Aliens Among Us: How non-US citizens have infiltrated America’s electoral process and what you can do about it Paperback – October 4, 2024
by Jay Norman DeLancy (Author)
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With a Forward written by electron law attorney Cleta Mitchell, this first-ever "Votechecker Journal," election integrity leader and blogger, Lt Col Jay DeLancy (USAF Ret), introduces readers to America's modern election integrity movement by taking us along for the ride when he publicly exposed evidence of non-citizen voting in North Carolina. His initial effort resulted hundreds of his non-citizen voter challenges being lawlessly dismissed before 14 of the remaining 18 challenged voters being removed from the voter rolls, 11 of whom were referred to ICE for criminal prosecution. When his group learned from their unjust treatment and sought to expand their research project, the forces blocking their efforts fully emerged. Not only was a Soros-backed organization fighting his groups efforts, so were election administrators, court administrators, and elected politicians from both parties. He even documented how the state's Republican House and Senate leadership cooperated with the Democrat Governor to prevent further exposure of noncitizens registered and often voting in North Carolina. Going deeper down the rabbit hole, his group exposed illegal immigrants who were licensed as Notary Public and using that authority to notarize absentee ballots. Part of this story includes an insider's account of how the NC Secretary of State was caught issuing Notary Public licenses. Though the practice violated both state and federal law, the same legislature that blocked the author's reform efforts found a way to sabotage an historic impeachment investigation. The book also exposes some smoking-gun emails that demonstrated the artful tactics "deep-state" actors used in order to derail a federal investigation. Rather than discouraging readers, the author applies the lessons learned during his 12-year fight for election integrity. This section provides an action blueprint for either developing a consensus among any good public servants or "smoking out" the ones who are hiding noncitizens within their transaction records. It also includes constructive advice and specific language helpful when addressing this issue with lawmakers and public administrators at all levels of government. The book closes with a specific case history that put all of his advice into action. By following the tips and principles DeLancy offers in this heavily footnoted journal, readers will be equipped for defending our electoral process against the threat of noncitizen voting, no matter where you may live. ###
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