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Why is the Mockingbird Media So Interested in Coffee County, Georgia’s 2020 Election All of the Sudden?

Quite a bit of “information” has come out recently in the mockingbird media, especially the Washington Post and the AP.  There is an unusual interest in a small county in Georgia regarding their election machines.  While most of the focus has been on what happened after the election (and subsequent run-off), this article will focus on why those events took place and why those events were justified.

It is worth noting, for your own personal determination, that none of the recent articles in the mockingbird media will outright call the forensic imaging in Coffee County a “breach” because that would be accusing these individuals of a crime.  They add the word “alleged” in front of it (seriously…press cntrl+f on the article, search “breach”, and check the word preceding it every single time).  The authors should know very well that there was no breach.  And I won’t preface my accusation with “allegedly.”  A breach implies a forced entry by someone without authorization.   The definition of “breach” most applicable here is an “infraction or violation of a law, obligation, tie, or standard.

Because the administration of county elections is delegated to the county officials, as per Pearson v. Kemp (below), the person of authority over the machines in Coffee County would be Misty Hampton, the county’s elections supervisor.  And if Ms. Hampton permits the imaging and conducts it herself, it is unclear how that would be “stolen” software as Marilyn Marks, the plaintiff in the long running yet underachieving Curling v. Raffensperger case claims.  I reached out to Marks for comment and citations of specific statutes that she claims are being violated.  She did not cite any specific statutes but mentions Rule 183-1-12-.05, which ironically states the machines cannot be connected to the internet (more on that below) but also states that “lock and key access” is granted to only a handful of people, but does not explicitly state those are the only people allowed in the room.  It’s also worth noting that there is no access log, as required per this Rule, when the Secretary of State’s Office seized the machines from the EMS room (according to the Rule Marks cites above, the SoS Office is not authorized to “lock and key access” of this room).

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1 thought on “Why is the Mockingbird Media So Interested in Coffee County, Georgia’s 2020 Election All of the Sudden?”

  1. That gap toothed white person hating communist will cheat… funny that when she previously lost, it was “stolen” but obviously that is okay to say as long as you are a dumbocrat

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