SN 7.10.2021

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Sheriff discussed seizing voting machines


Bridge Magazine
Barry County Sheriff Dar
Leaf last year tried to enlist
fellow “constitutional sher-
iffs” to seize Dominion vot-
ing machines at the heart of
an election conspiracy theo-
ry promoted by then-Presi-
dent Donald Trump, Bridge
Michigan has learned.
Emails obtained by Bridge
through the Freedom of
Information Act indicate
Trump had at least some law
enforcement support in his
bid to overturn the 2020
election won by Democratic
President Joe Biden.
The emails from Leaf
detail his unsuccessful efforts
to obtain voting machines
and inspect them. The
records indicate that Leaf’s
attorney provided updates on
the effort to Trump allies,
including attorney Sidney
Powell and a contact for for-
mer National Security
Advisor Michael Flynn.
Leaf told Bridge in a brief
interview that he worked
with other Michigan sheriffs
on what he called an “ongo-
ing” matter after the election,
but would not divulge specif-
ics.
“It is our job to investigate
all acts of voter fraud,” said
Leaf, a Republican who


made national headlines last
year for joining armed mili-
tia members on stage at a
protest against Democratic
Gov. Gretchen Whitmer’s
COVID-19 pandemic orders.
The emails, which are
coming to light as conserva-
tive activists continue to call
for a forensic audit of
Michigan’s election, describe
a plot more befitting a
“banana republic” than a sta-
ble democracy, said David
Becker, executive director of
the Center for Election
Innovation and Research.
Talk of seizing voting
machines is “tinpot dictator
stuff,” said Becker, whose
nonprofit aims to improve
voter confidence, participa-
tion and election administra-
tion.
“It’s obviously extremely
concerning, especially given
the fact that the ballots in
Michigan, which are all
hand-marked paper ballots,
were audited extensively.”
The Trump
Administration’s Department
of Justice said there was no
evidence of widespread voter
fraud. Even so, the former
president has continued his
claims. Recently, he lambast-
ed Michigan Republican sen-
ators for an exhaustive

report that debunked linger-
ing conspiracy theories about
last year’s election.
Barry County records
obtained by Bridge show
Carson Tucker — an Ann
Arbor attorney who repre-
sented Leaf and included
him on numerous elec-
tion-related emails — asked
Trump allies for information
that might justify voting
machine seizures by his cli-
ent and other sheriffs
“expressing an interest” in
St. Joseph, Shiawassee, Lake
and Jackson counties.
Tucker sent an email Dec.
15, 2020, to Carissa Keshel
at the Fight Back Foundation,
a nonprofit chaired by pro-
Trump attorney L. Lin Wood,
and asked for information
about “counties that have
been potentially compro-
mised” in the Nov. 3 elec-
tion.
“My client Barry County
Sheriff and several other
county sheriffs in Michigan
would like to consider issu-
ing probable cause warrants
to sequester Dominion vot-
ing machines if there is evi-
dence of criminal manipula-
tion,” Tucker wrote.
In an earlier, Nov. 20
email to Powell — who later
filed failed lawsuits seeking
to overturn Trump losses in
Michigan and other swing
states — Tucker claimed
Leaf had already seized vot-
ing machines and ballots in
Barry County.
But that did not happen,
according to local election
officials and Leaf, who told
Bridge he did not recall why
his attorney told Powell it
had.
Constitutional sheriffs
Lake County Sheriff Rich
Martin confirmed Leaf con-
tacted him last year as he
tried to get other sheriffs to
investigate potential “impro-
priety with those machines.”
But Martin said he never
signed on, telling Bridge he

“didn’t want any part of it.”
“He does kind of his own
thing,” Martin said of Leaf.
“I’m friends with him, so he
usually calls me first on
some of these things, but I
don’t have anything to do
with that.”
St. Joseph County Sheriff
Mark Lillywhite and
Shiawassee County Sheriff
Brian BeGole did not return
multiple voicemails from
Bridge Michigan. The fourth
sheriff mentioned in the
emails, Steven Rand of
Jackson County, did not seek
re-election and is no longer
in office.
Leaf is among a handful of
self-described “constitution-
al sheriffs” in Michigan who
contend they are the highest
level of governmental
authority and have the power
or duty to defy or disregard
laws they find unconstitu-
tional.
“Constitutional Sheriffs
have a legal obligation and
duty to ferret out criminal
activity in the county on
behalf of the citizenry,”
Tucker wrote in the Dec. 15
email to the Fight Back
Foundation. “And they are
the chief law enforcement
officers.”
Leaf described Tucker as
his personal attorney and

