Dominion

Dominion employees and contractors in Serbia had access to U.S. election results (Serbia)

Established Fact There is evidence that Dominion Voting Systems has used Serbia-based software developers who could remotely access U.S. election systems. A Serbia-based engineer authored software (“RemovableMediaManager”) that could give remote file access (send/receive/create/modify/delete) on Dominion machines; the code is said to be publicly available on GitHub and usable as a client for remote access. […]

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Dominion Election Systems in Michigan Connected to Servers in Taiwan and Germany (Taiwan, Germany)

Established Fact This is the most technically precise foreign-connectivity finding in the 2020 evidentiary record. CyFIR LLC forensic examiner Ben Cotton, pursuant to court authorization in Bailey v. Antrim County, documented in sworn affidavits of April 9, 2021 and June 8, 2021, the recovery of two foreign IP addresses from the unallocated space of a

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Dominion Election Systems in Arizona Are Accessible from Serbia/China (Serbia/China)

Reasonable Inference Dun & Bradstreet corporate records confirm that Dominion Voting Systems began operations in Belgrade, Serbia in May 2011 and established its primary data center there, with Huawei Technologies identified as a strategic infrastructure partner. Huawei is designated under § 889 of the FY2019 NDAA as a prohibited supplier for U.S. government information infrastructure.

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Dominion Election Systems in Pennsylvania Accessible from Canada (Canada)

Established Fact Evidence presented in Fulton County, PA v. Dominion Voting Systems (Case No. 277 MD 2021) demonstrated that remote access to Fulton County’s ballot adjudication devices originated from a Canadian IP address – establishing that unauthorized privileged access to election networks traversed international lines. Ballot adjudication devices are among the most sensitive election system

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Dominion’s Election Systems Accessible from China (Serbia, China)

Reasonable Inference [Reasonable Inference – Potential access pathway] Corporate records confirm that Dominion Voting Systems began operations in Belgrade, Serbia in May 2011 and established its primary data center there through RoamingDot Networks, with Huawei Technologies as a strategic infrastructure partner. Huawei is explicitly prohibited under NDAA Section 889 from supplying components to U.S. federal

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Dominion Election Systems in Michigan Communicated Over Internet with Germany (Germany)

Disputed Fact The Dominion ImageCast X (ICX) touchscreen voting device forensically examined from Antrim County was manufactured in Taiwan and shipped to the United States via China Airlines. CyFIR forensic examiner Ben Cotton discovered, in the unallocated storage space of this device, data contextually proximate to TCP/IP communication sessions resolving to: (1) IP address 120.125.201.101

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Dominion Election Systems in Michigan Communicated Over Internet with Taiwan (Taiwan)

Disputed Fact CyTech Services (CyFir) forensic examination of a Dominion ICX machine from Antrim County found artifacts of internet communications with IP address 120.125.201.101, which resolves to the Ministry of Education Computer Center in Taipei, Taiwan, located in unallocated storage space contextually proximate to data consistent with a TCP/IP communication session. A second IP address

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Dominion Engineers Tied to Venezuela Have Remote Access to U.S. Election Systems (Venezuela)

Disputed Fact A confidential witness testified under oath that Dominion engineers, specifically Ronald Morales, utilized VPN connections and configured a man-in-the-middle virtual machine to remotely access and alter U.S. electoral systems during the election period, circumventing local chain of custody. The testimony was filed September 23, 2025 in Case No. 1:25-cv-00425-STV (U.S. District Court, District

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CISA Co-Authored Security Documentation With Dominion During Active Litigation (US)

Established Fact CISA co-authored a “Joint Security Guide” with Dominion Voting Systems that was distributed to Michigan county clerks in October 2020 – while Dominion equipment was simultaneously the subject of election integrity litigation and forensic audit requests. This collaboration presents a structural conflict of interest in which the federal agency nominally responsible for independent

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Voting Machine Vendors Withheld Records Under Contractual Confidentiality Claims (WI)

Established Fact Dominion Voting Systems, ESS, and other election technology vendors refused to comply with OSC legislative subpoenas, citing contractual confidentiality obligations. WEC Administrator Wolfe claimed private vendor contracts legally prohibited her from turning over public election records – a claim the OSC characterized as legally baseless. One voting machine vendor was documented as having

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