Welcome to the Kim Monson Show podcast. Kim Monson is your host. El Paso County canvass board member Candice Stutzreim voted to not certify the November 2025 election. Stutzreim discusses the issues that led her to this decision. Co-founder of Unite 4 Freedom Harry Haury explains that only by ensuring that we have real voters, real votes, real counts, and real proof, can we have the real representation and real America for which the citizens voted. State Farm agent Roger Mangan addresses rental and travel expense coverage on your auto insurance. ————————————————————————————– The Kim Monson Show airs on KLZ
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It’s the Kim Monson Show, analyzing the most important stories.
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The socialization of transportation, education, energy, housing, and water. What it means is that government controls it through rules and regulations.
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The latest in politics and world affairs.
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Under this guise of bipartisanship and nonpartisanship, it’s actually tapping down the truth.
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Today’s current opinions and ideas.
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On an equal field in the battle of ideas, mistruths and misconceptions is getting us into a world of hurt.
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Is it freedom or is it force? Let’s have a conversation.
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Indeed. Let’s have a conversation. And welcome to the Kim Monson Show. Thank you so much for joining us. You each are treasured. You’re valued. You have purpose. Today, strive for excellence. Take care of your heart, your soul, your mind, and your body. My friends, we were made for this moment in history. And thank you to the team. That’s Producer Joe, Luke, Rachel, Zach, Echo, Charlie, Mike, Teresa, Amanda, and all the people here at Crawford Broadcasting. Happy Monday, Producer Joe. And I hope you had a nice Thanksgiving.
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Happy Monday, Kim. And I did. I hope you did as well.
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Really did. I think I finally just finished the last of all the dishes. That was the pumpkin pie plate. But we had a really great time. And I cannot believe that we’re at December 1st. Yesterday was the first day of Advent. And we’ll talk a little bit more about that here in a moment. Check out the website. That is Kim Monson, M-O-N-S-O-N dot com. And make sure you’re signed up for our weekly email newsletter that goes out on Sundays, highlighting our upcoming guests as well as our most recent essays. You can email me at kim at kimmonson.com. The text line is 720-605-0647. And I thank all of you who support us. We’re an independent voice, and we search for truth and clarity by looking at these issues through the lens of freedom versus force, force versus freedom. If something’s a good idea, you should not have to force people to do it. And it’s never compassionate to take other people’s stuff, whether or not it’s their rights, their property, freedom, livelihood. opportunity, childhoods, or lives via force. Force can be a weapon, policy, unpredictable, an excess of taxation, fear, coercion, government-induced inflation. The agenda of the World Economic Forum and globalist elites is playing out all the way down to the municipal level. You can take a look at these crazy road diets. where they’re taking out lanes of traffic and parking for bicycle lanes on main thoroughfares. It seems like you could put the bike lanes over on not the main thoroughfares, but the goal is to push people out of their cars and try to make it so unpleasant that they will decide to use these public transportation systems. But people, the people of America, They like to go where they want to when they want to. The freedom of the road is really been a part of prosperity where people can have choices on employment and certainly to go see friends and family and all that is under this not so subtle attack. As you know, we have these important discussions because of our great sponsors. Another way to support the show is to support our sponsors. And one of those is Hooters Restaurants. They have locations in Loveland, Westminster, and in Aurora. And they really have great specials Monday through Friday for lunch and happy hour. And, of course, we’re into the football season. And I don’t watch much TV, but I did watch the end of the Broncos game last. last night unbelievable they won it in overtime on a fourth down because one of our players i can’t remember his name now was able to hit down a pass by the washington commander quarterback it was just pretty amazing but great place to get together to watch all the games as hooters restaurants and i thank them for their sponsorship of both the kim monson show and also the america’s veteran stories Regarding some of these headlines, first headline that I was going to hit is that Faith Winter, who is was a Colorado state senator, died on Wednesday before. a multi-car crash on I-25, and apparently the crash was around 6 p.m. on Wednesday, and she leaves behind a fiancé and two children, and so certainly sympathy goes out to her family on that. From a policy standpoint, she was very involved in much of the legislation that really led was very radical and activist. And so I certainly saw things differently from her regarding a policy standpoint, but sympathy and condolences out to her family on that. Our word of the day, I went to Advent because we’re in the Advent season and Advent is a noun and it could mean the coming or arrival of something or someone that is important or worthy of note. Number two, it’s the liturgical period preceding Christmas, beginning in Western churches on the fourth Sunday before Christmas and in Eastern churches in mid-November. And it’s observed by many Christians as a season of prayer, fasting and penance, but it’s a season of expectation. of the birth of the Savior of our world. And then the last definition is the coming of Jesus at the incarnation. And so I have my little Advent candles and lit one of those last night. And again, this is the four Sundays before Christmas Eve. And so our word of the day is Advent. It could also be they used it in the sentence of the coming arrival or something important as the advent of the computer. So it should be pretty simple for you to use the word Advent in a sentence today. Our quote of the day, I went to Dietrich Bonhoeffer. I was looking for Advent quotes. And Bonhoeffer was born in 1906. He died in 1945. He was a German Lutheran. pastor, a theologian, and anti-Nazi dissident who was a key founding member of the Confessing Church. Eric McTaxis wrote an excellent book about Bonhoeffer, and Colonel Rutledge and I did a show on him as well. And his writings on Christianity’s role in the secular world become widely influential. His 1937 book, The Cost of Discipleship, is described as a modern classic. And apart from his theological writings, Bonhoeffer was known for his staunch resistance to the Nazi dictatorship. He was accused or associated with the July 20 plot to assassinate Hitler and was tried along with other accused plotters, including former members of Abwehr, the German military intelligence office. And he was arrested and he was put into a concentration camp. And they didn’t have great records. They didn’t know exactly which camp he was in. But Hitler was so furious as he was realizing he was losing the war that they found Bonhoeffer and they hanged him on April 9, 1945. as the Nazi regime was collapsing, and then Hitler committed suicide on April 30, 1945. So this is what Bonhoeffer said, though. He said, a prison cell in which one waits and hopes is completely dependent on the fact that the door of freedom has to be open from the outside is not a bad picture of Advent. And that is Dietrich Bonhoeffer. A couple of other quotes, some big things that had happened. There was a National Guard shooting in Washington, D.C. Kristi Noem has said that the Afghan… that person that did that was actually radicalized in the United States. And this is from USA Today. It says officials are still working to determine the potential motive of the man from Afghanistan accused of shooting two National Guard members. One of them died. And apparently this guy came in and I think 2023 under the Biden administration. And certainly when we’ve been involved in wars on, foreign soil, there are those nationals that do help us. And in interviewing like the Vietnam War veterans, we left many of those people that helped us behind. And so bringing people that helped us to America is a, I think, is a good thing. However, I would question the potential vetting of the Biden-Harris administration on many of these Afghan nationals. So stay tuned regarding that. And we are on the air because of all of your support and also because I work with really great people. And I’m talking with Roger Mangan, State Farm agent, a great sponsor of the show. Roger, we’ve been going through auto insurance, and you’ve said there’s basically 11 different things that comprise auto insurance, and we want to finish that up today.
