Judge Gives NEW Hope for a Trump Win

Judge Allows the Release of Election Corruption Proof

Despite multiple setbacks, President Trump and his supporters may have found the proof they need. A judge has allowed the release of the results of Allied Security Operations Group’s forensic audit.

The audit, which took place in Antrim County, Michigan, was conducted on Dominion Voting Systems machines. Allied Security Operations Group, a company whose employees include former Department of Defense, Department of Homeland Security, and Central Intelligence Agency officials, released its findings on Monday after Judge Kevin Elsenheimer’s ruling.

The investigation into the Dominion machines was requested in a lawsuit by plaintiff William Bailey.

Antrim County has been in the news since November, after a news story broke soon after the election that 6,000 votes had been switched from President Trump and Republican Senate candidate John James to Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden and Democrat Senator Gary Peters.

Initial reporting revealed that the switched votes in Antrim County occurred due to a “software glitch.” Since then, Democrats and the media have tried desperately to insist that the real problem was human error.

The new information provided by the audit shows that the Democrats were wrong.

Allied Security Operations Group evaluated a Dominion ImageCast Precinct machine, searching for possible hardware problems, and found that more than 1,400 votes had been changed.

“This is the most preliminary report of serious election fraud indicators. In comparing the numbers on both rolls, we estimate 1,474 votes changed across the two rolls, between the first and the second time the exact same ballots were run through the County Clerk’s vote counting machine—which is almost the same number of voters that voted in total,” the company said after examining two tape rolls in Central Lake Township.

According to the audit, “742 votes were added to School Board Member for Central Lake Schools,” and “657 votes were removed from School Board Member for Ellsworth Schools.”

“There were incremental changes throughout the rolls with some significant adjustments between the 2 rolls that were reviewed. This demonstrates conclusively that votes can be and were changed during the second machine count after the software update. That should be impossible especially at such a high percentage to total votes cast,” Allied Security Operations Group wrote.

“For the School Board Member for Central Lake Schools, there were 742 votes added to this vote total. Since multiple people were elected, this did not change the result of both candidates being elected, but one does see a change in who had most votes. If it were a single-person election this would have changed the outcome and demonstrates conclusively that votes can be and were changed during the second machine counting. That should be impossible,” Allied said.

After analyzing the election results for School Board Member for Ellsworth Schools, the company said that 657 votes were “removed from this election,” adding, “In this case, only 3 people who were eligible to vote actually voted. Since there were 2 votes allowed for each voter to cast,” the recount “correctly shows 6 votes.”

Two images of vote totals from the election for School Board Member for Ellsworth Schools were included. One was from Election Day, and the other was from the Michigan recount which began on November 6. On the night of the election, 663 total votes were recorded. The recount showed only six total votes.

ellsworth school board vote

It is also noted in the report that logs from the 2020 election are missing.

“Significantly, the computer system shows vote adjudication logs for prior years; but all adjudication log entries for the 2020 election cycle are missing. The adjudication process is the simplest way to manually manipulate votes. The lack of records prevents any form of audit accountability, and their conspicuous absence is extremely suspicious since the files exist for previous years using the same software,” the report states.

“We must conclude that the 2020 election cycle records have been manually removed,” the report continues.

The fact that these logs are missing is very concerning, as voting machines in the 2020 election rejected a significant number of ballots for adjudication. Adjudication is the manual process by which election workers examine each ballot, and determine its outcome.

“The allowable election error rate established by the Federal Election Commission guidelines is of 1 in 250,000 ballots. We observed an error rate of 68.05 percent. This demonstrated a significant and fatal error in security and election integrity,” the report reads.

“These errors resulted in overall tabulation errors or ballots being sent to adjudication. This high error rates proves the Dominion Voting System is flawed and does not meet state or federal election laws. Because the intentional high error rate generates large numbers of ballots to be adjudicated by election personnel, we must deduce that bulk adjudication occurred. However, because files and adjudication logs are missing, we have not yet determined where the bulk adjudication occurred or who was responsible for it. Our research continues,” the report continues.

The report was authored by Russell Ramsland, who manages the Allied Security Operations Group. Ramsland has an MBA from Harvard University and a political science degree from Duke University, and has worked at both NASA and MIT.

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