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The Justice Department just secured a superseding indictment against the Southern Poverty Law Center, and it reveals some new bombshells
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https://t.co/uRCbnWaBzr
A federal judge on Wednesday considered whether to throw out a jury's guilty verdict against former Wisconsin Judge Hannah Dugan, who was convicted of felony obstruction for helping an immigrant evade federal officers.
https://t.co/W7f5u6OWvE
The St. Paul City Attorney's Office has declined to bring state criminal charges against demonstrators who disrupted a Jan. 18 service at Cities Church. https://t.co/jpttvsSxCL
5 INVESTIGATES found Pride Transportation, which operated the school bus that crashed into a building on Tuesday, routinely fails state inspections. In 2023, dozens of buses were pulled off the road due to brake issues. We spoke with a driver today outside the company's office.
Governor Tim Walz has appointed Judge Peter Cahill, who oversaw the Derek Chauvin trial, to lead a new state council reviewing how recent federal immigration operations affected Minnesotans. https://t.co/yaBLYVd2ks
EXCLUSIVE: Anonymous letter addressed to Mayor Frey warned about O’Hara years before resignation
The letter, dated Sept. 11, 2022, contained detailed allegations about O’Hara’s conduct and leadership during his time in Newark, New Jersey, where he served as public safety director and later deputy mayor — including claims that closely mirrored the issues that later surfaced in Minneapolis.
Alpha News sent the letter to Frey's office this week and asked if the city reviewed the allegations during O'Hara’s hiring process or conducted any follow-up inquiry. The mayor's office did not respond.
@KSTP@HeadlinesStrib “The Board of Pardons — comprised of Gov. Tim Walz, Supreme Court Chief Justice Natalie Hudson and Attorney General Keith Ellison…”
This is all we need to know.
Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz on Wednesday pardoned a man taken into ICE custody during Operation Metro Surge before he could potentially be deported to Laos, his native country. https://t.co/mWV904UYnj
Depends on what you mean by "major". I haven't looked at CA's state rolls, MI, MN, NV, IL, WA, or DC. I suspect those look pretty bad also. From the ones I have looked at, all fail basic database management tests, but the worst are NY, WI, AZ, and GA. IN other words, one third of all the rolls I've looked at are shockingly bad vs simply "bad".
Research:
Overall: https://t.co/wu5MYshvoY
Multiple States: https://t.co/OnaziKjK0A
Ohio: https://t.co/74l01B0HJA
Multiple States: https://t.co/D3XLPxKp42
Harris County, TX: https://t.co/dajDQvJy2C
Wisconsin: https://t.co/8IDXaERiQT
New Jersey: https://t.co/x5qt4cxAlb
New York: https://t.co/GgrPZmA3az
And yes, I've also studied unusual dreams. That's what interested me until I discovered that our elections were compromised.
About 5 years ago, I started researching voter roll data in the United States. Since then, I have published 7 peer-reviewed articles on the subject, most in the Journal of information Warfare (links in comments).
I am the first person to publish anything on the subject of hidden algorithms in voter rolls, and remain the only person to have published on the subject.
More importantly, this study has revealed that no state of the 12+ I have looked at meet normal standards for database management or security. If the state election boards were banks or any other regulated industry, they would be shut down.
They could complain about "incompetent clerks" and "accumulated errors over time" all they want, but they'd still be shut down.