Anonymous 10/13/2025 (Mon) 02:30 Id: 8a8b0e No.162894 del
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BPRO’S CONNECTIONS TO COMMUNIST CHINA'
In 2011, Jason Gant hired “Everyone Counts” of LaJolla, California to develop the first ever online military voting system, then called IOASIS. Gant used a federal grant and spent $668,831 on a system only twenty-seven people used in the first year – about $28,000 per vote. IOASIS morphed into a program that is now used for Uniformed and Overseas Citizen Absentee Voting Act (UOCAVA) voting.
In 2012, Everyone Counts was contracted to handle voting for the Academy Awards. The results were unusual and led some to question the voting system. Since then, Everyone Counts was bought by Votem Corp, where Konnech’s Eugune Yu was on the board. Konnech and Eugene Yu made headlines last year when it was discovered that they were stealing personal identifying information and storing it in communist China.
Another incident in New Jersey raises eyebrows about how connected BPro, KNOWiNK, Everyone Counts, and Votem really are. New Jersey signed a $17 million contract with Everyone Counts for voter registration system maintenance. In 2019, after Votem acquired Everyone Counts, the company restructured, and sold the New Jersey contract to KNOWiNK. However, at the time, KNOWiNK was only known to sell and service e-poll pads, as they had not yet purchased BPro which handles voter registration. The questionable timing of this “inherited” contract by KNOWiNK without officially owning or selling voter roll maintenance software is an example of the smoke and mirrors in the election equipment shell game.

BPRO RELIES ON FOREIGN SOFTWARE DEVELOPERS IN VIOLATION OF THEIR CONTRACTS
China isn’t BPro’s only foreign connection: The New Mexico SOS displays election results in both table and GIS map form. A candidate in New Mexico noticed that BPro’s mapping feature is provided by a company called “Leaflet” who included a hyperlink at the bottom of all the state maps displaying election results (the hyperlink has since been removed by BPro):

NEW MEXICO’S ELECTION RESULTS GIS MAPS PROVIDED BY UKRAINIAN COMPANY “LEAFLET”
Clicking on the hyperlink brought up fundraising advertisement for the Ukraine War and another link to information about Leaflet’s creator, a native Ukrainian named Volodomyr Agafonkin. Per the website description, “Leaflet is the leading open-source JavaScript library for mobile-friendly interactive maps….”

UKRAINIAN WAR ADVERTISEMENT FROM LEAFLET’S DEVELOPER EMBEDDED IN BPRO SOFTWARE
The biggest problem with using foreign-created GIS features in BPro software is that they have signed at least a dozen contracts that contain a clause that work on sensitive data will be performed in the United States, including subcontractors:

SECTION OF BPRO’S CONTRACT WITH ARIZONA FOR DEVELOPMENT OF ARIZONA VOTER INFORMATION DATABASE (AVID)

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