Giuliani: Campaign disallowed access to voting machines; issues reported in Nevada

Trump attorney Rudy Giuliani - Facebook
Trump attorney Rudy Giuliani - Facebook
0Comments

Trump attorney Rudy Giuliani said governors won’t allow access to voting machines, but that he could prove election fraud allegations if they were allowed access.

Dominion Systems voting machines have been questioned in several states, including Nevada.

Giuliani told Sean Spicer on “Spicer & Co.” that his team only needed to prove 10,000 contested votes in Arizona, which he said could easily be done. 

“Don’t you think it’s going to be pretty easy to show 10,000 noncitizens voted in Arizona?” Giuliani said on the show.

Giuliani said all he had to do was run the names of those who voted in a Lexis-Nexis search and it would come up with 40,000 noncitizens.

Giuliani said if states didn’t cheat, they would agree to letting the Trump team examine the machines.

“If they didn’t cheat, Sean, why won’t they let us examine the machines?” Giuliani said on the show. “Why does the governor of Georgia continue to hold onto the machines the city paid $110 million for, and he refuses to let us examine them?”

Giuliani said President-elect Joe Biden needed to encourage the examination so that his presidency wouldn’t be shrouded in questions.

“There’s no reason to go beyond anything that this election was a theft. It could be proven,” Giuliani said on the show. “I can tell you one simple thing that would prove it to make the American people feel really good.”

Giuliani said if the governors would agree to allow the voting machines to be looked at, he might not feel the way he feels about them. 

“Five or six of these crooked governors could let us have access to the machines,” Giuliani said to Spicer. “In fact, if they did, maybe I would have to apologize for saying they’re crooked.”

Giuliani stressed the importance of examining the machines. He said if the machines could simply be examined it would clear up things.



Related

Attorney General Aaron D. Ford - Nevada Attorney General  Office

Nevada attorney general sues YouTube over alleged harm to youth

Nevada Attorney General Aaron D. Ford has filed a civil lawsuit against YouTube and its parent companies, Google LLC and Alphabet Inc., alleging that the platform’s design and practices have caused harm to young people in Nevada.

Attorney General Aaron D. Ford - Nevada Attorney General  Office

Nevada attorney general outlines litigation efforts against Trump administration at congressional panel

Nevada Attorney General Aaron D. Ford addressed the Congressional Litigation Task Force to discuss ongoing legal actions taken by Democratic attorneys general against policies and actions of the Trump administration.

Attorney General Aaron D. Ford - Nevada Attorney General  Office

Nevada AG announces convictions and restitution order in behavioral health Medicaid fraud case

An investigation led by the Nevada Attorney General’s Medicaid Fraud Control Unit (MFCU) has resulted in the conviction of eleven individuals involved in a scheme to defraud Medicaid through several behavioral health companies in Southern Nevada.

Trending

The Weekly Newsletter

Sign-up for the Weekly Newsletter from Silver State Times.