To: RightGeek
Government bureaucrats were caught flat-footed, and the flood of money being rushed out the door in the name of emergency meant more vulnerabilities than ever. It took many states more than six months to add verification requirements and partially stem the flow. Just to use one state as an example, Washington state usually identifies a few dozen fraudsters in a year—now, it has identified more than 122,000 since March. Two questions/comments
1) The Nigerian must have had a US bank account or address to receive money. How did that work?
2) What grounds does anyone have to believe voting and vote-counting would be any different, especially when many steps were actively against verification steps?
6 posted on
01/04/2021 2:55:35 PM PST by
PGR88
To: PGR88
The scammer from Nigeria can have one of his brothers already in USA to open a bank account. If you have flash a large amount of cash available to deposit, the bank will kiss your feet to open an account there.
The address is even simpler. Just use the brother’s address.
19 posted on
01/04/2021 3:38:40 PM PST by
entropy12
(Those who vote decide nothing, those who count votes decide everything--Joseph Stalin)
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