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Elections Bennett Barred From Audit For Sharing Data

Sworn Testimony
When Rudy Giuliani and Arizona state legislatures held public hearings regarding the Maricopa County election fraud of November 2020, among the most compelling sworn testimonies came from elections witness Jan Bryant.

Her testimony coincided with others and may explain Arizona audit director Ken Bennett’s later revelation that Dominion Voting Systems had refused to comply with a subpoena to turn over passwords to its Maricopa County voting machines.

screenshot_2021-06-13-12-08-25-11252089630.png

During the hearing on November 30, 2020, Bryant testified under oath that not even county IT staff were allowed access to the machines.

Bryant witnessed Dominion employees with a laptop computer in the counting room during the six days she worked at the Maricopa County Election Center.

During questioning by Republican state Rep. Mark Finchem, Bryant said there were daily election ballot deliveries to the center by Runbeck Election Services. According to witness testimony, these deliveries happened from Nov. 3 to at least Nov. 10.

screenshot_2021-06-13-09-50-21713670696.png

Repeated explanations by supervisors at that time was that “Runbeck has high speed scanners,” Bryant said. She was told the ballots were scanned offsite by Runbeck and then delivered to the Maricopa County Election Center.













....
 
Transcript Quotes from Bryant’s testimony:

Jan Bryant: …ten days before they quit tabulating they thought they were done. And then more truck loads of ballots would come in. And I’m like, how can you not know how many ballots are still out there.

State House Rep. David L. Cook: Mr. Chairman I’m sorry. WOULD YOU REPEAT THAT. They thought they were done, and then there was WHAT?

Jan Bryant: They thought they were done multiple times. Multiple times the people that were running the rooms thought they were done (counting ballots), or almost done. Or were gonna be done Wednesday morning (Nov. 4th), then Thursday morning (Nov. 5th), then Friday morning. Then it went on the whole next week. And I’m like, I asked the question, You don’t know how many ballots are still left to come in? I don’t know who does, again…process…project management, but zero.

171705_lg577273451.jpg

AZ Reps: David L. Cook and Mark Finchem
State House Rep. Mark Finchem: On that point Ma’am, I’m tracking with you but, what day did the truck show up?

Jan Bryant: Every day, yeah, every day.

Mark Finchem: OK. Just a minute. I want to make sure we capture this properly. So there were trucks that showed up on the 3rd, and then the 4th, and then the 5th, and how long did that go on. How many days?

Jan Bryant: I wasn’t there the whole last week. My last day was the 10th and they were still coming in. They were coming from a company called Runbeck, that does the high speed scanning and printing of duplications, and I think the military ballots. And now I’m getting out of my comfort level here talking about this. I don’t know what they are doing but those ballots are coming in from a high speed scanning company called Runbeck that…. apparently you haven’t heard of Runbeck.

Mark Finchem: No, I’ve heard of Runbeck Ma’am. What I’m trying to figure out is whether they printed them or if they scanned them. And if they scanned them offsite, to what purpose?

Jan Bryant: I can’t tell you.

Mark Finchem: Wasn’t that your job to scan them? I mean, not your job, but the (MCTEC).

Jan Bryant: No, all the high speed scanning happens at Runbeck. So, those ballots go to Runbeck. As far as I know there were no observers there. I don’t know. I never got called to work at Runbeck. That’s all I can tell you.

Mark Finchem: No that’s fine. Your observation is useful here. What you’re telling me is the scanning wasn’t actually done on site at a Maricopa County structure. It was done someplace else.

Jan Bryant: Where they have very high speed scanners.

Mark Finchem: Right now I really don’t care what the speed is. I want to know were they Dominion scanners?

Jan Bryant: No, no, I don’t think it has anything to do with Dominion.

Mark Finchem: I’m trying to understand what was the purpose of scanning them in advance of them being tabulated on the Dominion equipment.

