Amistad Project Has Yet to Receive USPS Report on Ballots Allegedly Driven from New York to Pennsylvania
April 12, 2022 | Pennsylvania
According to the director of the nonprofit Amistad Project, the U.S. Postal Service has yet to release a report on thousands of ballots allegedly driven from New York to Pennsylvania in 2020.
The allegations originated from York, Pennsylvania, resident Jesse Morgan, a driver who said he made out-of-state deliveries for a USPS contractor. In an affidavit signed on November 26, 2020 and in a press conference on December 1, 2020, Morgan described delivering 24 large cardboard boxes filled with trays containing “completed ballots” from Bethpage, New York to Lancaster, Pennsylvania on October 21, 2020.
Morgan described the volume of the ballots and the events transpiring that day as suspicious, and some have cited his attestations as evidence of election fraud. His statement was presented as evidence in the lawsuit filed by State Representative Daryl Metcalfe (R-PA-Cranberry Township) and other legislators challenging the 2020 presidential-election result.
Phill Kline, a Republican former Kansas attorney general who directs the Amistad Project, an election watchdog group operating out of a public interest law firm called the Thomas More Society, said his organization provided USPS with evidence and sought an investigation. He said the postal agency showed no interest in the information it was given and has not disclosed its report on the matter, despite having told Amistad that such a document was composed.
“We’re trying to seek the report, but they’ve refused to release it thus far,” Kline told The Pennsylvania Daily Star. “But we’re still working to get it.” … (Excerpt from Pennsylvania Daily Star)