(Minghui.org) A former U.S. military intelligence officer testified and proved that Dominion Voting Systems have been used to interfere with U.S. elections by foreign forces including communist China, Serbia, and Iran. These findings are consistent with information provided by various witnesses.
A Dominion touchscreen voting machine
The witness is a former military electronics intelligence analyst with the 305th Military Intelligence Battalion. Having worked with top election experts in the world, this analyst has extensive experience as a whitehat hacker.
During a public network scan on November 8 of Dominion’s website, Dominionvoting.com, this analyst obtained information on the company’s connection with other Internet users and network devices. There were also 13 unencrypted passwords from Dominion employees, along with 75 passwords with hashing encryption at Tor nodes.
Through network analysis, the analyst found that the Dominion system has derivative domain names such dvscorp.com. Many of these domain names have connections with China and Iran.
Information from United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) indicated that Dominion had mortgaged numerous voting software patents to HSBC Canada. The analyst said that Dominion had sold voting patents to communist China through HSBC.
A public network scan on the same day showed that the same voting system also had connections with Belgrade, capital of Serbia. A follow-up scan of the Dominion official website found that the company’s Domain Name System (DNS) had a subdomain name of Belgrade.
Searching within the professional network of LinkedIn on November 9 revealed a large number of employees in Serbia working for Dominion.
This analyst also testified that while Smartmatic is the backbone of Dominion, Scytl is responsible for security of the election system.
National File interviewed Dana Jill Simpson and her husband Jim, both “election integrity and technology experts who have worked for Tides Foundation insiders (the Tides Canada Foundation shares office space in Toronto with Dominion Voting Systems’ headquarters).” In its November 24 article, the couple were cited saying that Dominion has been a national security threat for years while its voting machines, programmed in Serbia, are known for vote-flipping.
In March 2010, U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder issued a press release, “Justice Department Requires Key Divestiture in Election Systems & Software/Premier Election Solutions Merger,” announcing that “DOJ was forcing a divestiture of election technology from a top company. Dominion ended up getting that technology and thus nearly a third of the electronic voting systems market in America.”
Within two weeks, Dominion purchased Sequoia, a spun-out company of Smartmatic.
She also brought up a politician’s connection with Serbia. He visited Serbia and helped Serbian Hackers in Belgrade get control of information about a leading voting machine company so “Obama would have a better chance in 2012.”
A search in LinkedIn on November 6 showed 243 employees of Dominion. Only 140 of the 243 employees remained on LinkedIn as of November 16. That means more than 100 had disappeared, including some employees in Serbia.
Simpson said the Dominion plot is linked to communist China, the Clinton Foundation, and George Soros. She pointed out that the scanners for Dominion are made by a company called Flex (previously known as Flextronics) in Plano, Texas, a global contract manufacturer. With headquarters in Singapore, Flex has over 50,000 contract workers in China, about one fourth of its global workforce. The biggest client in China for Flex is Huawei.
Simpson had been to Dominion’s U.S. office in Denver. “The Machines are made by Flex in China for the most part, and the programming is done in Serbia and Canada, and the international corporation is Barbados. They have direct ties to the Clinton Foundation in Delian Project,” she explained.
Frank Figliuzzi, a former assistant director of the FBI for counterintelligence, told NBC in December 2019 that the Chinese manufacturers can be forced to cooperate with requests from Chinese intelligence officials to share any information about the technology, and therefore pose a risk for U.S. companies.
“There is also the concern of machines shipped with undetected vulnerabilities or backdoors that could allow tampering,” reported NBC in an article titled “Chinese parts, hidden ownership, growing scrutiny: Inside America's biggest maker of voting machines.”
Andy Huang, core infrastructure manager of information technology at Dominion Voting System, had previously worked at China Telecom, reported National Pulse in a November 25 article with the title of “Dominion Techie Worked For CCP Military Proxy Flagged By U.S. Govt For ‘Malicious Cyber Activity’.”