
There’s trouble in Fulton County, Georgia, as two high-powered criminal defense attorneys have suddenly filed a motion to withdraw from a 2020 election case.
According to the motion, criminal defense attorneys Donald F. Samuel and Amanda R. Clark Palmer have filed a motion to withdraw from the Favorito v.
Rasmussen speculated that the lawyers who reportedly called for the recall may have had something to do with the “missing” mail-in ballots.
Update: High Price Criminal Defense Lawyers in Fulton County, GA See Writing on the Wall, Hit the Silk
Those 150,000 still-secret 2020 mail-in ballots with the perfect ovals protected by court order for 3 years may be gone, and the county attorneys just gave up. https://t.co/ez6E40exWw pic.twitter.com/UuQTiS90xa
— Rasmussen Reports (@Rasmussen_Poll) November 9, 2023
“Those 150,000 still-secret 2020 mail-in ballots with perfect ovals protected by court order for 3 years may be gone and the county attorneys just quit,” Rasmussen posted on X.
It is not clear why the lawyers are withdrawing from the case. Becker News has reached out to the Garland, Samuel & Loeb law firm for comment and will update accordingly.
Human Events, however, had previously reported on the 147,000 vote-by-mail controversy:
Fulton County Director of Polls Suzi Voyles was sorting through a large stack of mail-in ballots last November when she noticed something odd: Several ballots marked for Joe Biden were extremely similar.
One after another, the ballots contained perfectly filled ovals for Biden. In addition, each of the bubbles had an identical white void inside in the shape of a tiny crescent, indicating that they had been marked with toner ink rather than a pen or pencil, according to the Epoch Times.
Voyles also noticed that all the ballots were printed on a different paper than the others he had counted and that none were folded or wrinkled, which is standard for mail-in ballots since they come from envelopes.
“They were all strangely virginal,” Voyles said. He noted that he had never seen anything like it in his 20 years of monitoring elections in Fulton County.
All but three of the 110 ballots in the pile, which had been labeled “State Farm Arena,” were marked for Biden and appeared to be “identical ballots.”
After Voyles ran, she was fired as a poll manager by the Fulton County Department of Elections.
“I got the boot for telling the truth,” he said.
At least three other poll workers observed the same thing.
Those election watchers have used their affidavits to help convince a state judge to seal all 147,000 mail-in ballots in Fulton and allow for closer inspection. They argue that possibly tens of thousands have been fabricated in a race that Biden won by just 12,000 votes.
An election integrity organization has reported that original ballot images for the November 2020 election have not been made available from seventy-four Georgia counties.
VoterGA, a nonprofit organization dedicated to ensuring election integrity, has certified 56 counties through Open Records Requests (ORRs) that were automatically generated by the state’s voting machine system. most or all images used for tabulating results.
Voter images are essential to voter records and must be kept for a period of 22 months in the federal government and 24 months in the state government, according to their respective statutes.
“We have what is almost certainly significant absentee voting fraud in Fulton County involving 10,000 to 20,000 likely false ballots,” said Garland Favorito, the lead petitioner in the case and a certified poll watcher.
“We have confirmed that there are five pallets of wrapped ballots in a county warehouse,” he said.
Also, there are massive chain of custody issues in Georgia related to the voting footage.
Seventy-four of Georgia’s counties have been unable to produce original ballot images from the November 2020 election, according to VoterGA, an election integrity nonprofit.
The group received confirmation through open records requests (ORRs) from 56 counties that most or all of the images the voting machine system automatically created to tabulate the results have been destroyed.
“At least 28 counties admitted to having no original images, and 22 of those counties only had recount images that some claimed were the same as the originals,” the nonprofit group VoterGA reported.
The Associated Press did not deny the substance of the reports in a “fact check,” but merely rejected the narrative that the missing voting footage “proved” voter fraud.
They may not “prove” voter fraud, but they do demonstrate an election where voters have plenty of reason not to trust the results.
Georgia voters and the American public must be able to trust that election officials are doing their due diligence to secure elections and provide transparency to all voters.
Transparency has been slow when it comes to the 2020 election. Getting to the bottom of what happened in Georgia during that election would be an important start.
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