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DC Removing 103,000 Ineligible Names from Voter
Rolls in Response to Judicial Watch
We’ve achieved another significant victory in our fight to clean up the
nation’s voter rolls – this time in our nation’s capital.
We sent notice letters to
election officials in the District of Columbia, California, and Illinois,
notifying them of evident violations of the National Voter Registration
Act(NVRA) of 1993, based on their failure to remove
inactive voters from their registration rolls.
The letters point out that these jurisdictions publicly reported removing
few or no ineligible voter registrations under a key provision of the NVRA.
The letters threaten federal lawsuits unless the violations are corrected
in a timely fashion.
In response to our inquiries, Washington, DC, officials admitted that they
had not complied with the NVRA, promptly removed 65,544 outdated names from
the voting rolls, promised to remove 37,962 more, and designated another
73,522 registrations as “inactive.”
The NVRA requires states to “conduct a general program that makes a
reasonable effort to remove” from the official voter rolls “the names
of ineligible voters” who have died or changed residence. The law
requires registrations to be canceled when voters fail to respond to
address confirmation notices and then fail to vote in the next two general
federal elections. In 2018, the Supreme Court confirmed that such removals
are mandatory (Husted v. A. Philip
Randolph Inst., 138 S. Ct.
1833, 1841-42 (2018)).
Federal law directs the Election Assistance Commission (EAC) to submit a
report to Congress every second year assessing how states are complying
with the NVRA. Federal regulations require states to provide data to the
EAC for use in this report. On June 29, 2023, the EAC posted data from the
most recent surveys it sent to the states and the District of Columbia for
the reporting period from November 2020 through November 2022.
Based on the data contained in this report, we contacted a number of states
and Washington, DC, to inquire about their compliance with federal law and
to request public records. After processing the responses to these
communications, Judicial Watch sent notice of violation letters to
Washington, DC, California, and Illinois, detailing their non-compliance
with the NVRA.
The notice letter to
the District of Columbia, sent on behalf of Judicial Watch and the District
of Columbia Republican Party, reports:
DC reported removing zero voter registrations in the last
two-year reporting period for failing to respond to an address
confirmation notice and failing to vote for two consecutive general federal
elections.
- DC
flatly admitted in correspondence with Judicial Watch that it was failing
to remove registrations as required by the NVRA, citing data conversion,
staffing, and other issues.
- DC’s
total registration rate—its total number of registrations divided by the
most recent census estimates of its citizen voting-age population—is
greater than 131%.
The notice letter to
California, sent on behalf of Judicial Watch and the Libertarian Party of
California, states:
-
California’s survey responses to the EAC show that 27 California counties
reported removing five or fewer—and, in most of those counties,
zero—voter registrations in the last two-year period for failing to
respond to an address confirmation notice and failing to vote in two
consecutive general federal elections.
- Another
19 California counties simply did not report any data about such removals.
-
Twenty-one California counties had more voter registrations than citizens
over the age of 18, based on the most recent census
estimates.
In all, 46 California counties reported removing only a handful, or no
registrations under the NVRA’s change of address rules, or else failed to
report any data at all. These 46 counties contain more than 14 million
registered voters.
The notice letter to
Illinois, sent on behalf of Judicial Watch, Illinois resident and voter
Carol J. Davis and Illinois Family Action, states:
- In
Illinois’ responses to the EAC’s survey, 23 Illinois counties reported
removing fewer than 15—and, in almost half of those counties,
zero—voter registrations from November 2020 to November 2022 for failing
to respond to an address confirmation notice and failing to vote in two
consecutive general federal elections.
-
Thirty-four Illinois jurisdictions simply did not report any data about
such removals.
- Fifteen
Illinois jurisdictions have more voter registrations than citizens of
voting age.
In total, 57 Illinois counties either reported removing 15 or fewer
registrations or failed to report any data at all under the NVRA’s change
of address removal procedures. These 57 counties contain over five million
registered voters.
Last month, the District of Columbia admitted in correspondence
to us that it removed 65,544 inactive voters, will soon remove an
additional 37,962 inactive voters, and that it has designated another
73,522 inactive names for potential removal.
