A new documentary, "2000 Mules," reveals how True the Vote chief Catherine Engelbrecht teamed with data analyst and election intelligence expert Gregg Phillips to investigate the evidence of trouble during the 2020 election.
As Engelbrecht told WND in a video interview (video below), they uncovered a highly coordinated operation in key battleground states carried out by left-wing groups that collected mail-in ballots and paid "mules" to stuff them in unattended drop boxes, typically in the middle of the night.
Now investigations into election fraud are under way.
It is Just the News that revealed officials in the Yuma County, Arizona, sheriff's office, which was highlighted in "2000 Mules," is teaming up with the county recorder to investigate fraud.
Official said as of March, they were working on 16 open voter fraud cases.
The report said the county offices "are working together to actively examine cases of voting fraud from the 2020 General Election and now a recent pattern of fraudulent voter registration forms leading up to the 2022 Primary Election."
What's been found, the sheriff's office reported, includes impersonation voting, which is when someone votes in the name of someone else, and false registrations, in which fraudsters either use a real or fake name and information, and obtain false voter registrations.
Also found was duplicate voting as well as fraudulent use of absentee ballots, when someone asks for a ballot in someone else's name – without that real voter knowing anything about it.
The documentary uses geotracking data and video surveillance footage obtained by election integrity watchdog True the Vote show reveals "mules" stuffing drop boxes with absentee ballots during odd hours in battleground states.
"We are extremely encouraged that the Yuma County Sheriff's Office and Recorder's Office are now working together to investigate individuals involved in the subversion of elections," Engelbrecht said. "We've spent concentrated time in Yuma County and have provided significant information to both state and federal authorities. What has been happening in Yuma County is happening across the country. The targeting of vulnerable communities and voter abuse must be stopped."
Film director Dinesh D'Souza, who was interviewed on the John Solomon Reports podcast for this week, said an alleged Yuma County mule who talked with True the Vote also is cooperating now with authorities.
D'Souza also revealed that in about five days a million people have seen "2000 Mules" and it has made over $10 million, "which, for a political documentary, is like downright insane."
Half a dozen people already have been indicted in Arizona on illegal ballot harvesting counts.
WND also reported this week that AP claimed that the True the Vote's analysis of the 2020 evidence was "flawed."
The legacy wire service's main charge was that the cellphone location data was not precise enough to determine whether or not an individual actually visited a particular drop box. Innocent people, the news wire contended, may have been caught up in their data.
But, as WND reported, Wendi Strauch Mahoney of UncoverDC confirmed Engelbrecht and Phillips took that issue and many others brought up by the AP into account when they designed their investigation.
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In a 2018 opinion in the Supreme Court case Carpenter v. United States, Chief Justice John Roberts wrote that when the government "tracks the location of a cell phone," it "achieves near perfect surveillance as if it had attached an ankle monitor to the phone’s user."
And Engelbrecht points out in the movie that the data in Georgia was used by law enforcement as a test case to help law enforcement solve a cold murder case of a young girl.
Engelbrecht noted that the criteria used to identify a person as a ballot trafficker was intended to rule out individuals who might merely have been passing by. The person not only had to have made multiple trips to multiple drop boxes, he or she also had to have made at least five visits to one or more of the non-profit, left-wing organizations that turned out to be a nexus of ballot traffic.
D'Souza said in a video interview with WND (embedded below) last week that the investigation featured in the movie will "blow out of the water" the idea that the 2020 vote was the most secure election ever.
See the WND interview with Dinesh D'Souza:
Last week, Georgia state investigators who responded to a complaint by True the Vote issued subpoenas that signal they are engaged in a wide-ranging probe into the alleged ballot trafficking, Just the News reported.
See the WND interview with Catherine Engelbrecht:
See a trailer for the film "2000 Mules":
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