Upcoming D’Souza Documentary To Reveal What Looks Like Massive Misuse of Ballot Drop Boxes in 2020 Election – Opinion

“A car pulls up at a drop box after midnight. One man walks out, takes a look around, and then opens the box to find a few ballots. Then he goes out again. Then he goes to the next box, again and again.”

The following sentence was taken from a text by The New York Post’s Miranda Devine detailing the behavior of “mules” used during the 2020 election who allegedly “picked up ballots from election NGOs — such as Stacey Abrams’ outfit, ‘Fair Fight Action’ — and then carried them to different drop boxes, depositing between three to 10 ballots in each box before moving to the next.”

Dinesh D’Souza, in partnership with Salem Media and using research from True The Vote, has produced a documentary to be released May 7 exclusively through Locals subscription-based platform.

This trailer created quite a stir.

The questions surrounding what happened in the 2020 election, in which Joe Biden barely campaigned and was said to have won the most votes for President in the history of U.S. elections, have not abated, despite attempts from Democrat supporters to justify “fortifying” the election during the COVID pandemic.

Those so-called fortifications include a massive influx of private cash to districts courtesy of Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg via the Center for Tech and Civic Life — intended, it was reported, to help with election administration — and the near-ubiquitous use of dropboxes to collect absentee ballots, ostensibly used to keep people away from the polls on election day for their safety during COVID.

How those dropboxes were used is the subject of D’Souza’s film. Devine explained that True The Vote triangulated the cellphone data purchased by them and then used these results to check their surveillance footage.

“The extent of the operation is jaw-dropping,” Devine writes.

Start at The Post:

From Oct. 1, 2020 through November 3, 2019, True the Vote purchased three trillion geolocation signals from mobile phones that were close to drop boxes as well as near non-profit election organizations. Georgia had the January 6, 2021 run-off.

They drew lines around the Atlanta metro area’s 309 dropboxes and purchased all cellphone data from people who had lived near these dropboxes and other NGOs.

This narrowed down the field to just 2,000 mules.

Next, they searched for public surveillance camera footage from drop boxes. They found over 4,000,000 minutes of footage across the nation.

Amazing results! You can witness the plan come to life by pairing a mule with video.

After midnight, a car pulled up to a dropbox. After midnight, a man walks out and looks suspiciously around. He then approaches the drop box, places a few ballots inside, and jumps out. Next, he moves to the next one.

Phipps observed that mules began wearing gloves in Georgia after Dec. 23, 2020. This was the result of an Arizona ballot stuffing indictment that Phipps found on December 22. “The way the FBI nailed them was fingerprints.” After that, mules started wearing gloves.

The data pattern is unmistakable, as D’Souza shows a spider web of routes taken by various mules between NGOs and drop boxes.

The average dropbox visit for each of the 2,000 mules was 38. On average, five ballots were dropped per visit. That’s 380,000 suspect votes.

In his film, D’Souza breaks down the numbers in an attempt to determine if they had could have affected Biden’s margins over Trump. In Georgia, for example, “250 mules averaged 24 drop box visits each, [that’s] 30,000 suspect votes, more than enough to overcome Biden’s 12,000 vote advantage. D’Souza moves Georgia’s 16 electoral votes into the Trump column.”

On Wednesday, April 21, the Biden DOJ sent letters to “election officials in Florida, Arizona, Texas and Ohio — all Republican-led states” specifically requesting information related to what they say are their “efforts to combat ‘lies and conspiracy theories’ that could damage the integrity of federal elections as part of a broader investigation into the ‘weaponization of misinformation and disinformation’ in the electoral process.”

It’s probably not a coincidence those letters were sent a mere two weeks before D’Souza releases his film.

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