California provided some public records and promised a further, substantive
response. Illinois provided some public records and promises a further,
substantive response. Ultimately, however, if Judicial Watch is not
satisfied with the jurisdictions’ responses to its notice letters,
Judicial Watch plans to sue under the National Voter Registration Act to
ensure the jurisdictions take certain reasonable steps to clean up their
voter rolls as the law requires.
Dirty voter rolls increase the potential for voter fraud. As Washington,
DC’s, quick cleanup of tens of thousands of names in response to us
shows, there are potentially hundreds of thousands of names on the voter
rolls that should be removed by California and Illinois. Indeed, our
litigation resulted in the removal of four million names from voter rolls
in various states recently.”
We are a national leader in voting integrity and voting rights. As part of
our work, we assembled a team of highly experienced voting rights attorneys
who stopped discriminatory elections in Hawaii, and cleaned up voter rolls
in California, Ohio, Indiana, and Kentucky, among other
achievements. Robert Popper, a Judicial Watch senior attorney,
leads our election law program. Popper was previously in the Voting Section
of the Civil Rights Division of the Justice Department, where he managed
voting rights investigations, litigations, consent decrees, and settlements
in dozens of states.
In July 2023 we filed an amicus
curiae (friend of the court) brief, supporting
the decision of the
U.S. District Court for the District of Maine, which struck down Maine’s
policy restricting the use and distribution of the state’s voter
registration list (Public Interest Legal
Foundation v. Shenna Bellows (No. 23-1361). According to a
national study
conducted by Judicial Watch in 2020, Maine’s statewide registration rate
was 101% of eligible voters.
In July 2023 we also settled a federal
election integrity lawsuit on behalf of the Illinois Conservative Union
against the state of Illinois, the Illinois State Board of Elections, and
its director, which grants access to the current centralized statewide list
of registered voters for the state for the past 15 elections.
In April 2023, Pennsylvania settled with us
and admitted in court filings that it removed 178,258 ineligible
registrations in response to communications from us. The settlement commits
Pennsylvania and five of its counties to extensive public reporting of
statistics regarding their ongoing voter roll clean-up efforts for the next
five years.
In March 2023, Colorado agreed to settle a
Judicial Watch NVRA lawsuit alleging that Colorado failed to remove
ineligible voters from its rolls. The settlement agreement requires
Colorado to provide Judicial Watch with the most recent voter roll data for
each Colorado county each year for six years.
In February 2023, Los Angeles County confirmed the
removal of 1,207,613 ineligible voters from its rolls since last year,
under the terms of a settlement
agreement in a federal lawsuit we filed
in 2017.
We settled a federal
election integrity lawsuit against New York City after the city removed
441,083 ineligible names from the voter rolls and promised to take
reasonable steps going forward to clean its voter registration lists.
Kentucky also
removed hundreds of thousands of old registrations after it entered into a
consent decree to end another Judicial Watch lawsuit.
In February 2022, we settled a voter
roll clean-up lawsuit against North Carolina and two of its counties after
North Carolina removed over 430,000 inactive registrations from its voter
rolls.
In March 2022, a Maryland court ruled in favor of
our challenge to the Democratic state legislature’s “extreme”
congressional districts gerrymander.
You can expect more federal lawsuits over the next few months as we
increase our legal pressure to protect our elections!
Judicial Watch Questions Candidates at the Republican Presidential
Debate
I was pleased to represent you at the Republican presidential debate aired
on NewsNation
and Rumble on Wednesday, December 6, from the University of Alabama.
I presented two powerful questions through prerecorded video. Former Amb.
Nikki Haley, Gov Ron DeSantis, Mr. Vivek Ramaswamy, and former Gov. Chris
Christie participated in the debate.
Moderators were Elizabeth Vargas,
the Peabody award-winning anchor of NewsNation’s “Elizabeth Vargas
Reports,” Megyn Kelly, host
of “The Megyn Kelly Show” on SiriusXM and Eliana Johnson,
editor-in-chief of The Washington Free Beacon.
You can watch my portion of the debate here. My first
question was directed to Christie, the second to DeSantis.
Here is a transcript.
Fitton:
President Trump and many of his supporters
claim federal law enforcement agencies have abused his civil rights for the
last eight years by, among other things, spying on him and now prosecuting
him while having treated Hillary Clinton and Joe Biden with kid
gloves.
