Thursday, November 19, 2020

Dominion machines linked to electronic election fraud back in 2011

Here's a report on an example of electronic election fraud dating back to 2011. The end of the report reveals, "Dominion is the company behind the machines."
 

Cynthia Zirkle: "They called it backwards. It was simply backwards."

Reporter: "South Jersey voting machine incident makes waves."

Narrator: "It was 2011 and Cynthia Zirkle and her husband Ernie were running in a local election in their home town of Fairton, New Jersey."

Reporter: "Was this a big deal here?"

CZ: "It was. It was both a big deal, but people said we don't trust the system. And that was sad. Very sad."

Reporter: "How did you know you would win this election?"

CZ: "Because I knew 33 of the people that voted for us, and we lost 33 to 10. And I knew that that wasn't the case."

Reporter: "The results had been switched with those of their opponents."

Ernie Zirkle: "We started calling people that we thought we knew voted for us, because it was just in this district of this township and we know everyone in this district."

Narrator: "Because people voted on electronic voting machines that leave no paper trail there was no way to recount the votes."

Reporter: "Do you blame the electronic voting machines?"

CZ: "No, I blame people, and unfortunately I think that no matter what system you come up with can be rigged."

President Trump: "The system folks is rigged. It's a rigged disgusting dirty system."

Dr Andrew Appel: "When you have an electronic voting machine with no paper ballot then you're completely relying on the software in the voting machine to tell you who won, and software is easily replaced in a computer, so somebody can replace it with fraudulent software that lies about who won."

Narrator: "That was computer scientist Andrew Appel. He knows what he's talking about because he's actually hacked the voting machines himself."

AA: "And you see you don't have to be a computer expert to actually hack the voting machines."

A mock up of a Dominion Voting logo.
Archive clip: "So I remove it simply by prying it loose from it's socket with a screwdriver."

AA: "If it's a really close election then one swing state will make the difference."

Reporter: "So you actually program it to say this button's for Hillary Clinton. This button's going to be for Trump."

"No, that's done by Dominion."

Narrator: "Dominion is the company behind the machines. We reached out to them, but they didn't respond to our request for comment."

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