*****OFFICIAL ELECTION DAY THREAD*****

2,698,980 Views | 20889 Replies | Last: 2 yr ago by Whistle Pig
will25u
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txags92
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richardag said:

aggiehawg said:

full rumble HERE
Three people in Michigan blocking transparency. Wold say unbelievable but I have come to accept the Democratic Party leadership is completely corrupt and unethical.

Worth watching
I worked in Michigan for 18 months. When it comes to corruption and unethical behavior, nothing...absolutely nothing, would surprise me up there.
will25u
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will25u
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Just putting this here...

will25u
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will25u said:

Just putting this here...


ravingfans
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will25u said:




TABULATORS DON'T STEAL ELECTIONS, CRIMINALS DO!!!
will25u
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Here is an image putting together the scanned ballot, the scanning of the ballot into the machine, and what the election official wrote down on the batch sheet.

aggiehawg
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will25u said:

will25u said:

Just putting this here...



So those are the letters that Stephanie Lambert was talking about in the rumble video I posted yesterday.




Quote:

So, who is ElectionSource and why are they tampering with election equipment?
Quote:

Despite claiming to have a contract with the State of Michigan on their company website, I have been unable to obtain a copy of that contract. It is more likely that ElectionSource is operating on behalf of a contract they have with Dominion Voting Systems. Such an arrangement would make it more difficult to obtain data on the scope of their services pertaining to Dominion Voting Systems. In the State of Michigan contract with Dominion, the following ICX equipment and price list can be found.
Quote:

ICX equipment is the focus of the "preventative maintenance" performed by ElectionSource per their memo. The ICX equipment has three basic functions:
  • Ballot marking and printing of electronic mobile ballots
  • Ballot review and second chance voting
  • Accessible voting and ballot marking
Clearly, the settings for these functions would be of significant interest in a forensic audit.


Quote:

Please note that battery removal is not specified in this "Preventative Maintenance Checklist". Clearly, the "maintenance" visit to Michigan counties was not consistent with their checklist. This begs the question, why did they refer to the visits as "preventative maintenance?"
CONCLUSION
Election officials are required to secure election records for 22 months per federal law. It is clear from the memo above that Election Source intends to modify the configuration of election equipment prior to the end of this period (September 3, 2021) which is a clear violation of federal law. As the momentum builds for a forensic audit of the election in Michigan, it is clear that attempts to tamper with the integrity of election records will ramp up as well.
Link
FriscoKid
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crowman2010
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FriscoKid said:


Thanks for finding the video! This is what I posted from my buddy's page on facebook. Pretty damning if you ask me!
FriscoKid
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The state AG's need to start arresting the folks that committed this fraud. Nothing DC can do to stop that. You are talking about multiple felony counts for each incident. Maybe these Dem officials will think twice about it in the future. Hopefully we get bigger fish later, but start small. Broken windows policing.
Keegan99
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Cash you provide a link to the source, please?
We fixed the keg
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aggiehawg said:

Watching a rumble with Stephanie Lambert, Michigan attorney (she's also up on sanction charges) and she is talking about how a letter went out (not sure from whom) that directed local election officials that the election servicer would be coming to "change out batteries" and that the local election officials did NOT need to be present during this "routine servicing."

But she called one of her cyber experts (former NSA cyber guy) to ask what effects, if any would changing out the batteries on the machines have? His response was that there are other functions including memory devices that are solely on the battery power so removal and replacement of them would wipe those memories from those functions.

You are my IT go-to guy here. Could that be correct?

rumble link at bottom of the page HERE
Holy cow. Hit $2 Milagro shot night so I just saw this.

I will do some digging into the Michigan machines, but what he said could be correct. Just like a PC, anything being stored in RAM would be lost unless written to internal storage first. I would think there would be a process for this prior to shutting down a system. (similar to saving changes to your spreadsheet before shutting your PC down).

If this was done during the election, why? Why wouldn't these machines all be fully serviced and ready prior to go-time. If not, you still have the issue of how would this pass certification but anyone performing an audit invalidates that machine from ever being used again.
We fixed the keg
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aggiehawg said:

Watching further, Lambert just revealed she has an email from Dominion sent to Antrim County after the primaries in 2020 complaining about their unreliable internet connection.
....but....but....air-gapped, no signs of machines connecting to any external network. muh DHCP.
FLATOUT
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FriscoKid said:

The state AG's need to start arresting the folks that committed this fraud. Nothing DC can do to stop that. You are talking about multiple felony counts for each incident. Maybe these Dem officials will think twice about it in the future. Hopefully we get bigger fish later, but start small. Broken windows policing.
This
We fixed the keg
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aggiehawg said:

Michigan Secretary of State did not keep the source codes in escrow? (Sorry, I'm behind and watching this rumble with Stephanie Lambert about Michigan and when my jaw drops, I pause it and come here to post.)