A recent Gallup poll shows that Americans
think more highly of the U.S. Postal Service than they do the FBI or
Justice Department.
What would you do as president to restore
the faith of the American people in these agencies?
Christie:
Well, first off, I'm the only person on this
stage who's actually done a job in the Department of Justice.
I was the U.S. Attorney in New Jersey and
the 5th largest office in this country appointed by President Bush on
September 10th, 2001.
And it was an extraordinary time in this
country to be on the front lines of fighting the greatest attack against
our country since Pearl Harbor.
And I’m proud of the seven years I spent
in the Justice Department.
And one of the reasons I am is because I had
an Attorney General when I came in, named John Ashcroft. And John Ashcroft
stood up and told each and every one of us, our job was to do one thing, to
make sure justice was done every day, regardless of partisanship,
regardless of gender or race or any other consideration.
And that's what we did for seven years, and
at a time when our country was at its greatest moment of danger. In the
last 40 years, we did exactly that. There was not another domestic
terrorist attack on this soil.
So what I would do as president, having had
that experience, and the only one who's had that experience, is to pick an
attorney general who will absolutely do the same thing that John Ashcroft
did. To pick U.S. attorneys who will only care about making sure that
justice is done without regard to any other consideration but the facts
that are presented and whether someone is guilty beyond a reasonable doubt
and the government can prove it.
We have had attorneys general like Eric
Holder and Loretta Lynch and Jeff Sessions and now our current attorney
general who have not met that standard.
And the only way you restore people's faith
in the justice system is to put someone like that in charge of the Justice
Department and then as president to get the hell out of the way on anything
that involves criminal investigations. If a president's involved in trying
to do something and put their thumb on the scales Donald Trump says he will
do, that makes people much less likely to believe our justice system can be
fair.
Fitton:
Many Republicans are concerned about the
legitimacy of elections.
A federal judge just ruled that Pennsylvania
must count on dated mail in ballots.
And unlike Alabama, many states still don't
require any identification to vote.
What should states do now to increase
election integrity and voter confidence for the 2024 election?
DeSantis:
Well, Tom, thanks for the question. Thanks
for you guys doing Judicial Watch. It's really, really important. There's a
lot of corruption in this government. You guys are doing a great
job.
What you should do for election integrity is
do what we did in Florida 20 years ago.
Florida and elections were a joke. Everybody
would laugh at it.
I came in, I removed a couple supervisors
from South Florida. We require voter ID. Universal No Zuckerbucks, no mass
mail balloting and no ballot harvesting.
We even have an agency that prosecutes
people for violating election laws. The result of that, in both 2020 and
2022, we counted millions and millions of votes on election night, produced
the results. It was transparent and everybody was happy.
That is not happening throughout this
country. But let me tell you this, as the nominee, I think it's important.
Not every state where we need it to be.
There is ballot harvesting in places like
Nevada, All these places I am not going to fight with one hand tied behind
my back.
I'm going to have organizations in all the
swing states.
If they're harvesting, we're harvesting. If
there's Zuckerbucks, we're Zuckerbucks. We are going to exploit whatever
the rules are. I favor changing the rules to be like Florida and some of
the other states that have done a good job. But until then, we have to do
that.
And then just on the Justice Department and
FBI I mean, I remember being, you know, in Iraq, working with the FBI on
the ground and being, and then I was a special assistant.
I used to have such a high regard for these
agencies. What they did to Donald Trump with the Russia collusion was one
of the biggest abuses of power in the history of our country.
These agencies need to be cleaned out. With
me, you'll have a new FBI director on day one. We're going to clear out the
DOJ, the IRS, all these places. Buckle your seatbelts. There's going to be
a new sheriff in town.
My Judicial Watch questions educated
countless Americans and smashed the media monopoly on candidate questions
at presidential debates. Let’s hope it is the beginning of a new
discussion about these important issues in the months ahead!
Judicial Watch Taxpayer Lawsuit over Racially Discriminatory Minneapolis
Teachers’ Contract to Proceed
In another major victory for Judicial Watch, the Minnesota Court of Appeals
reversed a trial court’s ruling and is allowing our historic lawsuit
filed on behalf of a Minneapolis taxpayer over a teachers’ contract that
provides discriminatory job protections to certain racial minorities to
proceed (Clapp v. Cox et
al. (No. 27-CV-22-12454)).
