Trump Team Makes Stunning Revelation — Says 40,000 Double Votes Occurred In State Lost By 33,596 Votes, Nevada Lawsuit Alleges

OPINION | This article contains opinion. This site is licensed to publish this content.

Another election-related lawsuit has been filed against The State of Nevada, according to Fox News.

Allegedly Trump lost Nevada by 33,596 votes.

It was claimed that 1,506 votes received in the general election came from deceased voters.

Jesse Binnall also alleges that 42,284 voters voted twice, 20,000 voters voted without a Nevada mailing address and 2,468 voters had changed their address to another state.

“We have testimony from multiple witnesses reporting that the usb drives used in the election would show that vote tallies changed overnight. That means in the dead of night, votes would appear or disappear on these voting machines during early voting and Election Day.”

“In the dead of night, votes appeared and votes reappeared without explanation, and there is no good explanation.”

“In a court of law it’s evidence that counts, not tweets or social media bluster, not hearsay or speculation, it’s evidence and that’s what’s missing in the record before the court,” attorney Kevin Hamilton said.

Binnall said, “This election was unfortunately stolen. We cannot turn a blind eye with evidence like this. We cannot allow an election to be stolen.”

From Fox News:

Trump’s legal team said they focused on Nevada’s election law that allows mail-in ballots to be sent to every individual without the ballot having first been requested – a practice that several states carried out amid the coronavirus pandemic.

Just prior to the Thursday hearing, the Nevada GOP posted a video on Twitter of 20 binders they said contained evidence supporting their claims.

Hamilton also pointed out that both Democratic and Republican districts across the U.S. use the same signature verification machine as Clark County, and noted that the county reported no issues of mass voter fraud during the June primary.

The judge said he would review all the evidence and attempt to make a decision by Friday.

— Advertisement —