Jan Bryant: They were duplicate, duplications. The ballots that wouldn’t read through the tabulation machines. They were ballots that came in from Military and overseas. But there were more ballots than that. So I don’t know where the rest of them were coming from. Because they kept bringing trays of them in. So I don’t know where they were coming from. That’s a question for the county employees to explain to you, where those ballots came from that whole next week. I don’t know where they came from.


Rudy Giuliani: So you were there from Nov. 3rd through the 10th. Seven days later (after election) ballots were still coming in.

Jan Bryant: Yes.

Rudy Giuliani: Were those ballots counted?

Jan Bryant: I watched them go through the tabulation machines. And I watched people working on the adjudication of those ballots.

Rudy Giuliani: And how many ballots…

Jan Bryant: Oh, I don’t know.

Rudy Giuliani: What was the largest number you saw in one day. Just a guess. How many cartons?

Jan Bryant: …there was usually 2 or 3 shifts. I wanna say one day they thought 90,000 was a good number, for a shift. And if they were running multiple shifts a day. It was somewhere between the 3rd and the 10th.

State House Rep. Bret Roberts: I am assuming these were not early ballots in any way shape or form. I’m just kind of curious, did anything stand out to you as far as these new ballots, didn’t know where they were coming from, as far as a physical appearance in any way?

Jan Bryant: No. Everything… they just looked like ballots. Just kept coming. They all came in the same bins.
 
Both a Maricopa County Elections Director and a key employee of the voting ballot printing company in Phoenix donated money to ActBlue for Democratic candidates prior to the November 2020 Election in Arizona.

Kelly Dixon was the elections official who sent the email out to staff stipulating voters would be required to use Sharpie markers at polling places on Election Day, but ballpoint pens prior to that specific time.

6f35448f-c9d8-490d-a2a7-cc0128685a3e-1947100331.jpg

Kelly Dixon
Some of the elections clerks suspected this could be to circumvent or take advantage of the expectations that Democrats were more likely to vote early, and Republicans were more likely to show up in person on Election Day.

Federal Election Commission records show that Dixon donated $100 to Democrat fundraising aggregator ActBlue on September 22, 2020.


She attached a memo to the donation stipulating that the cash was “EARMARKED FOR MARK KELLY FOR SENATE.”

Kelly went on to be declared the winner in the Arizona Senate race by the margin of some 78,000 votes.

  • mark-kelly-us-senate306x306_2x-11937776501..jpg
  • Mark Kelly
Curiously, Dixon ordered subordinates to hand out ballpoint pens to voters from October until November 2 -the day before the election – then switch to Sharpie markers on November 3.

In her October 22, 2020 email to them, Dixon admitted that they are aware of significant complaints relating to issues using Sharpie markers on ballots at polling locations.

Dixon specifically indicated that on November 2, poll workers are to give out ballpoint pens instead of markers, then switch back to the markers on election day, November 3.

“Next, we’ve heard you and we know you’re hearing issues and concerns about the Sharpie Markers,” Dixon acknowledged in the email. “Starting tomorrow, 10/23, and through 11/2, we are asking that Clerks hand voters BALLPOINT PENS rather than Markers.”

sharpie-gate-email-redacted-11148846190.jpg

Dixon actually emailed this order.
However, Dixon went on to stipulate that Sharpie markers must be used on November 3: “We NEED to use Markers on Election Day, but for now and through 11/2, hand voters a Ballpoint Pen. You have plenty of pens in your supplies right now.”

She concluded with directions for recipients of the email to “message this to your Inspectors and ensure they cascade this change down to everyone on the Board.”

Perhaps equally concerning is that a key figure and relative of the owner of the local ballot printing company was a repeated donor to ActBlue.

Brian Runbeck identifies himself as the Client Services Manager/Project Manager and Production Coordinator at Runbeck Election Services, saying he manages the production of election ballots and related official election material. He claims he handles high pressure deadlines and high volume production.

