JESUS. GUNS. AND BABIES. w/ Dr. Kandiss Taylor ft Tim Adderholdt
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Hi, everybody.
Welcome to Jesus, Guns, and Babies.
I'm your host, Dr.
Candace Taylor, and I have, I think it's going to be one of my best shows and one of my favorite because we are going to be talking about Brad Raffensperger, the Secretary of State of Georgia, who I think should have been held accountable for 2020 four years ago.
And so I cannot wait.
So you stay with us.
I'm going to start with Deuteronomy 16, 18 through 20.
Appoint judges and officials for each of your tribes in every town the Lord your God is giving you, and they shall judge the people fairly.
Do not pervert justice or show partiality.
I expect to be treated that way.
I expect to be treated fairly and for justice not to be perverted and for no one to show me partiality.
I expect to be treated fairly.
Like everybody else.
Doesn't matter what seat I have.
It doesn't matter how much money I have or how much money I don't have.
So, I think Brad Raffensperger should be treated the same way.
So, welcome to Jesus Guns and Babies.
This is a private citizen from Cherokee County.
His name is Tim Adderholt.
Welcome, Tim.
Hey, thanks.
So we're going to talk about why you got involved in the election in 2020, the aftermath of the election in 2020.
If you will, just talk a little bit about that and kind of who you are.
I know you're a private citizen, so just share what you want.
But I want the people to understand your mindset and why you were brave enough and had enough courage to step forward and do what you did.
And then we'll go into how the process of what happened.
Yeah, my name's Tim Adderholt.
I live in Cherokee County.
I'm a small business owner, and following the 2020 presidential election, there were a lot of things going on, and I read one of the lawsuits, specifically the one in Georgia, and it was brought up in that lawsuit that the Secretary of State and State Board of Elections had Authorized the county boards of elections to open ballots early,
where Georgia law prohibited opening ballots before Election Day.
And specifically, you're talking about absentee ballots.
Yes, yes, yes.
Absentee ballots, mail-in ballots, absentee ballots, ballots that were in the possession of the Board of Elections, any County Board of Elections before Election Day.
So we still had the runoff coming up, and they were still doing it.
And when you think about it, for all these years, you weren't allowed to touch an absentee ballot before Election Day for obvious security reasons and integrity reasons.
You don't want those things being handled by anyone.
For 93 years.
97 years actually.
97 years.
That's almost a century.
They cannot touch these ballots.
It's like a sacred thing in Georgia.
Imagine that, right?
Right, right.
For 97 years it was that way.
But they had created their own problem and their solution to their own problem was to violate the law.
There was probably a way to do it, but lying about the authority to do it was not it.
So I took little bits and pieces from various lawsuits that I had found all over Georgia and all over the country and just cobbed together something and I walked into the Cherokee County Superior Courthouse and I filed a civil Action against the Cherokee Board of Elections saying, hey, you can't open these ballots early because the law prohibits it.
But me not being a lawyer and not knowing what I was doing at all, the judge said, well, you didn't verify it.
You didn't do this.
You didn't cross that.
You didn't do this.
So I really didn't.
I didn't have a lawyer at the time.
Nobody was working in 2020.
And there were so many more Yeah, I want to say something right here that I want to say that's not how our government was set up, right?
We were supposed to be able to petition our government and air grievances and hold people accountable.
You know, the whole thing with attorneys and the Bar Association and the amount of obscene money that is spent and has to be spent to get anything done that is fair and legal and just in this country is out of control.
And so this is just...
A total example on a platter right here of that that you go and you try to do something and you even go online and pull stuff and try to make it as formal as you can and you're a smart man and you're a business owner and you go and do this trying to say stop breaking the law and oh we're gonna throw it out because you didn't do this this and this right and we can get you on this loophole because we don't really care if they're breaking the law We want to get a loophole to shut you up because we
don't want to have to do anything you say, even though the government is of, by, and for the people.
Yeah, I naively walked into the courthouse and handed in those papers and filed the petition or the lawsuit.
I filed it, signed my name to it, raised my hand, signed the affidavit.
It was an exhilarating feeling walking back to the car by myself.
uh after doing that and and i thought that the judge would see it and say oh my god they're breaking the law we got to do something about this but no they're it's amazing how and i'll probably say this multiple times throughout our conversation but it amazes me how judges turn into defense attorneys when the government is involved in the criminal activity they take their hat they spin it around bam they're defense attorneys all of a sudden they're no longer judges You know,
that scripture comes to my mind is about a double-minded man being unstable in all their ways.
Yeah.
So they're double-minded.
They're not being a judge and doing justice.
They are, oh, let me get you because I will protect my buddy.
And that's what is the problem in Georgia.
We have a good old boy system in Georgia.
That's why I ran for governor because it needs to be broken up.
It needs to stop.
Yeah, I mean, it's been that way for so long, I don't think the judge felt like they were doing anything out of the ordinary.
Like, okay, well, here's this lawsuit.
Well, it didn't check all these boxes, so, you know, it's dismissed.
So I refiled it a few times.
