--- Page 1 --- APPROVED FOR PUBLIC RELEASE BY COUNSEL TO THE PRESIDENT WARRINGTON on 10 July 2026 -1 of 3- Orricia. Reconp FD-302 (Rev. 5-8-10) FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION Date of entry 12/13/2023 information: In Fall 2020, who was not married at the time and went to in 1r she People were standing outside an Office nex Oor and aske wanted a job. The office was previously an eyeglass store. went into the office and applied for a job registering people to vote. hired the following day. The office was run by a tall thin wh in Dut were | | job was to stand outside of businesses asking people if they wante oO register to vote. There were over 100 people doing the same job in the Muskegon area. These employees were paid _based upon how many completed registrations they submitted each day, but couldn't recall how much she was paid per registration. The white male employees that the organization was huge and had operations in other states. He also said employees who did the best, meaning turned in the most _ voter registration applications, could travel to other states to work. and also drove employees to their locations and collected registration applications themselves. Once the police executed the search warrant at the office, the employees were told their job assignment was over. was shown two nvasser contracts (attached as 1A13_1 6" and ; 1A13_2 114.") | | confirmed she had out both of these Torms. | | was shown 22 completed voter registration applications (attached File# S6D-DE-3407960 Date drafted 12/13/2023 by P| This document contains neither recommendations nor conclusions of the FBI. It is the property of the FBI and is loaned to your agency; it and its contents are not to be distributed outside your agency --- Page 2 --- APPROVED FOR PUBLIC RELEASE BY COUNSEL TO THE PRESIDENT WARRINGTON on 10 July 2026 FD-302a (Rev. 5-8-10) 56D-DE-3407960 Continuation of FD-302 of (U) I On 12/12/2023 page 2 of 3 as "Similar Hand A.") | initially stated that she remembered all the people on the_pages. After being told_that these applications appeared to be fabricated, a stated that | or a told all of the employees that 1 ey couldn't get enougn applications, they should just fill them in. This occurred at a meeting with over 100 employees present. One of the_employees_ asked what this person meant. GE os: recall if it was = or in front of the group, but whichever it was picked up nk a ion and filled it out with made-up information and said, "this is what I mean." | | or | then told them to make sure the information was filled out Correctly or ey wouldn't This person, either get credit for the application. iz was told she needed to submit seven to eight applications per shift 1f working alone and ten per shift per person if working with another employee. a was paid approximately $800 each payday. The company gave employees debit cards and loaded their pay on the cards each week. didn't recall if she turned in the same number of applications ea why she would have received the same pay for different numbers of or | to put any number she could think of for e€ social security number ut not to use her own_social security number or date of birth. oi told _b Ez or a: could make up names or use anyone el e. — retu e office at the end of her shift and fill in enou ank sheets with made-up people so that she reached her daily quota. OO coc that she filled out all of the "Michigan-issued driver's license applications. was told by ichigan-issued state ID card #" and "personal information" sections of the 22 reviewed voter registration applications, except for " and ' " [| signed all of the remaining 20 reviewed voter registration a ications except e. ese wou e Ys the office for | she turned them_in. often helped fill in e fabricated applications. the forms er that the n Ma names were fabricated. If there were forms that were rejected because they weren't signed sitting around the office, some employees would pick them up, sign them, and turn them in for credit. There were long lines of people at the end of each shift turning in their completed voter registration applications. The white male who ran the office left before the office closed. He never --- Page 3 --- APPROVED FOR PUBLIC RELEASE BY COUNSEL TO THE PRESIDENT WARRINGTON on 10 July 2026 FD-302a (Rev. 5-8-10) 56D-DE-3407960 Continuation of FD-302 of (U) Interview ‘iii ,On 12/12/2023 page 3 of 3 said he was leaving. After he left, |_| [i ran the office. The white male was around wh stru o fill out fake applications and was_aware it was occurring. Everyone working there was aware it was occurring. doesn't know if the group was trying to impact the election or personally trying to make money at_a_ job. Others employed by the group were | There were a couple of black male e y 5' 120 pounds. They always worked together and seemed "fishy". They were always hired. One was approximately 5'5" and the other was app whispering to each other and didn't really interact with anyone else. | ae for this organization for almost a month. | | col egitimate voter registration applications during ie. did not fill out any of the sections on the legitimate voter tion applications. The people registering to vote always completed those sections. estimated she submitted 100 fake voter registration applications to Pp. personally to make up tell the same thing to lots of people. It would not s e were thousands_of fake voter registration applications : would blame and the white male for the fake vo istration ap s. If eople claimed they told employees not to turn in fake applications, they are lying. There was no posters or anything else telling employees not information on the forms. to turn in fake applications. The employees were just doing what they were told. knew what was going on was fraud, but these people were forci ployees to do it so they could make a living. doesn't have contact information for any of the people she discusse the interview.