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Sounds good. We’ve got about three or four remaining elements that I think your listeners would be appreciative of a deeper understanding of. You know, we buy insurance. We buy it and we forget it in most cases until we need it. So let’s buy what we need, but let’s understand what we may be rejecting because there are things you don’t buy that you should really have because the costs are so low. And what are some of those things? Well, one of the things we talked about before, so this is a little overlap here, It’s called rental and travel expenses. When you add that to your policy, when you go rent a car, for example, and you have an accident in that car, what happens is the insurance you had in Colorado goes For example, you’re on a vacation in California at Disneyland, and then you have a wreck. How does insurance coordinate with that non-owned car, that rental car from Hertz, let’s say, and your policy back in Colorado? the way that works is everything you have in colorado transfers in this case state farm would transfer into that rental car with hertz in california now the question is when i have an accident in that car i need another rental car does the rental i have cover what’s going to happen in that second rental car and the answer is yes you have fifty dollars a day in colorado with state farm up to fifteen hundred dollar aggregate in the rental reimbursement of that second rental car Now, the big question, I think, and maybe a little bit confusing, what happens if there is an accident? Well, if you have rental reimbursement and travel expense coverage, then the repayment of a deductible amount expense, State Farm will pay up to $500 for a deductible for which you may be responsible for. Now, what does that mean? Well, if you have a $500 deductible on your car here in Colorado… you’re going to have a $500 deductible on that rental car that you just had an accident in. And what I’m saying is we will waive that $500 deductible in that rental car. I don’t think that happens with all companies or many companies, so you should be aware of that. And you should definitely have rental reimbursement and travel on a car in the household. If you have three cars, have it at least on one, and then that one car would transfer to that rental car on vacation in California. How much does that cost? You know, that’s about $19 every six months. So let’s say $3 a month, essentially. Okay.
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It seems like that makes sense. So let’s go to another one then. What’s another one we should talk about?
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The other is called Death, Dismemberment, and Loss of Sight. This coverage pays. And we’ve talked about that a little bit. We have. And remember, it’s $3.24 every six months with State Farm. You’d have to check with your carrier to find out how much that is. But if you are in an accident and you die with your seatbelt on, State Farm will pay $20,000 to the person who just passed away. Without a seatbelt, and I can’t imagine you don’t use a seatbelt, they would pay $10,000. Okay. You can buy different levels, $5,000 level or a $10,000 level. I would definitely recommend that. And it has more to do with… You know, when death occurs in a car accident, it’s a sudden death. It’s shocking to the family. And money becomes an issue in terms of covering expenses. And we talked about life insurance earlier in my conversations with Kim. And I’d like to discuss life insurance again through 2026 so we have a better understanding of options today. Okay.
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Roger, you know what? Let’s save these other ones for our next interview. How can people reach you and your team for a complimentary appointment?
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You can call us at 303-795-8855. I have four team members, all of whom are very, very professional and well-educated and can really bring you up to date on your needs. So give us an opportunity. Thank you.
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And again, that’s 303-795-8855. Like a good neighbor, the Roger Mangan team is there.
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There’s so much noise coming at us. Sometimes it is difficult to make sense of it all. How can you sift through the clamor for your attention and get to the truth? The Kim Monson Show is here to help. Kim searches for truth and clarity by examining issues through the lens of freedom versus force, force versus freedom. Tune in to the Kim Monson Show each weekday, 6 to 8 a.m. with encores 1 to 2 p.m. and 10 to 11 p.m. on KLZ 560 AM, KLZ 100.7 FM. the KLZ website, the KLZ app, and Alexa. Play KLZ. Shows can also be found at KimMonson.com, Spotify, and iTunes.
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And welcome back to the Kim Monson Show. Be sure and check out our website. That is Kim Monson, M-O-N-S-O-N.com. And are you ready for financial freedom? Then call our friends at Mint Financial Strategies. As an independent firm and an accredited investment fiduciary, they always put your interests first. Mint means more than money. It stands for a meaningful relationship. information sharing, a network of smart strategies, and a thoughtful advisor who puts you in control. No cookie cutter plans. Everything is tailored to you. So call Mint Financial Strategies today. That number is 303-285-3080, 303-285-3080. And pleased to have on the line with me Harry Howry. He is the chairman of Unite for Freedom, formerly United Sovereign Americans. He’s been involved with elections for decades, including consulting on the design and authoring of the Help America Vote Act, which is known as HAVA, in 2002. He has worked extensively with the U.S. military, the Department of Homeland Security, and the intelligence community. He’s recognized as a subject matter expert on cybersecurity forensics, attack and offense, and he was directly involved with election systems analysis after the 2020 election, where he was the first to advocate focusing on the obvious and massive election misconduct. He submitted expert testimony in several election challenges in 2020, including testimony that was filed before the Supreme Court. Harry Howry, welcome.
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Hello, Kim. Thanks for having me again.
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Well, it is good to have you, and there is much going on, particularly out here in Colorado. But Unite for Freedom has been very, very busy with a number of these different reports that have been published. uh, are published right now. And you can find those at unite for freedom, uh, dot com. And you’ve got, uh, 2024 election validity scorecards. So let’s talk a little bit about that. And, um, oh, you know, the other thing though, I think is that the other reports, yeah, that’s, that’s it is the 2024 election validate, um, validity scorecards, right?
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Right.
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That are dropping.
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Yes. The Colorado one is, uh, Just recently minted.
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Okay, so that will be published. Can you tell us what that is, or do we wait for publication on that?
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Yes, absolutely. We can talk about it. So the scorecard measures a number of things, and we’re just in a final revision of the formatting, but basically Colorado has approved compared to many states, has a pretty clean scorecard. Now, that doesn’t mean that it’s acceptable. The number of registration errors in Colorado is quite high. Almost 15.2% of the registrations appear to be flawed. Now, They don’t have as high a voting rate as other voters in the state. So the error in the actual vote in 2024 appears to be about 3%, just short of that. Still quite large, just to be clear. I mean, we have many, many races that are decided at a relatively… you know, a small percentage. So we haven’t actually reviewed the number of races in Colorado that were decided by less than 3%. But the fact of the matter is, if you have this kind of error rate, you really can’t depend on any of the results. And let me explain why. It’s kind of like when you, you know, balance your checkbook. It doesn’t balance completely. It has… you know, it’s not valid. It just doesn’t meet the requirements of being an accurate representation. So we have another really troublesome number that’s in the system, which is what gives you the concern that there’s a significant conduct issue, almost as much as the error in the voting. And that’s that there’s a huge vote-to-voter discrepancy for the size of Colorado. It’s at about 34,000 ballots, slightly more than that, 34,223. Now, Colorado is a little different than most states. Many states have more votes than voters. In Colorado, they have more voters than votes. So somehow, from, you know, the minimal observability that the states give us, you can find 34,000 votes that were registered as having been cast, but they weren’t counted. So totally inexplicable. There’s always, you know, the states come up with, you know, kind of a waving of hands that Just administrative error. It’s not just administrative error. It’s a very large number. Almost 1% of the votes in Colorado that are registered to the history of the voters or for which a voter was registered aren’t being counted. So we suspect… because of some other analysis we’ve done, which we were late, the Colorado, uh, vote tampering report is not finished yet, but, um, we see the same patterns in Colorado that we see in the other states where, uh, we’ve discovered manipulation of the voter history during the voting process. So, um, these things are very disquieting. They, they demand, uh, investigation, um, They comport completely with what we’ve observed since 2020, except for one thing. And they would claim credit for it, I suppose, if they listen to it. But in several jurisdictions, the number of voters with registration errors seems to be going down. But the number that are going down is quite limited. And what we’re concerned about, quite frankly, is that there aren’t any changes in the voting procedures and regulations and policies that would suggest that they’re doing something better than they did before. We’re very, very concerned that in these limited and restricted areas, they’ve discovered how to manipulate the vote without it being observable in the data statistics. And it’s just a few areas california colorado is one of them dallas county texas is another there’s there’s there’s many areas that suddenly in 2024 show a better vote to voter reconciliation but then we see these massive manipulations of the numbers behind the scenes and these manipulations just aren’t explicable uh In some states, it’s in the millions. And it comports completely with what was theorized in Phil Klein’s effort under the Amistad Project and the work that Nate Kane and I did back in 2020. We indicate that there has to be a mechanism for them to slide votes in and out if they’re cheating. And so part of the reason I found it for freedom to begin with was to expose this particular problem. And it took us a while. I mean, when we started this, the records were extraordinarily sloppy. The states still have not cleaned their voter rolls. But now in a few jurisdictions, some areas seem to be bringing their systems in the way they want them to come in. But the measurable artifacts of that seem to be diminishing. So why is that? It’s just hypothetical on our part. The fact is that we still need investigations of what’s going on in all of these areas. And then when we look at You know, when we did the deep dive in Jefferson County in Colorado, the numbers were quite bad. They weren’t as bad as California, but they were extraordinarily worrisome that you had a 9% variance. When you look at it by county, too, you have offsetting errors because we think that we’re not measuring the fraud. We’re measuring the errors. uh, you know, how, how bad is the reconciliation problem within the state? Uh, because, because that, those are indicative of, of things happening in the voting process that are illegal. Um, it doesn’t measure, you know, I keep trying to tell people this, what we’re measuring are the things that we can see. And, um, and we still have things that we can’t see. And, uh, because nobody lets us touch the ballots, nobody lets us do a detailed CVR reconciliation or a reconciliation of the images of the ballots to the vote that was counted on those ballots. All of these, where we look at them nationwide, and we have gotten an ability to see parts of it, Often, unfortunately, the people doing that analysis don’t understand broadly what it means. For instance, in both Maricopa and Fulton County as examples, we see CBR records that don’t agree with the ballots. We see images that don’t agree with the physical ballots.