I went back and forth with the attorney who's currently Fulton County's elections attorney, Ann Brumbaugh.
And she argued on behalf of Cherokee County.
And they basically ran out the clock.
And then SB 202 codified opening ballots early.
Okay, so wait a minute.
They ran the clock out on you.
How much money, about how much money did you have invested in filing?
A couple hundred dollars every time?
Yeah, it's probably less than $1,000 out of pocket money, but it was lots and lots of hours of time.
Which is worth more than money.
And so our time is money.
And so you did all this and you said something profound.
They ran the clock out.
They ran the clock out, and then they had a session.
And in this session, they created Senate Bill 202, who everybody, oh, this is it.
This is going to do it.
It did nothing except solidify a fraudulent voting system.
But I want you to talk about specifically what they did in there that was in response To you, because you're in one county out of 159.
You filed something they said is frivolous, right?
And they...
They didn't say frivolous.
They never said frivolous.
I bet they said it behind closed doors.
That's the word they love to use.
Yeah, how dare you, peasant?
Right, who are you?
It's frivolous.
It doesn't matter.
But it wasn't frivolous.
Absolutely not.
Because they responded to you directly through their legislation.
So you were so powerful that Georgia...
Senators wrote legislation to protect their buddy Brad Raffensperger.
Yeah, I don't know.
I wouldn't go that far to think that I was driving that, but I think that they, that's something.
They're narcissists.
They think that everything is about them, Tim.
You're just a good guy, but most of them think everything that happens happens because of them.
Right.
Yeah.
But there's a lot of differences in the rule that they issued in 2020 versus what they codified in Georgia law.
There's a whole bunch more security measures that they had in place, whereas there were zero security measures in 2020.
I care that they slipped in two things that protected Brad.
That's what I care about.
I care about the two things that were inserted silently under the radar so nobody knew about it.
Well, you know, they're going to have to come up with a time machine to protect him against what I have on file right now because the evidence is compelling and it's objective.
And nothing that I've submitted to the court now in the case that I currently have going, it's all 100% Georgia law.
It's Georgia court filings.
It's certified documents with Brad Raffensperger's signature on them.
And there's nothing objective about it.
It's pesky things.
I said black and white evidence.
It's just pesky little things in the Georgia law, black and white.
It's a little pesky thing we don't want to have to deal with.
Let's go back to, because I interrupted you, because I got, oh, I can get so fired up about this.
So I interrupted you.
Let's go back to what they did put in the Senate Bill 202.
Do you want to talk about that now or later?
But then let's go on to your civil case that you filed.
Well, the next one's a criminal case.
But yeah, in 202, they codified some of the things were good, some of the things were bad.
I think that opening ballots three weeks early is insane.
Because if you think about how many people are going to have their hands on it, They're going to handle these things.
Imagine the local county parties having to commit people to observe this for three weeks straight.
You're talking about 120 hours If you're doing eight hours a day, five days a week, and who knows?
You just don't know.
They just ripped the door open to mishandle absentee ballots in Georgia.
They destroyed it.
It blows my mind that they let them codify that.
But they did.
And the security on that, it's impossible.
Right.
It's simply impossible to guarantee security on three weeks.
If an election supervisor likes a ballot because she likes a certain candidate, and she decides, you know what, I'm just going to re-scan this ballot instead of scanning this other ballot that I don't like, and there's nobody here really watching me, and I have three weeks to manipulate these things, and nobody's going to count the paper because they're not going to let anybody count the paper I can just scan whatever I want to, and I've got a ballot that's a legal ballot, and I get to open it, and I'll just scan that ballot I like.
Right?
Who's gonna stop her?
There's nothing to stop anyone from doing exactly that.
And with a statewide election, you don't have to have that kind of corruption all over the state.
You only need it in one precinct.
You only need it in just a couple tiny little places because all this malarkey about how, oh, it's too big of a conspiracy.
Too many people would have to be involved.
That's simply not true.
It would only take a couple people.
The analogy I use for...
Football.
They say, well, you can't rig a football game.
There's too many people involved.
All you'd have to have is the defensive and offensive coordinators in on it, and that's it.
And the players just run their plays.
Same thing with election.
You just have to have the right people in the right place, just a couple of them, could swing a statewide election easily, and you could do it.
I don't have any proof of it.
I haven't gone there, and I haven't tried.
I've just been focused on what I've been doing, trying to say that, hey, ripping these ballots open for three weeks is a horrible idea.
It was a bad idea to begin with.
And it was in the issuance of that rule was illegal on its face.
So let's talk about how it came to be.
So everybody can get in their mind.
And for me, I'm a visual learner.
So really quick, guys.
I want y'all to think about 2020 and what happened.
COVID. And so...
Brian Kemp does an emergency order and he's making these emergency decisions and he can because he's the governor.
He can do that.
But then Brad Raffensperger did something.
And Tim, tell them what Brad Raffensperger did and what caused this problem.
Well, what Brad Raffensperger did, he sent out absentee ballot applications to every voter in Georgia, unsolicited.
There was no moral, legal, or ethical reason for him to do it.