The significance of not using the escrow system for source code is huge. Michigan uses ES&S and Dominion machines. The Sec of State should have the standard source code escrow clause in every contract with a voting machine vendor. Third party holds the source code and the Sec of State can access that upon certain conditions as stated within the contract. Read that clause in the Georgia contract with Dominion. (Surprise to me that such escrow companies existed but I'm a noob when it comes to IT stuff.)
Yeah, typically to protect against bankruptcy of the company who created the software, or if they decide to abandon the software. You get an escrow company that gets paid to keep it functioning.
TRM
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I know someone uploaded all the ballots on the left. I believe a link was posted several days and pages back. I don't know where to find the images in the middle and the right. Maybe it's at the same link?
FriscoKid
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We fixed the keg said:

aggiehawg said:

Watching a rumble with Stephanie Lambert, Michigan attorney (she's also up on sanction charges) and she is talking about how a letter went out (not sure from whom) that directed local election officials that the election servicer would be coming to "change out batteries" and that the local election officials did NOT need to be present during this "routine servicing."

But she called one of her cyber experts (former NSA cyber guy) to ask what effects, if any would changing out the batteries on the machines have? His response was that there are other functions including memory devices that are solely on the battery power so removal and replacement of them would wipe those memories from those functions.

You are my IT go-to guy here. Could that be correct?

rumble link at bottom of the page HERE
Holy cow. Hit $2 Milagro shot night so I just saw this.

I will do some digging into the Michigan machines, but what he said could be correct. Just like a PC, anything being stored in RAM would be lost unless written to internal storage first. I would think there would be a process for this prior to shutting down a system. (similar to saving changes to your spreadsheet before shutting your PC down).

If this was done during the election, why? Why wouldn't these machines all be fully serviced and ready prior to go-time. If not, you still have the issue of how would this pass certification but anyone performing an audit invalidates that machine from ever being used again.


I don't think it's about the battery at all. They are talking about a battery that would power the printer. That's a UPS kind of battery (not a coin cell for RAM or real-time clocks). They also said a clerk doesn't need to be there.

It sounds like they want access to the machines to load new code, delete some files, remove other hardware (like M2M modems), or something else that they are trying to cover up. The batteries are a red herring IMO. They are after something else.

And electronics don't need "servicing". It's not like a car with mechanical pieces that wear out.
aggiehawg
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David Cross has looked at GA ballot images and tally sheets and put them into pdfs

Link
FriscoKid
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If I knew there was something damning on that equipment and I had to get access to it then this seems like a good cover story. These companies have to sweating bullets right now. (Assuming there is something there that would ruin them)

If someone is able to prove fraud then that's serious jail time. I'd want access to the equipment too. Just my opinion.
A is A
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Keegan99 said:

Cash you provide a link to the source, please?
Hawg posted above.

https://www.dropbox.com/sh/jbdazeu1pcxmqqr/AADZBElcG318ebBqfHDIbhqwa?dl=0

to batch 19:
https://www.dropbox.com/sh/jbdazeu1pcxmqqr/AABXnQpXbglCsk_BQU2Lk1vua/Scanner%202%20-%20Tabulator05160/Batch019/Images?dl=0&subfolder_nav_tracking=1
TRM
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Ballot Images here.



Keegan99
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Awesome. Thank you!
American Hardwood
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FriscoKid said:

We fixed the keg said:

aggiehawg said:

Watching a rumble with Stephanie Lambert, Michigan attorney (she's also up on sanction charges) and she is talking about how a letter went out (not sure from whom) that directed local election officials that the election servicer would be coming to "change out batteries" and that the local election officials did NOT need to be present during this "routine servicing."

But she called one of her cyber experts (former NSA cyber guy) to ask what effects, if any would changing out the batteries on the machines have? His response was that there are other functions including memory devices that are solely on the battery power so removal and replacement of them would wipe those memories from those functions.

