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The Brian Mudd Show

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Q&A – Is Our Effort to Expose Unprosecuted Voter Fraud in SFL Working? 

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Q&A – Is Our Effort to Expose Unprosecuted Voter Fraud in SFL Working? 

Each day I feature a listener question sent by one of these methods.  

Email: brianmudd@iheartmedia.com 

Gettr, Parler & Twitter: @brianmuddradio 

Today’s Entry: I think your Friday call to action against voter fraud cases on file has prompted action by Katherine Fernandez Rundle and the Democrats. I just saw a segment on local ABC News regarding fraud by Republicans. Would love to hear your insight on it, Mayor Cava was also mentioned. 

Bottom Line: Right, so to quickly reset for any who might have missed it... In Friday’s Q&A I highlighted the following... There are currently 156 pending voter fraud cases in Florida which have been referred to prosecutors but haven’t been pursued by them. That includes 12 unprosecuted voter fraud cases in Palm Beach County, 42 in Miami-Dade and 78 in Broward. Here’s a breakout of the various types of monitored fraud that’s been referred to state attorneys but not prosecuted:   

  • Voting multiple times in a single election  
  • Forging voter signatures  
  • Felon voting without restoration of rights  
  • Non-citizens voting  
  • Votes cast in the names of the deceased  
  • Ballot Harvesting for pay  
  • Petition fraud 

As part of the story, I provided contact info for South Florida’s state attorneys and suggested it was worth taking the time to contact them and seek answers as to why there’s referred voter fraud that’s left unprosecuted by their offices. This after they’ve ignored all of my inquiries and interview requests dating back to early December which is when I originally began ramping up the pressure on these prosecutors for answers as to why officially referred voter fraud cases weren’t being pursued in South Florida. As I mentioned at the time... I wouldn’t give up on this story. It’s too important.  

So yes, interestingly on Saturday there was a big development in Miami-Dade. State Attorney Katherine Fernandez Rundle announced an investigation into voter fraud. The details announced by Rundle include allegations of seniors having their voter registration changed from Democrat to Republican by third-party organizations. While the full scope of the alleged fraud is not yet known, there were over 5,000 Democrats which switched their voter registration to Republican last year according to state records. Quoting Rundle when the announcement of the investigation was made: Our right to vote and the voting process should always be free from interference and misconduct by others. Amen, Katherine. Amen. As for my insight?  

I’m grateful that a) voter fraud is finally being acknowledged by a South Florida State Attorney and that b) local news media is finally reporting that it likely exists. I’m also grateful that one of the key categories of potential fraud referred to her office is being pursued. All voter fraud should be identified and prosecuted as she herself stated. That leads to the next key dynamic in play here. What about all of the other referred voter fraud cases? Is she going to pursue those? If not, why not? It does potentially smack of political expediency if the Democrat only targets one of the 42 referred cases which just so happens to be potential fraud committed by conservative operatives. Referring back to Rundle’s quote: Our right to vote and the voting process should always be free from interference and misconduct by others. Right, so how can you make that statement and not pursue every officially referred case of voter fraud?  

Voter fraud is not mutually exclusive. In Florida and across the country, voter fraud has been successfully prosecuted against Democrats, Republicans, Independents and Third-party candidates alike. With 156 pending officially referred voter fraud cases in Florida, almost certainly there’s been fraud committed by people of all political stripes. What’s important is that its all prosecuted. In the case of Rundle’s announcement... It’s a start. And there’s something else meaningful that’s come out of her announcement. She announced a “voter protection hotline” is being established and a task force for election integrity is being established. Now clearly that’s not happening because voter fraud isn’t a problem in South Florida is it? These announcements kill the long-standing narrative by the left and their allies in news media that voter fraud isn’t widespread or an issue. Moreover, rather than just contacting Rundle’s office to inquire about the officially referred but unprosecuted voter fraud cases, you can call the dedicated hotline demanding answers. And you should.  

So yes, it’s a start in Miami-Dade. Now the question is what about Broward – where the largest number of pending voter fraud cases exists – and Palm Beach County? Where are Pryor and Aronberg? To make it easy – here's the contact info for all of them again:  

  • Broward’s state attorney is Harold Pryor. Phone number 954-831-6955. You can send a digital message at browardsao.com/contact . Democrat elected in 2020 to a four-year term.  
  • Miami-Dade's state attorney is Katherine Fernandez-Rundle. Phone number 305-547-0100. You can email director NiloCuervo@MiamiSAO.com. Democrat elected in 2020 to a four-year term.  
  • Palm Beach County’s state attorney is Dave Aronberg. Phone number 561-355-7100. You may email StateAttorney@sa15.org. Democrat elected in 2020 to a four-year term. 

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