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Donald J. Trump @realDonaldTrump - Video: Dominion Voting Systems Director demonstrates how operators can manually enter votes into their machines and explains this is a feature of Dominion software.
Attorney Sidney Powell recently mentioned this feature when discussing allegations of voter fraud against Dominion.
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In a video reportedly from 2017, Dominion Director Eric Coomer demonstrates how Dominion's voting machines and software works. One feature he explains is the ability to manually enter votes, a feature Dominion calls "adjudication."
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And what we're saying is we're not sure what the voter intent is but we're gonna allow the adjudicators to make that call based on any kind of state statutes. So right on the screen I can go ahead and say you know what the voter meant to mark these. They wanted those votes to count for those candidates.
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Coomer says this feature is meant to be used when a voter doesn't mark the ballot correctly and the machine cannot read
which candidate was selected. If this happens an operator can adjudicate the ballot which means they manually select what candidate they think the voter meant to choose.
Despite Dominion's reasoning for the feature some people are raising concerns about how an operator could abuse it. In a recent press conference attorney Sidney Powell brought up this feature when discussing allegations of election fraud against Dominion.
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The software manual itself you can download it from the internet and I would encourage you all to read it because it specifically advertises some of these things as features of the system. Why it was ever allowed into this country is beyond my comprehension and why nobody has dealt with it is absolutely appalling.
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The Dominion brochure advertises that the adjudication feature allows for efficient processing of ballots that require resolution of voter intent during the post-voting stage of an election.
It also states that ballot changes always preserve the voters original intent.
Anyone reviewing a ballot will be able to see how the voter marked their ballot, how the scanner interpreted the intent, and how the ballot was adjudicated.
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Statistical irregularities and impossibilities. Now we'll take a closer look at some vote manipulation within the election database including explicit vote count switching from one candidate to another.
We can see in Dodge County there's a lot of strange activity going on.
The left side of the screen shows incremental votes as they were reported for both election day and absentee. On the right we can see the total vote counts, which should only be incremental moving as the county reported in real time.
Again here we're focusing only on Donald Trump's votes. So this wouldn't necessarily be captured the state totals as it
reported on TV, since one county's deduction in votes can be offset by another county's reporting of equal or greater votes.
The first question you're going to want to ask or already have asked is why are any bars going negative? And the answer is they shouldn't.
Unbeknownst to the general public votes for Donald Trump were being switched and removed from his total which often coincided with other precinct updates that simultaneously offset deductions so that they appeared to remain neutral to outside observers.
Across the three counties of Dodge, Daughtry, and Putnam, Trump has over 30,000 votes that simply disappear. Here we have clear visibility of an event that occurred at the county level as we compare two data sources.
In this case Donald Trump reported 29,391 votes at 9:11 local time in Bay County, Georgia.
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