Anonymous ID: 557dba Aug. 11, 2021, 11:46 a.m. No.14326408   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6555 >>6668 >>6883 >>7087

GEMS is the Key

Symposium guys are talking about "old software"

but not about GEMS

 

Should talk about it, because it's still be used in NH and probably LOTS of other states.

see >>>/qrb/64109

specifically:

"Harri will blow a gasket because he says they don't use GEMS in NH." ~1:18. But apparently they DO use GEMS, it's documented. "GEMS is the program they take to use that data and program the memory cards. It's where we believe the malware…may exist" - Gail. SEE MP4 CLIP 2.

 

NEXT:

from Jenny Cohn's article -

https://medium.com/@jennycohn1/updated-attachment-states-have-bought-voting-machines-from-vendors-controlled-and-funded-by-nation-6597e4dd3e70

 

  1. Diebold entered the voting machine business with its 2002 acquisition of Global Election Systems, a company whose Senior VP (programmer jeffrey dean) was a CONVICTED FELON who had served time for sophisticated crimes involving "COMPUTER TAMPERING".

 

  1. Global brought on dean shortly before the 2000 election. A few months later, it hired a convicted drug trafficker - who dean met in prison - to oversee punch card printing.

 

  1. Diebold told the AP that dean left the company in 2002.

 

  1. But [Beverly] Harris obtained dean's court file, which included internal Diebold memos showing that dean remained as a Diebold consultant.

 

  1. According to Wired, dean "wrote & maintained…code used to count hundreds of thousands of votes."

 

  1. dean also programmed the GEMS central tabulator system, which counted one third of the votes in 37 states in 2004…….

 

  1. Because elected officials and news organizations never followed up on dean's whereabouts, we can only speculate as to when (if at all) dean's relationship with the company ended.

 

SO: the person responsible for GEMS wasJeffrey Dean- a CONVICTED FELON whose ongoing role remains a mystery.

 

Dean was also a KEY PERSON running the King County elections in Seattle.

See this article:

Election Pros are Cons

https://www.seattleweekly.com/news/election-pros-are-cons/

 

In 1995, as the general manager for Spectrum Print and Mail Services in Mountlake Terrace, which was founded by his wife three years earlier. In 1998, Spectrum won the contract to print ballots for King County’s new optical-scan voting system, which is in use today. By 1999, Dean was also the point man for implementation of a new software system to manage voter registration in King County.

 

see the entire article here:

>>>/qrb/64062