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00:00Election systems across the country are found to have deleted millions of votes cast for President Trump.
00:06According to an unaudited analysis of data obtained from Edison Research,
00:12states using Dominion voting systems may have switched as many as 435,000 votes from President Trump to Joe Biden.
00:21And the author also finds another 2.7 million Trump votes appear to have been deleted by Dominion,
00:27including almost 1 million Trump votes in Pennsylvania alone.
00:32The experts' claims are quite shocking and starkly contrast the narrative that we've heard.
00:38Media claims have been made that the machines were not connected to the Internet,
00:42but according to the forensic report, that is patently false.
00:46The experts examined both Dominion and ES&S machines,
00:50and both were connected to the Internet using wireless technology.
00:53This is a fact that the machine vendors knew well before the election,
00:57because their proposal to pitch for the contract included information about Internet transmission and wireless capabilities.
01:06What is the vehicle for the transmission from the ICP?
01:09Is it cellular modem versus VPN?
01:12It is a cellular modem that can be configured in a VPN.
01:16And currently in Chicago-Lay-Cook County, we work with Verizon to secure that network.
01:22So we would have the same capabilities here.
01:26What wireless chipset slash modem does the hardware have?
01:32Uh, we support a variety.
01:35Some of the forensic evidence for this fact includes the wireless chip made by the company, Talit.
01:41This is a picture from the forensic audit of the chip inserted into the machine to transmit information wirelessly.
01:48This is a clear admission that they knew the machines were connected to the Internet,
01:53and there were problems, so they had to tally manually.
01:56The media also claimed that there was no foreign involvement.
01:59But according to the forensic report, that is not true.
02:03The 4G card included in the ES&S machines, pictured here, was made by the company, Talit.
02:10The project to manufacture the chips, according to the report,
02:13was funded by the Chinese and has ties to the Chinese Communist Party.
02:17Some have accused these companies of obfuscating and, in some cases, misleading election administrators and the American public.
02:26So I'd like to ask each of you, do you have components in your supply chain that come from either
02:33Russia or China?
02:36Chairperson, we do not have components that come from Russia.
02:39We do have a limited number of components that come from China.
02:43Thanks for the question.
02:46It wasn't our company in the Interesis report, but we do have components in our products that come from China.
02:53Ms. Mathis?
02:55Yes, similar feedback here.
02:57We take the security of our supply chain very seriously,
02:59and we actively monitor and assess all aspects of that supply chain, including country of origin.
03:06So do you have components from China or Russia?
03:08We do not have components from Russia, but we do have, similar to my colleagues, we do have components.
03:13And what would be the nature of those components?
03:17Similar resistors, capacitors, the global supply chain for technology components of that.
03:23Sure.
03:23And what percentage do you know?
03:24I don't have that.
03:25We'll follow up with that.
03:26Is there any method of voting that's 100% secure?
03:30No.
03:31No.
03:32No.
03:34Do you sell voting machines that have network capabilities installed?
03:41Can you be more specific?
03:43Yes.
03:44You don't have the software installed, but you have the capability of installing it.
03:48For remote access software?
03:50Yes.
03:50We do not.
03:51We no longer install any remote access software.
03:54That process was discontinued in 2006 and is not allowed by any of the EAC testing.
04:01We got a firsthand look when we visited ES&S, the largest manufacturer of voting machines,
04:07and talked to CEO Tom Burt.
04:10Why is there a Sprint thing here and a Verizon thing here?
04:13There's a small percentage of jurisdictions in the country, a lot of them are in Florida,
04:18who have decided that they want to modem unofficial results to the election office.
04:24Voting machines are not connected to the internet.
04:26Those are not connected.
04:28Voting machines themselves are not connected to the internet.
04:30And we knew that wasn't true.
04:31And cybersecurity expert Kevin Scoglin wanted to prove it.
04:35So he and nine other independent security consultants created their own search engine
04:40looking for election systems online.
04:43We found over 35 had been left online, and we're still continuing to find more.
04:47ES&S insists while there are 14,000 of its modems in use,
04:52there are firewalls separating those modems from the public internet,
04:57and that the modems are turned on for just seconds.
05:00But Scoglin says that's not enough.
05:03We're seeing Illinois and Michigan.
05:06Last summer, Scoglin's team found ES&S voting systems online
05:11in at least some of the precincts in 11 states,
05:15including the battleground states of Florida, Michigan, and Wisconsin.
05:19If you were able to get inside these systems,
05:22could you do more than perhaps mess up the preliminary results?
05:26Could you actually get deeper inside the system?
05:28Absolutely, and that's my biggest concern.
05:31Top computer scientist Andrew Appel agrees with Scoglin.
05:35Once a hacker starts talking to the voting machine through the modem,
05:39they can hack the software in the voting machine and make it cheat in future elections.
05:44In August, Scoglin took his results to election officials and the press,
05:48assuming the systems will get taken down.
05:51We were astonished when he showed us some of those systems are still online.
05:57Modems in voting machines are a bad idea.
05:59Those modems are network connections,
06:01and that leaves them vulnerable to hacking by anybody who can connect to that network.
06:05We should make sure that voting machines are not connected to the Internet.
06:07Period.
06:08Period.
06:09Mr. Pullis?
06:10Mr. Chairperson, we've never had any kind of remote access in our Dominion products.
06:15Capabilities.
06:15Capabilities.
06:16But I will say that I do want to draw a caveat.
06:21Some of our tabulators are designed around the ability to have an external plug-in modem
06:27to transmit unofficial results after a poll is closed.
06:31Okay.
06:32What wireless chipset slash modem does the hardware have?
06:38We support a variety.
06:40So it's really up to the jurisdictions what technology they want to use,
06:45what's compatible with their networks.
06:48Currently, in some jurisdictions, we're using basically a modem that is a 3G modem, GSM,
06:54but we can support multiple varieties of modem that can be.
06:59Including the latest 4G standards.
07:02So the answer is the next question.
07:03Is it 3G or 4G?
07:05Verizon, AT or T or Sprint?
07:07I'm assuming all?
07:07Yeah, all networks.
07:12We have CPM.
07:34Analysts say the theft and destruction of votes are attributed to so-called glitches in Dominion software
07:41and the extent to which this affected results can be verified by hand recounts of votes in each state.
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