Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

A GUIDE TO WHO’S WHO

- Patrick Marley Milwaukee Journal Sentinel | USA TODAY NETWORK – WISCONSIN

MADISON – The Republican review of Wisconsin’s election is being conducted by those who appear to have already made up their minds. Leading it is former state Supreme Court Justice Michael Gableman, who a year ago claimed without evidence the election was stolen. He’s hired a team that has made similar comments or otherwise questioned Joe Biden’s victory in Wisconsin. Recounts and courts have confirmed Biden’s victory over Donald Trump, but Assembly Republican­s have said more review is warranted. They are using $676,000 in taxpayer money to fund Gableman’s review Here’s a look at who’s involved.

Robin Vos

The longtime speaker of the Assembly launched the review in May. He has taken criticism from Democrats who say he is underminin­g voters’ confidence in the election and some Republican­s who say he isn’t willing to go far enough with the review.

Michael Gableman

Gableman, who served as a Supreme Court justice from 2008 to 2018, was hired by Vos in June. He has long been involved in Republican politics and at a December 2020 pro-Trump rally claimed without evidence that the election was stolen — and that GOP legislativ­e leaders were responsibl­e for letting it happen.

In October, Gableman acknowledg­ed he does not have “a comprehens­ive understand­ing or even any understand­ing of how elections work.”

Andrew Kloster

Kloster worked as an attorney for the Trump administra­tion before becoming Gableman’s chief of staff. Last year, he served as a Republican election observer in Green Bay and raised complaints about how the election was conducted there.

Like Gableman, Kloster baselessly claimed before he joined Gableman’s team that the election was stolen. In an online post, he also wrote that conservati­ves need to have “our own captured DA offices to let our boys off the hook.”

Carol Matheis

A California-based attorney, Matheis for a time would not reveal her full name to the public or officials she was contacting about Gableman’s review. In response to questions from the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel in November, Gableman’s office confirmed the attorney going by the name “Carol M.” was Matheis.

She left Gableman’s office in mid-December.

Clint Lancaster

Lancaster is an attorney from Arkansas who represente­d the Trump campaign for the recount it demanded in Dane County. Separately, Lancaster represente­d a woman who successful­ly sued the president’s son, Hunter Biden, for child support.

Gableman revealed in November that he had hired Lancaster. He is paying him $10,000 a month — twice as much as what he’s paying Kloster and Matheis.

Ron Heuer

Heuer is the chairman of the Kewaunee County Republican Party and president of the Wisconsin Voters Alliance. The voters alliance filed three lawsuits over the election, including two that sought to overturn the results. All three lawsuits failed. Gableman hired Heuer in October and said he is looking into how voting was conducted at nursing homes. Heuer recently told the Journal Sentinel he does not believe there were problems with voting machines in Wisconsin, even as some conservati­ves falsely assert that they were hacked.

Heuer has taken to Facebook over the last year to post messages and videos that falsely suggest COVID is a hoax, mock Michelle Obama for her weight and credit white people with ending slavery.

Gary Wait

Wait served as a police officer in Highland Park, Illinois, in the 1970s before becoming a private investigat­or. Gableman recently disclosed that Wait had worked for him in September and October.

Before he worked for Gableman, Wait helped lead a group of private individual­s who conducted their own review of the election.

Former police officers

Vos in May hired former Milwaukee Detective Mike Sandvick and former Eau Claire Sgt. Steven Page to work on the election review. They quit within weeks of taking the jobs. More recently, Gableman hired three former Milwaukee police detectives, Thomas Obregon, Edward Chaim and Neil Saxton, to assist him. Saxton left after three weeks.

Zakory Niemierowi­cz

A recent graduate of the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Niemierowi­cz has assisted Gableman with administra­tive matters.

Unknown data analyst

Gableman has declined to name a data analyst who started working for him on Nov. 1 “to protect his best interests with his full-time employer.” The analyst is “creating timelines and informatio­n webs” for the review, Gableman told the Assembly Elections Committee.

Nate Cain

Cain is the owner of the West Virginia computer firm Cain & Associates. He was paid about $7,500 to educate Gableman’s team about technical issues and to help Gableman consider the attributes of vendors, according to Cain.

Cain last year falsely told a conservati­ve YouTube host that it was statistica­lly impossible for Biden to get as many votes as he did among the ballots that were counted latest. He also said the country could erupt into a civil war if the election was not audited.

Erick Kaardal

Kaardal is an attorney with the Minneapoli­s law firm Mohrman, Kaardal and Erickson who has worked with the conservati­ve Thomas More Society’s Amistad Project.

Working with Heuer, Kaardal has spearheade­d legal challenges to grants Wisconsin cities received from the nonprofit Center for Tech and Civic Life to help them run their elections. Courts and the state Elections Commission have thrown out his challenges. A federal judge in one of the cases said the lawsuit was so meritless that Kaardal should be considered for profession­al sanctions.

Gableman is sharing office space in Brookfield with Kaardal’s firm and the Thomas More Society.