He was just terrified by COVID and wanted to make himself look good because the press release from when he did it is still up on his website and he's really patting himself on the back.
He's sending out absentee ballot applications to everyone in the state.
So we've got something laying right over here that I want to show you here in a minute.
Because I'm in El Paso, Texas right now, and there's an absentee ballot application that was in here in this Airbnb I'm staying at.
You're not going to believe it.
I just found it yesterday.
So anyway, Rad Raffensperger sent out absentee ballot applications to the entire state.
So you had six and a half million ballot applications floating around.
Anyone could have got their hands on them.
Regardless of that, they didn't have a plan For what happens when they start coming back.
They didn't plan it at all.
If they did have a plan, no one knows what it is.
They had the, oh no, what do we do, contingency plan, because when the absentee ballots started coming back, the county boards of elections started complaining to the Secretary of State and saying, hey, we don't have the manpower to open all these absentee ballots and process them before the primary.
So, So it wasn't illegal to send them out.
That wasn't illegal.
That was just dumb.
I don't think it was.
I don't know that it was legal or illegal.
It was really.
It might have been a great idea if they had had a plan, but there was no security available.
It was irresponsible.
It was very short-sighted is the word that I use.
It was short-sighted because they had no plan.
They just did it.
They just, off we go.
We're going to send these out.
There's a lot of money.
I think that it was purposefully stupid, but go ahead.
Yeah, so when these ballots start coming back, the county boards of elections are complaining to the State Board of Elections and the Secretary of State going, what do we do?
So you look at the crew that you had running things.
You had Bad Raffensperger, Jordan Fuchs, and Gabe Sterling.
That was the top men, or the A-team that was running this thing.
Wonderful, great people, people.
We're just great.
Just great people.
Top shelf, right?
And so, their attorney, the staff attorney for Raffensperger is Ryan Germany.
And they worked with some county boards of elections to craft this rule.
And this rule is, well, since we have this horrible staffing issue that we created, we are going to allow the county boards of elections to open the ballots early.
And that's what they did.
This is May of 2020.
The world shut down.
People are just now getting their feet back up underneath them from being completely locked in their houses for the last two months.
Nobody really cared, I don't think.
The state of fear was still strong.
And it was an obvious problem, but they created the problem and their solution was to violate, not just to violate the law, but to directly violate the law and to violate a standing attorney general's opinion saying, hey, this is something you can't do.
And they did it anyway.
So they had a called meeting, which Brad Raffensperger was the chairman of the state election board meeting for Georgia.
It was a Zoom meeting.
And in this meeting, they decided, Brad Raffensperger leading that meeting, that they would open absentee ballots three weeks early because they're going to have such a demand on them because they mailed out $6.5 million.
That's correct.
And he didn't have emergency authority.
He didn't have the pleasure of doing that.
That's something that only the governor has, but he did it anyway.
That's correct.
And he directed 159 counties that are under his leadership, election supervisors, to break the Georgia Code.
Correct.
That's exactly what they did.
They used the word shall in the rule.
They said, you shall break the law.
Nobody really said anything about it.
Nobody's really paying attention.
I mean, just like me, I really never imagined that the constitutional officers within our government would so openly and brazenly do something that illegal.
I wasn't paying attention at the time.
I was just trying to maintain during the real tightness of COVID in May or throughout 2020.
There were things coming at everyone from every direction.
But they created this problem and then their solution to their staffing issue that they created was to break the law.
And I didn't even know about it until December of 2020 and that's when I filed the civil action in Cherokee County.
And I made my case and they argued against it, but it's not what's in their replies to the civil lawsuit.
It's what's missing from it.
They never made one single argument in all the replies.
Ann Brumbaugh, who's currently the Fulton County Attorney, they never made one single argument that the rule itself was legal.
There's no argument.
That would have shut my case down like that.
It's over.
They say, nope, sorry.
This rule meets all the standards.
It's legal.
It's good.
You're out of here.
The case would have been over.
But instead, they said, no, it's latches, and it's this case law says you can't sue the government, and sovereign immunity, and just all these excuses.
They made excuses.
And they never once argued that the law was legitimate.
There is no argument from that.
And it doesn't bother me.
I'm not worried to let the cat out of the bag and say that if and when I get a hearing in Cherokee County, Aunt Brumbaugh is going to be the star witness because she's the one that made all these arguments that I'm now using in this criminal filing.
So it's quite interesting, honestly, how, you know, you don't have this right and you don't have that right and you can't do this in civil court.
You can't do all these things.
But you know what?
You, Brad Raffensperger, can't break the law criminally.
And so, we do have remedy to that.
And so, we'll move into that.
But before we do, I want to go back to the Senate Bill 202.
Because the two things that is what I am so impressed with, that the Senators did, all the things they did, and they did some good things in Senate Bill 202, I guess.
But the two things they did, that struck me funny and not funny as in haha is first of all they made us able to open absentee ballots after a century 97 years three weeks early which It's what Brad Raffensperger criminally did wrong, right?