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And that’s where you’ve had an opportunity to compare the images with the actual ballot. But here in Colorado, we can’t do that. I know that we have the risk-limiting audit, and we’ll talk with Candace Stutzrehm in the second hour about that. And there may be a select amount that we’re able to look at, but those ballots are selected by the Secretary of State, is my understanding. But there are some states where actually you can compare them, huh?
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Yes, and it’s been very few that we’ve broken through the phalanx of the Democrat, liberal, and even conservative in some situations resistance to election transparency. And this is, you know, in a nonpartisan sense of this, we aren’t actually able to pinpoint, you know, what this is doing. We’re just able to pinpoint that there’s massive error in the system. And so… I worked with a number of people in Georgia, and Garland Fabarito is a friend of mine. We worked closely with trying to figure out how to see, if he was able to get hold of certain information, how to see the fraud. And the indicative and the trouble is this is a cybersecurity thing and most people don’t understand it. So you start talking about the digital signatures not agreeing or the tabulator registration is not the correct tabulator registration. But often cybersecurity people don’t do a very good job of explaining things because it’s so natural to us. that we don’t think about the persons that don’t understand this very broadly. But when you have an image of a ballot that has a digital time, date, and tabulator information stamped into it in a cybersecurity protected fashion, and it doesn’t agree with the tabulator numbers and the batch numbers and the other things that were in that digital signature, it means it’s an insertion in a fraud. It’s as simple as that. So sometimes we equivocate about these types of things. Or when the ballot boxes in Maricopa and Fulton and a dozen other states come back, actually more than dozens, come back with the seals broken from storage, it means that it’s no longer a valid representation of You can’t tell. Somebody’s tampered with the evidence. If it’s an evidence locker for a police official and the evidence has been tampered with, you don’t rely on that evidence. It’s the same thing with an audit. When all the audit controls the security process, process or audit controls that a company uses for their financial statement, when they come back broken, you just throw out the audit.
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Okay. So, Harry, let’s go to break. I’m talking with Harry Howry. He is the chairman of Unite for Freedom. We’re talking about a variety of things. One is the scorecards, and then also processes in our elections that cause concern. And these important discussions happen because of our sponsors. And for everything regarding residential real estate in the metro area, reach out to Karen Levine.
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All Kim’s sponsors are an inclusive partnership with Kim and are not affiliated with or in partnership with KLZ or Crawford Broadcasting. If you would like to support the work of The Kim Monson Show and grow your business, contact Kim at her website, kimmonson.com. That’s Kim Monson, M-O-N-S-O-N dot com.
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And welcome back to the Kim Monson Show. Be sure and check out our website. That is Kim Monson, M-O-N-S-O-N dot com. And we are now in the Advent season coming up to Christmas and people starting to think about Christmas shopping. A great gift for your loved one to honor their military service would be to buy a brick that will be on one of the pathways of service when the U.S. MC Memorial opens. is remodeled, and you can do that. You’ll receive a beautiful certificate, and you can get all that information by going to usmcmemorialfoundation.org. That is usmcmemorialfoundation.org. We’re talking with Harry Howery. He is the chairman of Unite for Freedom, formerly known as United Sovereign Americans, and we’re talking about elections. And I think we’re really talking about… maybe three different things. One is obviously transparency, Harry, but I want to go back to the scorecards because that is just taking a look at registrations and records. What’s the process? Because you are releasing these and already have many of them out there. California has this huge error rate of… in the 30% range. But that’s different than we have so many people that are concerned about the tabulating machines. This is just looking at data from each of these states, right? And you have volunteers that are doing this, correct?
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Correct. We have a few exceptions to that. If we do a deep dive on identity, we don’t use our volunteers. We We’re very concerned that people might encounter PII, and so we try to make sure it’s in a protected and licensed environment. If that type of accident occurred, it wouldn’t be done on purpose, obviously. But what we do with our volunteers, and we have over 100 data analysts involved in our organization, we look at the state voter rolls and voter history. People often… don’t quite understand the difference. The voter history shows whether or not a person voted in a particular election. Every state in the country requires, you know, based on a variety of federal law, they require a record associated with the voter history, the fact of whether you voted as a person or not. This is part of our analysis, is looking at not just the voter registration’s but also the voter history component of those systems. Sometimes they’re combined into one thing that’s called usually the Secretary of State’s voter registration roles. But the fact of the matter is that it’s not just the registration errors we’re looking at. We’re also looking at whether or not things are suspicious with regard to the actual votes. And so one of the first places we looked at in the scorecard is, you know, what we call line, you know, three or, I’m sorry, section three of the scorecards. And that’s, you know, was the number of votes counted equal to the number of votes cast. And the way you can get to that number is by looking at the reported vote count and the reported, you know, look at all the individual histories and figure out whether or not they’re you know, paying attention to that. And so, you know, in Colorado, as an example, that number in, and I think I said this wrong, it’s section four of our scorecard. There’s a 51,877, I’m sorry, that is completely incorrect. I’m talking, you know, quickly here. There’s 34,223 votes or a vote-to-voter discrepancy. In Colorado, it’s negative. So people ask us all the time, how could it be negative? That means that there were more voters counted than there were votes counted. So are they destroying votes? Is this just an error of some sort of administrative process? Are they losing votes because of a provisional balloting system or a or some sort of adjudication process that’s not reconciling. Who knows? But the fact of the matter is that that number should be zero. And so when they certify an election with these kinds of massive discrepancies in them, it’s actually against federal law. It’s defined as election fraud on the part of the election officials. And so, you know, what our emphasis from the beginning was was to try to find the artifacts within the system that tell us that there’s something terribly wrong. The scorecards tell us that there’s something terribly wrong. The reason that we wanted to go this route to begin with was that, you know, we can observe little – you know, we can observe, you know, boxes of ballots or something being – delivered in 2020 at 2 a.m. in the morning or whatever time it was at TCF Center in Detroit or Wayne County. We can see ballots being scanned after people have been sent home in Fulton County, Georgia. We can see weirdness in the Maricopa. voting system we have legal ballot harvesting of all things in california and a couple of other states where where people unassociated with elections can go pick up ballots are they all making it to the counting center you know and people say well we’re going to all make it do you know in in in california you can see how people voted through the mail-in ballots envelope because there’s a hole in it that’s supposed to, you know, you hold these things, you know, in safety. In normal procedures, you have a hole in the ballot or in the envelope, and you hold these things on a rack of rods that go through the ballots as kind of a security measure so people can’t insert or delete things that are already collected. But the fact of the matter is you can see how people voted. So if you’re a boat harvester and you decide not to deliver one of the ones or 10 of the ones or 1,000 of the ones that you picked up because they have the wrong kind of boat on it, it’s a place that’s open to direct manipulation. Or you could be a mail carrier. And I’m not accusing any specific mail carriers of any malfeasance, but you can get one guy that’s a little bit or one gal that’s a little bit irritated at one party or the other. And they know that this particular area picking up mail will be heavily the way that they don’t want to vote with. And all they have to do is throw all the ballots in that area away. The whole concept of using the current system without any controls or observability is preposterous. And, you know, the things we can measure are terrible. I mean, you mentioned California, the The number that’s really horrible in California is at 18.7%. I believe it’s the number, but it’s right at 18% statewide. The number of people that voted that we can’t identify who they are is almost one in five.