Stunningly, government records indicate Brian Runbeck was a prolific monetary contributor (over 50 times in 2020) to Act Blue, Biden for President and the Democrat Senatorial Campaign Committee.
 
these fibers?
Thousands of mail-in ballots in pristine condition in Maricopa County suddenly showed up after the 2020 presidential election. The same scenario simultaneously occurred in Fulton County, GA.

They were all printed by Runbeck Election Services in Phoenix, Arizona. This is the same company local media reported on regarding Rey Valenzuela, elections director, and Kevin Runbeck, owner of the printing company.

This was previously on the Runbeck website:
screenshot_2021-06-13-09-53-361703857420.png

Rey Valenzuela and Kevin Runbeck
screenshot_2021-06-13-10-14-24-11871114539.png

(Note: The reference by Valenzuela has been taken down from the Runbeck website.)

Sworn Testimony
When Rudy Giuliani and Arizona state legislatures held public hearings regarding the Maricopa County election fraud of November 2020, among the most compelling sworn testimonies came from elections witness Jan Bryant.

Her testimony coincided with others and may explain Arizona audit director Ken Bennett’s later revelation that Dominion Voting Systems had refused to comply with a subpoena to turn over passwords to its Maricopa County voting machines.

screenshot_2021-06-13-12-08-25-11252089630.png

During the hearing on November 30, 2020, Bryant testified under oath that not even county IT staff were allowed access to the machines.

Bryant witnessed Dominion employees with a laptop computer in the counting room during the six days she worked at the Maricopa County Election Center.

During questioning by Republican state Rep. Mark Finchem, Bryant said there were daily election ballot deliveries to the center by Runbeck Election Services. According to witness testimony, these deliveries happened from Nov. 3 to at least Nov. 10.

screenshot_2021-06-13-09-50-21713670696.png

Repeated explanations by supervisors at that time was that “Runbeck has high speed scanners,” Bryant said. She was told the ballots were scanned offsite by Runbeck and then delivered to the Maricopa County Election Center.













....

Transcript Quotes from Bryant’s testimony:

Jan Bryant: …ten days before they quit tabulating they thought they were done. And then more truck loads of ballots would come in. And I’m like, how can you not know how many ballots are still out there.

State House Rep. David L. Cook: Mr. Chairman I’m sorry. WOULD YOU REPEAT THAT. They thought they were done, and then there was WHAT?

Jan Bryant: They thought they were done multiple times. Multiple times the people that were running the rooms thought they were done (counting ballots), or almost done. Or were gonna be done Wednesday morning (Nov. 4th), then Thursday morning (Nov. 5th), then Friday morning. Then it went on the whole next week. And I’m like, I asked the question, You don’t know how many ballots are still left to come in? I don’t know who does, again…process…project management, but zero.

171705_lg577273451.jpg

AZ Reps: David L. Cook and Mark Finchem
State House Rep. Mark Finchem: On that point Ma’am, I’m tracking with you but, what day did the truck show up?

Jan Bryant: Every day, yeah, every day.

Mark Finchem: OK. Just a minute. I want to make sure we capture this properly. So there were trucks that showed up on the 3rd, and then the 4th, and then the 5th, and how long did that go on. How many days?

Jan Bryant: I wasn’t there the whole last week. My last day was the 10th and they were still coming in. They were coming from a company called Runbeck, that does the high speed scanning and printing of duplications, and I think the military ballots. And now I’m getting out of my comfort level here talking about this. I don’t know what they are doing but those ballots are coming in from a high speed scanning company called Runbeck that…. apparently you haven’t heard of Runbeck.

Mark Finchem: No, I’ve heard of Runbeck Ma’am. What I’m trying to figure out is whether they printed them or if they scanned them. And if they scanned them offsite, to what purpose?

Jan Bryant: I can’t tell you.

Mark Finchem: Wasn’t that your job to scan them? I mean, not your job, but the (MCTEC).