You are my IT go-to guy here. Could that be correct?

rumble link at bottom of the page HERE
Holy cow. Hit $2 Milagro shot night so I just saw this.

I will do some digging into the Michigan machines, but what he said could be correct. Just like a PC, anything being stored in RAM would be lost unless written to internal storage first. I would think there would be a process for this prior to shutting down a system. (similar to saving changes to your spreadsheet before shutting your PC down).

If this was done during the election, why? Why wouldn't these machines all be fully serviced and ready prior to go-time. If not, you still have the issue of how would this pass certification but anyone performing an audit invalidates that machine from ever being used again.


I don't think it's about the battery at all. They are talking about a battery that would power the printer. That's a UPS kind of battery (not a coin cell for RAM or real-time clocks). They also said a clerk doesn't need to be there.

It sounds like they want access to the machines to load new code, delete some files, remove other hardware (like M2M modems), or something else that they are trying to cover up. The batteries are a red herring IMO. They are after something else.

And electronics don't need "servicing". It's not like a car with mechanical pieces that wear out.
Whether or not they are trying to destroy perishable data, or trying to get access to manipulate data, or even to legitimately 'service' the machines doesn't really matter. Nobody should be touching them.
aggiehawg
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TRM said:

Ballot Images here.




This is what has been infuriating me since right after the election. Election observers are allowed to take notes, no phone or cameras but they can take notes of what they are observing (assuming they were allowed to get close enough that is with the phony covid crappola.)

I watched many a video interview of those observers with their notes stating the precise batch numbers that they found were problematical. More than enough identification to pull those for examination way back then. Few of these election observers across several states even knew each other, had no way of coordinating anything in real time nor even in the days and weeks afterwards. The people in Michigan didn't know the people in Georgia and Arizona and vice versa yet they reported remarkably similar observations.
aggiehawg
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American Hardwood said:

FriscoKid said:

We fixed the keg said:

aggiehawg said:

Watching a rumble with Stephanie Lambert, Michigan attorney (she's also up on sanction charges) and she is talking about how a letter went out (not sure from whom) that directed local election officials that the election servicer would be coming to "change out batteries" and that the local election officials did NOT need to be present during this "routine servicing."

But she called one of her cyber experts (former NSA cyber guy) to ask what effects, if any would changing out the batteries on the machines have? His response was that there are other functions including memory devices that are solely on the battery power so removal and replacement of them would wipe those memories from those functions.

You are my IT go-to guy here. Could that be correct?

rumble link at bottom of the page HERE
Holy cow. Hit $2 Milagro shot night so I just saw this.

I will do some digging into the Michigan machines, but what he said could be correct. Just like a PC, anything being stored in RAM would be lost unless written to internal storage first. I would think there would be a process for this prior to shutting down a system. (similar to saving changes to your spreadsheet before shutting your PC down).

If this was done during the election, why? Why wouldn't these machines all be fully serviced and ready prior to go-time. If not, you still have the issue of how would this pass certification but anyone performing an audit invalidates that machine from ever being used again.


I don't think it's about the battery at all. They are talking about a battery that would power the printer. That's a UPS kind of battery (not a coin cell for RAM or real-time clocks). They also said a clerk doesn't need to be there.

It sounds like they want access to the machines to load new code, delete some files, remove other hardware (like M2M modems), or something else that they are trying to cover up. The batteries are a red herring IMO. They are after something else.

And electronics don't need "servicing". It's not like a car with mechanical pieces that wear out.
Whether or not they are trying to destroy perishable data, or trying to get access to manipulate data, or even to legitimately 'service' the machines doesn't really matter. Nobody should be touching them.
DePerno has filed for a TRO to stop this. We'll see if he gets it.
FriscoKid
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100% agree. There is an active investigation going on. The defense doesn't get to have access to the evidence room. That's not going to fly. If it turns out to be real "servicing" then you can do it later. It's not going to hurt a damn thing to leave a UPS battery in the box for a few months or even years.
richardag
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will25u said:


From Dominion no less, how ignorant can some people be. They would have better results with a few of these:


Edit spelling
Among the latter, under pretence of governing they have divided their nations into two classes, wolves and sheep.”
Thomas Jefferson, Letter to Edward Carrington, January 16, 1787
aggiehawg
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What's up with this?

