On Monday we
reported on the investigation by Attorney Matthew Deperno into the Antrim County Michigan Dominion Voting Machines. DePerno was able to quickly assemble a team of seven highly trained forensic IT experts to conduct the forensic examination.
On Sunday morning, the seven-people IT forensic team arrived; Mr. Bailey and his attorney Matt DePerno were given access to the county building and started gathering the forensic evidence.
After 8 hours, the collection was complete. With 16 CF cards (similar to SIM cards), 16 thumb drives, and forensic images of the Dominion voting machines in hand, the IT team was escorted to the local Antrim County Airport by two Antrim County Sheriff vehicles, where they boarded their jet plane with evidence in hand.
Mr. DePerno expected to have the results of the study sometime Tuesday. He didn't receive the result until later this week.
Tonight Atty. DePerno went on Greg Kelly on Newsmax. The information he shared was explosive.
Matthew DePerno:
Well the Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson said it happened by human error. We discovered that's not true, that's a lie. It didn't happen by human error. It happened by a computer program called Dominion Voting System. And through our lawsuit we were able to get access to the Dominion Voting System program and my team went on last Sunday and we took forensic images on that computer system, 16 CF data cards, 16 thumb drives, and we got the forensic image of the actual tabulation machine in the Antrim County clerk office.
Comment: Its been an
uphill battle to get the Dominion Voting machines' forensics in Michigan thus far:
[...] Patrick Colbeck, an election challenger in Wayne County appeared on Fox Business Thursday night to discuss the audit of the Dominion machines.
Colbeck told Lou Dobbs that a judge ruled in favor of crooked Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel to prohibit the disclosure of the forensic results.
WATCH:
The Detroit News reported on the fight for the forensic results:
A Northern Michigan judge granted Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson permission to intervene in a case questioning results in Antrim County and the security of tabulators used there on Nov. 3.
Judge Kevin Elsenheimer ruled Thursday that Attorney General Dana Nessel's office could intervene on behalf of Benson, who had argued she had supervisory control over the Antrim County clerk, had an interest in any audit discussions the case may raise and was party to the county's contract with Dominion Voting Systems.
The Secretary of State's office is concerned particularly with forensic imaging performed on Antrim County's 22 Dominion tabulators earlier this week by a Village of Central Lake resident and Allied Security Operations Group, said Assistant Attorney General Heather Meingast.
"We'd like to know more about what was obtained, what the intent is for the use of the images obtained," Meingast said, noting the disclosure of some elements of the tabulators could compromise their security in future elections.
More dots being connected between the flipped votes in Antrim County and the election fraud investigation as a whole:
And lest we forget:
Comment: Its been an uphill battle to get the Dominion Voting machines' forensics in Michigan thus far: More dots being connected between the flipped votes in Antrim County and the election fraud investigation as a whole:
And lest we forget: