Re Az AG Brnovich..
Ballots transported from drop boxes without a chain of custody was a significant problem. There were 901,976 ballots collected from drop boxes in Maricopa County. Out of 1,895 Early Voting Ballot Transportation Statements, “381 or 20 percent were missing required information.” This meant possibly “somewhere between 100,000 and 200,000 ballots were transported without a proper chain of custody.” The information missing included ballot count fields, missing audit and courier signatures, and documentation of security seals.
https://arizonasuntimes.com/2022/04/10/arizona-attorney-general-brnovich-announces-prosecutions-after-reviewing-maricopa-county-ballot-audit-as-kari-lake-calls-to-decertify-election/Re Wisco ..
"Reference Foundation (VRF) revealed “40,856 registrants who voted in the 2020 General Election with an Indefinitely Confined status and according to WEC, had not provided ID prior to doing so.”
Joe Biden reportedly won Wisconsin by 20,608 votes.
In March 2020, the WEC, citing the Covid pandemic, provided guidance that voters who self-identified as “indefinitely confined” could receive a ballot without providing ID. Instead of using an ID to verify a voter’s identity, the only requirement was the signature of a witness verifying that the voter filled out the absentee ballot and that the name and address were correct.
It was not until after the election, in December of 2020, that the Wisconsin Supreme Court ruled the Covid pandemic and the state’s declared public health emergency were insufficient to classify voters as “indefintely confined” and exempt from voter ID rules. Only those voters whose “own age, physical illness or infirmity” makes them homebound could declare themselves “indefinitely confined” and bypass a state requirement for photo ID, the court determined."
From Gableman.
"On election day, Spitzer Rubenstein (National Vote at Home Institute employee) had access to ballots and determined which
ones would be counted or not counted. Spitzer Rubenstein wrote to Vanessa Chavez, Green
Bay City Attorney, on November 3, 2020 at 9:29 pm: “Be prepared: ballots delayed.” The
text stated: “I think we’re probably okay; I don’t think anyone challenged the ballots when
they came in.” App. 304 (emphasis added). Spitzer Rubenstein explained that someone
“prevented one of the drop box deliveries from getting to City Hall by 8 PM,” so the ballots
were “delayed,” i.e., did not arrive on time as required by law. Forty-seven boxes of ballots
were expected to be delivered and apparently, according to Spitzer Rubenstein’s email,
some of them were late but he decided that despite some of them being late, they were to
be counted anyway because no one “challenged them.” Id.
"The Zuckerberg 5’s privately funded absentee
ballot drop boxes in the 2020 election were legally unauthorized under Wisconsin law.
This makes the Zuckerberg 5 and CTCL’s agreement for CTCL-funded purchase and
placement of absentee ballot drop boxes a void contract provision as against state law and
public policy."
"Former Green Bay Clerk Kris Teske has described this usurpation by CTCL and its
“partners” of election administration. She stated in her Answer in a prior WEC proceeding:
1. “Others in the Mayor’s office began to hold meetings and make decisions
relating to the election outside of the Clerk’s office.” App. 674.
2. “This caused planning for the election to become VERY dysfunctional
and caused great confusion in the Clerk’s office as many of the meetings
and decisions were driven by the Mayor’s chief of staff and other senior
officials without the knowledge or consent of the Clerk’s office.” Id.
3. “I wrote several emails outlining my concerns with meetings that
excluded the Clerk’s office and decisions that were made without
consulting the Clerk’s office.” App. 675.
4. “[T]he office’s [Clerk’s office] ability to fulfill the obligations for the
election were greatly hindered and diminished by outside interference.”
App. 677.
As Teske asserted, Wisconsin law and WEC’s Election Administration Manual for
Wisconsin Municipal Clerks did not legally authorize CTCL and its partners to engage in
Zuckerberg 5’s election administration."
Re Green Bay Mayor Eric Genrich.
"Emails obtained by the Wisconsin Assembly’s Committee on Campaigns and Elections and presented during a hearing Wednesday demonstrate that Genrich usurped the lawful authority of Green Bay City Clerk Kris Teske to run the election, thereby running afoul of Wisconsin Statute § 7.15(1)’s requirement that “each municipal clerk has charge and supervision of elections and registration in the municipality.”
https://www.maciverinstitute.com/2021/03/green-bays-handling-of-presidential-election-violated-at-least-five-laws/