SPEAKER 09 :
Oh, my gosh, that’s crazy. So, Harry, I just want to clarify. In Colorado, you said that there was 34,000 more voters. Voters counted.
SPEAKER 04 :
34,000 voters that are shown to have voted in excess of the number of ballots that were counted.
SPEAKER 09 :
Okay.
SPEAKER 04 :
And that’s an aggregate number for the state. The actual number is much worse than that. And let me explain that. If one county is over and the other county is under, they cancel each other out partially. So if you look at this at a precinct by precinct basis, the number is very large. The county by county basis, it’s a little bit less large. And then the statewide basis, these… things, the vote to voter discrepancy tends to be positive and negative differently across an individual state. So, and then in every state we have counties that do it perfectly. So why do you have a county that does it perfectly? And, you know, often The bigger counties don’t. And people say all the time, well, that’s because it’s a bigger county. No, it’s not. Anybody that’s familiar with process at a bank or anything else, you get better when it gets bigger, not worse. So it’s a misnomer. I mean, there’s something wrong in the operations at scale across the country. You were also talking about risk-limiting audits. If I can just journey into that for a moment. Risk-limiting audits are supposed to be randomly selected samples. They are not, which means that they aren’t truly risk-limiting audits. They’re a fraud. So the words risk-limiting for audit is actually an oxymoron. It’s not designed to find error. In any state that we’ve looked at, it’s designed for the secretary of state or the state election official or whoever it is that’s doing the risk-limiting audit. It’s a tool that they can use to say they did the right thing without having to prove they did the right thing. The only way to do a risk-limiting audit appropriately is to make a random selection, truly random selection, across the whole body of voters. And then there’s often this thing that says it’s misunderstood from a statistical basis that says that it’s got a 95% probability of finding any errors. No, no, it doesn’t. It’s a 95% probability of finding out if there are errors within a certain confidence level range. And so the definition of risk-limiting audit and the way that the secretaries of state and the election officials run them is actually completely wrong. They don’t solve the problem. The most egregious example is Brad Rappensperger in Georgia in 2020, deciding, you know, what’s going to, you know, he’s going to allow to be the risk limiting audit. And then because he was forced by adverse litigation, you know, what was actually going to be counted with regard to, you know, precincts or whatnot. This is absurd. If you’re claiming a statistically valid process, you’ve got to use a statistically valid process. And that means that the sampling has to be across the whole state. You have the same problem in Colorado. The Secretary of State gets to decide where the sample is going to be focused. This is ridiculous. It’s across the whole state. And it’s got to be – if you’re really looking at statewide races, it’s okay. But if you’re looking at – You know, down ballot races and needing to discover those you need to do it so that it’s statistically valid for every race, which means you have to, you know, make a fairly significant selection. But most importantly, it’s got to be completely random. And it’s not in Colorado.
SPEAKER 09 :
Right. And I was trying to find the legislation that put that in place where, and I remember reading this thinking, now that is odd that on a risk-limiting audit that the Secretary of State can choose the ballot numbers. Do I have that correct? And that’s what’s used for the risk-limiting audit, correct?
SPEAKER 04 :
So they can choose. The best way to put it in general is that they get to kick the sample that’s going to be looked at.
SPEAKER 09 :
Got it, got it, got it. So, yeah, which opens up questions. So we’re going to continue the discussion with Harry Howry. He is the co-founder of Unite for Freedom. He is the chairman of Unite for Freedom. These discussions happen because of our sponsors for everything mortgages. Reach out to Lauren Levy.
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SPEAKER 06 :
April 26th, 1777. Colonel, the British are raiding Danbury and burning the town. I’ll go tell them. Sixteen-year-old Sybil Ludington mounted her horse and rode 40 miles through night and pouring rain. That’s twice the distance of Paul Revere to sound the alarm.
SPEAKER 01 :
Quickly, assemble at my father’s house.
SPEAKER 06 :
The Kim Monson Show is our modern-day Sybil Ludington, bringing us the latest breaking news in the battle for truth and freedom. Ben’s Plumbing, Heating, and Cooling is proud to stand with Kim. Will you stand with us? Get engaged with the issue that keeps you up at night so that you can influence your school and community with truth and justice. And for quality craftsmanship at a fair price, call or text Ben’s Plumbing, Heating, and Cooling at 303-995-1636. That number again is 303-995-1636.
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We’ll be right back.
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To learn more, reach out to Teresa at 520-631-9243. Teresa would love to talk with you. Again, that number is 520-631-9243.
SPEAKER 09 :
Welcome back to the Kim Monson Show. Be sure and check out our website. That is Kim Monson, M-O-N-S-O-N dot com. And definitely check out the Center for American Values. And a great Christmas gift would be to order one of their Medal of Honor quote books. It’s a great actually it’s a great gift. I don’t really do many stocking stuffers, but you could probably put that in a stocking. but you can get more information about ordering that by going to their website, and that website is AmericanValuesCenter.org, AmericanValuesCenter.org. And also I wanted to say thank you to Laramie Energy for their gold sponsorship of the show because it’s reliable, efficient, affordable, and abundant power. from naturally occurring oil natural gas and coal that powers our lives fuels our hopes and dreams and empowers us to change our own personal climate to be warm in the winter and cool in the summer and if you’re having any challenges now that’s gotten very cold with being warm in the winter be sure and reach out to another great sponsor of the show and that is bins plumbing heating and cooling all that information is on my website we are talking with harry howry He is the chairman of Unite for Freedom. And Harry, I think the next question is this important information. There’s so many different places where we have vulnerabilities. But looking at these scorecards is identifying some vulnerabilities. I think the question is what to do, and here in Colorado, our listeners and followers have stepped forward to fund two different lawsuits, one of them through Unite for Freedom regarding these election challenges, and also then our listeners stepped forward and funded the Jefferson County prevalence study. What to do, because if we don’t get this turned around by the 2026 elections, we could see the Senate congressional races that could be very questionable. So what can we do?
