Subpoena in Georgia Election Lawsuit Seeks Video Footage From Voting Site

Subpoena in Georgia Election Lawsuit Seeks Video Footage From Voting Site
Supporters of President Donald Trump protest outside State Farm Arena as ballots continue to be counted inside in Atlanta, Georgia, on Nov. 5, 2020. (Megan Varner/Getty Images)
Ivan Pentchoukov
11/24/2020
Updated:
11/25/2020

The plaintiff in an election lawsuit in Georgia on Nov. 23 served a subpoena on State Farm Arena in Atlanta, seeking video footage filmed on the premises during and after Election Day.

The subpoena, which names the NBA’s Atlanta Hawks, the arena, and Scott Wilkinson, who is the executive vice president and chief legal officer of both entities, seeks all recordings taken between midnight Nov. 3 and midnight Nov. 5 at the arena, which was used as a voting site.

The request specifically calls for recordings taken in and around “Room 604,” all elevators that provide access to the floor where that room is located, and all loading docks in the arena.

The plaintiff in the lawsuit, attorney Lin Wood, sent a public Twitter message on Nov. 23 to the defendant, Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger, citing the subpoena.

“Would someone ask my never-to-be friend Brad Raffensperger @GaSecofState if he has seen this tape of election fraud at State Farm Arena,” Wood wrote. “Several people have seen it. Many more will see it soon. Video camera eye does not lie. How do you spell Election Fraud?”

Wood didn’t immediately respond to an emailed request by The Epoch Times for more details. Raffensperger’s office also didn’t respond to an email seeking comment.

Judge Steven Grimberg on Nov. 24 stayed discovery in the case, in response to a challenge to the subpoena filed by some of the defendants.

“Please note that the court has currently stayed any discovery by either party,” Wilkinson wrote in an email to The Epoch Times.

Wood’s subpoena further demands all documents related to plumbing issues on the premises during the Nov. 3–5 time frame. The request is linked to a pipe that reportedly burst in State Farm Arena on the morning of Election Day. County officials said on the night of Nov. 3 that the plumbing incident caused a two-hour delay to vote counting in a room where absentee ballots were tabulated.
A local attorney who filed a records request about the burst pipe only received a brief text message exchange about the incident describing it as “highly exaggerated ... a slow leak that caused about an hour-and-a-half delay” and that “we contained it quickly—it did not spread,” according to the text conversation that the attorney, Paul Dzikowski, shared with The Epoch Times.

“As it turns out, there never was a burst pipe or water main, which some news outlets reported,” Dzikowski told The Epoch Times in an email.

“The water inside [State Farm Arena] was caused by a leaking toilet, which, as you know, can be remedied by simply hand-turning off the water supply line to the toilet. In any event, the leak was minimal and was resolved in the early morning hours, well prior to the time the elections staff halted the counting.”

President Donald Trump mentioned the pipe incident in remarks shortly after Election Day.

“In Georgia, a pipe burst in a faraway location, totally unrelated to the location of what was happening and they stopped counting for four hours,” the president said.

Georgia certified former Vice President Joe Biden as the winner of the presidential election in the state. Trump hasn’t conceded the race and his campaign has said that a lawsuit will soon be filed in the state. The Peach State will begin a recount requested by the Trump campaign.

Trump is also litigating election challenges in Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Nevada, while a recount is underway in two counties in Wisconsin.

Ivan is the national editor of The Epoch Times. He has reported for The Epoch Times on a variety of topics since 2011.
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