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Tags: amistad | thomas more | pennsylvania | ballots | truck

Law Firm Claims More Than 280K Pre-marked Ballots Disappeared in Pennsylvania

phill kline speaks to the camera
Phill Kline, director of the Thomas More Society's Amistad Project, on Newsmax TV

By    |   Tuesday, 01 December 2020 06:10 PM EST

As many as 280,000 pre-marked ballots were transported from Bethpage, New York, to Lancaster, Pennsylvania, in late October and then "disappeared," the director of a public interest law firm said Tuesday, quoting a postal service subcontractor.

Phill Kline, the director of the legal group Thomas More Society's Amistad Project, said at a press conference in Arlington, Virginia, that a witness has testified to the fact the ballots went missing, which was verified by other witness statements.

"This evidence demonstrates, and it's through eyewitness testimony that's been corroborated by others through their eyewitness statements, that 130,000 to 280,000 completed ballots for the 2020 general election were shipped from Bethpage, New York, to Lancaster, Pennsylvania, where the ballots, and the trailer in which they were shipped, disappeared," said Kline, a former attorney general for the state of Kansas.

Kline claimed in a news release, postal service workers engaged in "widespread illegal efforts" to influence the election, according The Epoch Times.

Three individuals spoke at Tuesday's event to provide first-hand accounts of what Kline outlined, including truck driver subcontractor Jesse Morgan, who said he drove the truck filled with potentially upward of 288,000 ballots Oct. 21. The ballots were addressed to Harrisburg, but Morgan was instructed to deliver them to a Lancaster location.

The truck — and ballots — vanished after he parked at a USPS depot in Lancaster, he said. Kline said the numbers come from estimates his group discerned.

The news conference also heard from a witness who claims to have seen a Dominion Voting Systems vendor inserting thumb drives into voting aggregation machines in Delaware County, Pennsylvania, and a third man – another USPS subcontractor — who said he was told the postal service was planning to backdate tens of thousands of ballots in the days after the Nov. 3 election in order to circumvent the ballot submission deadline, Justthenews.com reported.

"This evidence joins with unlawful conduct by state and local election officials, including accepting millions of dollars of private funds, to undermine the integrity of this election," Kline said.

In a press release, the Amistad Project says it has sworn expert affidavits claiming "over 300,000 ballots are at issue in Arizona, 548,000 in Michigan, 204,000 in Georgia, and over 121,000 in Pennsylvania."

Kline said the information will be shared with the FBI, federal, and local prosecutors "who are aware of our evidence."

The Epoch Times said neither the FBI nor postal service has responded to a request for comment.

The claims come on the same day that U.S. Attorney General William Barr told The Associated Press his office has no evidence of fraud that would change the election results.

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Politics
As many as 280,000 pre-marked ballots were transported from Bethpage, New York, to Lancaster, Pennsylvania, in late October and then "disappeared," the director of a public interest law firm said Tuesday, quoting a postal service subcontractor.
amistad, thomas more, pennsylvania, ballots, truck
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2020-10-01
Tuesday, 01 December 2020 06:10 PM
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