Election denier behind “Pence Card” theory says he’s coordinating with far-right sheriffs group to get “a little bit of retribution”
In an X Space that included discussion about grassroots mobilizing for the campaign of Donald Trump, Ivan Raiklin, a former military officer who tried to overturn the 2020 presidential election with his “Pence Card” plan, claimed that he was “brainstorming” with the head of a far-right sheriffs group about “getting a little bit of retribution.”
Raiklin was reportedly involved with former national security adviser Michael Flynn’s efforts to overturn the 2020 election. Flynn’s family has denied being involved with Raiklin, despite Flynn previously lauding him as a “digital soldier,” a term often used by QAnon supporters to describe themselves and which Raiklin has himself apparently invoked.
The “Pence Card” refers to the theory that then-Vice President Mike Pence could have effectively blocked the January 6, 2021, certification of the 2020 election results. That theory was subsequently embraced by Trump, who in December 2020 retweeted Raiklin pushing the Pence Card theory, activity which was later noted by the House January 6 Committee. Around this time, the former military officer agreed with a QAnon influencer that a military coup could be an option to overturn the 2020 election.
Raiklin also claimed to have contacted multiple members of Congress to push his plan.
During a June 7 X Space, which was seemingly hosted by a QAnon supporter, Raiklin presented his ideas on how to get “a little bit of retribution,” suggesting they needed to use “phases of the operation” like releasing “evidence” of the supposed crimes of what another participant called “deep state individuals” and then using the “raw power” of sheriffs to make arrests.
In response to Ben Moore — who is a QAnon influencer known online as “Sun Tzu” and a member of Flynn’s organization America’s Future — asking Raiklin what kinds of “trials” he would conduct if he was “deputized tomorrow to carry out arrests,” Raiklin suggested that arrests or trials would not happen “until we get the evidence to the court of public opinion, the American jury pool, en masse.”