The Justice Department said Monday that people “lionizing” the Jan. 6 rioters are heightening the risk of future political violence. “Indeed, the risk of future violence is fueled by a segment of the population that seems intent on lionizing the January 6 rioters and treating them as political prisoners, heroes, or martyrs instead of what they are: criminals,” Assistant U.S. Attorney Michael Roman wrote in a court filing, “many of whom committed extremely serious crimes of violence, and all of whom attacked the democratic values which all of us should share.” The statement came as part of a 28-page argument supporting the pretrial detention of Cody Mattice, a defendant charged with ripping down metal barricades and assaulting police during the attack on the Capitol. It’s an indirect broadside at Republicans who have sought to whitewash the violence committed by supporters of former President Donald Trump during the assault on the Capitol. Trump himself has argued alternately that his supporters were “hugging and kissing” police — rather than committing the approximately 1,000 assaults prosecutors say occurred — and has baselessly claimed that left-wing agitators caused the violence.
Tennessee: Inside Franklin election issue: Poll workers caught errors, secretary of state advised hand count | Brinley Hineman/The Tennessean
After a voting machine tabulator possibly miscounted the total number of votes cast in a Tennessee municipal election, the county election commission held a hand count to verify vote totals. Under 4,000 people voted Tuesday in the Franklin Board of Mayor and Aldermen race. A software issue may have led the Dominion voting machines to incorrectly calculate vote totals. Of the five races, four were won by significant margins and are likely to not be impacted by the hand count. The Ward 3 seat was won by only 25 votes. This was the first time the county has had issues with the voting machines, Election Administrator Chad Gray told The Tennessean. In his 21-year career as the election administrator, nothing like this has happened before. The hand count was performed by 40 people in groups of four spread out among 10 tables. The tables worked in pairs to hand count the ballots to ensure accuracy. Only about two dozen people attended the count — mostly candidates and their representatives. The hand count was quiet and calm with a few deputies present. Election officials expected the count to take late into the night. Conservatives have been suspicious of Dominion voting machines following the 2020 presidential election, when inaccurate claims surfaced that the company rigged the election and contributed to widespread voter fraud.
Full Article: How Franklin, TN, caught election issue and decided on hand count