Election Group Slapped With RICO Says It Can Prove Trump Won Georgia In 2020. (Since That Is Their Defense, the State Must supply Voting Records)
Posted by freedomforall 2 years, 7 months ago to Politics
Excerpt:
"Mr. Floyd was charged on Aug. 14 alongside the 45th president and 17 other co-defendants with violating Georgia’s Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations (RICO) Act, conspiracy to commit solicitation of false statements and writings, and influencing witnesses.
He was the only defendant to spend time in jail due to the indictment before he was released on bond on Aug. 30.
“Your Honor, this case isn’t about whether you or I think that Donald Trump lost the election. It’s about what Mr. Floyd believed at the time,” noted Chris Kachouroff, one of Mr. Floyd’s defense attorneys, at a Nov. 3 hearing before Judge Scott McAfee.
“It’s also [about] what the false statements are alleged to have been, and indeed, are they really false,” he said.
Opening the Door
The judge ordered the hearing in response to motions to quash three sweeping subpoenas Mr. Floyd’s legal team served to the office of Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger, the Fulton County Clerk of Courts, and the Fulton County Board of Elections.
Materials the attorneys requested included the ballot images and envelopes for all absentee ballots cast in the 2020 general election, all absentee ballot application forms, reports from the Dominion voting machines used, and all laptops and poll pads used by election workers, along with other documents, files, and drives.
Attorneys also requested all documents and recordings concerning the secretary of state’s post-election investigation into allegations of election fraud.
“The state chose to open this door,” Mr. Kachouroff said. “It is a broad and sweeping complaint. They opened the door wide open for us to walk in and ask for these things.”"
"Mr. Floyd was charged on Aug. 14 alongside the 45th president and 17 other co-defendants with violating Georgia’s Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations (RICO) Act, conspiracy to commit solicitation of false statements and writings, and influencing witnesses.
He was the only defendant to spend time in jail due to the indictment before he was released on bond on Aug. 30.
“Your Honor, this case isn’t about whether you or I think that Donald Trump lost the election. It’s about what Mr. Floyd believed at the time,” noted Chris Kachouroff, one of Mr. Floyd’s defense attorneys, at a Nov. 3 hearing before Judge Scott McAfee.
“It’s also [about] what the false statements are alleged to have been, and indeed, are they really false,” he said.
Opening the Door
The judge ordered the hearing in response to motions to quash three sweeping subpoenas Mr. Floyd’s legal team served to the office of Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger, the Fulton County Clerk of Courts, and the Fulton County Board of Elections.
Materials the attorneys requested included the ballot images and envelopes for all absentee ballots cast in the 2020 general election, all absentee ballot application forms, reports from the Dominion voting machines used, and all laptops and poll pads used by election workers, along with other documents, files, and drives.
Attorneys also requested all documents and recordings concerning the secretary of state’s post-election investigation into allegations of election fraud.
“The state chose to open this door,” Mr. Kachouroff said. “It is a broad and sweeping complaint. They opened the door wide open for us to walk in and ask for these things.”"
Having that take place in every battleground state in the same time frame is so
unlikely that in a free country there would have been immediate independent
investigation into every single instance.
Add to that
1) the video evidence showing vote counting done by democrat agents
purposely against the laws requiring verification by republican observers
2) the video evidence of ballot box stuffing (harvesting) by paid democrat
agents
3) computer evidence of tampering with computer voting machines, etc.
The 2020 election result was a fraud and an act of treason by every
government power who opposed investigation or who refused to hear
the evidence.
He will be denied his right to prove his assertion. If the state was smart they’d dismiss the charges now. Michigan is learning it the hard way with The Iron Pig. The owners of that restaurant have done more to prevent tyranny (in their own defense from tyranny of the state) than ANY of our elected representatives. After Whitmer’s Executive orders were slow walked through the justice system and declared unconstitutional the state tried to dismiss all charges and make the unconstitutional mandates be forgotten. One restaurant said “Not so fast.” And filed suit against the Health Department for it’s unconstitutional public health orders. The goal is to set a precedent that the State does not have the authority to ever do anything like that again. Watching them try to squirm out of the trap they laid for themselves has been both frustrating and entertaining.