A Palm Beach County Sheriffs detective visited the OKeefe Media Group (OMG) headquarters in West Palm Beach, Florida, prompting fresh questions about law enforcement priorities as investigative journalist James OKeefe continues to expose alleged election-related misconduct in deep-blue California.
According to Gateway Pundit, James OKeefe recounted the incident, stating, Police showed up at my office looking for me. He added, We dont know what this is about, underscoring the lack of clarity surrounding the visit.
OKeefe emphasized that his recent work has focused on documenting wrongdoing by others, not committing crimes himself. Nobody has been arrested in our recent videos. We have another coming tomorrow showing more crimes on tape, he said, highlighting what many conservatives see as a double standard in how authorities respond to election-integrity concerns.
A detective from the Palm Beach County Sheriffs Office appeared to reassure OMG staffers that OKeefe was not the target of a criminal case. I can promise you hes not going to jail, its not a criminal act. Okay, that I can promise you, 100%, okay? the detective told them.
OKeefe, however, pointed to what he views as a troubling pattern. Even more concerning that nobodys yet been arrested from our recent investigative videos in California but the police are showing up to my office here in Florida, he said, before adding, We have another video coming out tomorrow, so stay tuned for that.
James OKeefe is preparing to release another undercover video this week tied to his ongoing investigation into ballot petition fraud in Los Angeles. The OKeefe Media Group last Tuesday released video evidence of more California election fraud crimes, further fueling conservative concerns about systemic vulnerabilities.
Undercover journalists documented how homeless individuals on Skid Row are allegedly being paid by petition circulators to forge signatures of real voters on ballot petitions. In Part II of Cash for Ballots, series hidden camera footage shows petition circulators paying homeless individuals $2$3 per form to sign ballot petitions using the names and addresses of real registered voters and forging their signatures, James OKeefe said.
Circulators provided printed lists of voters, assigned identities, and directed the homeless individuals exactly what to write, monitoring them to ensure the information matched so the circulators get paid, OKeefe said, raising serious questions about election integrity in California while law enforcement attention appears focused hundreds of miles away in Florida.
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