NEW: Iowa Gov’t Officials Coordinated
with Big Tech to Censor Judicial Watch Election Posts
Last week we released records
from the Secretary of State of California revealing how state officials
pressured social media companies (Twitter, Facebook, Google (YouTube)) to
censor election posts. Included were “misinformation briefing” emails
compiled by communications firm SKDK, which lists Biden
for President as its top
client of 2020.
The state agency successfully pressured YouTube to censor a Judicial Watch
video concerning vote by mail and a Judicial Watch lawsuit settlement about
California voter roll clean up.
It turns out that California wasn’t the only state acting in seeming
violation of the First Amendment. The new information from Iowa revealed
below exposes the dirty details of the expanding conspiracy against free
expression.
We received 624
pages of records from the Secretary of State of Iowa showing how
state officials pressured social media companies Twitter and Facebook to
censor posts about the 2020 election.
Included in these records were emails from Iowa state officials to
representatives of Big Tech pressuring these companies to remove some of
Judicial Watch’s posts. The emails show how the state agency successfully
pressured Facebook to censor our post about Iowa’s management of its
voter rolls.
We received the records as a result of a June 2020 Iowa Open
Records lawsuit filed after the Iowa Secretary of State failed to
comply with our February 2020 request for records and communications about
a Judicial Watch report regarding
the accuracy of the state’s voter registration rolls (Judicial
Watch v. Iowa Secretary of State (No. 05771 EQCE085973)). We
were represented by Iowa lawyer Alan R. Ostergren of Des Moines,
Iowa.
The records show that officials in the Secretary of State’s office on
multiple occasions contacted officials from Facebook and Twitter to try to
have these companies remove Judicial Watch posts that raised
concerns about Iowa’s failure to maintain accurate election
rolls.
On February 3, 2020, at 5:19 p.m., Kevin Hall, the communications director
for the Iowa Secretary of State, wrote in a February 3, 2020, email to
Facebook official Rachel Holland:
Rachel,
We’ve told them is fake. They have it PINNED to the top of their
page.
Holland responded at 6:11p.m., writing:
Hi Kevin,
Circling back with an update regarding the content posted by Judicial
Watch. Our third-party fact checkers have rated this content false, and we
have applied a filter over the content warning users before they click to
see it that the content has been rated false by independent fact
checkers.
Please continue to report violating content to us by
emailing [email protected], and copying me
( [email protected]), as I will be on an airplane for the next couple
hours. Let me know if you have any questions or concerns regarding this or
any other matters.
A couple of hours later, Hall followed up, “Thank you! They have new
posts up, doubling down on the false claims.”
And Holland responded, “Thanks for flagging- we’ve got a full team with
eyes on this now and are applying the false filter to similar articles as
well. I’ll send you an additional update shortly!”
That same day, Hall and Maria Benson, the director of communications at the
National Association of Secretaries of State, both tried
to convince Twitter to censor Judicial Watch’s posts but were
ultimately unsuccessful.
Hall filed a report with Twitter, and Benson escalated it by looping in
Kevin Kane from Twitter. On February 3, 2020, Benson wrote, “Iowa
Secretary of State has reported the below election misinformation, but
Twitter has declined to take it down. As you can see from the facts the
tweets are clearly wrong. I wanted to bring this to your attention to
hopefully remedy the situation. I’ve cc’d Kevin Hall, their
Communicators Director.”
Kane responded rejecting the request saying, “Thanks Maria – This was
reviewed by our team and is not in violation of our election integrity
policy as it does not suppress voter turnout or mislead people about when.
where. or how to vote. I understand this is not the outcome you are seeking
and appreciate you continuing to report Tweets to our team.”
In an email the next day, Hall wrote to Kane saying, “Facebook,
thankfully, was helpful. I would suggest perhaps reviewing your policies at
Twitter and putting them more in line with what Facebook is doing to
counter election misinformation.”
After being rejected by Twitter, Benson emailed Brian Scully, an official
at the Department of Homeland Security’s Cybersecurity and Infrastructure
Security Agency, writing on February 3, 2020:
Hey Brian,
Can you report this as well? Hannity is now retweeting and Twitter isn’t
playing ball with us. I’ve cc’d Kevin Hall who you met Saturday. He’s
IA SOS’s Communications Director. He’s been reporting and playing wack
a mole by trying to reply to misleading tweets.
