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Of course vote, and the opposition party responsibility for debunked movie 2000 Groups about the alleged fraud in the 2020 election, is planning to release a new video. Like President Donald Trump continues to threaten the centerThe new movie is set change the 2020 electionalleging electoral fraud in Black communities—a claim that several courts have rejected.
True Vote appears to be working with Lorenzo Sewell, a Detroit pastor himself he spoke at Trump’s inauguration last year. Sewell told WIRED the documents, which he hasn’t seen yet, are called A trap—”because people are locked up” —and will be released “in the next month or so.”
The film is expected to repeat many of the claims made the first time 2024 trial which was provided by Detroit political columnist Ramon Jackson, who said that Democratic election officials, including Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson and Detroit City Clerk Janice Winfrey, organized a campaign to recruit ex-Detroit residents and cast ballots through false registration in elections starting in 2017. However, after Trump visited Sewell Church in June 2024 as part of the congregation trying to judge the black votepastors agreed with Jackson to continue to push this.
“There’s a process going on in our country where Democrats vote for poor black people without even knowing it,” Sewell says, without evidence. “They’re changing their votes, and they’re doing it like somebody’s out of government.”
Sewell believed that the same attack was taking place in cities that, like Detroit, have large low-income black residents, listing places like Atlanta, Baltimore, St. Louis, New Orleans, and Philadelphia as examples. Although Sewell admitted he had no evidence to back up the claims, he says, “I can, in any election, detect and identify fraud, period. Democrat or Republican, I have a proven method.”
Sewell says that his plan is to search the list of people who voted in the election and see how and where people voted. “Black people don’t vote absentee,” says Sewell. However, a study published this week mail-in voting is said to be more common among black voters in areas with high rates of hate crime.
Sewell says he also writes articles “unrelated to the names of our community.” As evidence, Sewell sent WIRED photos of ballot envelopes made by people with names they say are fake. Sewell provided WIRED with copies of 10 affidavits he and his team have collected so far from voters who say their addresses or names have been used incorrectly to cast ballots in recent elections. WIRED has not been able to independently verify the information in the official documents. Sewell did not detail how figures such as Benson, Winfrey, or other election officials allegedly identified the victims, how they registered false names at their addresses, or how they cast ballots that were not found in their names.
Benson and Winfrey did not respond to requests for comment.
Sewell did not say when True the Vote joined the project, only that he heard about her because “I’m famous.” The group and co-founder Catherine Engelbrecht did not respond to multiple requests for comment. However, the group and its leadership have admitted that they are producing documents that focus on Michigan.
In the Voting Review Letters was sent to followers last weekEngelbrecht wrote about “recording in Detroit,” but gave no further information. Co-founder Gregg Phillips, who once said that he was sent to Waffle House and he was recently pushed out about his leadership role at FEMA, he referenced the articles several times on Social Truth.