HOLLAND, MI (WHTC-AM/FM) – Could a local group be in the legal crosshairs of Dominion Voting Systems?
The company that has been accused of manipulating vote counts in the 2020 elections through its machines has filed a number of lawsuits against those making those accusations. Over the weekend, reports surfaced that a high-profile defamation attorney retained by Dominion sent a “cease-and-desist” letter to former state Senator Patrick Colbeck, asking that he retract his statements about vote manipulation or face litigation, and claiming that Colbeck has made “millions” in speaker fees in making those statements.
Among the groups that hosted Colbeck since the Nov. 3, 2020, election was the Ottawa County Patriots, whose president, Steve Redmond, is apparently not concerned about being a possible legal target by Dominion.
“We don’t endorse everything everybody says in every meeting, but we defend their right to share their viewpoints,” he said on WHTC’s “Talk of the Town” during a Monday appearance. “I’m not worried. They can sue us, but we don’t have any real resources. We’re a grass-roots group, we don’t have any paid staff, and we’re not too worried about that.”
Allegan County uses Dominion voting machines, and County Clerk Bob Genetski is on record in defending the integrity of the machines in his county during the Nov.3, 2020, election.
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