Russell James Ramsland Jr.
Russell James Ramsland Jr.
An expert witness says that the voting counts are abnormal and there were several spikes that occurred within 2.5 hours that were impossible.
Russell James Ramsland Jr., an expert who has worked with NASA, MIT and now works with the Allied Security Operations Group, said in an affidavit there were four spikes that totaled nearly 385,000 votes that were processed within just over 2.5 hours. He claims that Dominion is responsible for at least 290,000 illegal votes in Michigan.
Ramsland, along with others, alleged that there were many irregularities in the voting process during the election this year.
Dr. Navid Keshavarz-Nia said in an affidavit that the memory cards used during the election process provided backdoor access that impacted ballots in multiple states, including Michigan.
Keshavarz-Nia has received training from the NSA, CIA and DHS. He has a Ph.D. in engineering and technology. He also said in his statement that the vote counts across Michigan, Arizona, Wisconsin, Nevada and Pennsylvania were not normal.
“Instead, they are caused by fraudulent electronic manipulation of the targeted voting machines,” Keshavarz-Nia said in his statement, NTD reported.
The Michigan Senate Committee is set to meet Tuesday to hear testimony regarding absentee voting that occurred at Detroit’s TCF Center.
Another affidavit filed by a person who has extensive experience in white hat hacking and is an electronic intelligence analyst but their identifying information was redacted said in their statement that Edison Research performed a search that found that Dominion Voter Systems had an Iranian server and that China had access to the servers.
The expert’s affidavit notes that a digital forensics analysis shows “unambiguous evidence that Dominion Voter Systems and Edison Research have been accessible and were certainly compromised by rogue actors, such as Iran and China,” NTD reported.
A complaint was filed that was seeking to decertify Wayne County’s results and to stop Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson and Gov. Gretchen Whitmer from sending the state’s certifications to the Electoral College.