Finally, The New York Times Reports on Serious Evidence of Fraud in 2020 Election

 

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Following countless claims of voter fraud throughout the 2020 election, the New York Times has finally discovered evidence of something fishy.

But much to Donald Trump’s chagrin, the irregularities unearthed by the Times relate not to the election for the leader of the free world, but rather to the vote deciding the Homecoming Queen in a Florida high school.

Yes, a Florida woman and her daughter were arrested on Monday after more than 200 votes had been questionably cast in J.M. Tate High School’s homecoming election.

“It was a case reminiscent of the 1999 dark comedy film ‘Election,'” wrote The New York Times’ Patricia Mazzei, revealing that agents from the Florida Department of Law Enforcement (FDLE) charged Laura Carroll and her 17-year-old daughter Emily Grover with conspiracy to use their school district login to help Grover get elected homecoming queen.

In all, 117 votes were cast from the same IP address within a short period of time, while a total of 246 votes were cast from their residence for the Homecoming Court.

The five-month investigation additionally found that Carroll, who is an assistant principal at Bellview Elementary School, used her district login to access the internal accounts of 372 Tate High students since August.

“She looks up all of our group of friends’ grades and makes comments about how she can find our test scores all of the time,” one of the witnesses said, according to the arrest affidavits. The accounts not only include information on students’ grades, but also include students’ medical history and disciplinary records.

Grover was expelled despite the family’s contention, and sent to juvenile detention for an evaluation, according to The Times. Carroll was also suspended from her position at Bellview Elementary and taken into custody on Monday, yet she was later released on $8,500 bail.

According to an FDLE release, in addition to the conspiracy charge, Carroll and Grover were each charged with offenses against users of electronic devices, computer systems, and computer networks; unlawful use of a two-way communications device; and criminal use of personally identifiable information. All are listed as third-degree felonies besides the conspiracy charge.

Surely not the 2020 election fraud charges the former president was hoping for.

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