SPEAKER 04 :
I hesitate to say this exactly because it’s always misconstrued as a cult of violence. We’ve got to fight, fight, fight. I mean, you know, there’s nobody out there that is in the election, broadly election integrity space, that isn’t trying to expose something that needs to be exposed. You know, whether you’re talking about Tina Peters’ terrible case, I mean, frankly, Tina was right. And she was trying to preserve federal evidence, and the state puts her in jail for it. So it’s a ridiculous situation where lawyers are losing their law licenses for trying to argue about the law, which is, you know, the last time I looked, it was kind of their job to represent plaintiffs and defendants. We’ve never asked them to be the judges themselves before. And by the way, this is what they do in communist countries. When China gets upset at somebody filing a lawsuit, the first person to go to jail is the lawyer. So this is a terrible suppression of our freedom of speech in the form to make sure our grievances are heard. This is all basically an attack on our freedom of speech, our fundamental, most fundamental freedom. exercise of our freedom of speech is our ability to anonymously vote for who we choose for our own representatives and and uh you know they’re trying to degrade it every way they can and it’s not just just to be clear it’s not a partisan issue i mean We see lockstep control of blue areas all over the country. Are the local people being represented by the representatives that they chose? No, they’re not. So it’s, you know, we need to restore our republic, the democratic institutions upon which, you know, the third line of the Constitution guarantees the people the right to elect their own representatives. So what specifically do we need to do? We need to get the registration process completely fixed. And the massive problems in the registration system allows all sorts of noise. We actually know now because of our vote tampering report that the false registrations are used to hold data temporarily and then they’re injected back into the system. Clear evidence of vote changing is occurring all over the place. Vote changing. We’re not talking about, you know, the things that the scorecard originally was aimed at. We’re talking about the fact that we can measure now with some of it. And unfortunately, we don’t have as much visibility in some places as we had liked. But we have something called the vote tampering report, which is looking at changes where it’s visible. to the voter history. There’s no explanation for this. We have a guy in Dallas County, Texas, that voted 71 times. He voted, then his vote was deleted. Then he voted, then his vote was deleted. Then he voted, and this was during early voting. I don’t know what happened on the day of.
SPEAKER 09 :
Was this in the same election, same year?
SPEAKER 04 :
Yes, yes.
SPEAKER 09 :
And that was because of voter history.
SPEAKER 04 :
That comes from looking at a very highly granular level or as granular as we can. uh at at the vote histories so so you’ve been an election you know advocate for a long time kim what what would you do if you saw somebody in the voter history that voted and then an hour later didn’t vote and then an hour later did vote and then a couple hours later didn’t vote or did vote, just back and forth 71 times. He did vote once in the final voter history, but he was added 70 times and deleted 70 times before his final vote was registered.
SPEAKER 09 :
And so, goodness, we wonder how this happens. Harry, I’m so pleased that you were able to take the time to give us three segments. We are just about out of time because there’s so much to talk about. What is your final thought to leave for Coloradans today? We’ve got about a minute.
SPEAKER 04 :
Well, we have a lot to do in Colorado. We’re suing there, as you noted. There’s a lot of studies we want to do because we found some aberrations that we want to dig into. We need your help. We need your time. We need volunteers. We need money. These things, you know, and Kim, you helped us raise our initial funding. We need more money. We have to support our lawyers and our investigators. You can go to unite the number for freedom dot com. It’s very easy to donate there. If you want to fight for Colorado, the best way to fight is to put people that are looking deeply into this. And there’s many other good causes out there. I’m not trying to say not to not to donate to anybody else. But Unite for Freedom has got actual evidence. This has all been collected using evidentiary procedures and evidence. and getting the judges to listen to it because our judiciary is so badly broken right now, it’s difficult, but we’re doing it. We’re seeing people win around the country and we start focusing on very tightly defined points of law and the judges have very little room to escape. More and more of our work is going to focus on that. And we need we need we need time and we need treasure. And otherwise we don’t win 2026.
SPEAKER 09 :
OK, Harry Howry, thank you so much. We will talk again very soon. The quote for the end of the show is from Dietrich Bonhoeffer. He said the celebration of Advent is possible only to those who are troubled in soul, who know themselves to be poor and imperfect and who look forward to something greater to come. So today, my friends, be grateful, read great books, think good thoughts, listen to beautiful music, communicate and listen well, live honestly and authentically, strive for high ideals, and like Superman, stand for truth, justice, and the American way. My friends, you’re not alone. God bless you. God bless America. Stay tuned for our number two.
SPEAKER 13 :
The views and opinions expressed on KLZ 560 are those of the speaker, commentators, hosts, their guests, and callers. They are not necessarily the views and opinions of Crawford Broadcasting or KLZ management, employees, associates, or advertisers. KLZ 560 is a Crawford Broadcasting God and country station.
SPEAKER 07 :
It’s the Kim Monson Show, analyzing the most important stories.
SPEAKER 09 :
The socialization of transportation, education, energy, housing, and water, what it means is that government controls it through rules and regulations.
SPEAKER 07 :
The latest in politics and world affairs.
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Under the guise of bipartisanship and nonpartisanship, it’s actually tapping down the truth.
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Today’s current opinions and ideas.
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On an equal field in the battle of ideas, mistruths and misconceptions is getting us into a world of hurt.
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Is it freedom or is it force? Let’s have a conversation.
SPEAKER 09 :
Indeed. Let’s have a conversation. And welcome to the Kim Monson Show. Thank you so much for joining us. You each are treasured, you’re valued, you have purpose. Today, strive for excellence. Take care of your heart, your soul, your mind, and your body. My friends, we were made for this moment in history. Thank you to the team. That’s Producer Joe, Luke, Rachel, Zach, Echo, Charlie, Mike, Teresa, Amanda, and everyone here at Crawford Broadcasting. Happy Monday, Producer Joe.
SPEAKER 14 :
Happy Monday, Kim.
SPEAKER 09 :
Quite a bit of important information in hour number one with Harry Howery, who is the chairman of Unite for Freedom. If you missed that, you can catch that again today at 1 to 2 p.m. This hour will be rebroadcast 10 to 11 p.m. That’s on all KLZ 560 platforms, which is KLZ 560 AM, 100.7 FM, the website and the app. And, of course, then we will have the podcast on the website, or you can find those at Spotify.com. and iTunes. And as you know, we search for truth and clarity by looking at these issues through the lens of freedom versus force, force versus freedom. If something’s a good idea, you should not have to force people to do it. On the show, we focus on the issues, and we’ll mention the people in those issues, but we try to stay out of all the personality stuff because that gets over into emotion, passion, and we don’t make good decisions when we’re over in that realm. We need to stay reasoned. And so that’s why we will focus on these issues. Let’s see. Let’s get in here. Our word of the day, Advent began yesterday. And so I chose the word Advent. It’s A-D-V-E-N-T. First definition could be the coming or arrival of something or someone that is important or worthy of note. Number two, it’s the liturgical period preceding Christmas, beginning in the Western churches on the fourth Sunday before Christmas and in Eastern churches in mid-November. And it’s observed by many Christians as a season of prayer, fasting, penance, and expectation of the birth of the Savior of our world. And then lastly, the third definition is the coming of Jesus at the incarnation. And these definitions are from the American Heritage Dictionary. the quote of the day i go to many times to a to z quotes and then uh actually marshall dawson also sent me a great quote book but i was thinking about advent so i was looking for advent quotes and this came up from drica bonhoeffer he was born in 1906 he died in 1945 from he was hung Shortly before the end of World War II, Bonhoeffer apparently had participated in a, I guess, the plot to assassinate Hitler, and Hitler, as Hitler was realizing that he was losing the war, he just was in a rage, and he made sure they found Bonhoeffer, and he was hanged on April 9, 1945. And then on April 30th, 1945, Hitler committed suicide. But this is what Dietrich Bonhoeffer said. He said, And, of course, what he’s saying is… is our relationship with Christ happened because of what he did. He opened that door so that we could have a relationship with God the Father. And, of course, he did that through his birth and then his death and resurrection. And so that’s Dietrich Bonhoeffer. Excellent book was written by Eric Metaxas on Bonhoeffer. And Colonel Bill Rutledge, 97 years young, and I, he had read the book and he said, Kim, we should do a show on Dietrich Bonhoeffer. So we did. So that’s in our archives. And so stay tuned on some new things that will be happening at the Kim Monson show right after the first of the year. One of those will be pretty exciting on the website. So stay tuned for all of that. let’s see our headlines several different headlines i mentioned this in our number one and faith winter a colorado state senator died in a i-25 multi-car crash on wednesday before thanksgiving And she leaves behind a fiance and two children and certainly our condolences and sympathy to her family. From a policy standpoint, she really pushed radical activist policies that we’re seeing being put in place by, as a friend of mine coined, champagne communists. And so certainly condolences to her family. But regarding her policies, they were very, very bad for Colorado. Next thing, a lot has happened. Last week, as you know, we prerecorded the shows for last week. And I heard from many of you that you really enjoyed them. And it’s a lot of work. We’ll be doing that again for the week of Christmas. We pre-record the week of Thanksgiving, Christmas, Fourth of July, and