The second thing they did was they removed Brad Raffensperger from being the chairman of the state election board, which is where he made that decision wrong.
So the two things that have him caught up right now in criminal activity they rectified incident bill 202 just under the cover real slightly slipped it in there nobody paid attention except you tim you paid attention well it's more of the time machine defense to say well if you were since you were lying and you were doing something you were issuing False statements and writings a year ago.
Well, now that we've changed the law, we can go back in time and say that even though that was a lie then, or even though that wasn't true then, now it's suddenly true because we changed it in the future.
It's an absurd I hear this a lot when people say, well, they changed the law, so now it's legal.
Well, that doesn't go back in time and make a false statement a true statement.
And that's one of the main arguments.
It doesn't matter if you say, I didn't know it was illegal.
Like, you have to know the laws of the land.
That's your job as an American citizen.
I don't get to kill my husband and say, oops, I didn't know it was against the law to murder.
Nobody taught me that.
I had no idea.
No, murder's murder.
And if you murder somebody, then you can get the death penalty in Georgia.
So it's the same type of thing.
You don't get to say, I didn't know that I didn't have the powers that this governor has to execute an executive order and do this.
I didn't know that.
Too bad.
It is simply absurd to think that they didn't know that they couldn't do it because the law that they cite claiming the authority has Attorney General's opinions listed in the code section, in the law, in the books.
It's there.
And the very first one, let me read it to you here.
The very first one says, This is from the Georgia Attorney General on June 26, 1980.
Because back then, a Secretary of State, I'm not sure who it was at the time, this Secretary of State asked the Attorney General if there's a way they could open ballots early.
So, just conveniently sandwiched in between the 97 years.
So, 40 years back, it's almost right in the middle.
It's a gift.
It's what?
It's a gift.
Oh, yeah.
The code section at the time said the Board of Registrars shall keep safely and unopened all official absentee ballots received from absentee electors prior to the closing of the polls on the day of the primary election.
So the Attorney General quoted the code section.
And then here's what he said.
He said, this is in response to your recent request for my opinion on whether a Board of Registrars may open envelopes containing absentee ballots prior to the closing of the polls in the interest of expediting the counting of absentee ballots.
In my opinion, the mandatory language of the code section forecloses all discussion of the matter.
The Board of Registrars must keep the envelope safe and unopened until after the closing of the polls.
So that was the very first opinion cited in the code section that they cited as the authority to open the ballots early.
So they didn't consult Chris Carr.
They didn't consult anyone.
They just did it.
That slams the door on any.
Well, we didn't know.
Yes, you did know.
We take it for granted that you know how to read.
We take it for granted that you've read the code section.
We take it for granted that if you're going to be a constitutional officer, you have an understanding of the Constitution.
There's no we didn't know business to this.
It's plain language right there, the first opinion.
So, by them going ahead and issuing that rule in direct defiance of that statement or that Attorney General's opinion, you would think that they would have reached out to the Attorney General of Georgia and got some kind of backup to their decision.
But there's none.
They just did it.
The audacity of them to just do it still gets me.
All I'm asking for is a hearing.
All I'm asking for is to get in court and on the record lay out the evidence and have a judge Make a decision.
So, Chris Carr, the Attorney General of Georgia, is big, but he's with Brad and Brian Kemp, and there's no way he's going to do anything for his buddy to make him look bad.
So, we wouldn't be getting that from him.
He wants to run for governor, which is a complete and utter joke.
Well, he could have helped his buddy out back in May of 2020.
Yeah, if he told him not to do it, but that wouldn't have fit the narrative to rig the election for Joe Biden.
Right.
And against, and against, and for Raphael Warnock and John Ossoff.
Because if anybody thinks that the whole state of Georgia is majority red seats from the governor's seat, the top seats, all the House and Senate members have majority rule, and they think that miraculously the president and two Georgia senators are blue, Then I can't help you because that is complete stupidity and ignorance.
Didn't happen.
And so we know that.
We know that it didn't happen and that's why we're exposing it every single day and we're going to apply pressure every single day until it is fixed.
Because I'm not done with 2020.
You're not done with 2020.
We don't just forget about things that are treasonous when it's stolen from us.
We were talking about Chris Carr there.
If Raffensperger in Germany had reached out to Chris Carr and said, hey, we need your help here.
You're the Attorney General.
We've got a standing Attorney General's opinion in the code section on the books that prohibits us from doing what we want to do right now because we need to open these ballots early.
We need your help here.
That should have been their first step, but it wasn't.
I wonder why somebody didn't file a bar complaint on Ryan Germany for this misleading advice.
If he's the Secretary of State's attorney, I wonder why no one filed a bar complaint on that.
Surely, as an attorney, he knows how to look at case law and advise the Secretary of State of Georgia in the right way.
Well, one of the Board of Elections members at the time I spoke to on the phone told me, well, that's when everyone was an attorney.
So we did our own research.
We didn't really need Ryan Germany's research on this.
Oh, so you're admitting that she took our taxpayer money and you paid for somebody who was unnecessary and incompetent?
