claims against DeBoyer and Benson. Gary's response included substitutive evidence obtained by citizen FOIA requests to all 31 clerks that comprise St. Clair County and comparing it to the county record of the 2020 election.
Most counties have the same numbers for local vs county records of election. However in St. Clair Count's 2020 election this was not the case.
Substantial discrepancies between "number of registered voters on 11/3/2020" and "number of votes case in the 2020 election" amongst local v county data for the same municipalities on the same election. Two separate and conflicting records of the 2020 election for at least 28/31 local municipalities within St. Clair County.
One of the local satisfied FOIA's from 2020 " number of registered voters" shows a screenshot of what the State of Michigan Qualified Voter File looks like when you're logged into it from the local clerk's end. It shows the search query for number of registered voters going back to January 1st, 1800. (1/1/1800)
Benson's lawyers claim this is so they can make placeholder voter files for eligible voters whose birthdays they cannot verify. How are they eligible voters without verifying their birthday and who they are / State ID.
This seems to make a loophole for ability to have votes cast in an election with no State ID backing the vote.
Her lawyers go on to say that local clerks are supposed to "further investigate" the registries with unrealistic birthdays as a way to flag it to the clerk.
I'm going to post on the situation out of St. Clair County , Michigan. Our county has an election lawsuit against Jocelyn Benson and St. Clair County Clerk Jay DeBoyer. We cite violations of the contract for state of Michigan Dominion contract after getting transfer numbers associated with purchase orders made under that contract to be coming from Maine into Michigan and the contract says that the tabulators were supposed to be "newly Manufactured in Plano, TX" to be void in relief. It's a big piece of the puzzle and we also provide courts in Eastern District of Michigan.
Filed: 7/12/2022 Case #: 22-11572 Court: Eastern District of Michigan Subject: Violations of 52USC20701 "Preservation of Records and Papers" associated with federal elections.
Status of Suit: Pending Magistrate Judge Kimberly Altman's ruling on both defendant's motions to dismiss Gary F. Smith's claims against DeBoyer and Benson. Gary's response included substitutive evidence obtained by citizen FOIA requests to all 31 clerks that comprise St. Clair County and comparing it to the county record of the 2020 election.
Most counties have the same numbers for local vs county records of election. However in St. Clair Count's 2020 election this was not the case.
Substantial discrepancies between "number of registered voters on 11/3/2020" and "number of votes case in the 2020 election" amongst local v county data for the same municipalities on the same election. Two separate and conflicting records of the 2020 election for at least 28/31 local municipalities within St. Clair County.
One of the local satisfied FOIA's from 2020 " number of registered voters" shows a screenshot of what the State of Michigan Qualified Voter File looks like when you're logged into it from the local clerk's end. It shows the search query for number of registered voters going back to January 1st, 1800. (1/1/1800)
Benson's lawyers claim this is so they can make placeholder voter files for eligible voters whose birthdays they cannot verify. How are they eligible voters without verifying their birthday and who they are / State ID.
This seems to make a loophole for ability to have votes cast in an election with no State ID backing the vote.
Her lawyers go on to say that local clerks are supposed to "further investigate" the registries with unrealistic birthdays as a way to flag it to the clerk.