Easter. And it’s a lot of work, but it’s a lot of fun. And I certainly appreciate Producer Joe’s great work on that. Next thing, again, last week we were off, but USA Today has reported that officials are still working to determine the potential motive of a man from Afghanistan accused of shooting two National Guard members in Washington, D.C. And one of them, a young woman, died. And the suspect was subdued after the attack and hospitalized. He’s being investigated as possible terrorist suspect in this November 26 shooting. And so stay tuned on this. Apparently, Kristi Noem, uh head of the department of homeland security said investigators believe that uh lock and wall was living in washington state when he became radicalized through connections in his home community and state officials are working with the man’s friends and family members for more information And in the aftermath of the shooting, President Donald Trump accused President Joe Biden’s administration of poorly vetting Afghan immigrants and other foreign nationals who entered the country. And so stay tuned on that. Next thing, and we will be addressing this on Thursday. As many of you know, there were six Democrats that did a video encouraging our military members to not enforce unlawful acts. And so apparently, Pete Hegsteth is considering, he’s the head of the Department of War, taking Jason Crow, Colorado Representative Jason Crow, who was in the video, and Arizona Senator Mark Kelly, who’s, both of them are… and bringing them back to active duty, which I talked to Colonel Rutledge about this, and he said, absolutely, this can be done, and then be tried for court-martialed. And so stay tuned on this. This is going to be super interesting, and Colonel Rutledge will be on on Thursday. Let’s see, I think it’ll be hour number… Two, we’re going to address that, that Colonel Rutledge had been involved with military courts. So this is going to be super interesting. So stay tuned on that. Then lastly, as you all know, this beautiful city that I love, Denver, is in decline. It’s dirty and it’s dangerous. And these blue city mayors and governors are destroying these cities. But I think that this is pretty apropos. This was reported, I think, in October from KDVR. It says big cities are populated by hundreds of thousands of people, but a hidden population even larger than the number of humans lurks in the shadows. And that population consists of hundreds of thousands or even millions of rats, depending where you are in the country. And this goes on to say that Orkin, which is a pest control company, rated the radiest cities in the United States. And Denver is in the top 10. But let’s listen to these cities. Los Angeles is number one. They’re all red cities, I think. Chicago. is number two, New York, three, San Francisco, four, Hartford, Connecticut, five, Washington, D.C., six, Detroit, seven, Philadelphia, eight, Minneapolis, nine, and number 10 is Denver. And you can really correlate the number of rats, the pest, with some very ratty policies in each of these blue cities and we’ve got to get this turned around the way to do that is through our elections there’s two things through our elections and also changing hearts and minds so people understand what these issues are and we here at the Kim Monson show are working on both of those by shedding truth and light on what is happening out there And we talked with him in our number one. Roger Mangan and his State Farm Insurance team certainly strives for excellence. And they might be able to save you some money. And the only way to find out is to give them a call. That number is 303-795-8855. And they can go through your insurance and make sure that you have what you think you need. And again, that number is 303-795-8855.
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SPEAKER 15 :
There’s so much noise coming at us. Sometimes it is difficult to make sense of it all. How can you sift through the clamor for your attention and get to the truth? The Kim Monson Show is here to help. Kim searches for truth and clarity by examining issues through the lens of freedom versus force, force versus freedom. Tune in to the Kim Monson Show each weekday, 6 to 8 a.m. with encores 1 to 2 p.m. and 10 to 11 p.m. on KLZ 560 AM, KLZ 100.7 FM. The KLZ website, the KLZ app, and Alexa. Play KLZ. Shows can also be found at KimMonson.com, Spotify, and iTunes.
SPEAKER 09 :
And welcome back to the Kim Monson Show. Be sure and check out our website. That is Kim Monson, M-O-N-S-O-N.com. And from Parker to Golden, Little Richie’s Pizza and Pasta is your go-to for real New York-style pizza, hearty pastas, and that unbeatable local vibe. Little Richie’s is serving up daily specials, quick and tasty weekday lunch deals, and a happy hour the locals actually build their plans around. Whether you’re bringing the crew, catching up with friends, or flying solo for a hot slice, Little Richie’s is your neighborhood hangout. On the line with me is Candace Stutzrehm. She is a Canvas board member in El Paso County. And before Thanksgiving, we had had her on the show because she had some real questions regarding the 2025 election in El Paso County and certifications. So, Candace, welcome to the show.
SPEAKER 10 :
Good morning, Kim.
SPEAKER 09 :
Thank you for having me back. Well, good to have you. And before we get into it, explain the Canvas Board and how you are on that board.
SPEAKER 10 :
I was appointed to the El Paso County Canvas Board first by Chairman Vicki Tonkins and most recently again by Chairman Ken Davis. Typically the canvas boards in each County are an odd numbered configuration, three or five members where, um, one or half one, one or two are Republican and one or two are Democrat. And then that puts the clerk at each County right in the middle as the tiebreaker vote.
SPEAKER 09 :
Okay. And how long have you served as a Canvas board member?
SPEAKER 10 :
This is my third year. Okay. Anyway, yes, this is my fifth certification.
SPEAKER 09 :
Okay. So before Thanksgiving, we had you on because you had been looking at some of the reports and you were concerned about those. And you were going to meet later on that Friday morning regarding a certifying ceremony. So what happened, Candice?
SPEAKER 10 :
Well, just to tell you how it was discovered, my friend Jason Lupo is a campaign manager for one of the races that was on this ballot. And he had been pouring over the data on the election night reporting website, which is where you go. Every county has a product that’s created by the Secretary of State. And it gives you the rundown of the total votes counted as they’re downloaded, you know, periodically. And it has the date and the timestamp on it. But there’s also a special place where you can go even deeper into the numbers. It’s called a comma-separated values file. And by just simply clicking on that icon, it opens up a detailed spreadsheet of all the votes received, the ballots cast, under and over votes, and really gives you a more detailed rundown. So Jason discovered that there were numbers that were seriously off in his whole race and basically showed me how he was most concerned that it appeared that the ballots cast greatly exceeded the votes counted by over 7,000. So I continued to crunch the numbers on the entire document, and just the first night I did it, only doing the binary races, I came up with 27,000. And then… I contacted a friend of mine, a colleague, many people in election integrity world know of Peter Berninger out in Michigan. He’s an expert at this. Yeah, Wisconsin. Sorry. And boy, he was just right on it. He just swept off his desk and went right to work on this, just dove into it. I believe he has AI assistance and other programs that helped analyze it. And with his work, he brought up the number of missing ballots to over 52,000. So I knew that we were really on to something. And the first person I passed it by was the Democrat, my Democrat counterpart. I thought if he could share my concern for this, then I would have the confidence that we really had something to run up the flagpole. And sure enough, just looking at my own worksheet, it’s a pretty staggering find. And we We were supposed to have signed on Tuesday. They pushed it off to Friday to try to get to the bottom of the numbers. And what transpired over that time was interesting. As Canvas board member, I’m authorized in statute to make requests of information or ask questions before I’m compelled to asked to be asked to certify. And that’s what I was looking forward to on Friday. And because they had done, you know, hours and hours of work, pulling together these numbers, and they came up with which was a very plausible explanation. Basically, it’s very difficult to explain, but I’m going to try. If you could imagine looking at a map of your county that showed all the precincts. Now, in El Paso County, there’s around 250 precincts. There’s nothing logical or symmetric about them. They run on geographic lines. It’s just a grid. So for each of these races, each of these, say take the top one, which was the County Commissioner District 5 race. If you would lay down the County Commissioner District 5 race, say like an overlay, transparent overlay over the top of the precinct map, Think of it as a Venn diagram. You’re going to notice that the boundaries of the commissioner district doesn’t perfectly line up with the precincts. And that creates a real problem for designing ballots and counting ballots within each of those jurisdictions. particularly when say the commissioner district cuts right directly through any a precinct so if you go around the perimeter of the um of the jurisdiction you’re going to see that it cuts through almost every single precinct on the border so um what do you do about that you know because generally What makes a precinct a precinct, at least I always thought this as precinct leader, is that basically everybody in your precinct votes for the same people. You actually have a code in your voter ID that tells you all your different districts by number. Well, it turns out that there’s a lot more to it than that, and I wasn’t aware of it until now, that there’s such a thing called partial precincts. which are created just for this reason, so that when a given jurisdiction slices through a precinct, it is able to split out the votes of which part of the precinct should be counted in that race. Well, the explanation of these overvotes is that the value on the column that is labeled ballots cast was written in such a way to where it was not able to nuance the partial districts. It counted the entire precinct rather than using a value of a partial precinct. So it created an extraordinary amount of overvotes over the course of the entire race. And that’s why these numbers were so out of bounds. And they went to three hours. I peppered them with questions, my questions and Peter’s questions. And they explained it very thoroughly, even went through a couple races and reconstructed them from the bottom up. showing where the additional ballots were being added to the ballots cast column because they were taking in the entire precinct rather than just the partial number. Is that making any sense to you, Kim?
