Is it finally happening?

Are we finally starting to see TRUTH come out and JUSTICE prevail?

A small primer for the main event when “they FALL in Fall” according to Kim Clement?

Maybe so.

Collin Rugg was one of the first to post the breaking alert to Twitter:

JUST IN: Three officials for electronic voting technology company Smartmatic have been indicted by a federal grand jury for a bribery and money laundering scheme.

The DOJ named Roger Alejandro Piñate Martinez, Elie Moreno, and Jose Miguel Vaque in the indictment.

The men allegedly facilitated at least $1M in bribes to be paid to former Comelec (Commission on Elections) Chairperson Andy Bautista.

The bribes were used to obtain business related to providing voting machines in the Philippine elections.

Roger Piñate (photo below) is the president of Smartmatic.

DOJ report:

According to the indictment, between 2015 and 2018, Roger Alejandro Pinate Martinez, 49, a Venezuelan citizen and resident of Boca Raton, Florida, and Jorge Miguel Vasquez, 62, a U.S. citizen and resident of Davie, Florida, together with others, allegedly caused at least $1 million in bribes to be paid to Juan Andres Donato Bautista, 60, the former Chairman of COMELEC. These bribes were allegedly paid to obtain and retain business related to providing voting machines and election services for the 2016 Philippine elections and to secure payments on the contracts, including the release of value added tax payments.

The co-conspirators allegedly funded the bribes through a slush fund that was created by over-invoicing the cost per voting machine for the 2016 Philippine elections. To conceal and disguise the nature and purpose of the corrupt payments, the co-conspirators used coded language to refer to the slush fund and caused the creation of fraudulent contracts and sham loan agreements to justify transfers. The co-conspirators then allegedly laundered funds related to the bribery scheme through bank accounts located in Asia, Europe, and the United States, including in the Southern District of Florida.

Here is the Press Release from the DOJ itself at Justice.gov:

A federal grand jury in the Southern District of Florida returned an indictment today charging three executives of an election voting machine and service provider company and a former Chairman of the Commission on Elections (COMELEC) of the Republic of the Philippines for their roles in an alleged bribery and money laundering scheme to retain and obtain business related to the 2016 Philippine elections.

According to the indictment, between 2015 and 2018, Roger Alejandro Pinate Martinez, 49, a Venezuelan citizen and resident of Boca Raton, Florida, and Jorge Miguel Vasquez, 62, a U.S. citizen and resident of Davie, Florida, together with others, allegedly caused at least $1 million in bribes to be paid to Juan Andres Donato Bautista, 60, the former Chairman of COMELEC. These bribes were allegedly paid to obtain and retain business related to providing voting machines and election services for the 2016 Philippine elections and to secure payments on the contracts, including the release of value added tax payments.

The co-conspirators allegedly funded the bribes through a slush fund that was created by over-invoicing the cost per voting machine for the 2016 Philippine elections. To conceal and disguise the nature and purpose of the corrupt payments, the co-conspirators used coded language to refer to the slush fund and caused the creation of fraudulent contracts and sham loan agreements to justify transfers. The co-conspirators then allegedly laundered funds related to the bribery scheme through bank accounts located in Asia, Europe, and the United States, including in the Southern District of Florida.

Pinate and Vasquez are each charged with one count of conspiracy to violate the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) and one substantive violation of the FCPA. Bautista, Pinate, Vasquez, and Elie Moreno, 44, a dual citizen of Venezuela and Israel, are each charged with one count of conspiracy to commit money laundering and three counts of international laundering of monetary instruments. If convicted, Pinate and Vasquez each face a maximum penalty of five years in prison for the FCPA and conspiracy to violate the FCPA counts. Bautista, Pinate, Vasquez, and Moreno each face a maximum penalty of 20 years for each count of international laundering of monetary instruments and conspiracy to commit money laundering.

Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General Nicole M. Argentieri, head of the Justice Department’s Criminal Division; U.S. Attorney Markenzy Lapointe for the Southern District of Florida; Special Agent in Charge Anthony Salisbury of Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) Miami; and Special Agent in Charge Matthew D. Line of IRS Criminal Investigation (IRS CI) Miami made the announcement.

HSI’s El Dorado Task Force Miami is investigating the case, with assistance from IRS CI Miami.

Trial Attorneys Michael DiLorenzo and Connor Mullin and Assistant Chief Alexander Kramer of the Criminal Division’s Fraud Section and Assistant U.S. Attorney Robert Emery for the Southern District of Florida are prosecuting the case. The Justice Department’s Office of International Affairs and the Philippine Department of Justice and Office of the Ombudsman provided substantial assistance.

The Fraud Section is responsible for investigating and prosecuting FCPA and Foreign Extortion Prevention Act (FEPA) matters. Additional information about the Justice Department’s FCPA enforcement efforts can be found at www.justice.gov/criminal/fraud/fcpa.

An indictment is merely an allegation. All defendants are presumed innocent until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt in a court of law.

Updated August 8, 2024

Meanwhile, here is Lou Dobbs on Smartmatic way back in 2006:

Now if this story sounds kind of familiar to you, it’s because a similar story occurred back in September of last year.

It starts to get REALLY WEIRD and go REALLY DEEP and it even has Patrick Byrne all over it…

Take a look:

FACT-CHECK: Smartmatic Indicted?

Usually when I see a headline too wild to be true, it usually is — fake, that is.

Also, when I see that same wild story being shared from only ONE website that I’ve never heard of before, that’s usually the final confirmation that the story is fake.

We had both of those elements here in this story, but I have kind of a surprising “Fact Check” to show you here.

This was the Tweet I first saw that caught my attention:

Then I saw Mike Lindell Tweet about it here:

Dozens of people started posting the same thing.

Problem is, all the posts went to “YourNews.com” — a site I’ve never heard of:

And that was the ONLY site covering the story — until I show you what I found on CNN, which I’ll do just a bit further down below.

So I’ve already got two red flags and then here was the third red flag — the story and the Tweets claim that “Smartmatic was Indicted”.

I’m no legal scholar, but I’m pretty sure you can only Indict people, not companies.

So there’s red flag number 3.

Red flag number 4 was Patrick Byrne slithering up into the middle of this story.

At first I didn’t know what to make of Patrick Byrne.

I wanted to like him…

Wanted to beLIEve him….

And yet, nothing ever quite seemed to make sense with him.

But who’s at the center of this story?

PByrne of course!

First he posts this:

So there is Byrne saying this is his most important video ever and that the DOJ has indicted Smartmatic.

Then he says he’s “involved in the background” whatever that means.

He later clarified:

He further clarified that “indictment” wasn’t the right word (as I told you above):

Then he posted this video:

Ok…..so I know you’re saying “Noah, tell us the bottom line here….what’s going on?”

Is the story true?

Is there smoke or fire here?

Well, good thing you’ve got us on the case because I didn’t stop here.

Turns out there IS something real here, just not the headlines that “YourNews.com” tried to peddle.

That site appears to be mostly BS.

Here’s the real scoop, and oddly enough I go now to CNN for the “real scoop” on this one — from 3 days ago, here’s what’s actually going on, and it DOES involve Smartmatic at least tangentially and it does involve criminal charges, according to CNN:

Smartmatic, the voting technology company suing Fox News and former President Donald Trump’s top allies over their false claims that its machines rigged the 2020 election, was implicated in an alleged bribery scheme involving the former top election official in the Philippines, according to court filings obtained by CNN.

The court documents indicate that the Justice Department has filed money laundering charges against former Filipino election administrator Andres Bautista – and that four executives from Smartmatic subsidiaries are implicated as uncharged co-conspirators.

The bribery claims are sure to reverberate in Smartmatic’s ongoing defamation cases. Trump allies repeatedly peddled the lie that the company manipulated the results in 2020, despite the fact that its machines were only used in one California county that year.

