Pressure is mounting for action concerning a 2020 incident in which Brianna Hawkins, an employee of GBI Strategies, a campaign services vendor, allegedly attempted to submit 12,500 new voter registration applications to the city clerk of Muskegon, Michigan, in the weeks leading up to the presidential election.
According to the MSP incident report, Ms. Hawkins, from Detroit, told investigators that her job was to go to Muskegon to ensure that voter registration applications were filled out properly and completely by prospective voters.
The MSP investigation report states that Muskegon police and analysts from the secretary of state's office found a quantity of voter registration applications that they deemed "Clearly fraudulent," and others they called "Highly suspicious," because they contained erroneous information.
"Nothing" happened, according to David Howell, an election integrity activist with the watchdog group Michigan Fair Elections.
Some of the people most interested in the findings of the Muskegon investigation are the 15 Michigan Republican 2020 presidential electors who are currently being prosecuted by Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel, a Democrat, for knowingly and willfully advancing the "False claim" that there was large-scale voter fraud in the state and other alleged misrepresentations.
MFE's chairperson Patrice Johnson told The Epoch Times: "Unlike most evidence in criminal fraud cases, much evidence needed to prove election fraud can be legally erased or destroyed by election officials after 22 months unless notified by law enforcement to preserve them. We have been unable to confirm if any such notice has ever been issued in the Muskegon case. There is also a federal five-year statute of limitations for voter fraud."
Mr. Howell said that citizen groups in Michigan are conducting extensive legwork, exposing voter registration wrongdoing, and looking for ways to prevent a repeat of 2020.
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