The state of Georgia and the corrupt Brad Raffensperger thought they were in the clear. Not so. In December 2020, attorney Todd Harding filed a case against Fulton County, GA that alleged counterfeit ballots were inserted into the 2020 Election. A funny thing happened on its way to the slag heap. Justice prevailed. Judge Amero tossed the case out because he claimed that voters lack standing to question the 2020 election results. Did he really think anyone would buy that load of garbage?
The case went to the Appeals Court and Amero was upheld. But, then the case went to the Georgia Supreme Court, which must have felt that Fulton County was unable to explain how they counted 22,534 more mail-in ballots than they received. Trump allegedly lost the state by less than 12,000 votes. The Georgia Supreme Court ordered the case Favorito et al. v Wan et al. to be reconsidered. This time the Supreme Court ruled that voters have the constitutional right to sue over elections.
CLICK HERE TO JOIN OUR NEWSLETTERAmero cannot dismiss the case on a technicality. He will have to rule on the facts of the case, meaning that if he ignores the law and tosses the case again, his judgeship is in peril. Likewise, if he tries to prevent all of the evidence from being introduced.
According to a press release from VoterGA.org:
The Georgia Court of Appeals has issued an order remanding the Fulton County counterfeit ballot case back to the Superior Court for all Fulton County petitioners. The order comes over four months after the Georgia Supreme Court upheld standing in its December 20, 2022 ruling for the Favorito et al v. Wan et al and Jeffords et al v. Fulton County cases. That decision was based on the court’s previous ruling that unanimously found Georgia citizens, taxpayers and residents, including voters, always had standing to sue government officials or agencies who violate Georgia law.
Garland Favorito provided some context for the 28-month legal struggle: “The citizens of
Georgia have been victimized for well over two years by false claims that there is no evidence
of election fraud. This inordinate delay is attributable to lower court rulings that falsely
claimed we had no standing. The Secretary of State and Attorney General should have
helped us all this time instead of fighting against us. It is critical that Georgians quickly
know how many counterfeit ballots were included in the 2020 Fulton election results so we
can implement more fraud protection measures prior to the next election. We fully expect the
lower court to move expeditiously since it had already ordered a ballot inspection before
Fulton County hired criminal defense attorneys to prevent us from looking at the ballots. If
there is nothing to hide, all involved should be willing to show us the ballots.”
Fulton County and other counties in the state turned over evidence that was riddled with inconsistencies. To see the evidence gathered thus far by a team of citizens and mainly through open records request and government sourced statements, visit GABallots.com.
Some (of many) examples documented on GABallots.com:
- Fulton County counted 22,534 more mail-in ballots than received
- 74 Georgia Counties can’t produce original ballot images
- Fulton County Election Day Vote Discrepancy (14k reported as voting on Election Day but numbers would show over 59k!)
- Fulton Co can’t find 376,000 [original] ballot images
- 17,000 missing ballot images – Fulton
- Out of 148,318 ballot images, only 16,034 SHA files (hash validation) were provided
To see the evidence gathered thus far by a team of citizens and mainly through open records request and government sourced statements, visit GABallots.com.
Some (of many) examples documented on GABallots.com:
- Fulton County counted 22,534 more mail-in ballots than received
- 74 Georgia Counties can’t produce original ballot images
- Fulton County Election Day Vote Discrepancy (14k reported as voting on Election Day but numbers would show over 59k!)
- Fulton Co can’t find 376,000 [original] ballot images
- 17,000 missing ballot images – Fulton
- Out of 148,318 ballot images, only 16,034 SHA files (hash validation) were provided
Justice delayed is not always justice denied.