Dominion Voting Systems has sent a cessation letter to a former Michigan state senator that the company says is making false claims about its products and the 2020 election to direct donations to its personal business.
The letter, obtained by Detroit News, demands former state Sen. Patrick Colbeck (R) to stop spreading “lies” about Dominion, including his claims that Dominion machines were used to falsify votes for President BidenJoe BidenBiden should seek “Ostpolitik” to negotiate with autocrats The Hill’s Morning Report – Biden’s infrastructure plan triggers definition debate Note: Biden’s commitment to taxes MORE in the state. Biden won Michigan in November, four years after the state narrowly missed out President Trump
Donald TrumpBiden should look to “Ostpolitik” to negotiate with autocrats The Memorandum: Biden’s Bet on Taxes Why Some Republicans Think Vaccine Passports Will Turn Against Democrats MORE in 2016.
“It’s sowing discord in our democracy, soliciting exorbitant amounts of money (so far, totaling more than a million dollars) from its audiences paid directly to your personal business,” Dominion’s letter says. .
“If foreign countries, hackers, Democrats, space aliens or anyone else had hacked the Dominion machines in Antrim County and manipulated the voting measures on those machines, then the machine’s measurements would not match the ballot votes in the possession of county Republican officials, “he continued. “In fact, they agree, as confirmed by a manual counting of the ballots.”
Colbeck testified before the state Senate Oversight Committee in December that he had evidence of election fraud in Michigan, News reported, a claim that has been denied by federal officials, including the former Attorney General. William BarrBill BarrHunter Biden says he doesn’t know if his Delaware laptop was his Gaetz, showed lawmakers nude photos of women he claimed to have slept with: Pavlich reports: “The next ‘public health’ takeover of the Democrats will come MORE.
The former senator’s claims have been “repeatedly refuted by bipartisan election officials, election security experts, judges and numerous officials and allies of the Trump administration,” Dominion’s lawyers wrote.
The newspaper said Colbeck did not immediately return any request for comment.
Lawyers for the domain have targeted several pro-Trump figures who have been claiming no evidence of election fraud and company equipment in recent months, including the president’s former attorney, Sidney Powell, and Fox News.