Mark Zuckerberg would have poured money into an “ecosystem” that would be at the center of alleged fraud in the 2020 presidential race in the United States.
To denounce it is a report by the “election integrity monitor”, Project Amistad, an association linked to the conservative think tank Thomas More. The group will file a formal complaint against Facebook’s CEO. The lawsuit, based on a report prepared by the organization, states that Zuckerberg would have used 500 million of “dark money” to illegally tip the scales in the contested states for Democrat Joe Biden. This was announced by Mark Serrano, an advisor to the Trump 2020 campaign and president of ProActive Communications. The lawsuit is expected to be filed later today in U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia and will involve alleged election irregularities that occurred in Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, Michigan, Arizona and Georgia. According to Serrano, the legal complaint targets “the ecosystem” that caused “fraud on a huge level” during the 2020 election. The accusation against Zuckerberg is that he used his vast financial resources and influence to undermine the presidential election in the months leading up to and after Nov. 3. The announcement of the lawsuit coincides with the release of an Amistad Project report outlining how Zuckerberg allegedly used private funding ??to “improperly” influence the outcome of the election. Amistad Project director Phill Kline said Wednesday during a press conference that Zuckerberg funneled huge amounts of money into charities and nonprofits that lobbied officials and performed other lobbying activities that impacted the 2020 results. “He paid for election judges, he bought mailboxes, contrary to state law,” Kline said, adding that Zuckerberg’s money “bought machines – Dominion and otherwise – and Zuckerberg’s funding was contributed to the Secretaries of State.” This injection of hundreds of millions of dollars into the election by Zuckerberg and others “violated state election laws and resulted in an unequal distribution of funding that deprived voters of due process and equal protection,” according to a press release issued by the Amistad Project The group, part of the conservative constitutional litigation organization, the Thomas More Society, filed a motion in support of Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton’s unsuccessful lawsuit to the Supreme Court accusing four contested states – Georgia, Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin – of violating election laws. The Supreme Court dismissed the lawsuit, not going into the merits but citing a “lack of standing” in the claim. Joe Biden was declared president-elect by the Electoral College on Monday, but current U.S. President Donald Trump and nearly the entire Republican Party continue to argue that the Democrats’ victory is illegitimate due to large-scale fraud.
by Jeremy Abbott – American Correspondent