Setting the Election Aright: “This is Not Romantic…It’s Hard Work and It’s Laborious”

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Significant irregularities are being discovered in the audit taking place in Maricopa County, Arizona, this month.

Those irregularities were outlined in a letter written by Arizona Senate President Karen Fann (R) to the Maricopa County Board of Supervisors (MCBS), the body that oversees elections in the County.

The audit, which began last month, has revealed attorneys for Maricopa County failed to provide information regarding computer routers used in connection with the Nov. 3 general election. Those routers show network traffic coming into and out of the Maricopa County tabulation center on election night.

For weeks after Election Day the American public was told voting machines were not connected to the internet. The presence of these routers may indicate the opposite was true.

Officials in Arizona claim providing access to the routers would “endanger the lives of law enforcement officers, their operations, or the protected health information and personal data of Maricopa County’s citizens.”

But such sensitive information should not be stored on these routers and doing so is a violation of National Crime Information Center (NCIC) policy.

Attorneys for the MCBS have also bizarrely claimed providing access to the equipment would cost the County $6,000,000.

Further drawing scrutiny is the fact that County officials say they do not have passwords necessary to access voting machines used in the election. Those machines used in the election were provided by  Dominion Systems.

Maricopa County officials had previously said an audit of the election was conducted, a process that would have required accessing the voting machines. If officials in fact do not have the passwords necessary to access the machines it is unclear how that audit could have taken place.

Additional anomalies include a lack of chain-of-custody documentation for the ballots, ballot boxes that are sealed with standard tape instead of security tape (remnants of which are often at the bottom of boxes), and ballot counts that do not match – and are often less – than the tally sheets, or “pink slips,” on the outside of ballot storage boxes.

Perhaps most egregious is the fact that the main databases have been deleted from the folders on voting machines altogether.

“We have recently discovered that the entire ‘Database’ directory from the D drive of the machine ‘EMSPrimary’ has been deleted. This removes election related details that appear to have been covered by the subpoena,” Fann wrote in her letter.

“In addition, the main database for the Election Management System (EMS) Software, ‘Results Tally and Reporting,’ is not located anywhere on the EMSPrimary machine, even though all of the EMS Clients reference that machine as the location of the database. This suggests that the main database for all election related data for the November 2020 General Election has been removed,” she added.

Fann’s letter came in response to a letter written by the Arizona Secretary of State Katie Hobbs (D) in which she claims she was not allowed access to the audit planning process.

But Hobbs was invited three different times to be a part of the audit process and instead chose to bring legal action in an attempt to thwart it, says Arizona State Representative and current candidate for Arizona Secretary of State Mark Finchem (R).

“They’re scared to death of what we’re finding,” Finchem said, speaking of Democratic and Republican officials in Arizona, as well as Dominion Systems.

Steve Bannon addressed the impatience some are feeling on setting the results of the November election aright over the course of several appearances Finchem made this week on the Warroom broadcast.

“It’s going to take however long it takes,” Bannon said in one conversation.

“This is what’s going to happen in Georgia and Michigan and Pennsylvania,” Bannon added in another. “This is a grind. This is not Romantic. This is not big picture, interesting geopolitics or finance. This is hard work…This is a grind and it’s hard work and it’s laborious.”

“This is hard work,” Finchem agreed.

President Donald Trump, in a statement released earlier today, decried the lack of coverage in the media of these and other important developments in uncovering the election fraud that took place on Nov. 3.

“The DELETION of an entire Database and critical Election files of Maricopa County is unprecedented. Many other States to follow. The Mainstream Media and Radical Left Democrats want to stay as far away as possible from the Presidential Election Fraud, which should be one of the biggest stories of our time,” the President’s statement read.

“Fox News is afraid to cover it—there is rarely a mention. Likewise, Newsmax has been virtually silent on this subject because they are intimidated by threats of lawsuits…The story is only getting bigger and at some point it will be impossible for the weak and/or corrupt media not to cover…It is all happening quickly!” it adds.

Read Arizona Senate President Karen Fann’s letter in its entirety here.

Read Arizona Secretary of State Katie Hobbs’ letter in its entirety here.

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