Jan Bryant: No, all the high speed scanning happens at Runbeck. So, those ballots go to Runbeck. As far as I know there were no observers there. I don’t know. I never got called to work at Runbeck. That’s all I can tell you.

Mark Finchem: No that’s fine. Your observation is useful here. What you’re telling me is the scanning wasn’t actually done on site at a Maricopa County structure. It was done someplace else.

Jan Bryant: Where they have very high speed scanners.

Mark Finchem: Right now I really don’t care what the speed is. I want to know were they Dominion scanners?

Jan Bryant: No, no, I don’t think it has anything to do with Dominion.

Mark Finchem: I’m trying to understand what was the purpose of scanning them in advance of them being tabulated on the Dominion equipment.

Jan Bryant: They were duplicate, duplications. The ballots that wouldn’t read through the tabulation machines. They were ballots that came in from Military and overseas. But there were more ballots than that. So I don’t know where the rest of them were coming from. Because they kept bringing trays of them in. So I don’t know where they were coming from. That’s a question for the county employees to explain to you, where those ballots came from that whole next week. I don’t know where they came from.


Rudy Giuliani: So you were there from Nov. 3rd through the 10th. Seven days later (after election) ballots were still coming in.

Jan Bryant: Yes.

Rudy Giuliani: Were those ballots counted?

Jan Bryant: I watched them go through the tabulation machines. And I watched people working on the adjudication of those ballots.

Rudy Giuliani: And how many ballots…

Jan Bryant: Oh, I don’t know.

Rudy Giuliani: What was the largest number you saw in one day. Just a guess. How many cartons?

Jan Bryant: …there was usually 2 or 3 shifts. I wanna say one day they thought 90,000 was a good number, for a shift. And if they were running multiple shifts a day. It was somewhere between the 3rd and the 10th.

State House Rep. Bret Roberts: I am assuming these were not early ballots in any way shape or form. I’m just kind of curious, did anything stand out to you as far as these new ballots, didn’t know where they were coming from, as far as a physical appearance in any way?

Jan Bryant: No. Everything… they just looked like ballots. Just kept coming. They all came in the same bins.

Both a Maricopa County Elections Director and a key employee of the voting ballot printing company in Phoenix donated money to ActBlue for Democratic candidates prior to the November 2020 Election in Arizona.

Kelly Dixon was the elections official who sent the email out to staff stipulating voters would be required to use Sharpie markers at polling places on Election Day, but ballpoint pens prior to that specific time.

6f35448f-c9d8-490d-a2a7-cc0128685a3e-1947100331.jpg

Kelly Dixon
Some of the elections clerks suspected this could be to circumvent or take advantage of the expectations that Democrats were more likely to vote early, and Republicans were more likely to show up in person on Election Day.

Federal Election Commission records show that Dixon donated $100 to Democrat fundraising aggregator ActBlue on September 22, 2020.


She attached a memo to the donation stipulating that the cash was “EARMARKED FOR MARK KELLY FOR SENATE.”

Kelly went on to be declared the winner in the Arizona Senate race by the margin of some 78,000 votes.

  • mark-kelly-us-senate306x306_2x-11937776501..jpg
  • Mark Kelly
Curiously, Dixon ordered subordinates to hand out ballpoint pens to voters from October until November 2 -the day before the election – then switch to Sharpie markers on November 3.

In her October 22, 2020 email to them, Dixon admitted that they are aware of significant complaints relating to issues using Sharpie markers on ballots at polling locations.

Dixon specifically indicated that on November 2, poll workers are to give out ballpoint pens instead of markers, then switch back to the markers on election day, November 3.

“Next, we’ve heard you and we know you’re hearing issues and concerns about the Sharpie Markers,” Dixon acknowledged in the email. “Starting tomorrow, 10/23, and through 11/2, we are asking that Clerks hand voters BALLPOINT PENS rather than Markers.”

sharpie-gate-email-redacted-11148846190.jpg

Dixon actually emailed this order.
However, Dixon went on to stipulate that Sharpie markers must be used on November 3: “We NEED to use Markers on Election Day, but for now and through 11/2, hand voters a Ballpoint Pen. You have plenty of pens in your supplies right now.”

