Get paid for cleaning up fraudulent elections
One or more registered voters can get paid for challenging fraudulent elections.
They don’t have to prove a stolen election.
All they have to do is allege it.
It requires filing a civil RICO lawsuit in federal court.
RICO stands for Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations.
Filers must allege damages such as:
theft of their personal information stored by their local Board of Elections, ending up overseas or with other non-election domestic entities
loss of civil rights by allowing non-citizens to vote without a photo ID, proof of citizenship, or identity
public officials who ignore election laws (breach of duty)
failure to maintain clean voter registration rolls
Winners can pocket:
three times the amount of their actual damages caused by the defendants
attorneys fees
If successful, who has to pay?
state and local election officials
local election and IT workers
entities that award grants or administer elections
Judges who ruled against fraudulent elections
Politicians and other public employees are held personally liable and cannot claim public immunity.
The initial filing must name at least two parties as co-conspirators.
Most federal jurisdictions allow these cases to be filed remotely anytime without an attorney.
Criminal RICO trials take years to:
investigate
indict
go to trial.
Corrupt politicians and election workers can delay criminal prosecution until after their next election cycle.
However, the discovery process starts immediately with civil RICO cases.
Discovery includes:
subpoenas
disclosure of bank records
tax returns
video depositions (testimony given under oath)
interrogatories (written questions)
Also, corrupt public workers must pay their legal fees in civil RICO cases.
In criminal ones, the taxpayers do.
This three-page report describes what federal amendments and laws are necessary to meet standing and jurisdiction requirements in civil RICO cases.
It is dated April 4th and linked here: