LA Judge and DA break the law by releasing Konnech's servers to China
According to a federal court order dated March 3rd, Konnech’s servers should be returned to the Houston Federal Court.
When?
Upon conclusion of Konnech CEO Eugene Yu's $2.6 million embezzlement case in Los Angeles Superior Court.
Konnech sells election software used by over a thousand Election Boards in the U.S.
Konnech stores its clients’ data in Beijing, China.
The criminal case against Eugene Yu concluded Wednesday, according to Judge Amy Ashvanian, after 14 evidence hearings.
Instead, where did the servers go?
China.
To their owner, the China Communist Party (CCP) in Beijing.
On April 27th.
According to Luke Sisak, the Assistant Los Angeles District Attorney, who was in charge of the Eugene Yu case.
What happened to the documents that took three weeks to print?
Nothing printed.
According to public information searches, the LADA never paid the $125,000 to a cyber firm to crack Konnech’s servers.
Why?
There was no contract.
LADA verified there was no contract to pay $125k to a cyber firm to crack Konnech's servers
Sisak lied up the $125,000 contract.
On the record.
Images of the transcript dated Jan. 9th are in the links above and below.
His role was to cover up Eugene Yu’s wrongdoing.
He destroyed the case for Prosecutors nationwide by covering up the evidence.
Sisak returned over 200 pieces of evidence his office seized on Oct. 4th to China.
The search warrant included Eugene Yu:
home
car, and
two business locations in Lansing, Michigan.
Judge Amy Ashvanian approved Sisak’s actions.
What was on Konnech’s servers?
All the election data for the entire country is going to China.
It showed the votes being counted and falsified election results using Scytl software based in Barcelona, Spain.
Details are in these stories: