No question about it: When it comes to filing election fraud lawsuits, former federal prosecutor Sidney Powell is operating under the mantra, “Go big or go home.”
Earlier this week, Powell filed suit on behalf of Arizona’s 11 GOP electors alleging that at least 400,000 ballots were illegally cast in the state’s general election, while also claiming that the Dominion Voting Systems software created unprecedented security risks and statistical anomalies that indicate mass fraud.
The 53-page complaint, among other things, alleges that there were several occurrences of software manipulation and other fraud throughout the state “as set forth in the affidavits of eyewitnesses and the voter data cited” that constitutes violations of Arizona election law as well as the U.S. Constitution, The Epoch Times reports.
“The multifaceted schemes and artifices implemented by Defendants and their collaborators to defraud resulted in the unlawful counting, or fabrication, of hundreds of thousands of illegal, ineligible, duplicate or purely fictitious ballots in the State of Arizona,” says the suit.
These “collectively add up to multiples of Biden’s purported lead in the State of 10,457 votes,” the suit argued, adding that an alleged 412,000 “illegally cast ballots,” at least, were registered.
The outlet added:
Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey and Arizona Secretary of State Katie Hobbs are listed as defendants in the lawsuit.
Both certified the state’s presidential election results on Monday and challenged claims of election fraud, saying all voting machines were certified by a federal commission and reviewed by state officials, that credentialed poll observers witnessed all ballot tabulating, and cameras were in ballot tabulation centers with live streams able to be viewed over the Internet.
Ducey said on Twitter on Tuesday that following the certification, the state’s electors had a five-day window to challenge the certification in court.
And so they have.
The suit focuses, in part, on what witnesses and others claimed is an “especially egregious range of conduct” in Maricopa County, home to Phoenix, and other counties that used the Dominion machines and software.
No comments:
Post a Comment