Monday, May 13, 2024

Fmr. GOP Attorney General Candidate Charged With Voting Machine Tampering

-

Two battleground state allies of former President have been charged with multiple felonies involving voting machine tampering following the .

The defendants are , former Republican nominee for attorney general, and former state Rep. (R).

DePerno won the 2022 GOP nomination to run in the general election against incumbent (D). He won Donald Trump's endorsement while remaining under investigation by a special prosecutor for possible tabulator tampering.

On the campaign trail, DePerno denied the allegations, claiming he was the victim of a political prosecution. Nessel ultimately won by more by 8.6%, with DePerno vowing to enforce Michigan's 1931 ban and outlaw the emergency contraceptive Plan B.

He faces four charges, including two counts of “undue possession of a voting machine.”

Rendon faces charges involving “undue possession of a voting machine” and “false pretenses.”

Both individuals were arraigned today and released on $5,000 bond.

The Detroit News has more:

Special prosecutor D.J. Hilson confirmed the charges in a statement Tuesday afternoon, saying his investigation into the handling of tabulators in Michigan was “ongoing and not over,” which could mean other individuals will be charged.

“The charging decision was the result of a thorough decision-making process by an independent citizens grand jury,” Hilson said. “This citizens grand jury carefully listened to the sworn testimony and analyzed the evidence as required by law and returned a decision to indict each of the defendants.”

DePerno and Rendon, two of the most vocal proponents in Michigan of false and unproven election fraud claims, were arraigned on Tuesday before Oakland County Circuit Court Chief Judge Jeffery Matis.

The charges on Tuesday came after about 18 months of investigation in Michigan and meant prominent political figures who worked to push theories that widespread fraud caused Republican Donald Trump's loss to Democrat will face criminal prosecution. Attorney General Dana Nessel, a Democrat, described the allegations as “incredibly serious” and “unprecedented” in a statement.

This is a story. Click refresh for the latest updates.

Patrick Houck
Patrick Houck
Patrick Houck is an avid political enthusiast based out of the Washington, D.C. metro area. His expertise is in campaigns and the use of targeted messaging to persuade voters. When not combing through the latest news, you can find him enjoying the company of family and friends or pursuing his love of photography.

6 COMMENTS

  1. How do you have undue procession of a voting machine. How does a individual get a hold of a voting machine. Was the voting machine used in voting or just an excess voting machine not used. Where was this machine while in procession of the accused, in their home, garage, where. This article is missing too many basic answers to who, what, where, when, why, results and how of a reporter’s report.

  2. Does this mean that no one can question election results without being prosecuted? Or are only Republicans held to this standard?

  3. My guess is they were examining the machines to see if they could find evidence of tampering in the 2020 election. These people aren’t being arrested for voting machine tampering, they’re being investigated for investigating voting machine tampering.

Comments are closed.

Latest News