As Union forces continue their assault against FEMA in storm-ravaged areas, White Hats in swing states have been arduously, diligently fighting instances of potential election fraud, a source in General Eric M. Smith’s office told Real Raw News.
On Monday night, hours before early in-person voting began in Georgia, White Hats under General Smith’s command stopped “Democratic operatives” from replacing legitimate voting machines with fraudulent ones at the Sandy Springs Library in Fulton County, Georgia.
At approximately midnight, White Hats operating on earlier obtained intelligence observed a U-Haul truck park beside the library entrance. Two men and a woman, an unnamed library employee, exited the passenger compartment and opened the rear door. They extended the sliding ramp, then with hand trucks began carting electronic voting machines toward the library doors, an act White Hats deemed suspicious for a couple of reasons: The library had received a shipment of voting machines days earlier and stowed them in a double-locked storage room, and it was entirely anomalous for a different shipment to arrive at such a strange hour.
“They damn sure weren’t there to check out books,” our source said.
White Hats, he added, had on October 3 eavesdropped on a conversation between former Georgia House Representative Stacey Abrams—who served from 2011-2017—and liberal incumbent James Beverly, who won (stole) a House seat in 2011 and currently serves Georgia’s 143rd District, which includes Bibb but not Fulton County. Nonetheless, Abrams, who, as a civilian, still wields immense influence over Democratic legislators in Georgia, told Beverly that Fulton County had too many Republican voters and that he “should do something about that.” He replied that he didn’t want trouble and that Fulton County was outside his jurisdiction, and he said he had to worry about his own District, as opposed to how voters might vote a hundred miles away. He suggested that Abrams reach out to Rep. David Scott (D-GA), who represents portions of six counties: Cobb, Clayton, Douglas, Fayette, Fulton, and Henry.
White Hats followed the phone calls. On October 4 Abrams called Scott, who explosively scolded her for saying “We’re not doing enough to stop Donald Trump like we did in 2020” on an unsecured line. Scott said to her, “You’ll ruin everything,” implying that Georgia’s Democratic legislators had set in motion plans to undermine the election but kept an unhinged Abrams out of the loop.
Scott’s comments, while not an admission of guilt or criminality, prompted White Hats, specifically US Army Cyber Command, to focus on him instead of Abrams, who was spiraling into madness at the thought of Harris losing Georgia. ARCYBER accessed Scott’s home and office computers and found a pdf file of a U-Haul contract whose terms and conditions stated the contract holder would retrieve a 15’ truck from a rental center in Atlanta on October 14 and return it to the exact location two days later. While a rental contract is not ordinarily suspicious, a few things about the one found on Scott’s computer piqued ARCYBER’s interest.
For starters, it was not rented in Scott’s name. Our source wouldn’t disclose the signatory, but he said a public and law enforcement records search on the individual’s name seemed to suggest the signee was a phantom, a fictitious creation, a non-existent person. However, the address the contract holder had given U-Haul was a genuine location: the Democratic Party of Georgia’s office at 501 Pulliam Street Southwest, Atlanta. Moreover, ARCYBER found on Scott’s devices a notepad document, presumably typed by him, that mentioned: “Sandy Springs library drop off, 10/14, late.”
White Hats knew the library would be among the earliest early voting spots to open on October 15.
ARCYBER sent its intel to Gen. Smith, who, our source said, immediately suspected foul play was afoot. He coordinated a fact-finding mission with allies at the US Army Criminal Investigation Division (CID). Their undercover operatives visited the library on October 10 and learned its voting machines had arrived two days earlier and were stored under lock and key in an unused office. A library employee told them the machines would be installed and ready to use on the 15th and even dared to ask if they were voting for Kamala Harris.
White Hats suspected that Georgia Democrats planned to replace calibrated machines with tampered ones at the last possible moment, just in case unbiased election officials showed up to perform a spot inspection before they went online.
Gen. Smith tasked CID with pursuing the investigation, and on October 13, CID agents began surveilling the U-Haul lot despite having conceded to the general that singling out a single rental among dozens a day could be an insurmountable hurdle—especially since they had no idea who would turn up to rent the vehicle.
Fortune and luck had aided past White Hat investigations, and they did again on October 14 when CID spotted a Toyota Camry with three passengers, one of whom was the same woman they’d met at the library, arriving to pick up the U-Haul. It’s unclear why U-Haul released the truck to anyone besides the contract holder, as, per their website guidelines, only the person who initiated the contract can claim the vehicle after supplying U-Haul with a valid driver’s license. The library employee, though, did not drive the U-Haul off the lot; her unidentified companions, on the other hand, climbed aboard the truck and moved it to a self-storage facility on Custer Avenue in Atlanta.
The U-Haul driver and passenger were seen hauling six voting machines—later confirmed to be Dominion optical scanners—onto the truck, which they later parked overnight in the parking lot of a Lowes Home Improvement store less than two miles from the library. The driver and passenger never left the truck, and at midnight, they cruised from the parking lot to the library, where the library employee was waiting to greet them.
No sooner had the three unloaded the first machine than CID surrounded them at gunpoint, confiscating the Dominion equipment and demanding to know why they were trying to covertly switch them in the dead of night.
All three invoked their Fifth Amendment right to remain silent, and CID arrested them on suspicion of treason and election interference. They also confiscated the machines, which, our source said, have been sent to ARCYBER’s Fort Gordon headquarters for a comprehensive analysis.
Later that morning, CID visited House Rep. Scott’s home and business hoping to arrest him, but he had flown the coop.