Scully responded promising to contact Twitter. “Sorry … been out of
pocket a bit. Will reach out to Twitter. Let me know if you get
something.”
These records are yet another example of state officials conspiring with
Big Tech to deny Americans their First Amendment rights. These records
further show that Big Tech censorship is a government scandal: Iowa
government officials worked with Facebook to remove posts they did not
like, and Facebook bowed to this political pressure immediately. It should
be disturbing to all Americans that government officials are working to
censor speech they disagree with and that these behemoth companies often
seem willing to roll over and censor free speech.
Judicial Watch Sues over Abuse of Children Tied to Biden Border
Crisis
Little children are in trouble on the border. Texas welfare officials
received three reports of abuse and neglect at the Freeman Coliseum in San
Antonio, where more than 1,300 migrant children reportedly had
been held. The site
is one of several set up to handle the recent surge. This
came on the heels of claims that
multiple facilities where children are being held are unsafe.
To dig into this, we filed a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) suit against
the Department of Health and Human Services for records about assaults on
and abuse of unaccompanied alien children (UAC) in HHS custody (Judicial
Watch, Inc. v. U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services (No. 1:21-cv-01190)).
We sued after the HHS denied our February 26, 2021, FOIA request
for:
- All summaries from individual case files of reports of physical and/or
sexual abuse or assault of Unaccompanied Alien Children under the care of
HHS, its sub-agencies, and or volunteer agencies, contractors, grantees,
and sub-grantees, to include all segregable, non-exempt information.
- Records reflecting aggregated data of physical and/or sexual abuse and
assault of UACs under the care of HHS, its sub-agencies, and or volunteer
agencies, contractors, grantees, and sub-grantees.
We are concerned that the surge of migrants seeking to take advantage of
the Biden administration’s lax immigration policies has resulted in the
foreseeable abuse of children, as overwhelmed federal authorities are
ill-equipped to handle the huge number of children crossing the border. The
unprecedented secrecy and censorship surrounding these sites compounds the
problem and limits accountability. Our lawsuit aims to expose the full
truth about this particularly troubling consequence of the Biden
administration’s lawlessness on immigration.
This is not a new problem. We uncovered
HHS records in July 2018 revealing that in multiple cases, unaccompanied
alien children (UACs) processed during the Obama administration were
assaulted by government employees.
We began investigating this
matter in 2014 when a wave of UACs swamped the southwest border. Since that
time, we have been investigating incidents of violence, drug trafficking,
human trafficking, and other criminal activities, as well as whether
migrant children were being abused while in U.S. shelters.
Facebook’s Brazen Ban of President Trump Should Concern Every
American
The Facebook Oversight Board’s decision upholding President Trump’s
Facebook ban undermines the First Amendment and free speech. The brazen ban
of President Trump is already chilling the speech of other Facebook users
and Internet users generally, who fairly worry about Facebook and Big Tech
censoring and deplatforming them.
I have been personally locked out of Twitter for four months over a tweet
previously found not
to be in violation of Twitter’s rules.
Judicial Watch previously argued
that Facebook’s Oversight Board should have reversed the president’s
ban because the ban is an affront to First Amendment protections of free
speech, peaceable assembly, and the right to petition the government. There
is no credible evidence that President Trump either morally or legally
incited violence. He was resoundingly acquitted by the United States Senate
after the impeachment “prosecutors” failed to produce credible evidence
he incited violence. For Facebook and its Oversight Board to suggest
President Trump incited violence and that complaints about the
administration of an election could incite violence is a political position
aligned with the Left and political opponents of President Trump and his
supporters.
Judicial Watch Reveals CENSORED History of 2020
Election
We continue to investigate the serious questions concerning the 2020
election. Our chief investigative reporter, Micah Morrison, summarizes
our efforts in his Investigative
Bulletin:
Judicial Watch has uncovered critical new details in the secret history of
the 2020 election: how state government officials—at times interfacing
with the Biden presidential campaign—colluded with Twitter, Facebook, and
YouTube to censor freedom of speech.
The new information raises enormous constitutional and legal questions. It
challenges the conventional wisdom that the companies are operating solely
as private actors and can remove or ban users of their services as they see
fit, with no violation of First Amendment rights.
The new documents “suggest a conspiracy against the First Amendment
rights of Americans,” said Judicial Watch President Tom Fitton. “These
documents blow up the big lie that Big Tech censorship is
‘private’—as the documents show collusion between a whole group of
government officials in multiple states to suppress speech about election
controversies.”