SPEAKER 09 :
Well, I think it’s a good explanation. It doesn’t make sense to me that this is occurring because it seems in this day and age that that should not be occurring.
SPEAKER 10 :
Right. I explained what happened. Now, why it happened is a separate question. I think that’s what you’re getting to. And that was equally confounding to our clerk Schleicher as well, because he found out, not from the Secretary of State, because they declined to even return his phone calls. But by Coordinating with other colleagues in the County Clerks Association, Steve heard reports from people who had been in their positions for much longer than him to say that they have known about this anomaly on this comma separated value file, CSV file, for many years. And they’ve known that that ballot’s cast column has been an error for a long, long time. And so that’s the unacceptable part is that this data on which we rely upon, especially we as Canvas board members, it’s just unacceptable to have a value that’s that important just be so arbitrary and to have no integrity. And apparently they’ve known about it for years and done nothing. And then you can also address the way the secretary handled the revelation of this issue. I honestly call it the faux pas of the year, because in the time I’ve been doing this, you know, the first faux pas we had was the 30,000, um, non-citizens being asked to, being encouraged to register to vote. Remember that when 30,000 postcards went out to non-residents? It actually happened twice that year. And then in 2024, there was the, I believe the worst of all, the BIOS password breach, where on a similar situation, it was a database that a database of the machines, ironically. But underneath it, on a layer beneath the spreadsheet that is usually viewed most commonly, they discovered the BIOS password breaches. And, you know, that took on a life of its own. And they went across the entire state resetting the passwords. And really, I can’t tell you what the fallout was. There were eight different counties that did not certify on those grounds. So this is this year’s incident, the comma-separated value file over vote. And how is it that the Secretary of State can endure these types of – incidents year after year after year and never be held to account and now be considered competitive to be our attorney general. So that’s how I look at it. It’s the way this was handled. They were alerted by our clerk and they declined to return his call. There was no explanation. So they basically went into cover-up mode. They The website, which the election night reporting website that every each county has basically is the same format, but it’s contracted by the secretary of state. They went into every website and took down the CSV file without any warning, without any banner of explanation saying, you know, be back later or under construction, something like that. No, no notice at all that the files were just removed. And then in addition, they removed the El Paso County website altogether. Okay. So basically, without any explanation, go into deep cover-up mode, no apologies. I mean, just how hard would it have been to say this was a database error and it’s under construction, we’re fixing it, but no, the MO or the standard reaction is to take it down, cover it up, smooth it over, ask no questions, and go dark.
SPEAKER 09 :
And that’s not transparency at all, Candace Stutzring. We’re going to continue the discussion with Candace regarding this election certification. This is so important. These discussions happen because of our sponsors. And so pleased to have the Second Syndicate, Lisa Garcia and Teddy Collins, out there fighting for our Second Amendment rights in policy. They’ll be down at the Statehouse when the 2026 legislature convenes and support them and help them. You can go to their website. That’s thesecondsyndicate.com. And we’ll be right back with Candace Stetserine.
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SPEAKER 01 :
All Kim’s sponsors are an inclusive partnership with Kim and are not affiliated with or in partnership with KLZ or Crawford Broadcasting. If you would like to support the work of The Kim Monson Show and grow your business, contact Kim at her website, kimmonson.com. That’s Kim Monson, M-O-N-S-O-N dot com.
SPEAKER 09 :
And welcome back to the Kim Monson Show. Be sure and check out our website. That is Kim Monson, M-O-N-S-O-N.com. And do you have big dreams for your future, but you’re not quite sure how to get there? Call our friends at Mint Financial Strategies. They know your financial life is unique. And as an independent firm and an accredited investment fiduciary, they build personalized strategies that put your freedom and goals first. No sales pressure, no one-size-fits-all approach, just thoughtful guidance built right around you. So take that first step toward your future. Call Mint Financial Strategies. That number is 303-285-3080. And then also, we are in the season of Advent, which begins on the four Sundays before Christmas. And a great gift to honor your loved one’s military service would be to buy a brick that will be on one of their pathways of service when the Marine Memorial is remodeled. You’ll receive a beautiful certificate that you can frame and give to your loved one for Christmas or Hanukkah. It is a lovely gift. More information about that, go to usmcmemorialfoundation.org. And I’m talking with Candace Stutzreim. She is a Canvas board member in El Paso County. And before we get into that, though, I needed to clarify something. I had given you this report regarding the radiest cities in El Paso. America. And Denver is now in the top 10. And I said, I think that they’re all blue cities run by blue mayors. And one of our listeners said yes. And they also said, I initially said red cities. So I obviously misspoke, but all of them are blue cities. And these blue cities, these beautiful cities that we, they were beautiful. They’re because of the radical activists that are in control of these cities now. They’re becoming dirty and dangerous, and they’re really destroying these beautiful cities, and we’ve got to turn that around. And one of the ways to do that is elections. So we’re talking with Candace Stutzriem. She’s a Canvas board member in El Paso County. There’s three members, Candace, a counterpart who’s Democrat, and then the county clerk. So what happened on Friday, last Friday before Thanksgiving at the ceremony regarding the certification of the 2025 election? You had concerns. The county clerk went through, explained those. As one of our listeners said, she goes, ah, that was very confusing, sad. And she says, Kim, I can tell you’re somewhat skeptical of that. And I think part of it is, Candace, is they’ve known that they have this problem for years, and they didn’t fix it. That doesn’t sound very gold standard-ish to me, Candace Stetson.
SPEAKER 10 :
No, it’s not. And particularly the role as the Canvas board member in statute relies heavily on the metric of the ballots cast. In revised statutes 1-10-101.5, there are three different parameters where the Canvas board member is asked to certify data. And the first and most important one is that the number of ballots counted is less than the number of ballots cast. So this column that we’re referring to is the ballots cast. is referred to as ballots cast. So it’s the most important metric, I believe, in terms of voter roll integrity, particularly we in Colorado have the total mail-in election, or there is some in-person voting, but it’s as low as 1%. So number of ballots cast is huge. is just about all we – there are three different metrics. It’s the top metric of three that we are asked to verify. And so that we cannot count on that number as having integrity, cast questions, dispersions on the entire process. Right.