Well, no, they were just saying that the rule itself, we did our own research on this rule, and that's why there was no discussion.
Because during that State Board of Elections meeting when they proposed the rule, there was no discussion about the legality of it.
Hey, can we do this?
Can we not do this?
Maybe they all need to have bar complaints on them then.
Well, you know, I don't know how far it could go.
Are they complicit in this false statement in writing?
Are they all complicit in the violation of oath and the criminal solicitation?
That's the three things that I'm accusing Brad Raffensperger of in Superior Court.
Are they part of that?
I think that would be up for a DA or a grand jury to decide, not me.
I didn't want to go that far.
Truthfully, I didn't want to take on five attorneys all at one time.
Because I don't have time for it.
I barely have time for any of this at all.
We know, and we thank you, Tim.
You're a patriot, and we thank you for doing that and for caring about Georgia and caring about America because we can't win the White House without Georgia.
We all know that.
So let's talk about how you went from the civil case of, okay, we're throwing this out, to, okay, I'm not done with this.
I have this finding from the civil case, and I'm going to do something else with it.
Well, probably for about two years I was done with it.
I felt deep down I was right.
I still do.
I know I was right about it.
And I was asking for the judge to make a declaratory judgment, declare the rule in violation of the law.
But they ran out the clock and they issued a dismissal.
I let the clock go and I didn't file an appeal.
I was just kind of done with it.
I was upset about it, but I had other things to do.
I took a stab at it.
They just pushed back harder.
I've been working on this criminal thing for about two years, but here about a year and a half later, I just decided to look at it one time on my computer and I'm scrolling through the files and I read back over the dismissal order, the judge's order that closed the case.
And something just jumped off the page at me.
Just huge.
Bigly is how it jumped off the page at me.
And in the judge's order, she said, well, actually, the judge's order was written by M. Brumbaugh and the judge just signed it.
But there's one statement in the judge's order that just jumped right out and it said the court finds that defendants open the ballots pursuant to state election board emergency rule 183.1.14.09.15.
So suddenly I realized I have in my hand a judge's order that states on the record that the county board of elections opened the ballots pursuant to the rule.
I can prove it.
So, if you back that up to the rule itself and it being a false statement, I thought, well, this is criminal.
This is a false statement and writing.
It was issued by a government agency to my county and my elections board and they broke the law at their direction.
So the criminal activity happened in Cherokee County.
I can prove that it happened in Cherokee County.
I have a judge's order that states it.
It's not my opinion anymore.
It's the judge's order that states the law was broken in Cherokee County and the Cherokee County Board of Elections was compelled to break the law.
So that points right back to Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger because it's got his signature on it.
He's the one that issued it and the certified copy of it that I got from the Georgia Archives has Brad Raffensperger's signature on it.
Once I realized I had that piece of evidence that I could build a case off of, this court order, it really wasn't hard at all.
All I did was go collect all the Georgia law, put it all in order, say here's what the law says, here's what you did.
I'm accusing him of breaking these three laws.
They're all three felonies.
Fault statements and writings, violation of oath, and criminal solicitation.
So let's go to court.
Let's have the hearing.
Let's lay out the evidence.
Because we got a little bit more.
I learned a while back, you don't lay all your cards on the table.
There is more.
But all I thought I needed to do was present enough evidence to get a hearing.
But the magistrate judge in Cherokee, he did a straw man argument.
It really wasn't even a good straw man argument.
He said that since Since no judge has ruled on the validity of the rule, he can't rule on it because magistrate courts can't do declaratory judgments.
Since he can't do a declaratory judgment, then he can't have the warrant application hearing.
One's here, one's here.
They're not the same thing.
I'm not asking for a declaratory judgment.
I'm asking for a warrant application hearing.
I'm on record With my hand raised and signed my name, I'm asking for Brad Raffensperger to be arrested and his mugshot taken and booked in the Cherokee County Jail for three felonies.
So that's what I'm asking.
That's what I asked the magistrate judge to do.
He balked at it and threw his hands up and said, oh, no, no, no, no.
How dare you, peasant, step into my court.
He's a chicken.
All he had to do was hold the hearing.
They denied me the hearing.
No one wants this hearing.
Nobody wants this hearing to happen because if I get a chance...
I shouldn't say it that way.
We the people want the hearing.
I just want to lay it out.
Here you go, Judge.
Make the decision.
Go on the record.
Tell us the three warrants and why you chose those.
um well it's the three the three laws um i mean i've got my little uh powerpoint here the three laws one is false statements and writings that's ocga 161020 the second one is the violation of oath it's 161001 and the third one is criminal solicitation and that's 1647 so the first one false statements and writings um Let me get to the...
I've got them right here.
I don't have the actual law.
That's just an exhibit in the thing.
But what I'm saying is, the processing of the absentee ballots prior to Election Day, the rule falsely cited OCGA 21-231 as its authority to violate the Georgia law.
Because 21-231 said that all rules must be consistent with law.
So this rule wasn't consistent with law.
That's a lie.
It's simply untrue.
It never was true, never will be true.
They violated the law.
So that makes that document false.
That's a false statement in writing.
And it was issued by the Secretary of State as the Chairman of the Board of Elections.
The second one is a violation of oath.
By issuing a false statement, that's a violation of your oath.
The oath says that you have to be truthful in everything you do if you take an oath in Georgia.
Are you kidding me?
You have to be truthful?
I need to start going and just, like, filing these on all of my elected people because I catch them in lies constantly.
They have to be truthful.
So, good idea, guys.
Take a recording device and a video camera and go and record your elected officials and when they lie, then file a warrant application.
Maybe they'll quit lying.
Maybe they'll quit lying and they'll mean it when they say, I swear to God.
They're not scared of God.
I guess they're not scared to go to hell, but they're scared maybe of the people recording them.
I don't know.
Yeah, I mean, for me, you know, I like to stick with what I can prove.
So this one...
It's documented.
It's a pile of documents that Georgia law and certified documents.
Everything certified documents are Georgia law.
There's no subjectivity to it.
It's all black and white.
Being untruthful in your official duties, which this was, is a violation of the oath.
The third one is criminal solicitation.
So the law for criminal solicitation says that a person commits the offense of criminal solicitation when, with the intent that another person engage in conduct constituting a felony, he solicits, requests, commands, inopportunes, or otherwise attempts to cause the other person to engage in such conduct.
So, I have Ann Brumbaugh's certified court filings that says that Brad Raffensperger and the State Board of Elections compelled the county boards of elections to violate the law.
It can't be any more clear.
I've put together the template.
I mean, maybe the judges in Cherokee County won't do anything about it.
Maybe they'll find a way to say, well, no, or they'll run out the clock.
But this exact filing can be done in every county in Georgia, except for Eccles County.
They didn't open the ballots early.
Good job, Eccles.
At least not in the runoff.
I don't know about the rest of the year, but Echols didn't open the ballots early.
But we are talking about four election cycles that this happened in.
158 counties if we take Echols out if they didn't do it the rest of the time.
And every absentee ballot that they received, which we know was way astronomically higher because he mailed out ballot applications.
And he also, it was 2020 and it was people scared to come in and it was like convenient.
And so it was before they hated absentees because of COVID and the election being hijacked.
So they, a lot of people voted absentee and these astronomical numbers.
So if you're looking at counts, If you have your warrant hearing and they say, yeah, you actually can't issue this, let's look at how many counts we're going to have here.
You're not going to be adding, you're going to be multiplying.
Right, yeah.
The statute of limitations is, I think they might be trying to run the clock out, I don't know.
Yeah, that's what they're trying to do.
The statute of limitations ends on January 6th of 2025.
So that's a convenient date.
Whether or not they do anything here, I hope so.
I hope we get to have a hearing.
I'm just asking for the people that are entrusted to enforce the law and to judge the law, to follow the law.
Because the law says that they shall schedule a hearing.
What a concept.
Just do your job.
Just schedule the hearing.
Hear the evidence.
If I'm wrong, okay.
I don't think so, but let's have the hearing.
Let's lay out the evidence.
We need everybody to go to the Superior Court judge in Cherokee County and send a letter and tell them we need to have this hearing immediately and apply pressure.
Call them, send emails, and send letters.
That's what we need to do.
Yeah, I mean, I don't want to...
I don't want to make the judge mad, but at the same time, I'm just asking for the judge to do what the law says.
I don't care if the judge gets mad.
They can do their job or they can be complicit as well.
Well, the judge in this case is the same one that had the civil case back in 2020.
So this, it got assigned to the same, it's the chief judge.
And she had the original civil case and now she's got this criminal case.
But the magistrate judge dismissed it because he said, well, no, I can't do this because I'm going to make something up here and didn't do it.
I think she's going to do the right thing.
I think she's going to do the right thing.
And we're going to pray.
So we're going to pray.
And we're going to have intercessors all over the state pray, and we're going to apply pressure.
That's what we do, and that's how we, the people, get things done.
I will tell you, Tim, I was on the ballot in 2020.
I ran for U.S. Senate.
And as I was running for U.S. Senate, I traveled all 159 counties, and I went multiple times to some.
And when I was in Cherokee County, the Lord said to me, you cannot win Georgia without Cherokee.
No, there's a big chunk of bright red.
And so I took that as, let me look and see how many voters are in Cherokee that are red.
There's a ton, hundreds of thousands of them.
Okay, Lord, you're telling me that.
He didn't respond.
But I assumed that.
And sometimes you don't assume because, you know, it makes a, you know, what of yourself for assuming.
So even when I ran for governor, I thought, man...
You know, Cherokee, you gotta have Cherokee.
And they do try to, you know, the left tries to subvert Cherokee because they know how powerful y'all are in your strength of red voters.
But Tim, I am sitting here tonight listening to you talk about this, and the Lord, the Holy Spirit, reminded me of Him telling me that.
So, we can't win 2020 without Cherokee.
And the reason why we can't is because God sees the end from the beginning.
And He knew your steps are ordered of Him.
It says, a righteous man's steps are ordered of the Lord.
