The real Bourne conspiracy: The wild story behind the 2020 election fraud allegations


After the 2020 election, Fox News and other right wing media peddled the bizarre theory that there had been a vast conspiracy involving the Dominion voting machine company, the Smartmatic software company, the Democratic party, the deceased Venezuelan leader Hugo Chavez, and large numbers of election workers all over the country to switch votes from creepy Donald Trump to Joe Biden. Although preposterous on its face, this spread like wildfire and became an article of faith with creepy Trump, his cult followers, and among his campaign team.

Both Dominion and Smartmatic sued Fox News, Newsmax, and OANN. and also people close to creepy Trump like Rudy Giuliani and Sydney Powell who spread this nonsense. Fox settled with Dominion for a whopping $787.5 million dollars. Smartmatic’s case against Newsmax was settled on September 26, 2024 but the details have not yet been released. Four other cases are still pending.

(Just yesterday a different case, a defamation lawsuit brought by two Georgia election workers Ruby Freeman and Shaye Moss against the website The Gateway Pundit, was settled with the site’s owner Jim Hoft (sometimes referred to as the ‘dumbest man on the internet‘) was settled with Hoft admitting that the two women had not committed fraud. The monetary terms of the settlement were not disclosed.)

But where and how did this outlandish rumor begin? It turns out that it may have originated in the fertile mind of someone named Marlene Bourne who, in the immediate wake of the election, sent off an email outlining her theory to Sidney Powell and others. This was revealed in the depositions of the Dominion lawsuit against Fox but apart from a few reports in smaller news outlets in 2023, it has not received much publicity.

Bourne told MinnPost in an interview that the idea of voter fraud “was a spur of the moment thing” because she “wasn’t really paying attention to the election.” She said she had never heard of the voting systems company before, but heard the name “Dominion” somewhere that day and began to research the company, relying on her intuition and what she called a “sixth sense” that she says enables her to “connect the dots.”

“I am able to connect things that don’t seem to connect,” she said. “I have this unique vision. I see things that other people don’t.”

Bourne said she used her “highly attuned awareness” and ability to “find a common thread” to investigate Dominion Voting Systems.

One of her first discoveries, that Dominion was a Canadian company, energized her.

“Isn’t that, in itself, foreign interference?” Bourne asked. Dominion has a U.S. headquarters in Denver, Colo., as well as a headquarters in Toronto.

Bourne said it took her about an hour to piece together her information about Dominion and 10 minutes to write her lengthy email.

Documents made public in the lawsuit show that less than an hour after receiving it, Powell forwarded Bourne’s email to Maria Bartiromo, and the Fox News host allowed Powell to air claims of a vote-switching Dominion “algorithm” in an interview the next day.

Dominion’s lawsuit against Fox asks: “What was the evidence for these far-fetched claims that Powell sent to Bartiromo the day before the broadcast? An email entitled Election Fraud Info Powell had received from a ‘source,’ which the author herself describes as ‘pretty wackadoodle.’ This email, also received by Dobbs, alleged Dominion was the one common thread in the voting irregularities in a number of states.”

Dominion’s lawsuit says Bartiromo and Dobbs never disclosed the existence of Bourne’s email.

A spokeswoman for Fox News told MinnPost in a statement neither Bartiromo, nor her producer, used Bourne’s email in their coverage. She said that during her deposition, “Bartiromo testified repeatedly that she did not know who the writer was and didn’t remember seeing the email beyond forwarding it to her producer to check out.”

The Fox News spokeswoman conceded, however, that Bartiromo’s show gave Powell the opportunity to advance Bourne’s theories.

But wait, there’s more!.

But the strangest revelation so far from the Dominion Voting Systems case against the cable channel may be the alleged source of the voter-fraud claims that sparked the lawsuit: a single email from a previously unknown woman who was convinced, among other things, that late Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia was murdered while being hunted for sport.

But Bourne didn’t stop there. In a flurry of names and statistics, she laid out a scenario in the email where the world is controlled by a sinister cabal —one that fatally hunted Scalia for sport (in reality, Scalia died in his sleep in 2016).

“Justice Scalia wasn’t accidentally shot during a hunting trip,” her email read. “He was purposefully killed at the annual Bohemian Grove camp. A club for members of the Mega-Group, during a weeklong human hunting expedition. NEVER accept an invitation to be a guest at that camp. Ever.”

In a discursive 40-minute interview with The Daily Beast, Bourne threw out a jumble of ideas that centered on ties between telepaths, the Bank of the Vatican, the NXIVM sex cult, and the 1970 film Beneath the Planet of the Apes.

And she explained where she got the conspiracy theories like the one that Fox somehow allowed to reach its airwaves, prompting the threat of a $1.6 billion judgment. Essentially, in Bourne’s telling, she conjures her theories out of nothing.

“It’s just really interesting where I’ll have the TV on, and I’ll hear a word or a person’s name, and for whatever reason, I can’t explain it, it’s going to compel me to look it up online, I’ll do a little digging,” she said. “Instead of saying I rely on my intuition, I say ‘the wind’ is talking to me. It’s just a fun way of living my life, don’t you think?”

Bourne gets her theories from song lyrics and glimpses of magazine covers. She’s working on a book styled after the Ancient Aliens television series that focuses on the discovery of Tutankhamun’s tomb. She has an elaborate theory about the deep state and the media: in Bourne’s telling, the CIA controls the Washington Post, the FBI runs the New York Times, and the State Department runs Politico and CNN.

That these media outlets based their allegations on this kind of rubbish boggles the mind. Fox News tries to maintain a facade of journalistic credibility by asserting that there is a distinction between its ‘news’ programs and its ‘opinion’ programs. But even an opinion show would be obliged to do some minimal fact-checking before rushing to spread a manifestly wild theory that was sent to it by some unknown person. No wonder they wanted to settle the case against Dominion out of court, even if it was for a healthy sum. The blatant and reckless disregard for the truth that is on display in this episode probably made them fear hefty punitive damages if the case ended up before a jury.

Michael Kosta of The Daily Show recently interviewed Bourne.

Even though these revelations are more than a year old, this clip from a few days ago was where I first heard about this story. Initially I thought that Bourne was an actor and that this was a funny satirical piece about the kinds of people who imagine and propagate crazy ideas. But as I watched it, it dawned on me that she was not playing a part. So I looked into it and found these news reports from more than a year ago, but there was almost nothing in the major media outlets.

Comments

  1. Pierce R. Butler says

    FTR: Antonin Scalia died at a hunting “camp” (luxury resort) in Texas.

    The Bohemian Grove campground (luxury resort) is in northern California.

  2. Ridana says

    So what you’re saying is, “They” moved the body to hide the evidence. I see, I see, it’s all clear now.

  3. says

    Bourne told MinnPost in an interview that the idea of voter fraud “was a spur of the moment thing” because she “wasn’t really paying attention to the election.”

    In other words, she didn’t know jaque merde about any of this, and made up a delusional conspiracy theory from what little (probably cherry-picked) facts she got (or that caught her interest).

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