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2020 Election

False Election Fraud Theory Targets Denver-Based Company

A voting machine company based in the Mountain West has become the center of an unfounded conspiracy theory propagated by the president intended to shed doubt on the presidential election.

Dominion Voting Systems has its U.S. headquarters in Denver. Its machines were used in a number of states this election including Michigan and Georgia, where the Trump administration is contesting the results. Part of the unsubstantiated theory claims the machines switched a significant number of votes from President Trump to President-elect Joe Biden.

The federal Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security agency says this just isn’t true, and issued a statement that said, “There is no evidence that any voting system deleted or lost votes, changed votes, or was in any way compromised.”

The Trump administration has since fired the director of that agency, Christopher Krebs, after he personally vouched for the election’s security.

While there were some clerical errors with voting machines, there has been no evidence of wide-spread voter fraud, and Dominion recently created a webpage to refute the conspiracies tied to its company.

Douglas Jones, a computer science professor at the University of Iowa, says these claims feed into a deeper and even more absurd conspiracy involving a CIA supercomputer called Hammer and an application called Scorecard intervening in the election.

“I don’t know of any state where things are conducted far enough behind closed doors to allow large-scale intervention by such a computer,” Jones said.

Beyond that, he says the Hammer Scorecard conspiracy has been around for a long while.

“The oldest cropping up of this conspiracy theory suggests that this is an obsolete super computer, not merely a super computer, because it appears to have been around for a decade,” he said, laughing. “And yet, we’re supposed to be scared of it.”

Alison Dagnes, a political science professor at Shippensburg University, says the falsehood about Dominion is part of a larger wave of misinformation.

“It doesn’t necessarily mandate you believe in one specific mistruth. It just makes you really doubt everything,” Dagnes said. “And so when people don’t believe in anything, and when they think they’re being lied to that much, it really opens the door for more misinformation to come in.”

Dagnes says it’s something that may only be healed when leadership and citizens agree that the division in the nation right now is toxic and that there are singular facts to agree on.

This story was produced by the Mountain West News Bureau, a collaboration between Wyoming Public Media, Boise State Public Radio in Idaho, KUNR in Nevada, the O’Connor Center for the Rocky Mountain West in Montana, KUNC in Colorado, KUNM in New Mexico, with support from affiliate stations across the region. Funding for the Mountain West News Bureau is provided in part by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.

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This article has been archived for your research. The original version from Boise State Public Radio can be found here.