Anonymous ID: dad236 June 18, 2021, 10:57 a.m. No.13931919   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1983

Brian Kemp

Covering up voter fraud

going on 9 years now

 

So I search for Happy Faces on GA gov and find this election hearing being run by Brian Kemp, when he was Secretary of State. Some guy comes up for public comment and is in the process of admitting to voter fraud and Kemp goes all

Lemme stop right there

Happy Faces was transcribing the meeting.

 

https://sos.ga.gov/admin/files/feb2113.pdf

 

SECRETARY KEMP: Last call for anyone who would like to address us this morning.Sir, you can come right up. Let me just remind everybody here today when you’re addressing the Board, we're taking a transcript. So just speak fairly slowly and clearly and into the microphone so we can pick up on your testimony. Also, when you come to the podium, we need you to state your name and your address for the record.Yes, sir. Mr. James Green.Welcome.

 

MR. GREEN: Yes, sir. My name is James Green. My address is 75 BlountStreet, Forsyth,Georgia. I come before the Boardtoday I’ve had the privilege of seeing some of the information of the investigation of the voting supposed fraud in Monroe County, Forsyth. But I come today because I was a, I would say, a political candidate for several offices: mayor, school board, andeven county commission chairman. During those times when I was campaigning, I had to I had people to approachme, I guess gruntsyou would call them, who would put signs up for you for a fee. I said, no, I don’t have fees and I don’t have money to pay for fees. I'm just a person campaigning trying to do what’s right for the community.

 

Those same persons were the same people that did the same thing for Mayor Howard, Mr. Tye Howard. So again, that kind of bothered me, too. So for Mr. Howard to bring charges of that sort kind of bothered me and I just really think he did not understand what was going on and why he would be bringing charges(unintelligible)

 

Also, Mr. Tye Howardwas in the election when I campaigned for the city mayor of Forsyth. I was disqualified becauseof the residence where I lived. I had two houses in Monroe County and the house at 73 Blount Street. They said I had not lived there long enough, so I was disqualified. I went to Mr. Tye Howard. I said, Mr. Tye Howard, listen. I’m going to support you and you’re going to win. And I said, now, I’m going to go out and talk to the voters in the City of Forsyth, and you’re going to win. But I wanted him to know thosesame people that he filed charges against whoever filed the charges, was the same people that put him in office. The same ones. It was just his time for the next –for Mr. John Howard.

 

He lost. Take a loss and go home. I would advise him and anyone else who ran and got this issue about voting fraud, come to sideline like I done and watch what the candidates are doing. Stop bringing these allegations against people. And we just need some clarification of what these claims are because, hey, I’m not here to get a ticket, but I’m guilty of what they’ve said. I went down and people that were absentee ballots weren't able to go,__ I filled out the ballot, __but they signed

 

SECRETARY KEMP: Mr. Green, let me stop you right there. I don't want you toincriminate yourself because anything you say here is going to be public record

Anonymous ID: dad236 June 18, 2021, 11:09 a.m. No.13931983   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2058

>>13931919

 

Hey Tye, Are you sure you want to go through with that lawsuit?

https://www.macon.com/news/article28637521.html

 

Howard defeated incumbent Mayor Tye Howard no relation by a mere 151 votes. The election was mired in controversy, given that some 120 absentee ballots appeared to be in the same or similar handwriting. However, in November, Tye Howard decided not to pursue a lawsuit a day before his case was scheduled to be heard in Monroe County Superior Court. At the time, Tye Howard cited the number of votes he would have needed to win as part of the reason why.

 

John Howard said he was disappointed his opponent dropped the lawsuit when he did.

 

“I wanted closure,” he said. “I wanted a final decision that said ‘this is what happened.’ My personal belief is that there was no voter fraud. There were (about) 347 absentee ballots, and 279 went to me. … He was winning by 60 votes before the absentee ballots. I don’t hold it against him, but I don’t believe anyone tampered with ballots or forced the vote to be counted in a certain way.”

 

The Secretary of State’s Office is in the process of investigating the issue, said a spokesman who indicated the State Election Board may settle the issue in February. Even though the lawsuit was dropped, the State Election Board still has to make a ruling on the matter. The agenda for that meeting hasn’t yet been set.

Anonymous ID: dad236 June 18, 2021, 11:22 a.m. No.13932058   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>13931983

Even when they win by cheating, they're still the victims.

Cheater got his own fake news sob story published in Wapo

Special guest Abrams Kong

 

https://archive.ph/eZ8zL

We are here!’ From a blue dot in a sea of red comes.

a hopeful pitch for a politician’s visit.

Oct. 7, 2018 at 11:20 p.m. UTC

FORSYTH, Ga. —He was a Democrat in Republican territory,a citizen of a rural Georgia town that people tended to pass by on the way to someplace else, including politicians running for high office. But this election felt different to John Howard, so one morning in August he began writing a letter.

“I am reaching out to you all, to inquire about the possibility of Stacey Abrams coming to Forsyth,” began his email to the campaign of one of those politicians, who in November could become the first female governor of Georgia, the first black governor of Georgia and the first black woman to govern any state in America.

He introduced himself as the former mayor of Forsyth, and the first African American elected to the job. He explained that he was interim chair of the local Democratic Party, which was “in serious need of being shown the way.”

“We understand that our county of Monroe, does not have a strong showing of Democrats,” he typed. “But never the less, we are here!”

Outside his front door was a town of 4,000 people that appeared on electoral maps as a small blue dot in a sprawling sea of red — the red of rural Georgia, the red of the rural South and the red rest of America that had elected Donald Trump president.

He won by 151 votes — 549 to 398. He remembered how exhilarating that felt, and what had happened right after: His opponent filed a voter fraud complaint with the newly elected secretary of state, who happened to be Brian Kemp. Kemp sent investigators to Forsyth to knock on the doors of black voters who had cast absentee ballots, which turned up a few that were improperly filled out but did not change the outcome of the election.

John understood Kemp’s job was to investigate such complaints. At the same time, he felt the episode set the tone for all that followed, including what a white woman told him not long after he took office.

“She said the town probably wasn’t ready for me yet,” he recalled. “I said, ‘I’m sorry you’re not ready. I’m what you got.’ ”

As the months went on, he said, there were meetings about “the future of Forsyth” that he was not invited to attend. A white Republican congressman visited town and didn’t come by his office to shake his hand. He began sensing resistance to all his ideas, he said now, driving home after church one day, still remembering all the things he perceived as slights.

He drove past the old courthouse square where there was a Confederate statue landscaped with shrubs. He continued past the broad lawns and old Victorians that signaled the still mostly white side of town, through a middle-class, more racially mixed subdivision of small brick ramblers, and turned into a neighborhood of shotgun houses and worn-out churches that remained the mostly black side of Forsyth. He pulled into a cracked parking lot in front of a strip of grass with two picnic tables and playground where a swimming pool used to be.

“This is our version of a park,” he said.