Dominion has investigated itself and found it did nothing wrong
Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger hired a firm to conduct an “audit” of Dominion Voting Systems technology used during the 2020 elections is the same one that previously certified the Dominion systems and also approved a last-minute system-wide software change just weeks before the election, which has become the focus of dozens of fraud investigations.
The company that conducted the audit, Pro V&V, had a preexisting relationship with Dominion that dated back years. Raffensperger failed to mention this little conflict of interest during the statement announcing the audit.
Raffensperger also failed to disclose that Dominion had used technical conclusions from Pro V&V in a pre-election Georgia lawsuit that questioned the reliability of Dominion’s systems during a last-minute software fix before the Nov. 3 election.
The testing from Pro V&V had been characterized as “superficial” and “cursory testing” by an expert cited in court documents. In the widely quoted statement, Raffensperger said that the audit of Dominion machines was complete, there was “no sign of foul play,” and that “Pro V&V found no evidence” of tampering with the machines