Fani Willis is about to indic56t President Trump for allegedly trying to steal the election in Georgia. But if she were honest (Spoiler alert….she isn’t) she would be going after SoS Brad Raffensperger and his co-conspirator, Gabriel Sterling. Emails prove beyond a reasonable doubt that Raffensperger and Astering were aware of a major problem with the tabulators in Coffee County. Both men (And I use the term loosely) promised to fix the problem before the 2020 presidential election, but neither one did.
“Leaked” CCTV footage shows cyber experts entering the Coffee County Elections Office recently as if this were some clandestine spy operation. This was hardly the case as both inspectors walked through the front door in broad daylight. Jeff Lenberg, one of the experts “sneaking into” the public building in Coffee County sat down for an interview with Brian Lupo. He revealed his incredible findings in both Michigan and Georgia.
But none of the Mockingbird outlets reported on what happened before the January 5th run-off elections. That doesn’t fit the narrative that President Trump was trying to unjustly influence officials to commit crimes.
Emails and text messages obtained by The Gateway Pundit show that at least one of the individuals targeted by DA Willis had been raising concerns to Georgia’s Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger and Gabriel Sterling, specifically. Sterling, you may recall, was being paid $114k as a State of Georgia employee before taking a private contract in November 2019 thru January 2021 for $200k/year according to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. According to Sterling’s Linked-In, he resumed his official State job in January 2021. They claim this was to avoid benefit payouts or something, but conveniently, it also would make Sterling immune to Open Records Request and public oversight of a State official.
There were numerous issues with the elections in Georgia since the implementation of the new Dominion machines in 2019. A last-minute “de-minimis” update was authorized on the machines by Judge Amy Totenberg prior to the 2020 General Election. There were thousands of previously-unknown ballots that were mysteriously revealed during hand-counts conducted after the initial machine count in November 2020 in numerous Georgia counties.
VISIT OUR YOUTUBE CHANNELTo try and resolve this issue, one would need access to the ballot images, as granted by a Court. However, Fani Willis’s own Fulton County, and dozens of other counties, deleted a vast majority of the first machine count ballot images, “accidentally”, of course. For many counties, the only ballot images that exist for the 2020 General Election were those produced during the machine recount that ended after the revealing hand-count/audit.
But in at least one county, issues began with the 2020 Primaries and emails show they sought guidance from the Georgia Secretary of State’s Office, which seems to have fallen on deaf ears. You would never know this as all of the ‘news’ surrounding the issues in Coffee County focus on what happened after the 2020 Election and January Senate run-off. Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger sat down with 11Alive in September 2022 and when asked, “Did the Secretary of State’s Office take the Coffee County issue seriously and if you had, wouldn’t you have been able to get this information months ago?”
Raffensperger responded:
“Well, we were provided information and now it appears to be apparent that these people were not speaking truthfully to our investigators.”

On October 5th, 2020, Latham emailed Sterling and said:
“…my Board of Elections (BOE) President Matthew McCullough wanted to know what it would take to get an extra scanner for the county. Brad said that it would not be a problem and he’d let you know. Julianne [Thompson] was supposed to forward my information.
We are the county that ours broke during scanning and had to go several counties over after midnight to one from Cook County.”
On October 8th, Sterling succinctly responded “I’m looking into this for you.”
When the emails failed to get any attention from the private contractor whom Raffensperger had delegated the task to, Latham text messaged Raffensperger:
“Good morning. I really hate to bother you. I’ve emailed Gabriel about the extra scanner for Coffee County. He said he was working on it, but that is all I’ve heard. The Chair of the BOE said that when they ran preliminary ballots as a test, the scanner kept messing up. Just trying to help.”
So, guess what happened? They had major problems scanning votes. Does anyone but me believe this was not intentional?” So, Willis plans on prosecuting Trump for the crimes of Raffensperger and Sterling.




















