On September 8, reporters working for 100 Percent Fed Up and The Gateway Pundit attended “The Pit,” where True the Votes’ Catherine Engelbrecht and Gregg Phillips dropped a bombshell about the arrest of Eugene Yu, CEO of Konnech, an E. Lansing, MI-based company responsible for the software used in managing elections in several states that stored personal information of over 1 million Americans in its database.

Konnech, much like Dominion, almost immediately sued True the Vote as a way to silence them and keep them from speaking out about the bombshell information they provided to reporters at The Pit related to Konnech and the alleged unlawful transfer of information from America to China.

On April 17, True the Vote founder Catherine Englebrecht announced that the Konnech v. True the Vote lawsuit is heading toward discovery. She wrote, “Konnech has accused us of defaming them, hacking their servers, and pursuing them out of racist and xenophobic intent. None of this is true.”

Today, Catherine Engelbrecht announced that the defamation suit against them had been dropped.

From the True the Vote website:

Yesterday, Konnech dismissed all pending defamation and unlawful computer access litigation against True the Vote, Inc, Catherine Engelbrecht, and Gregg Phillips in U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Texas. The case number is 4:22-cv-03096.

True the Vote issued this comment: “Konnech’s litigation was meritless and intended to harass this organization. They have failed. We are evaluating our options with regard to holding them accountable for their unwarranted actions. We believe Konnech dismissed its lawsuit because it saw that it would lose.”

True the Vote founder Catherine Engelbrecht said of the dismissal, “Konnech’s aggressive litigation to shut down all conversation about their activities resulted in the wrongful imprisonment of Gregg Phillips and me. It required the intervention of a higher court to release us. We are more dedicated than ever to our mission of fostering a public conversation about voting integrity.”

Gregg Phillips said, “This was an unfounded defamation and unlawful computer access case that saw us strip searched and placed in solitary confinement. While it is encouraging to see progress being made, the serious issues surrounding the spread of misinformation, improper detainment, and judicial misconduct cannot be overlooked. Our commitment to seeking justice remains steadfast.”

True the Vote founder Catherine Engelbrecht told 100 Percent Fed Up, “We are correct in our comments about Konnech. Voters in any jurisdiction that uses Konnech to manage elections should take our case directly to their election administrator; she added, “Any election administrator who suggests there’s nothing to worry about should be removed from office.

On Oct. 4, LA County District Attorney’s office announced that Eugene Yu had been arrested and was taken into custody for suspected theft of information on voters stored on servers in Communist China.

Konnech CEO Eugene Yu

From the LA DA Gascon’s Office: Konnech distributes and sells its proprietary PollChief software, which is an election worker management system that was utilized by the county in the last California election. The software assists with poll worker assignments, communications, and payroll. PollChief requires that workers submit personal identifying information, which is retained by the Konnech.

Under its $2.9 million, five-year contract with the county, Konnech was supposed to securely maintain the data and that only United States citizens and permanent residents have access to it.

District Attorney investigators found that in contradiction to the contract, information was stored on servers in the People’s Republic of China.

On Oct 31, during their Konnech defamation case, Federal Judge Kenneth Hoyt held True the Vote founder Catherine Engelbrecht and True the Vote investigator Gregg Phillips in contempt of court over their refusal to identify a confidential informant who helped them obtain information that led to the discovery and later, evidence that the E. Lansing, MI based election software company Konnech was storing election-related data on servers in China.

Last week, Jim Hoft of The Gateway Pundit and Patty McMurray of 100 Percent Fed Up spoke with two American heroes, True the Vote Founder Catherine Engelbrecht and investigator Gregg Phillips, who were the two patriots behind the “2000 Mules” evidence that exposed a nationwide ballot trafficking scheme that was the subject of Dinesh D’Souza’s blockbuster “2000 Mules” movie that was seen by millions.

Catherine explained how she was placed in solitary confinement, which consisted of an 8 X 10 cinder block cell with a raised cement platform with a 2″ “mattress thing” placed on top and a light that was constantly on, which prevented her from being able to sleep. She also said she had no privacy as her bathroom facilities were in plain view of anyone standing outside.

Gregg Phillips elaborated on their situation in the federal prison, telling us that he was strip searched and how they were placed in handcuffs and ankle irons. They also were chained around their waists for most of the first day as they were being processed. In the short clip below, Phillips also explains how Engelbrecht was forced to use the bathroom and shower with a plate of glass on her wall that made all of her activities viewable to anyone standing outside of her cell.

If this disgusting violation of Catherine’s privacy doesn’t infuriate every American simply because she’s fighting back against voter fraud in the United States, then something is seriously wrong with our nation.

Phillips said the warden “understood the gravity of our situation” and was very good to them, adding that the prison where they were locked up was the same kind of prison where Jeffrey Epstein was being held.

The PatriotGames.org founder Gregg Phillips also revealed that President Trump made a “wellness call” to the prison to check in on him and Catherine while they were imprisoned for 8 days.

Phillips and Engelbrecht explained how they refused to give up the name of the FBI informant who helped them discover how Konnech was allegedly sending sensitive US election data to a server in China. When Phillips was asked about the national security risk their discovery posed, he said that he believed that this was possibly the most serious data breach in American history. Yet—here we are—the two people who brought this massive data breach to the attention of the FBI were sent to prison in what many are calling an unprecedented move by a judge because they refused to give up the name of their informant to protect his life from harm.

When asked about the data sent from Pennsylvania elections to the server in China, Gregg Phillips explains how the state’s electronic poll book was part of the data that was allegedly being stored on a server in China.

Watch the entire interview here:

Curiously, Gregg and Catherine were imprisoned only one week before the critical mid-term elections. The duo had an army of people assembled across the US who were trained to identify and report voter fraud back to Catherine’s True the Vote organization.

On November 10, Los Angeles County District Attorney George Gascon dropped all charges against Eugene Yu, the CEO of a Michigan-based election software company, pertaining to an investigation into the theft of personal information. Gascon cited “potential bias” in the investigation as part of his reasoning.

Today, a statement was posted on True the Vote’s website, announcing a huge victory for Catherine Englebrecht and Gregg Phillips. The statement celebrates the Fifth Circuit has vacated the contempt order against Engelbrecht and Phillips. The statement reads:

The Fifth Circuit’s powerful ruling lays bare the excesses of Konnech, their attorneys, and the lower court. The impermissible demands of Konnech, which were rubber-stamped by the district court, caused great harm to True the Vote as an organization, as well as Catherine Engelbrecht and Gregg Phillips, who were imprisoned for over a week by Konnech and the court’s actions. In addition, Engelbrecht and Phillips’ rights to openly speak on matters of public interest were impeded under the color of authority. But hear them clearly today; the investigation of Konnech and their activities continues across America. Catherine and Gregg offer their profound gratitude to the Fifth Circuit’s vindication and are committed more strongly than ever to defending the integrity of American elections.

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