She concluded with directions for recipients of the email to “message this to your Inspectors and ensure they cascade this change down to everyone on the Board.”

Perhaps equally concerning is that a key figure and relative of the owner of the local ballot printing company was a repeated donor to ActBlue.

Brian Runbeck identifies himself as the Client Services Manager/Project Manager and Production Coordinator at Runbeck Election Services, saying he manages the production of election ballots and related official election material. He claims he handles high pressure deadlines and high volume production.

Stunningly, government records indicate Brian Runbeck was a prolific monetary contributor (over 50 times in 2020) to Act Blue, Biden for President and the Democrat Senatorial Campaign Committee.

de9ec638ef73090d34042a34a8837d50.gif
 
these fibers?
Thousands of mail-in ballots in pristine condition in Maricopa County suddenly showed up after the 2020 presidential election. The same scenario simultaneously occurred in Fulton County, GA.

They were all printed by Runbeck Election Services in Phoenix, Arizona. This is the same company local media reported on regarding Rey Valenzuela, elections director, and Kevin Runbeck, owner of the printing company.

This was previously on the Runbeck website:
screenshot_2021-06-13-09-53-361703857420.png

Rey Valenzuela and Kevin Runbeck
screenshot_2021-06-13-10-14-24-11871114539.png

(Note: The reference by Valenzuela has been taken down from the Runbeck website.)

I just want to point out that Valenzuela is very similar to Venezuela, there has to be a connection to Hugo Chavez here.
 
I just want to point out that Valenzuela is very similar to Venezuela, there has to be a connection to Hugo Chavez here.
good point, but more importantly, if we were flying to Veniswaka and if we are flying 500 miles an hour, how long would it take to fly 500 miles?
 
Both a Maricopa County Elections Director and a key employee of the voting ballot printing company in Phoenix donated money to ActBlue for Democratic candidates prior to the November 2020 Election in Arizona.

Kelly Dixon was the elections official who sent the email out to staff stipulating voters would be required to use Sharpie markers at polling places on Election Day, but ballpoint pens prior to that specific time.

6f35448f-c9d8-490d-a2a7-cc0128685a3e-1947100331.jpg

Kelly Dixon
Some of the elections clerks suspected this could be to circumvent or take advantage of the expectations that Democrats were more likely to vote early, and Republicans were more likely to show up in person on Election Day.

Federal Election Commission records show that Dixon donated $100 to Democrat fundraising aggregator ActBlue on September 22, 2020.


She attached a memo to the donation stipulating that the cash was “EARMARKED FOR MARK KELLY FOR SENATE.”

Kelly went on to be declared the winner in the Arizona Senate race by the margin of some 78,000 votes.

  • mark-kelly-us-senate306x306_2x-11937776501..jpg
  • Mark Kelly
Curiously, Dixon ordered subordinates to hand out ballpoint pens to voters from October until November 2 -the day before the election – then switch to Sharpie markers on November 3.

In her October 22, 2020 email to them, Dixon admitted that they are aware of significant complaints relating to issues using Sharpie markers on ballots at polling locations.

Dixon specifically indicated that on November 2, poll workers are to give out ballpoint pens instead of markers, then switch back to the markers on election day, November 3.

“Next, we’ve heard you and we know you’re hearing issues and concerns about the Sharpie Markers,” Dixon acknowledged in the email. “Starting tomorrow, 10/23, and through 11/2, we are asking that Clerks hand voters BALLPOINT PENS rather than Markers.”

sharpie-gate-email-redacted-11148846190.jpg

Dixon actually emailed this order.
However, Dixon went on to stipulate that Sharpie markers must be used on November 3: “We NEED to use Markers on Election Day, but for now and through 11/2, hand voters a Ballpoint Pen. You have plenty of pens in your supplies right now.”