Quote:

Key elements of the first federal technology standards for voting equipment in 15 years should be scrapped because language that would have banned the devices from connecting to the internet was dropped after private meetings held with manufacturers, according to a federal lawsuit filed Tuesday.

The lawsuit against the U.S. Election Assistance Commission, filed in U.S. District Court in Washington, D.C., claims those meetings should have been open and that changes to the draft standards should have been shared with the commission's advisory and standards boards. The lawsuit seeks to have those changes set aside.

The standards, approved in February, did not include draft language that would have banned wireless technology from voting equipment under federal certification guidelines. Voting security experts say the machines will be vulnerable to hacking without such a ban.

While the commission's certification guidelines are voluntary, multiple states use them to set mandatory requirements for voting equipment.
Quote:

Federal law requires the agency to develop its guidelines for voting systems in public, said Susan Greenhalgh of the nonprofit Free Speech for People, the group that brought the lawsuit along with University of California, Berkeley computer scientist Philip Stark, who sits on the commission's advisory board.
Phil Stark, eh? For an electronic voting system expert, he sure gets around.

Quote:

Greenhalgh said that was not done ahead of the February vote by commissioners to ratify what had been draft standards.

"Instead, the EAC brazenly flouted its legal obligation to adhere to a transparent process, choosing instead to invite the manufacturers into private meetings so they could alter the voting system standards to ease requirements and benefit the manufacturers," she said.
Remember, there is a former long term Dominion employee who oversaw their certification process currently sitting on the EAC. And the former head of the EAC, Ryan Macias, was Sec of State Hobbs' spy in the Maricopa County audit.

Quote:

Agency leaders have defended the standards, saying the features that allow voting machines to connect to the internet must be disabled under the new rules. They also said previously that a ban on having wireless hardware in voting machines would force vendors to use more expensive, custom-built hardware, a step that could hurt competition in the industry.

An email to an agency official seeking a response to the lawsuit was not immediately returned.
Hurt competition in their industry? Really? There are only three companies that control virtually 90+% of all votes in the US. Hart Intercivic, ES&S and Dominion.

Link
richardag
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From your quote:
Quote:

They also said previously that a ban on having wireless hardware in voting machines would force vendors to use more expensive, custom-built hardware
I call
Among the latter, under pretence of governing they have divided their nations into two classes, wolves and sheep.”
Thomas Jefferson, Letter to Edward Carrington, January 16, 1787
BadMoonRisin
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https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2021/07/breaking-government-elections-agency-eac-quietly-drops-language-banning-voting-equipment-connecting-internet/

EAC quietly drops language banning voting equipment from connecting to the internet.

Here's the AP source:

https://apnews.com/article/business-technology-government-and-politics-voting-cb9169604edbaf166db394328144c403

Quote:

Key elements of the first federal technology standards for voting equipment in 15 years should be scrapped because language that would have banned the devices from connecting to the internet was dropped after private meetings held with manufacturers, according to a federal lawsuit filed Tuesday.

The lawsuit against the U.S. Election Assistance Commission, filed in U.S. District Court in Washington, D.C., claims those meetings should have been open and that changes to the draft standards should have been shared with the commission's advisory and standards boards. The lawsuit seeks to have those changes set aside.

The standards, approved in February, did not include draft language that would have banned wireless technology from voting equipment under federal certification guidelines. Voting security experts say the machines will be vulnerable to hacking without such a ban.

While the commission's certification guidelines are voluntary, multiple states use them to set mandatory requirements for voting equipment.
FriscoKid
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richardag said:

From your quote:
Quote:

They also said previously that a ban on having wireless hardware in voting machines would force vendors to use more expensive, custom-built hardware
I call

That is bull ***** 100%
aggiehawg
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Customer Off The Shelf= COTS as specified in Dominion contracts. But there is also a category for "Modified COTS" within the same contract (talking Georgia here). What that means is Dominion could still use off the shelf machine components but modify them and still have those modifications certified.

Disable the internet features on them is not an option?
FriscoKid
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aggiehawg said:

Customer Off The Shelf= COTS as specified in Dominion contracts. But there is also a category for "Modified COTS" within the same contract (talking Georgia here). What that means is Dominion could still use off the shelf machine components but modify them and still have those modifications certified.

Disable the internet features on them is not an option?
Don't disable it in software. Have the board populated without the IC's or remove the module from the assembly. Easy to do with what they are paying for the equipment.
aggiehawg
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Favorito presser from yesterday.
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