Based on the response from Newsmax, it appears Dominion Voting Systems filed a lawsuit and leaked it to media before the lawsuit was served on the targets. This is the signature move for Lawfare.
Reuters reveals first that Dominion has sued Newsmax, OAN and Patrick Byrne for defamation seeking $1.6 billion in damages from each entity. It does not seem coincidental these lawsuits are filed on the same day that Mike Lindell hosts a cyber symposium to present evidence of coordinated electronic voting system tabulation manipulation.
Dominion Voting Systems operates in multiple states identified by Lindell’s cyber-investigative team. According to the ongoing investigative analysis being revealed at the symposium, specific algorithms were deployed on a county level basis to change the vote system tabulation results.
REUTERS – Dominion Voting Systems Corp on Tuesday sued two conservative media networks, One America News Network and Newsmax Media Inc, saying they defamed the U.S. voting machine company by spreading false claims that it rigged the 2020 election against then-U.S. President Donald Trump.
Dominion also filed a lawsuit making similar allegations against businessman Patrick Byrne, the former chief executive of online retailer Overstock.com Inc (OSTK.O).
The lawsuits are the latest legal actions taken by Denver-based Dominion against Trump allies that amplified false theories about the firm. In each of the three lawsuits filed on Monday, Dominion is seeking more than $1.6 billion in damages, citing lost profits and other harms. (read more)
The issues surrounding the 2020 election are complex and some key states are attempting physical ballot audits to determine if any fraud took place. Georgia, Arizona, Pennsylvania, Michigan and Wisconsin have grassroots activist movements pressuring state legislatures for audits.




Earlier today New York City 
According to a
Today, the biggest names in Big Tech announce they have partnered with the Five Eyes intelligence network, ultimately controlled by the NSA, to: (1) monitor all activity in their platforms; (2) identify extremist content; (3) look for expressions of Domestic Violent Extremism (DVE); and then, (4) put the content details into a database where the Five Eyes intelligence agencies (U.K., U.S., Australia, Canada, New Zealand) can access it.