In California, we obtained more than 500
pages of documents showing how a state agency, the Office of
Election Cybersecurity, tracked social media commentary and pushed Big Tech
to take down posts. Included in the documents were so-called “Misinformation Daily Briefings” from the
communications firm SKDK. The firm also was deeply involved in
the Biden presidential campaign, developing its mail-in voting program
for four key electoral states: Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin, and
Arizona.
For Big Tech and state officials, questioning the wisdom of mail-in voting
was not allowed. On September 11, 2020, when JW’s Tom Fitton made the
common-sense observation on Twitter that “mailing 51 million ballots to
those who haven’t asked for increases risk of voter fraud and
intimidation,” SKDK put him in its “misinformation brief” to
California election security officials.
(In January, Twitter suspended Tom for tweeting another common-sense
observation—“hydroxychloroquine is a safe drug”—a comment he had
several times earlier made on Twitter and which the tech giant earlier had
found not to be in violation of its rules. Read more on the
incident here.)
California officials went after Tom again on September 24, falsely stating
that he claimed in a YouTube video that Democrats would benefit from
incorrect voter rolls and ballot collection. In the video, in fact, Tom was
updating viewers about Judicial Watch’s highly successful, non-partisan
lawsuit settlement with Los Angeles County to clean up voter rolls.
Judicial Watch is a national leader in a non-partisan
effort to clean up voter rolls.
California officials directly contacted YouTube complaining about the
Judicial Watch video. Three days later, the video was deleted from
YouTube.
In Iowa, Judicial Watch obtained 624
pages of records revealing how state officials pressured Twitter
and Facebook to censor posts about the 2020 election. Included in the
records were emails pressing the companies to remove Judicial Watch
posts.
The emails show how the state agency successfully worked with Facebook to
censor a Judicial Watch post about Iowa’s management of its voter
rolls:
An Iowa state official emailed Facebook official Rachel Holland complaining
that a Judicial Watch story on Iowa’s management of voter rolls was
“false.” ( It
wasn’t.) The time stamp on the email is 5:19 p.m.
By 6:11 p.m., Facebook hit back. Facebook factcheckers “have rated this
content false,” Holland wrote the Iowa official, “and we have applied a
filter over this content warning users.”
Read more on Judicial Watch’s Iowa case here.
Read more on the California case here.
Of course it’s not just Judicial Watch in the crosshairs of companies
like Twitter, YouTube, and Facebook. On Wednesday, Facebook moved to
continue its ban on Donald Trump, now a private citizen. Judicial Watch has
argued that the ban is an affront
to First Amendment protections of free speech, peaceable assembly,
and the right to petition the government.
It’s also an ominous sign that Big Tech censorship is growing—and
growing bolder. “If they can ban President Trump,” warned House
Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, “all conservative voices could be
next.”
Judicial Watch Sues for Records of Biden Dogs after Biting
Incidents
On March 9, 2021, the White
House confirmed that President Biden’s dog Major, an adopted
German Shepherd, “did in fact bite someone at the White House,
causing a “minor injury.” Press secretary Jen Psaki said the dogs,
“are still getting acclimated and accustomed to their new surroundings
and new people.”
On March 30, 2021, the White
House reported that, “President Biden’s dog Major on Monday
afternoon bit another employee, who then required medical attention.” The
encounter reportedly took place on the White House South Lawn Monday, March
29.
Americans are understandably curious, and we filed a Freedom of Information
Act (FOIA) suit against the Department of Homeland Security for
communication between Secret Service officials assigned to the White House
regarding the Biden family dogs (Judicial
Watch v. U.S. Department of Homeland Security (No.
1:21-cv-01194)).
We sued after the Secret Service failed to process records in a timely
manner in response to a March 10, 2021, FOIA request seeking:
All records of communications between USSS officials responsible for
protection at the White House regarding the Biden family dogs, named Champ
and Major.
On April 12, 2021, the Secret Service replied to Judicial Watch’s FOIA
request saying that they had identified responsive records which were being
processed but have yet to produce them.
The public has a right to know the details about any incident in which
Secret Service personnel were injured by President Biden’s dog. We have
no doubt that Major and Champ are good dogs but politicians and bureaucrats
can’t be trusted to tell us everything.
Until next week …
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