Hennepin County District Court had dismissed the lawsuit, ruling that our
taxpayer client lacked standing and that her claims were not ripe. We
appealed and, on December 4, the Minnesota Court of Appeals overturned the
lower court’s decision, ruling that our client does have standing as a
taxpayer who helps fund Minneapolis Public Schools through property taxes
and her claims are ripe because the lawsuit alleges an actual future
controversy using public funds.
Judicial Watch filed the lawsuit in August
of 2022 against the superintendent of the Minneapolis Public Schools, the
Minneapolis Public Schools (MPS), and the Minneapolis Board of Education
for violating the Equal Protection Guarantee of the Minnesota
Constitution.
The controversial contract was agreed to in March 2022 to end a 14-day
teacher strike. The Minneapolis Federation of Teachers ratified the
contract shortly after the agreement was reached. The Minneapolis Board of
Education ratified it in May of this year.
Our lawsuit states:
Among other things, the contract provides preferences, protections, and
privileges for MPS teachers of certain races and ethnicities under a
section entitled “ARTICLE 15. PROTECTIONS FOR EDUCATORS OF COLOR.”
There is no similar provision covering educators who are not “of
color.”
Under the contract, teachers of color are
exempt from Defendant MPS’s seniority-based layoffs and reassignments,
which means, when layoffs or reassignments occur, the next senior teacher
who is not “of color” would be laid off or reassigned. In addition, the
contract mandates that Defendants reinstate teachers of color over more
senior teachers who are not “of color.”
Upon information and belief, prior to the
contract, teachers were laid off or reassigned in order of seniority, with
the least senior teachers laid off or reassigned first, without regard to
race or ethnicity. Similarly, teachers were reinstated in order of
seniority, with the more senior teachers reinstated first, without regard
to race or ethnicity.
***
Article 15’s preferences, protections, and privileges for certain
public-school teachers on the basis of race and ethnicity violates
Minnesota’s Equal Protection Guarantee, which states that “no member of
this state shall be disenfranchised or deprived of any of the rights or
privileges secured to any citizen thereof, unless by the law of the land or
the judgment of his peers.” Minn. Const. art. 1, § 2. The Equal
Protection Guarantee is analyzed under the same principles and mandate as
the Equal Protection Clause of the U.S. Constitution.
In its December 4 ruling, the Minnesota Court of Appeals states:
[The] complaint states that, before the adoption of Article 15,
“teachers were laid off or reassigned in order of seniority . . . ,
without regard to race or ethnicity.” Teachers were also “reinstated in
order of seniority, with the more senior teachers reinstated first, without
regard to race or ethnicity.” But the complaint alleges that Article 15
of the March 2022 agreement altered this practice, such that “teachers of
color are exempt from [the] seniority-based layoffs and reassignments,
which means, when layoffs or reassignments occur, the next senior teacher
who is not ‘of color’ would be laid off or reassigned.” Article 15
states:
Starting with
the Spring 2023 Budget Tie-Out Cycle, if excessing a teacher who is a
member of a population underrepresented among licensed teachers in the
site, the [school district] shall excess the next least senior teacher, who
is not a member of an underrepresented population, for the reasons provided
in Article 15.1.2.i.
***
Reinstatement must be in the inverse order of
placement on lay off. The [school district] shall prioritize the recall of
a teacher who is a member of a population underrepresented among licensed
teachers in the [school district], per the definition provided in Article
15.1.2.i. To do this, the [school district] shall deprioritize the more
senior teacher, who is not a member of an underrepresented population, in
order to recall a teacher who is a member of an underrepresented population
among licensed teachers, for the reasons provided in Article 15.1.2.i.
Article 15.1.2.i provides that the anticipated outcome of the policy is
to:
remedy the
continuing effects of past discrimination by the [school district]. Past
discrimination by the [school district] disproportionately impacted the
hiring of underrepresented teachers in the [school district], as compared
to the relevant labor market and the community, and resulted in a lack of
diversity of teachers. Language which refers to this Article will no longer
be in effect once the teachers in the [school district] reflect the
diversity of the labor market and the community served by the [school
district].
The complaint alleges that MPS will lay off or reassign approximately
220 teachers between 2022 and 2027.
