A Michigan woman (we will call her “Gina”) is being hailed as a hero for her fast-acting decision to reach inside her purse and hit “record” on a “voice recording” app on her cell phone when she was approached by a woman who attempted to convince her to commit fraud by knowingly registering to vote in two different counties.
Voters who knowingly or unknowingly vote from more than one address in the same election are guilty of a felony. So, why would this canvasser try to convince Gina to commit a felony by registering to vote and then allowing the canvassing group to assign her an address so she can vote in two counties, especially in Wayne County, MI, known as the epicenter for voter shenanigans in Michigan?
Gina, a resident of Oakland County, MI, was shopping with a friend on October 1, 2024, when she and her friend were approached by a young (approximately) 25-yr-old black woman standing near the door at Joe Randazzo’s Fruit & Vegetable Market in Dearborn Heights, MI., located in Wayne County.
Fortunately, Gina was smart enough to recognize that the woman who approached her with a clipboard only one month before the November 2024 election could be part of a fraudulent voter registration scheme.
Here is a portion of Gina’s statement to the Dearborn Police Department:
The woman with the clipboard asked me if I was registered to vote. I explained to her that I was registered in Oakland County and plan on voting there because I live there. She said, “It doesn’t matter; you can vote down here too.”
She asked me to fill out a form on her clipboard with my name, address, and phone number. I told her that I would be looking for a pen in my purse and pushed the record button on my phone recorder app.
I put a fictitious name and phone number on the list on her clipboard. The woman further wanted me to complete a change of address form, indicating that it was very important to complete the form.
I told her that I needed to catch up with my friend who was shopping already inside the store and she would have a pen.
Here is a photo of the change of address form Gina was asked to fill out and return to canvasser so she could be registered to vote in two different counties in Michigan:
The canvasser neglected to give Gina the second page of the voter registration and change of address form, which clearly states you can only register to vote at one address.
Michigan’s rules for registering to vote are some of the most relaxed in the country. Voters can register to vote on the same day as the election, and in Michigan, you don’t need to provide an address where you reside.
Voters can register to vote from shelters, cross streets, or landmarks, which are all acceptable addresses from which a voter can register to vote in Michigan.
Here is the transcript of Gina’s recording of the conversation she had with the canvasser who was attempting to convince her to commit voter fraud by registering to vote in two different counties.
Gina: Ok, I can’t find it; I’m sorry.
Canvasser: …taking time out of your day.
Gina: So,l– I mean, so, I am registered in Oakland County to vote.
Canvasser: That’s fine, it’s for here.
Gina: So, I can vote here, too?
Canvasser: Yes, that’s what I’m telling you [giggles]
.
Gina: Where do I vote when I’m down here in Wayne County?Canvasser: Um..you sign your name. They’re—they’re going to—reach out to you and give you an address* so you can come vote, so, for here, yeah.
*It’s important to note here that the canvasser is telling Gina to fill out the form, and “they” (her voter registration fraud group or organization?) are going to “give you an address.” This is one of the key ways new voters are manufactured by outside groups and added to the voter rolls in Michigan.
Gina: So, so, they’re gonna, who’s gonna reach out, I mean.
Canvasser: Put your telephone number and your name. They’re going to reach out. That’s how they reach out to you. That’s how you can come vote down here…
Gina: Oh!
Canvasser: [giggles]
Gina: Okay.
Canvasser: [giggles]
Gina: I don’t have to live down here?
Canvasser: No, you don’t have to live down here to vote. [giggles].
Gina: Oh, that is so weird.
Canvasser: They changed a lot of stuff. [giggles] I’m sorry. [Pause] Okay, put your telephone number right here.
Gina: Hmm, Hmm. [Pause] So, uh…
Canvasser: Yeah, did you put your telephone number? Sign off on this and then this.
Gina: Oh. So, this is a change of address?
Canvasser: No, it’s not a change of address. It’s a register to vote.
Gina: Oh!
Canvasser: We’re trying to get somebody down here to represent.
Gina: Oh, so I can be represented twice?
Canvasser: Yes, that is what I’m trying to tell you. [giggles] Um. Yes, twice.
Are you-you live down here?
Gina: Well, can I take this with me? I don’t want to leave her alone. Can I bring this back..to you? Or do you? Where can I?—Because she’s in there—And I wanna buy some stuff.
Canvasser: You gonna fill it out while you’re in there?
Gina: Yeah, yeah, yeah, I can do that, and I can.
Canvasser: So, when you come out, you can just give it to me.
Gina: Okay, and then, okay, that sounds good. Here’s your pen. Thanks
Canvasser: Do you have a pen to fill it out?
Gina: She’ll (her friend) have one.
Canvasser: See you when you come out.
Here is the shocking recording of the exchange between Gina and the canvasser who was attempting to get Gina to commit voter fraud.
Gina shared the audio recording with the Dearborn Heights Police Department, the MI Secretary of State’s office, and the Gateway Pundit.
When Gina came out of the store, the woman with the clipboard was still standing there, but an employee of Joe Randazzo’s Fruit & Vegetable Market was engaged in conversation with her.
According to Gina, he was telling her she needed to leave and that she didn’t have permission to stand outside the store and solicit their customers.
Gina’s testimony from the police report:
I stopped the recording once I entered the store and told my friend about the activities that were taking place outside of the store. I finished my shopping and turned the recorder back on before heading out of the store.
Once outside, I heard a man telling the woman with the clipboard that she did not ask for permission to stand there. The woman then stepped aside to the left of the entrance as I was coming out of the store.
I told her that my friend did not have a pen and I did not complete the change of address form that she gave me. The conversation continued as transcribed.
Here is the transcript of the second recording Gina took when she walked outside of the store:
RANDAZZO EMPLOYEE: You didn’t ask permission to do this here. You gotta leave.
Canvasser: Oh, I didn’t know; I just started today. So… (unintelligible)
Gina approached the woman with the clipboard: She didn’t… Uh, you know, I don’t have that form. Um…come here.
Canvasser: Cute dog
Gina: Thank you. Uh, I don’t have that form filled out today…Um, she didn’t have a pen, so can I take it home and fill it out?
Canvaser: I mean, I would need it today.
Gina: Well, what, can I drop it off somewhere?
Canvasser: Yeah, probably. I can do it right now if you wait for me. It’s supposed to look like this filled out.
Gina: Oh! Ah—Let me see. Can uh—Does, um… [Pause] OK. Where is, where is the information going?
Canvasser: Um. It’s, I’m going to give it to my supervisor.
Gina: Oh.
Canvasser: My supervisor is going to get all this work together and register all the people that’s signed the book to vote from down here.
Gina: You’re going to get this to your supervisor?
Canvasser: Yup.
Gina: Where is your supervisor at?
Canvasser: My supervisor is over here today…doing the same thing I’m doing.
(The canvasser pointed at a nearby corner where Gina could see another woman standing with a clipboard.)
Gina: But, are you sure that, are you sure that I can fill this out?
Canvasser: Yeah, of course. Yeah.
Gina: Even though I’m registered in Oakland County?
Canvasser: Yes, I wouldn’t tell you a lie [chuckling].
Gina: Oh, she’s just taking off. She’s getting mad. Here, I’ll have to come back.
Loud background noise
Canvasser: It’s OK.
Here is the audio recording Gina shared with police and the MI SOS of the exchange after she returned to outside of the store:
From the police report:
During my conversation with the woman with the clipboard, my friend got into her car and then drove up and asked me to leave. As I was walking toward my friend’s car and loaded my purchases into her car, I observed the woman with the clipboard getting into a car on the passenger side that was parked on the outside part of the parking lot. I asked my friend Darla to drive by that particular car so I could take a photo of the license plate.
Gina’s friend was becoming impatient with her. A grocery cart had just hit her vehicle, and she wanted to leave.
Gina watched as the canvasser walked to a car and sat in the front passenger seat next to her supervisor, who was sitting in the driver’s seat. Gina asked her friend to drive around the parking lot so she could take a photo of the vehicle, which she did.
