Michigan Attorney Matthew DePerno released new information from his investigation into the Antrim County 2020 election.
In May DePerno broke the news that the Antrim County tabulator machines can be reopened after the election. The machines can then run more ballots through the tabulator, print off a new tabulator tape with new ballots, and then backdate that tape to November 3rd.
On Tuesday Matt DePerno dropped another bomb that he says should disqualify the 2020 Antrim County election.
According to DePerno the Dominion Voting Machines were accessed from the outside and remotely logged into after the election.
DePerno contends this should decertify the county’s election results.
And Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson should resign or be removed from office after alleging remote access was not possible with the Michigan machines.
Via Attorney Matthew DePerno on Twitter:
1. We have been lied to.
The Antrim County election management system (EMS) was REMOTELY and successfully logged into anonymously on 11/05/2020 at 5:55 PM and again on 11/17/2020 at 5:16 PM.
Yes, that is correct… REMOTELY
2. Those dates are significant because they correspond directly to the dates the county and SOS were trying to correct the intentional computer problems that subverted the election.
These logons appear to have escalated privileges at the time of logon.
Again . . . REMOTELY
3. But we were told there was no internet connection.
In an accredited system, an anonymous user should not be authorized by the accreditation authority, but would instead be required to enter a specific user name and password to utilize the system.
4. We were told there was no internet connection. We were told there was no remote access. We were told this was human error. All lies.
This is fraud. This decertifies the Antrim County election.
SOS Benson should resign or be impeached.
1. We have been lied to.
The Antrim County election management system (EMS) was REMOTELY and successfully logged into anonymously on 11/05/2020 at 5:55 PM and again on 11/17/2020 at 5:16 PM.
Yes, that is correct . . . REMOTELY
— Matthew S. DePerno, Esq. (@mdeperno) June 9, 2021
3. But we were told there was no internet connection.
In an accredited system, an anonymous user should not be authorized by the accreditation authority, but would instead be required to enter a specific user name and password to utilize the system.
— Matthew S. DePerno, Esq. (@mdeperno) June 9, 2021
1. More . . . last night former MI state rep @triston_cole started contacting people in Antrim County asking for county clerk Sheryl Guy's personal cell phone b/c @SenEdMcBroom needed to talk to her ASAP, and not on an official telephone line.
Was something exposed last night?
— Matthew S. DePerno, Esq. (@mdeperno) June 9, 2021
3. This phone call on a private line is an attempt to circumvent FOIA, violate the open meetings act, and may implicate other civil snd criminal statutes.
Patriots may want to call @SenEdMcBroom and ask what this call was about and what lines were used. Submit FOIA requests.
— Matthew S. DePerno, Esq. (@mdeperno) June 9, 2021
Cann Con released a video on Wednesday morning explaining these latest developments in Michigan.