The Maui News

Fake Michigan Certificat­e of Votes mailed to U.S. Senate after 2020 presidenti­al vote, official says

- By COREY WILLIAMS

A fake Certificat­e of Votes was submitted to the U.S. Senate following Michigan’s 2020 presidenti­al election, an official testified Tuesday during a preliminar­y hearing for six people facing forgery and other charges for allegedly serving as false electors.

The “purported” Certificat­e of Votes didn’t match an official document signed by Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer and featuring the Michigan state seal, said Dan Schwager, who served in 2020-2021 as general counsel to the secretary of the Senate.

“We could tell it was not an authorized Certificat­e of Votes. It was a fake,” Schwager testified in Lansing District Court.

Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel has charged 15 Republican­s in the case. Investigat­ors have said the group signed a document during a meeting at the Michigan Republican headquarte­rs in December 2020, falsely stating they were the state’s “duly elected and qualified electors.”

The defendants have insisted that their actions were not illegal, even though Joe Biden won Michigan by nearly 155,000 votes over then-President Donald Trump, a result confirmed by a GOP-led state Senate investigat­ion in 2021.

Fake electors in Michigan and six other battlegrou­nd states sent certificat­es to Congress falsely declaring Trump the winner of the 2020 presidenti­al election in their state, despite confirmed results showing he had lost. Michigan, Georgia and Nevada have charged fake electors. Republican­s who served as false electors in Wisconsin agreed to a legal settlement in which they conceded that Biden won the election and that their efforts were part of an attempt to improperly overturn the 2020 results.

Schwager said Tuesday the false Michigan document arrived Jan. 5, 2021, to the U.S. Senate’s mail services and that he reviewed it a few days later.

“The Michigan one came in a little bit late and so it was added to the collection of the other fake certificat­es,” he said.

Schwager also said it was “not uncommon to get one or two often really wacky submission­s from people claiming to be electors that are way out there.”

“I think we get maybe one or two or three every four or eight years, or something,” he added.

Certificat­es of votes are opened by the vice president, and the votes counted by members of Congress.

Names listed on the fake Certificat­e of Votes for Michigan did not match a Certificat­e of Ascertainm­ent, which confirms presidenti­al election results and lists slates of electors. The actual Certificat­e of Votes contained lists of all votes given by Michigan’s 16 electors for president and vice president.

There was no Certificat­e of Ascertainm­ent for the document listing Republican

electors in Michigan, testified Miriam Vincent, acting director of Legal Affairs and Policy for the Office of the Federal Register.

Vincent said Tuesday that “materials purported to be Certificat­e of Votes from non-official sources” were received by her office which is part of the National Archives.

The return address listed the Michigan Republican Party, Vincent said.

When announcing charges last July, Nessel said the fake electors allegedly met Dec. 14, 2020, in the basement of the Michigan Republican Party headquarte­rs “and signed their names to multiple certificat­es stating they were the duly elected and qualified electors for president and vice president.”

“These false documents were then transmitte­d to the United States Senate and National Archives in a coordinate­d effort to award the state’s electoral votes to the candidate of their choosing, in place of the candidates actually elected by the people of Michigan,” Nessel said in a statement.

 ?? Jake May / The Flint Journal file photo via AP ?? A protester waves a Trump flag
during rally organized by a group called Election Integrity Fund and Force at the Michigan State Capitol on Oct. 12, 2021, in Lansing, Mich. A fake Certificat­e of Votes was submitted to the U.S. Senate following Michigan’s 2020 presidenti­al election, an official testified on Tuesday, during a preliminar­y
hearing for six people facing forgery and other charges for allegedly serving as false electors.
Jake May / The Flint Journal file photo via AP A protester waves a Trump flag during rally organized by a group called Election Integrity Fund and Force at the Michigan State Capitol on Oct. 12, 2021, in Lansing, Mich. A fake Certificat­e of Votes was submitted to the U.S. Senate following Michigan’s 2020 presidenti­al election, an official testified on Tuesday, during a preliminar­y hearing for six people facing forgery and other charges for allegedly serving as false electors.

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