Amistad Project: 280,000 Ballots Transported Across State Lines Went Missing

Don Tran
By Don Tran
December 5, 2020NTD Evening News
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In Arlington, Virginia, the Amistad Project claimed that up to 280,000 ballots were transported from Bethpage, New York to Lancaster, Pennsylvania, and disappeared on Oct. 21

Former attorney general to Kansas and director of the Amistad Project Phil Kline said they have several eyewitness accounts as well as tangible evidence.

“This evidence demands investigation. This evidence demands answers. The American people deserve such answers,” said Kline.

Three witnesses spoke, two of whom were subcontract workers with the United States Postal Service.

One of the workers said he transported around 288,000 ballots to New York.

Shipping ballots across state lines is a federal crime.

“On October 21st, when I arrived for my usual route in Bethpage, New York, an expediter made three references to ballots that were to be loaded into my trailer, including saying, ‘Hey, you’ve got a ballot today,’ or ‘You have ballots today.’ And even showing me a piece of registered mail and saying, ‘Someone really wanted their ballot to count,'” said truck driver Jesse Morgan.

Kline said there are institutions and persons available to the public who can easily confirm the sworn statements made by their whistleblowers, but many of them have refused to be transparent.

“People refuse to speak and decide to not be forthcoming, they do it for a reason. Generally, this refusal comes down to one or two reasons or a mixture of both: they are afraid, or they have done something or participated in something which they do not want others to know about,” said Kline.

The Amistad Project filed lawsuits in several states in recent weeks, including one on Nov. 26 in Michigan.

They said they have been contacted by and communicated with the FBI and U.S. Attorneys from various jurisdictions.

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