WARNING and NOTICE to all states with epoll books:
This is how they are going to try and steal the November 5, 2024 election in Wisconsin and it very well could play out in your state:
inflate the voter rolls this time using illegals pouring over the southern boarder. Then "register" them electronically over time, or on election day (here we have same-day registration as election day) - using epoll books.
They are called Badger Books here. Badger Books were made by Paragon out of Brookfield, WI, until a Toronto company bought them one year after they got the contract with the Wis. Election Commission.
That company is Converge Technology Solutions Corp., with plants in Chengdu Shi, Quingdao Shi and Shenzhen Shi China.
Per the WIS DMV at a recent State Senate hearing, 78,000 illegals were admitted to have been given driver's licenses. Unconfirmed yet: it is looking like it is higher than that.
So the 78,000 get "registered" by Badger Books.
But not like you'd expect.
Here's how: a voter appears at the polls and signs in for the first time using Badger epoll books. Let's call this the 1st election. However, the next and thus 2nd election the voter was out of town and did not vote at all himself. Ahh...but a ballot was cast in his name for the 2nd election. But you ask where did his signature come from to check in for the 2nd election? It came from the 1st election when he did sign in, Badger Books kept his signature on file. It was reproduced by the Badger Books system for the 2nd election, an election the real person never participated in. We have another eye witness to this, and victim, she was out of state on vacation for the 2nd election. Yet a ballot was cast in her name. She told the clerk, but the clerk pulled up her own electronic signature and said 'see, you signed in'. Yes she did, for the 1st election, but not the 2nd.
So ask how can a guy who was out of town for the 2nd election, and a lady out of state for the 2nd election, both cast ballots in the 2nd election? Answer: they didn't.
Somebody did it for them, electronically.
Last, the Wis Election Commission ruled by themselves Badger Books don't have to be certified.