According to [the] complaint, Article 15
violates equal protection under the state constitution because it
“provides preferences, protections, and privileges for MPS teachers of
certain races and ethnicities” for layoffs and recalls. The complaint
further asserts that Article 15 requires MPS to spend public money to
implement this allegedly unlawful practice.
The lawsuit will go back to Hennepin County District Court for further
proceedings.
The lawsuit asks the court to enter a judgment declaring all actions taken
to implement the racial and ethnic preference provisions of Article 15 of
the contract to be illegal. The lawsuit also asks that the court declare
illegal the use of any taxpayer dollars to implement these provisions of
the contract and that MPS be prohibited from taking any actions to
implement these racial and ethnic provisions.
This is a big victory for taxpayers who are outraged that Minneapolis’
school system would engage in blatant racial discrimination in employing
teachers. We will move with all due speed to gather evidence in discovery.
This lawsuit aims to shut down this extreme leftist attack on the bedrock
constitutional principle that no one can be denied equal treatment under
the law on account of race.
We are being assisted in the lawsuit by Daniel N. Rosen of Rosen LLC in
Minneapolis, Minnesota.
The City of Asheville, NC, in January 2022 settled our
federal civil rights lawsuit after agreeing to remove all racially
discriminatory provisions in a city-funded scholarship program.
Additionally, the city also agreed to remove racially discriminatory
eligibility provisions in a related program that provides grants to
educators.
In May 2022, we won a court battle
against California’s gender quota law for corporate boards. The verdict
came after a 28-day trial. The verdict followed a similar ruling in
our favor in April finding California’s diversity mandate for corporate
boards unconstitutional.
More Evidence of Government Censorship During 2020 Election
We received 44 pages of
records in a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) lawsuit from the U.S.
Department of Homeland Security (DHS) that show a close collaboration
between DHS’s Cybersecurity and Information Security Agency (CISA) and
the leftist Election Integrity Partnership (EIP) to engage in “real-time
narrative tracking” on all major social media platforms in the days
leading up to the 2020 election.
The records discuss “takedowns” of social media posts and the avoidance
of creating public records subject to FOIA.
These records show the lengths to which a ‘Homeland Security’ Deep
State agency went in its effort to censor and suppress Americans during and
after the 2020 election. That it took a federal lawsuit to extract these
disturbing records should raise additional worries about what else this
Biden administration is up to.
The records also show that the EIP, which was initially called the Election
Misinformation Partnership in the days leading up to the November 3, 2020,
election, tasked staffers with monitoring online election content 24 hours
a day with a priority being “disinfo that is going viral.”
We obtained the records thanks to our FOIA lawsuit after DHS
failed to respond to our October 5, 2022, request (Judicial Watch v. U.S.
Department of Homeland Security (No. 1:22-cv-03560)).
We are asking for:
- All
records of communication between the CISA and the EIP. This includes all
“tickets” or notifications to the Partnership regarding
election-related disinformation on any social media platform.
- All
records regarding the July 9, 2020, meeting between DHS officials and
representatives of the EIP.
- All
records of communication between the CISA and the University of
Washington’s Center for an Informed Public and/or Stanford University’s
Internet Observatory regarding any of the following:
- The
Election Integrity Partnership
- The
2020 U.S. election
- Online
misinformation and disinformation
- Any
social media platform
The Election Integrity
Partnership was created in July
2020, just before the presidential election. According to
Just the News:
The consortium is comprised of four member organizations: Stanford
Internet Observatory (SIO), the University of Washington’s Center for an
Informed Public, the Atlantic Council’s Digital Forensic Research Lab,
and social media analytics firm Graphika. It set up a concierge-like
service in 2020 that allowed federal agencies like Homeland’s
Cybersecurity Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) and State’s Global
Engagement Center to file “tickets” requesting that online story links
and social media posts be censored or flagged by Big Tech.
Three liberal groups — the Democratic
National Committee, Common Cause and the NAACP — were also empowered like
the federal agencies to file tickets seeking censorship of content. A
Homeland-funded collaboration, the Elections Infrastructure Information
Sharing and Analysis Center, also had access.
The newly obtained records include an
undated PowerPoint presentation titled “Election Misinformation
Partnership.”
