Election official in Detroit who challenged the count forced into hiding
William Hartmann felt like he was stuck in a “Mission Impossible” movie when he left a Wayne County Board of Canvassers meeting in Detroit in November.
Law enforcement advised him not to return home and instead escorted him, with just the clothes on his back, to a friend’s house for safety.
“I was scared,” Hartmann told The Epoch Times. “[The police] actually had people stationed outside in different locations, watching, in case anything happened. They were there for three or four days.”
Hartmann said he didn’t venture outside for a week.
“I was afraid that somebody might recognize me when I was out and want to beat me up,” he said.
Hartmann was one of two Republican members of the Wayne County Board of Canvassers who initially refused to certify the election results due to imbalances in the numbers.
Hartmann and Monica Palmer deadlocked the certification in a 2–2 vote on Nov. 17, which resulted in a swift and hostile reaction from Democrats and community leaders over Zoom.
The two were called a “disgrace” by Rev. Wendell Anthony, a pastor and head of the Detroit branch of the National Association of the Advancement of Colored People, The Associated Press reported.
“You have extracted a black city out of a county and said the only ones that are at fault is the city of Detroit, where 80 percent of the people who reside here are African Americans. Shame on you!” Anthony said.
Ned Staebler, a vice president at Wayne State University in Detroit, said, “The stain of racism that you, William Hartmann and Monica Palmer, have just covered yourself in is going to follow you throughout history.”
Hartmann said that while he was concerned that the numbers in predominantly black Detroit didn’t add up, the discrepancies in predominantly white Livonia were worse.
Both Hartmann and Palmer changed their votes later that night after they were assured the state would allow an independent audit to be performed. The results were certified, although the two still haven’t officially signed the certification. The next day, Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson said the independent audit wouldn’t proceed.
“The news media went to my house and filmed the front of my house and my address,” Hartmann said. “And then my website was doxxed. And I got over 1,500 hate emails. And you got to then throw social media on top of that.”
He didn’t receive any explicit death threats, but was told to “burn in hell” many times, he said.
Hartmann worked with a friend to retrieve some clothes and his computer from his home.
“He arranged with the local police department to have an unmarked van and a couple police cars go to my house. I gave him the key and I stayed in a remote location and we communicated using FaceTime … and I told them what to get,” Hartmann said.
“So they did that. And then, the police cars sort of blocked in the news media vans. And then the other van—they had taken the license plates off just so that they couldn’t be tracked down—and that drove different ways till they got to where I was. And then I got all my stuff and I drove back to where I was staying.”
Hartmann said the tenant in his duplex also was forced to go live with her sister for a while.
He’s back home now, but the police still conduct regular drive-bys, he said.
After the initial drama, Hartmann is still trying to get his head around the discrepancies. He said he didn’t vote to certify the results initially because close to 71 percent of Detroit’s Absent Voter Counting Boards didn’t balance between the machine count and the paper ballot count, and no explanation was provided as to why (in what he called an over/under report).
For example, an undercount of one means there is one less paper ballot than the machine total and the explanation may be that a ballot was destroyed but it wasn’t recorded in the poll book, Hartmann said. Any discrepancy without an explanation cannot be counted in a recount and the machine tally has to be used, he said.
“It’s when you have overs—you have more voters voting than you have voters in the precinct—that doesn’t make any sense to me,” he said. “How did that happen? Nobody can give you an answer.”
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Michigan is still having trouble getting a consensus about the votes and there is still unresolved litigation at this point. The treatment of Hartmann looks like it was based more on intimidation than a reasoned dispute as to the count. It is the kind of treatment that makes others suspicious.
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