Jesse Morgan drove a tractor trailer for a contractor working for the U.S. Postal Service. Shortly after the 2020 election, Morgan made these claims at a press conference held by the Amistad Project of the Thomas More Society: On October 21, 2020, Jesse drove his truck and trailer from Bethpage, New York, to Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, loaded with as many as 288,000 completed ballots. In addition, there were 2 large trays of mixed mail, bound for Lancaster. Those were in the front of the trailer.
After finishing this article I realized that it omits a recommendation that might be helpful to the Post Office: When I mail something, I use something called "tracking." Maybe the Post Office should try it.
Hi Russ, Great question. Yes, according to the PO, all trucks have global positioning (GPS). The PO does not dispute that Morgan made the trip to Harrisburg and then to Lancaster. The post office says he identified the wrong trailer, and that someone else took his trailer back to Harrisburg with "mostly packages" according to their "trailer data records," whatever those are. The post office does not explain why the trailer was not immediately unloaded in Harrisburg, before going to Lancaster, since most mail was for Harrisburg and the Lancaster packages were in the front of the trailer.
The PO claims that employees "could not recall" telling Morgan to go to Lancaster. I find it troubling that the PO does not have a written or electronic record of instructions given to the truck drivers. Most troubling is the 650,000 ballots printed in New York and then taken to the Philadelphia area. According to the Closing Memo, the printer does not know if the 650,000 were delivered in its own trucks, or "entered into the mail-stream in Rochester." And the PO also does not know if it delivered the ballots. Are you kidding?!
After finishing this article I realized that it omits a recommendation that might be helpful to the Post Office: When I mail something, I use something called "tracking." Maybe the Post Office should try it.
Great work as usual, Joe. Do you know if this or similar trucks have GPS tracking? I would be surprised if they don't.
Hi Russ, Great question. Yes, according to the PO, all trucks have global positioning (GPS). The PO does not dispute that Morgan made the trip to Harrisburg and then to Lancaster. The post office says he identified the wrong trailer, and that someone else took his trailer back to Harrisburg with "mostly packages" according to their "trailer data records," whatever those are. The post office does not explain why the trailer was not immediately unloaded in Harrisburg, before going to Lancaster, since most mail was for Harrisburg and the Lancaster packages were in the front of the trailer.
The PO claims that employees "could not recall" telling Morgan to go to Lancaster. I find it troubling that the PO does not have a written or electronic record of instructions given to the truck drivers. Most troubling is the 650,000 ballots printed in New York and then taken to the Philadelphia area. According to the Closing Memo, the printer does not know if the 650,000 were delivered in its own trucks, or "entered into the mail-stream in Rochester." And the PO also does not know if it delivered the ballots. Are you kidding?!
"The Commonwealth of Pennsylvania certified its 2020 election despite the undisputed fact that it had recorded 202,000 more ballots cast than voters."
Says who?
Hi Stuart, Thank you for your comment. I tried to address your question in my latest post. Regards....Joe