According to the dozens of pages of police reports from the Muskegon Police Department and Michigan State Police, a firm called GBI Strategies was under scrutiny as an organization central to alleged voter registration fraud in the 2020 presidential election, which was first investigated by city and state authorities before the FBI took over.
The Muskegon Police Department began investigating GBI Strategies after the Muskegon City Clerk's Office reported suspected voter registration fraud, according to a police report first dated Oct. 16, 2020, which Just the News obtained from a FOIA request.
File Incident 202019124 R.pdf The city clerk's office said that a woman who dropped off the fraudulent voter registrations on Oct. 8, 2020 said she worked for GBI Strategies, the police report reads.
The police interviewed the woman, called "Suspect 1" in the police report, and she explained that she "Receives $1150.00 a week, hotels services and a rental vehicle for her work." She also said she was "Tasked with finding unregistered voters and provide them with a form so they can get registered and obtain their ballot," according to the police report.
Muskegon police investigated the alleged fraud with Michigan State Police, who executed a search warrant for an office of GBI Strategies.
A woman who was a canvasser and at the office during the search told police she made $15 an hour, contrary to what the suspect told police earlier.
Another heading appeared to show Tablets to be shipped to PA, MIA & ALA." File 60-368-20R.pdf On the Jobsearcher.com website, Michigan State Police found GBI Strategies' expired job postings for "Regional Field Manager, Supervisor and Driver, Voter Registration Specialist and Field Canvasser" in Flint Mich., as well as other "postings for Regional Field Managers in Washington DC and Chicago, IL," according to one of the reports.
" Search warrants in the report mention state police "currently investigating a possible violation of 'MCL 168.933a', Election Fraud by Forgery.
A total of 37 voter registration applications were examined in detail by the Muskegon police, according to information in the latter half of the report.
" According to the Muskegon police report, the FBI visited the Muskegon Police Department in May 2021 to examine the voter registration applications.
In March 2022, the police department received a call from an FBI agent "request[ing] random copies of some of the voter applications," according to the report.
No comments:
Post a Comment