As part of a comprehensive and well-planned campaign to access polling equipment in numerous states, Donald Trump’s attorneys instructed computer specialists to copy critical data from Georgia election systems.
Attorneys for voting-security activists and Georgia voters said the documents confirmed the state’s election system had been copied. Emails and other records obtained by the Washington Post show defense attorneys asked the Atlanta-based forensic data firm SullivanStrickler to access election systems in at least three crucial states.
According to plaintiffs’ lawyer David D. Cross, “the breach goes far beyond what we thought.” “Its vastness is mind-boggling.”
According to the documents, an attorney for the Trump campaign sent a team to Nevada, while SullivanStrickler experts copied data from a Dominion voting system in Coffee County, Georgia, on January 7, 2021.
Sidney Powell sent a team to Michigan to copy a rural county’s election data and then helped arrange for them to do that in the Detroit area.
A number of people whose names are found in the recently made public documents are the subject of a criminal investigation in Michigan, and Mesa County clerk Tina Peters is currently facing felony charges in Colorado, including conspiracy to commit criminal impersonation and attempting to influence a public official.
The new documents reveal Powell’s group discussed and paid for elections-systems data; the plaintiffs intend to give the FBI and state and local elections officials access to these records.
SullivanStrickler was given permission by courts to examine voting equipment in at least two counties, though details about those efforts have not yet been made public.
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