And so, He's ordered your steps, and He's ordered the steps of people watching this that are going to help us apply pressure.
And He's going to order our steps when we can take these certified legal documents and we can duplicate them in every county that Also, open ballots early.
So what if 158 magistrate judges, well now 157 because you took one out, what if they don't all decide to be a loser and scared and a cowardly lion like yours, and they decide to have a hearing because they're like, I am the magistrate judge.
I am one of the chief Constitutional officers in this county and I will do my job.
Or what if it goes to a superior court judge like has with you and they have the backbone and the strength and fortitude to say, you know what?
This is illegal activity and we're not going to have it in my county.
All I'm asking for is a public hearing.
Just a public hearing to lay out the facts.
Has it come to that where a citizen wants to redress his government for grievances, can't have a public hearing in a court where I swore out an affidavit?
I didn't just go in there and say, hey, dude over here was doing this.
They don't like affidavits.
They like to ignore affidavits.
I took 50-something thousand affidavits to the Capitol.
They don't like those.
Oh, unless they find you lying on one, then they like them.
Right.
Then you perjure yourself, right?
But Matt Lindell flew down to Georgia and took them all and served them in the Capitol on Brian Kemp and demanded a hand count and demanded a forensic audit of the 2020 election.
And they totally blew it off.
They don't they don't like to honor affidavits in Georgia.
But an affidavit is a legal document.
You're exactly correct.
And so too bad if they don't like it.
It was.
It was a legal document.
They don't seem to be carrying much weight these days.
But you know what?
Maybe the judge is taking her time with it and she has put the proper amount of due care into making a decision and we'll make the right decision and say, no, the law says that we have to have a hearing and we're going to have a hearing and then we'll have a hearing.
And we'll see what the judge says.
But there's nothing stopping someone in every county in the state from taking the filing that I've done.
It's all public record.
You can take the filing.
You can copy it.
Get an attorney.
I would strongly suggest don't do anything without speaking to or hiring an attorney.
And this same filing could be done in every county in the state because it happened in every county in the state.
And one of the documents in the filing is the list of counties that were doing it.
And I have the case law where Our dear friend, Ann Brumbaugh, makes the argument that the Secretary of State and the Board of Elections compelled the county election boards to open the ballots early.
So, she makes a good, strong argument that no, the county boards of elections had no choice in this matter.
The State Board of Elections commanded them to do this.
That's all part of the evidence.
And all I want to do is lay it all out in front of the judge and see what the judge has to say about it.
So when you went to your civil case, who showed up there from Brad Raffensperger's office?
Nobody.
It never got to him.
This case was just a...
I went in there naively thinking that the County Board of Elections would side with me and say, oh my gosh, the Secretary of State is making us break the law.
This is terrible.
We got to make, we got to, we can't do this.
But once again, Anne Brumbaugh, she went from elections attorney to defense attorney and her job, which I agree, but it was to keep them from getting in trouble.
Because that's her client.
I'm paying for it too.
A portion of my property taxes goes to her salary.
But she made the arguments that here's why this thing should be dismissed.
And she was ultimately successful.
Well, and that's what they've done.
They've perverted the law in so many cases, even not giving us access to the grand jury, which is supposed to be the representative of the people, and it's supposed to be the way that we get to redress our government, is with the grand jury process.
And they have DAs running the grand juries, and they're supposed to be there for consult on their cases.
And they're supposed to have, you know, the head of the grand jury that's appointed that is the one that receives the cases and presents them.
But instead, the grand jury doesn't see anything if it doesn't go through and is filtered by the DAs.
And I know because I filed six, Grand jury petitions in 2020 to bring criminality to all of these players and what they did in that election.
And I had all the evidence, I had all the numbers that were all the ORRs, all the data, showed they're missing hundreds of thousands of votes from the line of the election to the recount, all of this.
Never got to bring it up in front of the grand juries because the DA stood in the way.
And so, and these are Republican DA's.
These were not, in fact, one county that I went to was Cherokee.
And so, it was not only Democrat DA's.
These were Republican DA's that were standing in the way of the grand jury process and me being able to present evidence to them and let the people's court and the people's jury hear it and say, okay, yeah, we want to indict this person for criminal activity because this is illegal what they did.
They don't trust We the people.
And so they don't trust us to do what they want us to do.
And they don't think that we have a brain in our head and let the process work the way our founding fathers designed it to work.
So they want to control it.
And we're sitting around allowing it.
Why are we allowing it?
There's a much bigger problem with what Raffensperger did here.
Not only were they breaking the law in these three specific ways, but by doing that, they're wrecking the public's confidence in the system.
And the system doesn't work unless we have confidence in it.
And we trust the people that we've put in these positions of power.
They raise tons of money.
They beg for your vote.
They get elected.
They raise their hand and swear an oath.
Then they get in there and forget it all.
The way they've destroyed public confidence in the system is the bigger crime.
It's not a specific Georgia code, but that's the bigger problem that we have.
The victims of the criminal solicitation and the violation of oath and the false statements and writings.
