🚨 INVESTIGATION ACTIVE: Acting AG Blanche Touts "Ton of Evidence" on 2020 Election Probes
Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche has officially confirmed that the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) is actively pursuing multiple federal investigations into the 2020 presidential election, asserting that a "ton of evidence" exists regarding alleged misconduct.
The confirmation has sent shockwaves through the political landscape, signaling a aggressive push by federal investigators to review past election procedures.
The DOJ's Active Probes
Appearing on Fox News over the weekend, Acting AG Blanche revealed that federal prosecutors and investigators are deeply embedded in multi-state reviews.
The Focal Points: Blanche specifically identified Arizona and Fulton County, Georgia as primary jurisdictions where federal investigations are currently underway.
The Objectives: Investigators are heavily focused on verifying voter rosters, ensuring one vote was cast per eligible voter, and checking whether unauthorized individuals participated.
The Material: The update follows a series of recent federal maneuvers, including a January FBI raid that seized hundreds of boxes of 2020 election records from a Fulton County facility, alongside recent sweeping grand jury subpoenas.
Charges vs. Reports:
The Path Forward
While the announcement has energized advocates demanding full exposure of the 2020 data, Blanche offered a tempered view on what the final outcome of these investigations might look like.
When pressed on whether the public would see immediate criminal arrests or a "definitive answer" on the election being stolen, Blanche noted that uncovering hidden misconduct takes a massive amount of work. He stated that criminal charges are not guaranteed and suggested the DOJ's final delivery might ultimately come in the form of a comprehensive public report detailing their findings.
The DOJ's aggressive movesparticularly a sweeping subpoena demanding the personal contact information and residential addresses of thousands of Fulton County election workers have sparked intense legal and political pushback.
Congressional lawmakers and Fulton County officials have heavily criticized the scope of the probes, calling the demands overbroad and filing motions to block the subpoenas. Despite the resistance, federal judges have so far allowed the DOJ to maintain control of seized election materials as investigators dig deeper into the archives.