Sheriff Mack Encourages Other Sheriffs to Investigate Evidence of Election Fraud Depicted in ‘2000 Mules’
The claim made by Dinesh D’Souza’s documentary “2000 Mules” that significant fraud occurred in the 2020 election should be independently investigated by sheriffs in their counties, said former Arizona sheriff Richard Mack.
The first step of any investigation into this allegation is watching the movie, said Mack, founder of the Constitutional Sheriffs and Peace Officers Association (CSPOA).
“The ‘2000 Mules’ movie finally got us totally on board this issue. And it is our number-one issue now,” Mack said.
“Every sheriff in the country should be watching that movie,” Mack told EpochTV’s “Crossroads” program.
However, the evidence presented in “2000 Mules” by two researchers, Catherine Engelbrecht, the founder of the nonpartisan election integrity watchdog True the Vote (TTV), and Gregg Philipps, a cyber investigator for TTV, has been discredited by major media, Mack noted.
Mack advises investigating the reported evidence first. If the report is false, those who produced it should be arrested, Mack said.
“We need the sheriffs to investigate this so badly because the federal government won’t do it.”
Mack said that the federal agencies which should investigate the alleged election fraud are not independent, and they follow orders. “[The] sheriff is independent. He doesn’t have to ask anybody permission to do this investigation.”
Mack encourages people to watch the movie “2000 Mules,” then have their sheriff watch it and ask the sheriff to conduct an investigation.
Also, if people witnessed that election fraud has taken place in their county, they should notify their sheriff, Mack said. “You should have a relationship with your sheriff. Go volunteer to help your sheriff out. Ask the sheriff to form a posse.“
In Arizona, the law stipulates that “the sheriff can call out every able-bodied citizen to help him enforce the law or keep the peace,” he added.
Election Fraud Investigation Gregg
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