Here is a photo of the vehicle with the canvasser and her supervisor inside. The license plate is blacked out:
Gina immediately reported the crime to the local Dearborn Police Department. In her report, Gina included two recordings and transcripts for each, along with a detailed report about what happened and a photo of the vehicle the canvasser was sitting in with her supervisor.
After not hearing back from anyone since the October 1, 2024 incident, Gina and a male friend visited the Dearborn Heights Police Department to check on the status of their investigation. What they found was shocking!
On Monday, November 25, 2024, Gina traveled to the Dearborn Police Department to pick up the written Fraud Report she made (in person) with their Patrol Division on 11/01/2024, per the FBI’s recommendation.
Gina reviewed the final document and noticed no conclusion or detail about the investigation. “In fact,” Gina said, she was surprised when the front desk clerk told her that the investigation was closed because of a “lack of evidence.”
Gina explained that it was “a shock” to discover that the case had been closed because she had submitted 17 pages of evidence, including transcriptions of her two audio recordings and a photo of a license plate number.
Gina wrote a note to me to explain:
So, I asked to speak to the Investigator/Detective, Mark Pugh. We proceeded to the next door as directed by the clerk, and finally, Lieutenant Mike Guzowski from Investigative Services answered our door ring.
He heard us out as we complained about the abrupt closure of the investigation. He spent some time reviewing our final report and then the file in his office. He explained that this case is not under their jurisdiction there in Dearborn.
He assured us that investigator Pugh would call me the next day, the information would be forwarded to the Secretary of State, and our final report would be amended accordingly.
Importantly, Lieutenant Guzowski told Gina, “On a personal note, I was trying to vote during this last election and was told I already voted,” and further, the same thing happened to someone else he knows, a family member.
I believe the day we met with him, he had the right intentions, at a minimum, to move the report up to the next level.
Finally, after some persistence with follow-up phone calls, Investigator Pugh called back this morning (12/5/24) and explained that I should call before picking up the report.
He reported that he called the number on the card from the Secretary of State.
Investigator Pugh further reported that the investigation has not closed yet and that a nonpartisan organization is involved in this fraud situation. The organization hired people to recruit and register potential voters.
He also said that the woman I talked to “was new and didn’t know that you can’t vote twice.”
The canvasser told Gina more than once she could vote from more than one address. She went out of her way to convince her to fill out a voter registration and change of address form without providing her with the second page that explained she would be committing a crime by voting from more than one location.
Why would this (voter fraud) group put a canvasser out on the streets with no training whatsoever? On the contrary, it appears this woman was trained to con individuals to fill out a change of address form to register them at a manufactured address of their choice.
Gina told us, “Maybe they paid her per change of address form that she insisted I should complete on the spot there in Dearborn by the door outside of the supermarket? Surely, things don’t add up here.”
Gina is correct. Things certainly don’t add up. I left two messages for the MI SOS agent assigned to Gina’s case, but she hasn’t returned either of my calls.
Voters attached to one voter ID who are voting more than once from two or more addresses is a serious issue in Michigan, where elections are controlled by the Soros-funded Democrat SOS Jocelyn Benson.
According to the MI Secretary of State’s data, ONE Voter ID (we have removed the voter’s name from the image) was attached to 29 votes (highlighted in yellow) in the 2024 election in Wayne County, the same county where the canvasser was trying to con Gina into filling out a Voter Registration-Change of Address form.
The 29 votes that were all cast on October 25, 2024, according to the MI SOS data. The RNC inquired about this situation and were told by MI SOS Jocelyn Benson’s office that this was simply a “glitch.”
In the December 2023 QVF (Qualified Voter Files), compared to the December 2020 QVF, there were almost 15 times more occurrences of individuals voting twice in the same election.
The highest occurrence, by a significant amount, occurred in the November 2023 election.
Election integrity data expert Tim Vetter warns: “The data shows we had over a FIFTY-fold increase in duplicate voters between the last two major elections in 2024. If we don’t resolve this issue, we can absolutely expect to see a significant increase in duplicate ballots/voters again in our next election.”
The post BUSTED! Michigan Woman Discretely Records and Catches Canvasser Telling Her It’s Okay Register to Vote In TWO DIFFERENT Counties: “You don’t have to live down here to vote” [VIDEO] appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.