In December 2019, just before America learned of something called “COVID,” Runbeck suddenly had the foresight, premonition, instinct, and urge to order 11 ballot printing and sorting machines.
Or was it inside information that caused Runbeck Election Services to buy these printers, worth millions of dollars? The company would be adding to their already five–-to handle the forthcoming election of 2020.
Almost three years later, the mailed-in ballots so hot and heavy in the news right now are sent to print vendor Runbeck Election Services, about six miles away from Maricopa’s own Tabulation Center in Phoenix.
Every single completed mail-in ballot, whether mailed or dropped off at a polling place, goes straight to Runbeck.
Today, while America waits, all mail-in ballots that were collected on election day, and the previous few days, are sitting at Runbeck headquarters.
Maricopa has no clue how many ballots are in their possession because the ballots are under no electoral processing supervision. It is no wonder in 2022, America’s future is hanging by a thread as Arizona’s votes are not under control and farmed out to a suspicious vendor with a questionable past.
Who filed a U.S. Patent Application for a computer system for “on-screen ballot duplication” to be used for “generating a revised ballot”?
According to application # 20190311030, Kevin Runbeck did:
Kevin Runbeck has been the Chairman and owner of Runbeck Election Services.
Stunningly, government records indicate Brian Runbeck, who worked for his family’s ballot printing company, was a prolific monetary contributor (over 50 times in 2020) to Act Blue, Biden for President and the Democrat Senatorial Campaign Committee.
Rey Valenzuela, who was Maricopa County elections director in 2020, had a curious relationship to Kevin Runbeck, owner of the printing company. He was highlighted on Runbeck’s website during the 2020 fiasco.
(Note: The reference by Valenzuela has been taken down from the Runbeck website.)
Sworn Testimony
When Rudy Giuliani and Arizona state legislatures held public hearings regarding the Maricopa County election fraud of November 2020, among the most compelling sworn testimonies came from elections witness Jan Bryant.
Her testimony coincided with others and may explain Arizona audit director Ken Bennett’s later revelation that Dominion Voting Systems had refused to comply with a subpoena to turn over passwords to its Maricopa County voting machines.
During the hearing on November 30, 2020, Bryant testified under oath that not even county IT staff were allowed access to the machines.
Bryant witnessed Dominion employees with a laptop computer in the counting room during the six days she worked at the Maricopa County Election Center.
During questioning by Republican state Rep. Mark Finchem, Bryant said there were daily election ballot deliveries to the center by Runbeck Election Services. According to witness testimony, these deliveries happened from Nov. 3 to at least Nov. 10.
Repeated explanations by supervisors at that time was that “Runbeck has high speed scanners,” Bryant said. She was told the ballots were scanned offsite by Runbeck and then delivered to the Maricopa County Election Center.
Transcript Quotes from Bryant’s testimony:
Jan Bryant: …ten days before they quit tabulating they thought they were done. And then more truck loads of ballots would come in. And I’m like, how can you not know how many ballots are still out there.
State House Rep. David L. Cook: Mr. Chairman I’m sorry. WOULD YOU REPEAT THAT. They thought they were done, and then there was WHAT?
Jan Bryant: They thought they were done multiple times. Multiple times the people that were running the rooms thought they were done (counting ballots), or almost done. Or were gonna be done Wednesday morning (Nov. 4th), then Thursday morning (Nov. 5th), then Friday morning. Then it went on the whole next week. And I’m like, I asked the question, You don’t know how many ballots are still left to come in? I don’t know who does, again…process…project management, but zero.
Forward to 2022 and Maricopa taxpayers continue to pay for Runbeck because they have “high-speed scanners.”