Despite widespread searches by outgoing President Donald Trump and his allies for key US election fraud, and allegations that such fraud cost Trump victory in the early November presidential election, relatively few and minor incidents have been reported. Very few have led to charges.

In Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, police have received ten reports of election fraud. Eight cases have been closed without charge and without these notifications being substantiated. No one has been charged in Pittsburgh or Philadelphia, the state’s two largest cities.

A total of three people have been charged with electoral fraud in Pennsylvania, all of them Republicans. In one case, a 71-year-old man tried to vote twice. He voted on election day and then returned, wearing sunglasses, and tried to vote in his son’s name.

In Wisconsin, one woman has been charged with electoral fraud. She tried to file a ballot in the name of her husband, who died in July. A similar story is being told about Michigan, where two men have been charged and both for forging their daughters’ signatures to get or try to send ballots in their name.

Talk to officials in fluctuating countries

This is according to a report in the Washington Post where journalists have talked to officials in the so-called swing countries. Officials say some of the few incidents that have taken place are that Trump supporters intended to help him.

Among them was a man in Pennsylvania who tried to submit a ballot in the name of his deceased mother.

Coleman McDonough, Pittsburgh’s chief of police, said that of the ten reports they had received, eight had been blocked, as previously reported. One is still under investigation and one has been sent to another office.

All eight of the aforementioned announcements were about what McDonough said were “serious allegations” of suspicions against election commissioners who were counting the votes. However, they were about the misunderstandings of those who announced the counting process, election laws or based on Facebook posts that turned out to be wrong.

Many reports are based on misunderstandings and ignorance

Similar stories are being told from other countries, according to WP’s summary. There have been relatively few reports of electoral fraud and most of them are based on misunderstandings or false information.

Officials say they have had to deal with far more complaints than usual, largely because of Trump’s propaganda. People have been encouraged to report scams and they have complained about traditional processes that they simply should not.

In Arizona, about 2,000 people filed complaints about electoral fraud following the election. The vast majority of those complaints have not been substantiated. The majority of them were rumors that ballot papers written in ink were invalid. That’s not right.

Earlier an investigative report “Vaccine Leak “  was published by The Eastern Herald. The Vaccine Leak  exposed the Pharma Mafia and their profit from different COVID-19 vaccines. Many politicians may also be involved in this conspiracy.

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