Dominion says OAN’s ‘expert mathematician’ who claimed to prove election fraud actually had a job ‘setting up swing sets’

OSTN Staff

rudy giuliani oan oann
Rudy Giuliani wipes sweat away after an interview with One America News Network’s Chanel Rion outside the White House West Wing July 01, 2020 in Washington, DC.

  • In January, One America News presented an “expert mathematician” in an interview.
  • The “expert” claimed to have uncovered evidence that the 2020 election was rigged against Donald Trump.
  • He is actually a swing set installer on Long Island, according to a new Dominion lawsuit.
  • See more stories on Insider’s business page.

The right-wing media organization One America News presented a Long Island swing set installer as an “expert mathematician” who claimed to uncover evidence that the 2020 election was rigged, according to a new lawsuit filed by Dominion Voting Systems.

One America News’ Christina Bobb interviewed the swing set installer, Ed Solomon, on January 27 in a segment about the 2020 election, which President Joe Biden had won nearly three months earlier.

In the interview, Solomon claimed that he conducted a mathematical analysis showing that the results in Fulton County, Georgia, “can only have been done by an algorithm.” He added that the probability of Biden’s victory in the county was “1 over 10 to an exponent so large there’s not enough stars in the universe, there aren’t enough atoms in the universe, to explain the number.”

It’s not clear where Solomon got his dataset, or if he made it up. Factcheck.org compared the numbers he used in his analysis with the data available from Georgia’s secretary of state and found that they did not match. An audit of the ballots cast in Georgia in the 2020 election found that the results were correct.

Ed Solomon OAN Dominion
One America News claimed Ed Solomon was a “Mathematician” when he actually installed swing sets, Dominion Voting Systems said in a lawsuit.

According to Dominion’s lawsuit, Solomon is not an “expert mathematician” as OAN claimed, but “was in fact a convicted felon with no college degree.” The lawsuit said Solomon’s “current job was setting up swing sets in Long Island, New York.”

A spokesperson for Stony Brook University, with which Solomon claimed an affiliation, previously told Factcheck.org that he took several math classes over the course of seven years at the school but never received an undergraduate degree.

A person who appeared to be Solomon also was arrested in 2016 on drug-related charges and served two years in prison, according to Vice.

Dominion included these claims in a lawsuit filed Tuesday against OAN, alleging defamation over election conspiracy theories and seeking over $1.6 billion in damages.

Representatives for OAN didn’t immediately respond to Insider’s request for comment. A Twitter account that appeared to be associated with Solomon didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

Dominion previously decried Solomon in a letter sent to MyPillow CEO and conspiracy theorist Mike Lindell. The letter, dated February 4 and obtained by Insider, also pointed out that Solomon “is not a ‘mathematician'” and that he “is currently employed as an ‘Installer’ at a swing set construction company.” Dominion is suing Lindell, as well as a host of other entities, over false conspiracy theories about the company’s role in the 2020 election.

The same day, Dominion said in its lawsuit, it sent a letter to OAN demanding a retraction of Bobb’s interview with Solomon. OAN then took down the interview from its website, but left it up on other platforms, according to the lawsuit.

“OAN itself had effectively acknowledged [the claims were false] by secretly removing several articles and broadcasts from its own website that made similar claims,” Dominion’s lawsuit said.

Read the original article on Business Insider

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