Smartmatic spokeswoman Samira Saba said in a statement that the Florida-based company “has never won a project through any illegal means” and stressed that the claims in the Bautista case are “not related to Smartmatic election security or integrity.”

Smartmatic filed massive defamation suits against Fox News, Newsmax, OAN, several individual Fox hosts, ex-Trump lawyer Rudy Giuliani, former Trump campaign lawyer Sidney Powell, MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell and others. They all deny wrongdoing.

Some of these pro-Trump figures have tried to push back against the defamation suits by highlighting Smartmatic’s ties to Venezuela and its involvement in foreign elections.

OAN recently asked a judge to let them seek records from the Philippines government and other countries as part of the discovery process, claiming they have files about “investigations… scandals.. and major problems” involving Smartmatic machines.

The Smartmatic co-conspirators in the Philippines-related criminal case aren’t identified by name in the court filing obtained by CNN, which says they allegedly “caused or attempted” to funnel $4 million to Bautista “in violation of US money laundering laws.”

According to the charging documents, the Smartmatic executives used “slush funds” and “fake contracts” to facilitate alleged bribes and masked their actions with phony email accounts. “Salsa” was their code word for “money,” the documents alleged.

Enter your email to subscribe to the CNN Five Things Newsletter.
close dialog
CNN Five Things logo
You give us five minutes, we’ll give you five things you must know for the day.
By subscribing you agree to our
privacy policy.

Bautista awarded $199 million in contracts to Smartmatic for about 94,000 voting machines and to handle the results of the Philippines’ presidential election in 2016.

“I did not ask for nor receive any bribe money from Smartmatic or any other entity,” Bautista posted Thursday on X, formerly known as Twitter, adding that the elections he oversaw were “hailed” by observers as being the “best managed” in Filipino history.

He also said he would “respond to the alleged charges at the proper forum and time.” The criminal charges were filed Tuesday, according to the court filing. There is no indication that Bautista is currently in US custody.

Saba, the Smartmatic spokeswoman, said, “winning a bid in the Philippines is never solely one individual’s preference or decision” and that the company has “both won and lost bids in the Philippines” over the years.

The new allegations of corrupt foreign dealings could boost the defense for Fox News and the other Trump allies currently fighting Smartmatic in court. They could argue that it wasn’t their lies about the 2020 election that caused Smartmatic to lose business, but rather the company’s reputation was tarnished by the allegedly criminal behavior of some of its employees.

The criminal complaint against Bautista doesn’t accuse Smartmatic of tampering with election results in the Philippines or any other jurisdiction. A State Department report concluded that the 2016 elections in the Philippines “were generally free and fair.”

A spokesperson for the US attorney for the Southern District of Florida, where the charges against Bautista were filed, did not respond to CNN’s requests for comment.

I ordinarily will not quote an entire article, but in this case I felt it necessary to give you the entire context of CNN’s reporting.

Read the full article here:  https://www.cnn.com/2023/09/22/business/smartmatic-bribery-scheme-indictment/index.html

But we’re not stopping there….

I have what I believe is the entire court filling for you, which you can read here:

So….bottom line: has Smartmatic been indicted?

No.

But…have criminal charges been filed and does this closely relate to Smartmatic?

It appears that is a yes.

As always, we have a system of innocent until proven guilty here in the United States, or at least we used to.

It’s unclear if we still have that system if you’re a conservative or member of MAGA, but for anyone on the Left I’m sure they will be afforded all benefit of the doubt and all defenses available to them.

This is a Guest Post from our friends over at WLTReport.

View the original article here.

 

Join The Conversation. Leave a Comment.


We have no tolerance for comments containing violence, racism, profanity, vulgarity, doxing, or discourteous behavior. If a comment is spam, instead of replying to it please click the ∨ icon below and to the right of that comment. Thank you for partnering with us to maintain fruitful conversation.