Trump’s election demands situations blocked by helpless witnesses

The last-minute legal efforts of Donald Trump’s campaign have focused on witnesses who claim to have witnessed voter fraud and other suspicious activity in battlefield states across the country. White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany brandished piles of papers detailing what she said were a bunch of affidavits from the electorate or The Tellers allegedly aggravated television appearances, and MAGA loyalists took the accusations as evidence that Trump won the election in secret.

But when claims of those who actually succeed in a judge, the allegations fall dramatically, putting some other obstacle in Trump’s attempts to push away the election of President-elect Joe Biden.

The most recent fatal reaction to Trump’s election witnesses came Friday in an order in Michigan state court. Trump’s crusade had asked The Supreme Court President, Timothy M. place with the vote count, basically at the TCF Center in Detroit.

But when Kenny saw the witness’ statements, he wasn’t impressed. In his view, on Friday, Kenny rejected Trump’s campaign request, describing a witness’ affidavit as “full of hypotheses and hypotheses on a sinister basis. “

Instead of alleging voter fraud, Kenny said, many of the fees filed through witnesses described the regime’s counting procedures. If Republican contenders had only attended an optional on-site education, according to Kenny, they would not have been so alarmed.

“There is no evidence to characterize any perverse activity by the fact that the city uses a rental truck with out-of-state license plates,” Kenny wrote in reaction to a complaint.

Kenny also rejected allegations of voting irregularities made through Melissa Carone, a computer subcontractor at Dominion Voting Systems, whose voting machines were included in the conspiracy theories of voter theft that were propelled through Trump. Carone made appearances in the right-wing media as a guy. of the star witness of the Trump crusade that supports the “rigged” election narrative, yet Kenny said his accusations did not fit any other witness statement.

“The accusations are simply credible,” Kenny wrote.

Carone faced similar up disorders on his media tour in favor of Trump. In a Thursday appearance on Fox Business host Lou Dobbs’ show, Carone told a strange story about the fact that pollsters did not receive enough meals, which even puzzled Dobbs.

Trump’s crusade responded to a request for comment.

Witnesses to Trump’s crusade have also found unrest in Arizona. On Thursday, the crusade collected false accusations that Sharpie pens were used to invalidate court votes in Maricopa County. .

Sharpie’s conspiracy theory, dubbed “Sharpiegate” through Trump’s allies, focuses on the concept that election officials intentionally gave Sharpies Republican voters to make their ballots countless, but Sharpie’s use would invalidate ballots, according to state election officials.

By contrast, many witnesses cited through Trump’s attorneys in Maricopa County only allege after the fact that they may have noticed something suspicious, even though they could not accurately say what it was. Some, for example, have complained that election officials urged other yettons, but they could not discover that there was something about urgent yettons.

Maricopa Superior Court issued its ruling on also removing from the record various accusations of Trump’s crusade, compiled through an Internet forum, and wondered whether requesting “evidence” on the Internet could reliably provide credible claims. of all he admitted that the crusade did not alleviate fraud, but noted “mistakes of good religion. “

On Friday, the Arizona case ruling ignored the Arizona case, as Biden had accumulated such an advantage that the resolution would not determine whether Biden or Trump won the state.

Even in open-air courtrooms, Trump’s alleged voter fraud witnesses have not shown their claims. Postal Service mailman Richard Hopkins shortly became a star to the right the day after the election, after it was alleged that Pennsylvania postal personnel were canceling ballots to meet the November 3 deadline. and Hopkins raised more than $ 100,000 on GoFundMe.

However, in an interview with postal investigators, Hopkins retracted his claims. While he later stated in an interview with O’Keefe that he felt deceived by investigators, audio from the interview through project Veritas showed that Hopkins had retracted at least part of his accusations of voter fraud.

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