Update: The courtroom exhibit was far more worrisome than first reported, as our discussion with election integrity specialist Garland Favorito disclosed. J. Alex Halderman presented evidence in court regarding Dominion machine hacking and manipulation, which had a substantial impact on the accuracy of their tabulations.
Professor J. Alex Halderman of the University of Michigan’s Department of Computer Science and Engineering gave important testimony last Friday in a Federal Court in Atlanta, Georgia, on the Dominion voting machines that have been used in Georgia elections since 2020.
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In the courtroom, Halderman changed the tabulation in front of U.S. District Judge Amy Totenberg by breaking into a Dominion voting machine while he was testifying.
With just one pen, Halderman tampered with the vote totals!
Advocates for election integrity filed the complaint, which is set for a bench trial, and his evidence was a key part of that case.
The plaintiffs are pushing for the adoption of secure paper ballots in place of Georgia’s purportedly unsafe voting equipment.
After The Gateway Pundit’s powerful article, we spoke with Georgia reporter Amber Connor, who has been in the courtroom for the past two weeks.
The earlier stories of Halderman’s live demonstration of hacking a Dominion voting system and changing the vote totals with just a pen have been formally confirmed by Amber. It’s interesting to note that Halderman used a pen that the defense lawyers had given him for this presentation.
Why is this historic Georgian case being ignored by the mainstream, legacy news media?
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More from our conversation with Amber Connor is as follows:
Jim Hoft: Amber Connor, thank you for calling. I’m really anxious to hear what you had to say. Amber, you were in the courtroom for the Curling versus Raffensberger case that’s been going on since for over a week now. Maybe you could fill us in a little bit. Okay? And this explosive development that we just heard about tonight at The Gateway Pundit, which is that the expert, J. Halderman, was in the courtroom and was able to change vote totals on the Dominion machines. So maybe you could tell us a little bit about that.
Amber Connor: Just to give a background, Alex Halderman, he was the one who wrote the Halderman report that showed individuals how vulnerable the ballot marking devices that the machines that Dominion has its software on and show different ways where you can access through vulnerabilities within the ballot marking device. And a background of him is he works in Michigan. He has three degrees in computer science from Princeton University, he does security analysis of precinct programs in the US and in other countries. He’s been to Australia, India, Estonia to do these things. He’s been part of a team in California with the Secretary of State to help with forensics, and in Antrim County and in Louisiana.
When he analyzed the BMD (ballot marking device) in Georgia… And so what he did is they brought the ballot marking device and the printer up to the front (of the courtroom)… What he did is he began to show the first vulnerability and he borrowed the state defense counsel. So those representing the Georgia secretary, he asked the main counsel to borrow his pen that he was writing with. And then he goes over to the power button, leans down, he holds down the power button for between five to 10 seconds, probably 7 seconds, and it automatically puts the machine in safe mode.
…And this reboot happens. And he then shows the judge the display and it shows a picture of the on off button as he’s pushing it for five to 10 seconds to instigate the reboot. But before you reboot the whole thing there’ll be something that comes up to ask if he wants to go into safe mode, and then he pushes. Yes. So it doesn’t shut it down or reboot. He just goes into safe mode. And that allows him to open up files and change the content of files.
Halderman also demonstrated the capacity to tamper with the vote count and change election outcomes.
Amber Connor: So you can actually install something that you’ve already pre-programmed, or you can program it at that point to do whatever you tell it to do. So that can be anything from, if they vote for George Washington, that it could then be recorded… or actually displayed as Benedict Arnold.
CLICK HERE TO HEAR THE WHOLE INTERVIEW
** We appreciate Garland Favorito’s feedback on this report.
Learn the inside scoop on the State of Georgia v. Curling lawsuit and the Halderman Report.

The Federal District Court for the Northern District of Georgia released The Halderman Report, a thorough examination of Georgia’s ImageCast X ballot marking devices, in June 2023.
Brad Raffensperger, the secretary of state of Georgia, withheld this information from the public for an astounding two years.
J. Alex Halderman, an assistant professor and security researcher at Auburn University, and Drew Sringall, a professor of computer science and engineering at the University of Michigan, collaborated on a thorough report that exposed multiple vulnerabilities in the Dominion Voting Systems ImageCast X system.
The results of the inquiry of Dominion voting machines in Georgia were purposefully kept and disguised by Judge Amy Totenberg, a left-leaning jurist, and were just made public this week.
Unquestionable proof that votes in Dominion voting machines can be altered is presented in the study. Moreover, it reveals how hacker-friendly and vulnerable the Dominion software is.
Garland Favorito, the creator of VoterGA, discussed the shocking findings with Steve Bannon on The War Room after the research was made public.
Why did Secretary of State Raffensperger wait until 2023 to make this information public?
On Wednesday, Professor Halderman posted a blog entry discussing his research.
Back in September 2020, the Court granted the Curling Plaintiffs access to one of Georgia’s touchscreen ballot marking devices (BMDs) so that they could assess its security. Drew and I extensively tested the machine, and we discovered vulnerabilities in nearly every part of the system that is exposed to potential attackers. The most critical problem we found is an arbitrary-code-execution vulnerability that can be exploited to spread malware from a county’s central election management system (EMS) to every BMD in the jurisdiction. This makes it possible to attack the BMDs at scale, over a wide area, without needing physical access to any of them.
Our report explains how attackers could exploit the flaws we found to change votes or potentially even affect election outcomes in Georgia, including how they could defeat the technical and procedural protections the state has in place. While we are not aware of any evidence that the vulnerabilities have been exploited to change votes in past elections, without more precautions and mitigations, there is a serious risk that they will be exploited in the future.
Professor Halderman stated that, in advance of the 2024 election, Brad Raffensperger, the secretary of state for Georgia, had chosen not to apply Dominion’s security fixes.
J. Alex Halderman showed off his hacking skills in a Dominion Voting Tabulator on Friday in an impressive case before a federal court in Atlanta, Georgia. In front of U.S. District Judge Amy Totenberg, the occurrence happened, and everyone in the courtroom was shocked.
Halderman altered the vote totals using just a pen!
This is a portion of a long-running bench trial lawsuit filed by advocates for election integrity.
The plaintiffs want secure paper ballots instead of what they claim are unsafe voting machines in Georgia.




