new filing in the United States Supreme Court by Arizona’s failed 2022 Republican gubernatorial candidate just exposed new election breaches sparking new state-level Department of State investigations in two different states.
The election-denying CEO of My Pillow Mike Lindell promised “explosive” new evidence in a lawsuit intended to overturn the 2022 election results in Arizona.
Little did he know that he would be right.
But not how he thought he would be.
Republican politician Kari Lake submitted the filing containing a sworn declaration from a purported cyber security expert in the last ditch petition for certiorari contesting the use of electronic voting machines in her 2022 election loss, alongside the losing 2022 Arizona GOP Secretary of State candidate Mark Finchem.
Newly obtained public records from the Pennsylvania Secretary of State (PaDOS) indicate they’re taking action based on her revelations to the U.S. Supreme Court (document linked below). This story is part one of three about those records.
The Stern Facts is a reader-supported publication delivering the national investigative journalism stories nobody else covers and the only place to find Grant Stern’s investigative reporting on the internet after this story. Sign up here:
Officials from Georgia’s Secretary of State confirmed the existence of their investigation in Macon-Bibb County earlier this month in response to a complaint filed by a nonprofit election security organization.
Buried inside Lake’s 48th page in a 178-page document innocuously titled “APPENDIX TO PETITIONERS’ MOTION TO EXPEDITE” there is a statement from Benjamin Cotton of the cybersecurity firm CyFIR
new filing in the United States Supreme Court by Arizona’s failed 2022 Republican gubernatorial candidate just exposed new election breaches sparking new state-level Department of State investigations in two different states.
The election-denying CEO of My Pillow Mike Lindell promised “explosive” new evidence in a lawsuit intended to overturn the 2022 election results in Arizona.
Little did he know that he would be right.
But not how he thought he would be.
Republican politician Kari Lake submitted the filing containing a sworn declaration from a purported cyber security expert in the last ditch petition for certiorari contesting the use of electronic voting machines in her 2022 election loss, alongside the losing 2022 Arizona GOP Secretary of State candidate Mark Finchem.
Newly obtained public records from the Pennsylvania Secretary of State (PaDOS) indicate they’re taking action based on her revelations to the U.S. Supreme Court (document linked below). This story is part one of three about those records.
The Stern Facts is a reader-supported publication delivering the national investigative journalism stories nobody else covers and the only place to find Grant Stern’s investigative reporting on the internet after this story. Sign up here:
Officials from Georgia’s Secretary of State confirmed the existence of their investigation in Macon-Bibb County earlier this month in response to a complaint filed by a nonprofit election security organization.
Buried inside Lake’s 48th page in a 178-page document innocuously titled “APPENDIX TO PETITIONERS’ MOTION TO EXPEDITE” there is a statement from Benjamin Cotton of the cybersecurity firm CyFIR