Several pages in the
presentation discuss “takedowns,” including:
Example Flow 5: Sourced from Platform [formatting in original]
Days after 11/03, Facebook notifies EMP of
an impending takedown of a group of pages exhibiting coordinated
inauthentic behavior. Since the election, these pages have consistently
pushed a narrative encouraging Americans in key states to call for
invalidation of election results. Facebook will take these pages down in
one hour, and is already briefing relevant state and local election
officials.
***
Notes: Given that information is platform-verified, and Facebook has a
direct relationship with local election officials, EMP's involvement can be
smaller with the initial dump. EMP should follow up with election officials
and the platform in case either stakeholder wants for further
research.
The presentation discusses the avoidance of creating public records
subject to FOIA:
Best way to collaborate
What's the best way to
collaborate?
- CISA
can't create their own Slack channels, but can participate in others'.
-
Listservs are bad (public records requirements).
- Jira is
fine.
- CISA
has privacy concerns: can't monitor people's individual accounts; ensure
CISA doesn't participate in discussions or notes concerning U.S.
persons.
-
Setup:
- SIO
will have dedicated Slack, something like Jira or Salesforce (will ask for
donation), separate from Stanford and destroyed once
over.
- We'll
intake info by email, but direct people to private forms SIO and CISA have
distributed.
- Info
from there will go into queue -> be triaged, assigned
SLA.
A slide in the presentation titled “Stanford Internet Observatory
Calendar” details its monitoring plan:
“November: Full Time, Election: 24/7 monitoring in shifts. Heightened
monitoring during voting times. Emphasis on voter suppression tactics.
Election November 3, 2020. December: Full Time, Post-Election: Full time
monitoring continues, but not 24/7. Emphasis on narratives around election
legitimacy (EX: mail in ballot theories). Release brief post-mortem.”
A portion of the presentation labeled “Summarized
notes” states:
Overview: CISA has limited capabilities to identify, track
disinfo narratives + attempts to undermine confidence in elections
- SIO
does = good partnership
- Major
goal: prevent a crisis of confidence in 2020
elections
- E.g.,
where Russia doesn't change any votes (or changes just a few), but claims
they changed many more and hysteria is blown out of
proportion
Scope: Keep scope narrow: focus on election-related disinfo that
has the potential to impact the public's voting patterns
Partnerships and Relationships SIO [Stanford Internet Observatory] would be the
coordinators, working w/ Graphika [https://graphika.com], DFRLab [Digital Forensic
Research Lab], and [redacted’s]
team at UW [University of
Washington].
- Mutual
trust is key: don't want to need NDAs, legal red
tape.
- Need to
build out workflow management system: JIRA/Slack/other communications
channels, shared processes and definitions, etc.
-
[Redacted] envisions Tier 1 and Tier 2 partners:
- Tier 1
is intake (of tips, disinfo reports, etc.): consisting of people either
digging for narratives, or processing info received from other
partners.
- Think
students, election officials, etc. who are looking for
disinfo.
- Workflow: check that info against
protocols, do some initial data aggregation, triage it into the workflow
management system.
- Tier 2 is the 4 orgs [redacted] I team at
Stanford, Graphika, etc.
- Workflow: take stuff off the workflow
management queue, process it.
- Need
to sketch that out.
- SLA
for different times of the calendar based on the level of severity obtained
by triage.
- E.g., a report from the general public will
have less priority than a report from an on-the-ground election official; a
report for disinfo that is not popular will have less priority than disinfo
that is going viral.
- General public = more turnaround time, but
election officials = less turnaround time: need to get back to them
fast.
- SIO has good relationship w/ platforms who
already care.
- See
the Secondary Infektion (Russian disinfo op) report.
- Think through all the platforms that might
have been useful there (e.g., communicating with Twitter at stage x would
have stopped the spread).
- Meanwhile, CISA has strong
relationships w/ election officials.
- CISA
is happy to introduce SIO to them, do outreach.
- Just
keep CISA in the info-sharing pipeline.
***
CISA’s concern starts 45 days out operationally, when
military/overseas voters start mailing.
- Start
hunting, messaging at beginning of September.
- Lower
SLA (higher turnaround time/less priority), but start looking for search
terms and taking tips.
- The
days leading up to/right after Election Day will be much more
intense.
