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Suitcase ballot video participants in Georgia - have interesting backstory
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<blockquote data-quote="essentialsaltes" data-source="post: 76391746" data-attributes="member: 294566"><p><span style="font-size: 22px"><strong><a href="https://www.nbcnews.com/tech/internet/georgia-election-workers-suing-conspiracy-website-campaign-lies-rcna7319" target="_blank">Georgia election workers suing conspiracy website over ‘campaign of lies’</a></strong></span></p><p>In a lawsuit filed Thursday, Ruby Freeman and her daughter allege how they became the target of a feedback loop of misinformation that included President Donald Trump.</p><p></p><p>Two Georgia election workers who became the target of conspiracy theories around the 2020 election are suing The Gateway Pundit, a far-right website that published false information about them as part of a sweeping effort to sow doubt about the integrity of the vote.</p><p></p><p>Gateway Pundit’s articles began when they identified Freeman in a surveillance video from a Georgia voting center <a href="https://www.reuters.com/investigates/special-report/usa-election-threats-georgia/" target="_blank">first presented by Trump campaign lawyer Jacki Pick</a> to Georgia’s State Senate on Dec. 3. Pick claimed someone who “had the name Ruby across her shirt somewhere” found a “suitcase” full of ballots from “underneath a table.”</p><p></p><p>The claims were quickly dismissed by both Georgia’s secretary of state and its Bureau of Investigation, who said there was no suitcase. Election workers, who had been previously told to stop counting ballots and pack up for the night, were told to re-start the ballot count, and Freeman was simply continuing her work.</p><p></p><p>Gateway Pundit articles continued to accuse Freeman and Moss of voter fraud throughout the spring and summer. </p><p></p><p>At the height of the harassment, Freeman said strangers twice attempted to push into her home to “make a citizens’ arrest,” the lawsuit alleges. Freeman was eventually forced to shutter her business and flee her home for two months at the recommendation of the FBI, the suit says.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="essentialsaltes, post: 76391746, member: 294566"] [SIZE=6][B][URL='https://www.nbcnews.com/tech/internet/georgia-election-workers-suing-conspiracy-website-campaign-lies-rcna7319']Georgia election workers suing conspiracy website over ‘campaign of lies’[/URL][/B][/SIZE] In a lawsuit filed Thursday, Ruby Freeman and her daughter allege how they became the target of a feedback loop of misinformation that included President Donald Trump. Two Georgia election workers who became the target of conspiracy theories around the 2020 election are suing The Gateway Pundit, a far-right website that published false information about them as part of a sweeping effort to sow doubt about the integrity of the vote. Gateway Pundit’s articles began when they identified Freeman in a surveillance video from a Georgia voting center [URL='https://www.reuters.com/investigates/special-report/usa-election-threats-georgia/']first presented by Trump campaign lawyer Jacki Pick[/URL] to Georgia’s State Senate on Dec. 3. Pick claimed someone who “had the name Ruby across her shirt somewhere” found a “suitcase” full of ballots from “underneath a table.” The claims were quickly dismissed by both Georgia’s secretary of state and its Bureau of Investigation, who said there was no suitcase. Election workers, who had been previously told to stop counting ballots and pack up for the night, were told to re-start the ballot count, and Freeman was simply continuing her work. Gateway Pundit articles continued to accuse Freeman and Moss of voter fraud throughout the spring and summer. At the height of the harassment, Freeman said strangers twice attempted to push into her home to “make a citizens’ arrest,” the lawsuit alleges. Freeman was eventually forced to shutter her business and flee her home for two months at the recommendation of the FBI, the suit says. [/QUOTE]
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Suitcase ballot video participants in Georgia - have interesting backstory
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