If you thought the 2020 election controversy was old news, think again. A new bombshell has just been dropped, and it’s coming straight from someone who knows President Donald J. Trump better than most—Peter Ticktin, a successful Florida attorney, decorated Marine platoon sergeant, and longtime friend of President Trump from their days at New York Military Academy.
And what Ticktin’s alleging isn’t just some fringe theory. It’s about Dominion voting machines—yes, those same machines that were supposed to be the gold standard of election security, according to every cable news anchor wearing a blue tie in 2020. Ticktin says he’s uncovered something that should send alarm bells ringing across the country: “phone chips” embedded inside the motherboards of Dominion machines used in Michigan during the 2020 election.
Let’s pause right there. Phone chips. Inside voting machines. Think about that. If true, these chips could allow remote access or communication—essentially opening the door for outside interference. That’s not a bug; that’s a backdoor.
Ticktin didn’t just stumble across this information at a backyard barbecue. He’s been working alongside Associate Deputy Attorney General Ed Martin and Trump’s U.S. Pardon Attorney on a broader investigation into election integrity and legal persecution of Trump allies. What they discovered should make every American demand answers.
Now, the case getting the most attention is out of Michigan, where State Attorney General Dana Nessel—the same woman who’s made it her life’s mission to harass conservatives—brought charges against Matt DePerno, her former opponent in the AG race, and other individuals who looked into the voting machines. Their supposed crime? Examining the equipment after the 2020 election and finding some very uncomfortable truths.
Nessel claims these folks tampered with machines, broke seals, and accessed data without authorization. But here’s what they actually did: they were given access by local clerks to inspect the equipment. The goal? To find out what really happened in an election that millions of Americans still believe was riddled with irregularities.
Ticktin is calling this exactly what it is—lawfare. Retroactive punishments. He says Michigan’s government decided *after the fact* to criminalize the actions of these investigators. “They decided later, to get these lawyers—the weaponization of government—how do we get them?” Ticktin said bluntly.
It’s the same playbook we’ve seen from Democrats coast to coast. If you can’t win the argument, criminalize the opposition. First, they tried to silence people questioning election results. Then they called them conspiracy theorists. Now, they’re charging them with crimes for looking into it.
And the media? Silent. Too busy covering Taylor Swift’s latest album or Biden’s latest gaffe to report on potential vulnerabilities in the very machines that count our votes.
Let’s be clear: the question here isn’t whether Joe Biden got more votes. The question is whether the machines used to count those votes were secure from outside influence. And if these machines had phone chips built into their motherboards, as Ticktin claims, that’s a serious threat to our entire democratic process.
Democrats love to say that 2020 was “the most secure election in history.” But if that’s true, why are they fighting so hard to stop anyone from looking under the hood?
This isn’t about Donald Trump. This is about whether our votes are safe. If the system is as secure as they say, then why the fear of transparency?
Americans deserve answers, and they deserve a voting system that isn’t vulnerable to tampering, interference, or political cover-ups. The truth has a funny way of coming out, even if it takes a few years and a few brave patriots to drag it into the light.
If there really were phone chips in those machines, someone needs to explain why. And if the government changed the rules just to punish the people who tried to expose it, then it’s not just the machines that are broken—it’s the system itself.