Peter Bernegger

Bernegger, who was sent to federal prison after he was convicted of mail fraud and bank fraud in 2009, this year worked closely with Gary Wait to look into the election on their own. They gathered copies of ballots from across the state — in some cases by visiting clerks’ offices to scan copies of them.

In addition to working with Wait, Bernegger has met with Gableman about his views on the election, according to Cain.

Mike Lindell

Lindell is the chief executive officer of MyPillow, a cheerleade­r for Trump and a purveyor of false, often outlandish claims about the election. He hosted a roundly mocked forum on election hacking in August that Gableman attended. Lindell later sent files to Gableman, according to emails that were released under the state’s open records law.

Shiva Ayyadurai

Shiva Ayyadurai, who appeared at Lindell’s forum, has discussed the election with Gableman, according to Cain and Harry Wait, president of the conservati­ve Racine County group Honest Open Transparen­t Government and Gary Wait’s brother.

In a podcast interview during Lindell’s event, Ayyadurai suggested that votes had been taken away from Trump in a way that was meant to give a nod to the comedic science fiction novel “The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy.” Ayyadurai lost a Republican primary for U.S. Senate in Massachuse­tts last year. Afterward, he falsely claimed the state had destroyed over a million ballots.

Douglas Frank

The chairman of the math and science department at an Ohio school, Frank appeared at Lindell’s event. Frank, who over the last year has made false claims about the manipulati­on of election informatio­n, later met with Gableman, according to Cain.

Frank recently falsely told the Assembly Elections Committee that elections officials did not know the names of who voted in 2020. That informatio­n is readily available from the state.

James Bopp

Gableman has retained Bopp, an attorney from Indiana, to help fight a lawsuit filed by Democratic Attorney General Josh Kaul. The attorney general argues some of the subpoenas Gableman has issued are invalid.

As general counsel for the conservati­ve group True the Vote, Bopp filed lawsuits last year challengin­g the results in Wisconsin and three other states. He withdrew them within days and a donor who funded the lawsuits is now trying to recover his money.

Bopp has developed a national reputation for fighting abortion and campaign finance laws. About a decade ago, he defended Gableman when he was accused of violating the ethics code for judges by lying in a campaign ad. Gableman did not face discipline in that case because the state Supreme Court split 3-3 on whether he had violated ethics rules.

Michael Dean

Dean is a Brookfield attorney who is working with Bopp to keep Gableman’s subpoenas in place. He has long been involved in conservati­ve legal fights and last year was part of a lawsuit that claimed without evidence that voting machines were hacked by foreigners. A judge quickly threw out the case.

David Craig

A former state senator, Craig is an attorney helping Dean and Bopp with the lawsuit over the subpoenas.

Janel Brandtjen

Brandtjen, a Republican state representa­tive from Menomonee Falls, is the chairwoman of the Assembly Elections Committee. Gableman is ostensibly working for her committee and has appeared before it twice, but Brandtjen said in October that he had not been consulting with her.

Brandtjen was among a group of four Wisconsin Republican legislator­s to tour Arizona’s controvers­ial review of ballots in Maricopa County. The audit drew criticism from around the country, including from some Republican­s.

Timothy Ramthun

Ramthun is a Republican from Campbellsp­ort serving his second term in the Assembly. He has made numerous false claims about the election and has filed a resolution to revoke the state’s electoral votes for Biden even though doing so is impossible legally.

Ramthun attended Lindell’s forum and has had some talks with Gableman.

 ?? MARK HENLE/THE REPUBLIC ?? Wisconsin state Rep. Janel Brandtjen, center, Eric Greitens, second from left, and Wisconsin state Rep. Dave Murphy, left, watch as Maricopa County ballots from the 2020 general election are examined and recounted by contractor­s hired by the Arizona Senate on June 12 at the Veterans Memorial Coliseum in Phoenix.
MARK HENLE/THE REPUBLIC Wisconsin state Rep. Janel Brandtjen, center, Eric Greitens, second from left, and Wisconsin state Rep. Dave Murphy, left, watch as Maricopa County ballots from the 2020 general election are examined and recounted by contractor­s hired by the Arizona Senate on June 12 at the Veterans Memorial Coliseum in Phoenix.
 ?? MARK HOFFMAN / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL ?? My Pillow CEO Mike Lindell speaks before President Donald Trump's campaign appearance Oct. 27, 2020, at the La Crosse County Fairground­s in West Salem.
MARK HOFFMAN / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL My Pillow CEO Mike Lindell speaks before President Donald Trump's campaign appearance Oct. 27, 2020, at the La Crosse County Fairground­s in West Salem.
 ?? MIKE DE SISTI / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL ?? Michael Gableman, formerly a justice of the Wisconsin Supreme Court, speaks at a rally Nov. 7, 2020, for President Donald Trump at American Serb Hall on West Oklahoma Avenue in Milwaukee.
MIKE DE SISTI / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL Michael Gableman, formerly a justice of the Wisconsin Supreme Court, speaks at a rally Nov. 7, 2020, for President Donald Trump at American Serb Hall on West Oklahoma Avenue in Milwaukee.
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