confirmed they also have
worked together on legal the-
ories that informed his deci-
sion to not enforce COVID-
19 orders issued by Whitmer
and her administration.
In a brief phone interview,
Tucker said the emails
obtained by Bridge through
the Freedom of Information
Act were protected by attor-
ney-client privilege and
shouldn’t have been dis-
closed by the Barry County
Sheriff’s Office.
Asked his view on the role
of a “constitutional sheriff,”
Leaf told Bridge it’s import-
ant for elected county law
enforcement leaders to
“exercise their authority” so
that it does not get “diluted.”
“It’s just a matter of us
harnessing it and getting the
office of sheriff back on track
and where it’s supposed to
be,” he said.
Martin, the Lake County
sheriff, said he had been part
of the national Constitutional
Sheriff and Peace Officers
Association but has “kind of
backed out of it because it’s
become so controversial.”
While he took an oath of
office to uphold the federal
and state constitutions, “I’m
not, by far, a fanatic like a lot
of people in that organization
are,” Martin said.

From Antrim to Gen.
Flynn
The emails obtained by
Bridge show Leaf and Trump
allies were focused on
Dominion voting machines.
Keshel from the Fight
Back Foundation, responded
Dec. 15 to Tucker and Leaf
with a document she said
came from Flynn, the former
national security adviser who
twice pleaded guilty to lying
about Russia but was par-
doned by Trump following
the 2020 election.
“Hi Carson and Dar,
General Flynn wanted ya’ll
to see the Antrim Forensics
analysis, and we believe all
48 counties are affected the
same,” Keshel wrote, refer-
encing a factually chal-
lenged report on Dominion
voting machines used in
Antrim and dozens of other
Michigan counties.
“I am in contact with the
team to be able to coordinate
our next steps with these
Dominion machines,” she
added.
Antrim County, about 200
miles north of Barry County,
emerged as an unlikely focal
point in Trump’s fraud claims
after a programming error by
the Republican clerk led to


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Mystery figure questions local


clerks in sheriff’s investigation
Taylor Owens and Rebecca Pierce
Staff Writers
Eight months after the 2020 presidential
election, Barry County Sheriff Dar Leaf is
not saying whether his office has found any
evidence of voter fraud.
But he is continuing the investigation,
Leaf said.
The sheriff would not comment as to
when or why that probe began, other than to
say they received a complaint.
Barry County Prosecutor Julie Nakfoor
Pratt said she has not received any informa-
tion from the sheriff relating to this investi-
gation.
Her office typically doesn’t receive infor-
mation about an investigation until it’s com-
plete, Pratt noted. “But if it’s an investiga-
tion of this magnitude, normally we would
be involved.”
In this case, however, she said she heard
about it from the public.
“I was concerned because I heard there
was somebody doing the investigation
alongside [the deputy] who is not a police
officer,” Pratt said.
Several local officials, including Pratt,
confirmed that the sheriff’s office is working
with a man named Michael Lynch to inves-
tigate the case – which is prompting a num-
ber of concerns ranging from accountability
to credibility to cost.

“Apparently, he holds himself up as some
kind of forensic auditor – and those are very
expensive,” Pratt said. “So, I don’t know
what he was auditing, or if he was in his
capacity as an auditor. But, if he was, the
question that popped into my mind was,
‘Well, who’s paying him?’ Is he doing this
for free?’
“My understanding is that he was doing a
tremendous amount of questioning. So, I’d
like to know, if this is a law enforcement
investigation, who is he?”
The sheriff himself is unclear regarding
Lynch.
“I don’t know too much about him,” Leaf
said, adding that he does not know who is
paying Lynch or if he has an official title or
special training.
Lynch is not an attorney, Leaf added, but
he is helping the department with election
issues because the sheriff’s officers are not
trained in how to investigate election fraud.
“This is pretty new stuff for us,” the sher-
iff said, noting that his office frequently goes
to outside parties for help.
Leaf said he’s not sure how Lynch fits into
the investigation and would have to ask the
deputy involved to find out.
The Hastings Banner was unable to reach
Lynch for comment.
For more of this story, see Thursday’s
Banner.

Continued next page

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