- It'll
be an effective SOC, maybe a physical one, but in a much larger
space.
A July 10, 2020, email sent from a
redacted sender to CISA officials Allison Snell, Brian Scully, Matthew
Masterson, Geoffrey Hale, and several other persons whose names are
redacted, states:
July will be big to get things going on both the CISA and SIO front, so
we will be sure to keep open lines of communication. Thank you again for
everyone's help in getting this going, looking forward to getting to work
here!
Action Items:
CISA (@ who I will be reaching out
to).
- El-ISAC [https://www.cisa.gov/resources-tools/groups/join-ei-isac]
connection: introduction to (redacted) heading social media reporting
(@Masterson, Matthew)
- CFI
plug-in: discussions how to best integrate reporting into CISA/CFI's ops
center and send tips back to SIO (@Scully, Brian).
- Legal: get an initial proposal for OCC
(@ Snel, Allison).”
The presentation includes a slide regarding the Stanford Internet
Observatory (SIO):
The Stanford Internet Observatory (SIO) is a cross-disciplinary program
of research, teaching, and policy engagement for the study and abuse in
current information technologies, with a focus on social media.
Key capabilities:
- Experienced disinformation research
team of analytical and technical talent.
- Real-time narrative tracking
capabilities for all major platforms (Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, Reddit,
potential for TikTok).
- Additional API or historical access to
‘fringe’ platforms (Gab, Parler, 4Chan).
- Established and collaborative node
within the third-party misinformation research
ecosystem.”
The presentation gives an example of a
scenario the CISA-EIP collaborators could be faced with:
Example Flow 3: Stickier [formatting in original]
#BidenStoleMichigan is trending on Twitter
on election day. Groups of seemingly-local accounts tweet @MISecofState to
demand the Michigan election results be declared invalid, citing a fresh
Epoch Times article alleging shady connections between Michigan's SoS, Bill
Gates, and Joe Biden. Their tweets are relatively few, but see high
engagement shortly after posting and spread around right-leaning Twitter.
Researchers trace the origin of the article to posts on 4chan and Parler
encouraging Michiganders to confront @MlSecOfState on Twitter over the
story and calling for the Michigan results to be declared
invalid.
***
Notes: This scenario has a geographical component, but seems targeted to
ideological groups online. While particular election officials are
targeted, the political nature of the content makes counter-messaging
difficult. A government-only response would be even stickier however.
In a June 26, 2023 report, the
Committee on the Judiciary and the Select Subcommittee on the Weaponization
of the Federal Government writes about CISA:
Founded in 2018, CISA was originally intended to be an ancillary agency
designed to protect “critical infrastructure” and guard against
cybersecurity threats. In the years since its creation, however, CISA
metastasized into the nerve center of the federal government’s domestic
surveillance and censorship operations on social media. By 2020, CISA
routinely reported social media posts that allegedly spread
“disinformation” to social media platforms. By 2021, CISA had a formal
“Mis-, Dis-, and Malinformation” (MDM) team. In 2022 and 2023, in
response to growing public and private criticism of CISA’s
unconstitutional behavior, CISA attempted to camouflage its activities,
duplicitously claiming it serves a purely “informational” role.
Separately, in August 2023, we filed two FOIA lawsuits against
the U.S. Department of Justice and other federal agencies for
communications between the agencies and Facebook and Twitter regarding the
government’s involvement in content moderation and censorship on the
social media platforms.
In June 2023, we sued DHS for all
records of communications tied to the Election Integrity Partnership. Based
on representations from the EIP (see here and here), the federal
government, social media companies, the EIP, the Center for Internet
Security (a non-profit organization funded partly by DHS and the
Defense Department) and numerous other leftist groups
communicated privately via the Jira software
platform developed by Atlassian.
In February 2023, we sued the U.S.
Department Homeland Security (DHS) for records showing cooperation between
the Cybersecurity and Information Security Agency (CISA) and social media
platforms to censor and suppress free speech.
In January 2023 we sued the DOJ for
records of communications between the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI)
and social media sites regarding foreign influence in elections, as well as
the Hunter Biden laptop story.
In September 2022, we sued the Secretary
of State of the State of California for having YouTube censor a Judicial
Watch election integrity video.
In May 2022, YouTube censored a Judicial Watch video about Biden corruption
and election integrity issues in the 2020 election. The video, titled
“Impeach? Biden Corruption Threatens National Security,” was falsely
determined to be “election misinformation” and removed by YouTube, and
Judicial Watch’s YouTube account was suspended for a week. Judicial Watch
continues to post its video content
on its Rumble channel (https://rumble.com/vz7aof-fitton-impeach-biden-corruption-threatens-national-security.html).
In July 2021, we uncovered records
from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), which revealed
that Facebook coordinated closely with the CDC to control the COVID
narrative and “misinformation” and that over $3.5 million in free
advertising given to the CDC by social media companies.
In May 2021, we revealed documents
showing that Iowa state officials pressured social media companies Twitter
and Facebook to censor posts about the 2020 election.
In April 2021, we published
documents revealing how California state officials pressured social media
companies (Twitter, Facebook, Google (YouTube)) to censor posts about the
2020 election.
More is coming on this important topic, so stay tuned!
FBI Director Concerned About Terrorists’ Ability to Exploit Southwest
Border
The Biden administration was forced to admit the obvious national security
threat caused by Joe Biden’s border crisis. Our Corruption
Chronicles blog reports:
Foreign terrorist organizations can exploit the southwest border as the
United States faces the highest risk of an attack following the Hamas
onslaught in Israel, according to Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI)
Director Christopher Wray. The FBI chief revealed that terrorist threats to
the nation have skyrocketed since October during testimony this week before
the Senate Judiciary Committee. In his prepared statement Wray failed to
include the dire security threats created by the Biden administration’s
disastrous open border policies. The crucial information only surfaced and
became part of the official record because a Republican lawmaker grilled
Wray about it.
The hearing, called “Oversight of the Federal Bureau of Investigation,” touched on the agency’s mission to tackle
grave threats and ensure the safety and security of communities throughout
the nation. Wray’s prepared statement
covered what the FBI is doing to
address the threats while adhering to the highest of standards. “As we
saw in early October with the devastating attack in Israel, terrorist
actors are still very intent on using violence and brutality to spread
their ideologies,” Wray told the committee. “Protecting the American
people from terrorism remains the FBI’s number one priority. The threat
from terrorism is as persistent and complex as ever. We are in an
environment where the threats from international terrorism, domestic
terrorism, and state-sponsored terrorism are all simultaneously
elevated.” The FBI director identified “lone actors or small cells of
individuals who typically radicalize to violence online” as the greatest
terrorism threat to the homeland.
He mentioned the FBI’s concern about the
Taliban takeover of Afghanistan and the intent of groups such as ISIS and
al-Qa’ida to carry out or inspire large-scale attacks in the U.S. Wray
also spoke about cybercriminal syndicates that compromise our networks and
foreign intelligence threats such as China, Russia and Iran, which are more
aggressive and capable than ever. Violent crimes and gang
activities—including robbery, human trafficking, drug and gun
trafficking, fraud, extortion and prostitution rings—also made the list
as did Transnational Organized Crime (TOC) characterized by families that
exert influence over criminal activities in neighborhoods, cities or
states. The FBI chief also delved into crimes against children, revealing
that every year thousands of kids are kidnapped, violently attacked,
sexually abused or trafficked. He closed by asking Congress to reauthorize
a section of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) created after
9/11 that allows the U.S. government to collect the communications of
foreigners outside the country without a warrant. Wray thanked the
committee and took questions.
If not for the question-and-answer portion
of the hearing the FBI director would have completely omitted the illegal
immigration crisis along the southwest border as a security threat to the
country. The information surfaced during an exchange with
Republican Senator Lindsey Graham, a ranking member of the Senate Judiciary
Committee. Graham said: “One of my concerns is after [the withdrawal
from] Afghanistan, we put international terrorism on steroids. Are you
concerned that international terrorism threats to the homeland are rising
as the [southern] border continues to be broken?” Wray responded: “I am
concerned that we are in… a heightened threat environment from foreign
terrorist organizations for a whole host of reasons and obviously their
ability to exploit any port of entry, including our southwest border… We
have seen an increase in so-called KSTs, ‘known or suspected
terrorists’, attempting to cross over the last five years.” Wray added
that the “threat level has gone to a whole other level since October
7.”
Until next week,
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