She concluded with directions for recipients of the email to “message this to your Inspectors and ensure they cascade this change down to everyone on the Board.”

Perhaps equally concerning is that a key figure and relative of the owner of the local ballot printing company was a repeated donor to ActBlue.

Brian Runbeck identifies himself as the Client Services Manager/Project Manager and Production Coordinator at Runbeck Election Services, saying he manages the production of election ballots and related official election material. He claims he handles high pressure deadlines and high volume production.

Stunningly, government records indicate Brian Runbeck was a prolific monetary contributor (over 50 times in 2020) to Act Blue, Biden for President and the Democrat Senatorial Campaign Committee.

First, you appear to be making the claim that donating to a party of some type invalidates your work in elections. Next, the sharpie gate has been debunked OVER and OVER and here you are back on that wagon. You are constantly changing tactics. That is not someone who is confident with what they are posting. Lastly, that E-mail looks suspect AF. I could do a better job in paint merging cut and paste lines from different E-mails. Do you not see the discoloration going on?

Regardless of sharpies or ball point pens, the votes were audited by hand and the counts match so sharpie or ball point pen is a non-issue.
 
good point, but more importantly, if we were flying to Veniswaka and if we are flying 500 miles an hour, how long would it take to fly 500 miles?

which direction are we flying? East to West? North to South? I want to be accurate and take time zones into consideration. I am not sure what this has to do with me as I am not disputing some car caravan video.
 
First, you appear to be making the claim that donating to a party of some type invalidates your work in elections. Next, the sharpie gate has been debunked OVER and OVER and here you are back on that wagon. You are constantly changing tactics. That is not someone who is confident with what they are posting. Lastly, that E-mail looks suspect AF. I could do a better job in paint merging cut and paste lines from different E-mails. Do you not see the discoloration going on?

Regardless of sharpies or ball point pens, the votes were audited by hand and the counts match so sharpie or ball point pen is a non-issue
.
I didn't write that article, nor have I been in or made any comments about sharpies to this point, but more importantly your idea of debunked is meaningless.
If it is debunked why would you be concerned about an email talking about sharpies?
I do see some discoloration, I also see a fold and shadowing. The lines do look off, seem to be running up hill, but its obviously a picture of a printed email so who knows.
bolded this is exactly why they are doing a forensic audit, it why having a group of 5 examine each ballot and coming to a unanimous consensus is important and why just rerunning ballots through a machine to count isn't an audit.
 
I guess the important question is when will Donal Trump be reinstalled as President?

Next month? December?

I thought it was supposed to happen in March, but maybe I missed it.
 
Hmmm sounds really familiar. Pretty sure a certain retard watched this segment before going on a posting rampage yesterday



Guyz, I had the feeling in my bones Trump would win. The feeling in my bones is never wrong! Fraud!!!!1!
 
I didn't write that article, nor have I been in or made any comments about sharpies to this point, but more importantly your idea of debunked is meaningless.
If it is debunked why would you be concerned about an email talking about sharpies?
I do see some discoloration, I also see a fold and shadowing. The lines do look off, seem to be running up hill, but its obviously a picture of a printed email so who knows.
bolded this is exactly why they are doing a forensic audit, it why having a group of 5 examine each ballot and coming to a unanimous consensus is important and why just rerunning ballots through a machine to count isn't an audit.

I just noticed something further. At the bottom where it says "Hope you have " you can clearly see the copied page placed on top and the shadow created due to the wrinkle. They didn't even try to photoshop this. Christ. The E-mail is also to herself and then blacked out whomever. I know some people who do that when forwarding or reply to all but come on man.
 



7:12 he nails the need for audits
 
Last edited:
Funding the 6 million revealed


Basically all stop the steal groups
 
Bennet has also agreed to stay on and will QA the final result
 
She didn’t need to ban him for simply letting the truth out. The idiots that are still voting for them don’t care about the truth anyways.
 
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