PA Election Deniers Ordered To Pay $1M In Voting Machine Case
A Pennsylvania judge has determined that three election deniers must pay nearly $1 million in fees as the result of a years-long legal dispute with state officials over voting equipment used in 2020, according to recent court filings. Via CNN:
Recommendations from the judge, who was appointed to serve as a special master overseeing the case, attach a dollar figure to sanctions previously imposed by the state’s Supreme Court against two Republican county commissioners and their attorney for allowing an outside firm to examine voting equipment after the 2020 election – despite a court order prohibiting them to do so, according to the new filings.
The case, which dates back to 2021, involves actions taken by two Fulton County, Pennsylvania, commissioners – Stuart Ulsh and Randy Bunch – who sought to have Dominion voting equipment examined by a third-party after the 2020 election. Many of former President Donald Trump’s allies falsely blamed Dominion’s software for his election defeat.