The victims are the whole state and the The violence committed is the destruction of public confidence, is tearing it down.
So even if I was successful, like you were saying, the DAs and the...
I have 100% confidence in the Cherokee County Board of Elections.
I've dealt with them.
The people that work there, not necessarily the board itself, but the people that work there, the superintendent does a fantastic job in there.
And I do an open records request and I get it back in, you know, sometimes in minutes.
And it's always a friendly interaction.
They've been open with everything.
I asked them for the ballot images.
Because it ain't like that in Applin County.
And it ain't like they're in a lot of counties in Applin County.
I know.
I know.
We're lucky up in Cherokee.
I mean, when I asked for the ballot images, and I know that voter GA, a lot of people were asking for ballot images all over the state.
I asked them for the ballot images, and I got them like in a couple days on a thumb drive.
Here you go.
I'm looking around the rest of the state, I'm going, what's all the fuss about?
Why can't the rest of these people do what we're doing up here in Cherokee?
We've got a really, really top shelf bunch of people running it.
Those who have nothing to hide, hide nothing.
Right, yeah.
They've never been, the people at that board of elections, and I've dealt with them a bunch, Never even caught a whiff of any dishonesty or subversion.
It's never been even close to being a thing.
I trust them.
I just flat out trust them.
But I will tell you, the local board of elections and these attorneys that work for the county that are representing them, they don't know elections even as well as a private citizen.
They don't know what they're doing.
They're appointed on there and they're sitting on these boards and they don't even understand elections and they're making rules and doing things that they don't understand.
And then they listen to the attorney because they think, well, the attorney said they know the law.
The attorney said No, you are serving in a role and a capacity for we the people and the attorney can be there as a consultant, but you need to do your job.
And that needs to be a message for every board of election in the county level because things can be handled at the county level where they should be that would never rise to this other level if they would just do their job.
They miss a lot of opportunities to do the right thing.
They just sit on their hands and just let something go and hope it goes away.
I've seen that in a lot of these boards of elections.
I've read some of the things from other counties and just think, oh man, we don't have that here.
You got people involved.
The Democrats are involved too.
They show up at the Board of Elections meetings.
Like you were saying about the grand jury and the DA, If, by the grace of God, I'm successful and have a hearing and the judge agrees that Raffensperger and anybody else committed these crimes and agrees that probable cause exists, so we should spend some time on that.
Because the warrant application hearing is not a trial.
It's not a beyond reasonable doubt.
I don't have to really prove it completely.
It's just like when a police officer goes to get a warrant.
He has to have probable cause and that's it.
That's not a very high standard of proof.
Is it probable that this happened?
I would say the probable cause is deafening in this case with the stack of documents that I've got that absolutely prove it.
I mean it's all it's beyond possible doubt but the burden here is probable cause.
I'm asking the judge to schedule a probable cause hearing and basically it's the same as if a police officer goes to a judge and asks for a warrant the judge says well why do you think this person so and so did Did this crime?
And the police officer has to say, well, judge, here's the reason.
Here's the probable cause I have.
And the judge has to look at it, make an objective, reasonable, non-biased decision, and either issue a warrant or not issue a warrant.
I'm just asking for the same treatment.
So there are no warrants issued.
It's a warrant application hearing is what I'm asking for first.
Then if the judge agrees in the hearing that probable cause exists, then arrest warrants would be issued.
Most people aren't aware of it.
Most people aren't aware that they have that power.
And you can bet your butt if I get a warrant application hearing, the Georgia General Assembly will be going straight to work to get rid of that availability to the average peasant like me to be able to go into Madison Court and file a warrant application I'm
sure.
Well, Tim, thank you so much for coming.
How can everybody follow your case?
Where is the best place for them to go to follow what you're doing?
Well, I haven't really tried to publicize it that much.
The case number, if you want to look it up in Cherokee County, Well, I have to enlarge this so I can see it.
The case number is 20 Charlie Victor Echo 2156.
That was the original filing.
And so now we have a...
Let's see, is that it?
No, no, no.
I'm sorry.
I just gave you the case number for the original, the original, original filing.
So, the new one is case number 24 Charlie Victor Echo 1246.
You can look that up at the Cherokee County Clerk of Courts website and read it.
But I don't really have a blog going.
I don't have time to do stuff like that.
But I have been thinking I will take the PowerPoint that I put together and narrate it and just put it on YouTube or put it on Rumble and just have that sitting out there.
But what you're doing here is going to help tremendously.
I just want people to know that they can do something by themselves.
You don't have to join a group.
You don't have to be a member of this or that.
You can do the research, you can do the work, and you can walk into the courthouse and take action yourself with the advice of a competent attorney.
So I appreciate you, Tim, for coming.
You're welcome anytime.
We'll be praying, and we're going to organize ourselves, and we're going to do more than what you did with what you've already done.
So thank you for coming on.
Tim Adderholt, Cherokee County, thank you so much.
Yeah, you're welcome.
Thank you.
I will see y'all next week on St.
Peter's Network at 8 p.m.
Eastern Standard Time.
I love you.
God bless you and God bless America.
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