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FBI searches Atlanta election office, chasing Trump 2020 vote fraud claims
https://www.reuters.com/world/us/fbi-ex ... 026-01-28/The FBI searched an election office in Georgia's Fulton County outside Atlanta on Wednesday, pursuing U.S. President Donald Trump's false claims that his 2020 election defeat was the result of widespread voting fraud.
The FBI said in a brief statement that its agents executed a warrant at the Fulton County Election Hub and Operation Center in Union City, a large, warehouse-like facility opened by Georgia officials in 2023, and called it a "court-authorized law enforcement activity."
The fact that there was no evidence presented only proves that the evidence has been very very well hidden.Sean Hayden wrote: ↑Thu Jan 29, 2026 12:17 pmFBI searches Atlanta election office, chasing Trump 2020 vote fraud claimshttps://www.reuters.com/world/us/fbi-ex ... 026-01-28/The FBI searched an election office in Georgia's Fulton County outside Atlanta on Wednesday, pursuing U.S. President Donald Trump's false claims that his 2020 election defeat was the result of widespread voting fraud.
The FBI said in a brief statement that its agents executed a warrant at the Fulton County Election Hub and Operation Center in Union City, a large, warehouse-like facility opened by Georgia officials in 2023, and called it a "court-authorized law enforcement activity."
So how does this work? Hundreds of cases dismissed, zero evidence presented, but some court suddenly believes there’s a good reason to let the FBI go in now that Trump’s president?
—US policing is hellbent on destroying all credibility and goodwill.
Exactly. I’m still curious about the agents though. —just a job I guess, don’t know why I expected more…Brian Peacock wrote: ↑Fri Jan 30, 2026 12:53 amThe fact that there was no evidence presented only proves that the evidence has been very very well hidden.Sean Hayden wrote: ↑Thu Jan 29, 2026 12:17 pmFBI searches Atlanta election office, chasing Trump 2020 vote fraud claimshttps://www.reuters.com/world/us/fbi-ex ... 026-01-28/The FBI searched an election office in Georgia's Fulton County outside Atlanta on Wednesday, pursuing U.S. President Donald Trump's false claims that his 2020 election defeat was the result of widespread voting fraud.
The FBI said in a brief statement that its agents executed a warrant at the Fulton County Election Hub and Operation Center in Union City, a large, warehouse-like facility opened by Georgia officials in 2023, and called it a "court-authorized law enforcement activity."
So how does this work? Hundreds of cases dismissed, zero evidence presented, but some court suddenly believes there’s a good reason to let the FBI go in now that Trump’s president?
—US policing is hellbent on destroying all credibility and goodwill.
The fact that previous cases were dismissed just proves that powerful elements within the judiciary are invested in stopping the truth from coming out.
I can do this all day btw...![]()
In the wake of immigration agents’ killings of three US citizens within a matter of weeks, the Department of Homeland Security is quietly moving forward with a plan to expand its capacity for mass detention by using a military contract to create what Pablo Manríquez, the author of the immigration news site Migrant Insider calls “a nationwide ‘ghost network’ of concentration camps.”
On Sunday, Manríquez reported that “a massive Navy contract vehicle, once valued at $10 billion, has ballooned to a staggering $55 billion ceiling to expedite President Donald Trump’s ‘mass deportation’ agenda.”
It is the expansion of a contract first reported on in October by CNN, which found that DHS was “funneling $10 billion through the Navy to help facilitate the construction of a sprawling network of migrant detention centers across the US in an arrangement aimed at getting the centers built faster, according to sources and federal contracting documents.”
The report describes the money as being allocated for “new detention centers,” which “are likely to be primarily soft-sided tents and may or may not be built on existing Navy installations, according to the sources familiar with the initiative. DHS has often leaned on soft-sided facilities to manage influxes of migrants.”
According to a source familiar with the project, “the goal is for the facilities to house as many as 10,000 people each, and are expected to be built in Louisiana, Georgia, Pennsylvania, Indiana, Utah, and Kansas.”
Now Manríquez reports that the project has just gotten much bigger after a Navy grant was repurposed weeks ago. It was authorized through the Worldwide Expeditionary Multiple Award Contract (WEXMAC), a flexible purchasing system that the government uses to quickly move military equipment to dangerous and remote parts of the world.
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