SPEAKER 09 :
And it seems that those two, you should have reports where those two numbers are the same, right?
SPEAKER 10 :
Well, they should add up, yes. The way the columns in this spreadsheet works is that there is one column that show the partial votes earned by each candidate. And so together they add up to the total votes. Then there’s a column for over and under votes. If you understand what those terms mean, undervotes is when somebody declines, say, in a two-vote race, they would leave it blank. That would be considered an undervote. An overvote is when they would vote for both of them. So the total votes of the two candidates plus the over and undervotes should exactly match the number of ballots cast. And in this case, say, that first race in County Commissioner District 5, there was a disparity of 7,234 votes. And I could go down the whole spreadsheet that shows, you know, really an egregious disparity between votes counted and votes cast.
SPEAKER 09 :
So, Candace, is that number, that 7,200 number, is that after the explanation that you went through regarding these partial precincts?
SPEAKER 10 :
Well, I’m glad you brought that up because I still have questions pending with the county. They were able to… show the example of two or three of these races, how by adding up only the partial precincts that the numbers will match. But I want all 52,000 votes accounted for, and I think they do also. So the Democrat Canvas board members standing with me on this, and this isn’t over until those 52,000 votes are accounted for. Okay.
SPEAKER 09 :
So you’re at the – and there’s tremendous pressure to certify. At least that’s my read from what I’ve seen regarding legislation. And so you are at this ceremony then on Friday morning. What happened?
SPEAKER 10 :
Well, there’s always pressure to certify because, as I’m saying, the statute has pretty much reduced the role of the Canvas board member to simply verifying that certain numbers that are displayed to the Canvas board member, one is greater than the other, that the number of ballots counted is less than the number of ballots cast, and that the number of ballots in each precinct is less than the number of registered voters, and then the total abstract of votes. So you’re given an array of numbers. And I always say that any third grader could tell you that this number is greater than this one. This one is less than this one. But that’s all the campus board member is asked to do. In other words, they really don’t want anything more than that. And I have always maintained that the campus board member is the face of citizen oversight of our elections. People like me take it very seriously, and people in our party take it seriously as well. And I feel that those values that we are asked to just simply sign off on, those values together are insufficient to describe whether or not an election is certifiable. Because there are so many moving parts to an election, particularly a mail-in election. You know, everything from distribution of the ballots through the mail system, dropbox surveillance and security, signature verification issues. Then there’s the grand drama of the tabulators themselves. their programming, and their susceptibility to manipulation from outside influence. And then, most recently, what’s concerning us the most is the function we call election night reporting. And that’s where the tabulations of each individual county are served up to the Secretary of State. And That is why we’re taking an extra close look at these values and what they are telling us. And I just want to bring up why we’re so concerned about this right now. We have a very an incredible event going on right now involving whistleblowers within our own system and within the Venezuelan government, Venezuelan Actually, I would call them engineers that were hired to design the original voting machines and create the source code, which is common to all voting machines that we use today and use throughout the entire, not just country, but the entire world. There’s two Venezuelan engineers who actually designed these. voting machines for Hugo Chavez back in the early 2000s, have conducted testimony with the DOJ and also with an attorney named John Case. He is Tina Peters’ attorney here in Colorado. He conducted an excellent interview with one of the uh, whistleblowers, you know, and he was witness protected, blurred out with, with some, with a funny voice. And anyway, we learned that these machines are actually designed to cheat. And then, um, that, that is a quote of the Venezuelan engineers. Um, but this, but the source code, which is pretty much inaccessible because it’s proprietary information is common to all the machines. The company was originally called Diebold, and then it became Smartmatic. Smartmatic became Sequoia. Sequoia became Dominion, and now Dominion is Liberty Vote. But the common thread throughout all of those machines is the common source code. And that source code, by the way, is in the vault of the central bank in Venezuela. So there’s a lot more going on in Venezuela that meets the eye, in my opinion. But what we’ve learned from that is that this election night reporting is kind of the knit point of where a lot of this manipulation is occurring today. And so that is why we’re leaning in on this number very carefully. So we’re very concerned about the explanation that we’re hearing. also the reaction and the response by the Secretary of State to make this right.
SPEAKER 09 :
Okay. So we’re going to continue the discussion with Candace Setz-Reim. She is a Canvas board member in El Paso County. And just to note, John Case, who she referenced, Tina Peters’ attorney, will be our featured guest on Friday, an hour number one. We’ve also invited the executive director of the Colorado State Thank you very much. and empowers us to change our own personal climate to be warm in the winter and cool in the summer. And if you’re having any challenges now that we’re in this cold snap with being warm in the winter, be sure and reach out to Ben’s Plumbing, Heating, and Cooling. All of my sponsors are on my website. And also, if you have been injured, you’ll want to make an appointment with John Bozen and Bozen Law.
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SPEAKER 02 :
Thank you so much for having me. To learn more, reach out to Teresa at 520-631-9243. Teresa would love to talk with you. Again, that number is 520-631-9243.
SPEAKER 09 :
Welcome back to the Kim Monson Show. Check out our website. That is Kim Monson, M-O-N-S-O-N dot com. Did want to mention the Center for American Values, which is located in Pueblo on the Riverwalk. Pueblo is known as the home of heroes because there’s four Medal of Honor recipients that grew up there. And the Center for American Values is nonpolitical. It’s nonpartisan, just focused on these foundational principles of honor, integrity, and patriotism. I’d highly recommend that you make sure over Christmas break to take the family down to see the portraits of valor of the Medal of Honor recipients. It’s a life-changing experience. That website is AmericanValueCenter.org, AmericanValueCenter.org. We’re talking with Candace Stetsrim, and she is a Canvas board member regarding elections, certifying elections in El Paso County. And Candace, it seems that I remember, we’re talking about pressure to certify, but it seems that I remember some legislation that was passed within the last few years that said that if a Canvas board did not certify, an election that the Colorado Secretary of State could come in and do so. Am I remembering that correctly? Yes, you are.
SPEAKER 10 :
By the way, because there’s an odd number of members on the board, say myself, if I decline to certify, my vote is considered a minority vote. It takes two members in order to cast a majority dissenting vote. So what I’m left to do is to submit a minority report explaining my reasons for not certifying. It would take a majority vote in order for the Secretary of State to be compelled to answer to the reasons that we’ve offered up. But yes, what you’re saying is true. I believe it was 22-276, I was trying to find it here, where basically it says in the most convoluted wording that if the Canvas board members decline to certify that the Secretary of State can take into account the numbers as they’re presented and choose to certify. on her own. And so that’s exactly right, Kim. That is how the statutes are written. So we have this system. It’s kind of a facade, if you want to put it that way, of citizen oversight, because like I said before, that all we’re asked to do is to verify certain sets of numbers. And I don’t believe that they are indicative of the entire complexities of the race. And it’s kind of like just sign on the dotted line and we’ll move on. Nothing to see here. So I believe in my minority report sincerely. I put a lot of effort and time into composing the report so that it has integrity in itself. And even with the BIOS password breach last year, we were only able to get eight other counties to not certify because they are basically intimidated by the process where, sadly, the role of the Canvas board member is reduced to just an administrative chore, just sign on the dotted line. I will say that that’s not true of El Paso County, that they genuinely welcome the minority report. And I try to honor their respect for that because that’s what I believe the role of the canvas board members should be, should be the face of the citizen oversight at the county level.
SPEAKER 09 :
Well, and we must have free, fair, honest, and transparent elections. And what we’re talking about here is a lack of transparency. And transparency is so important. And if there is not transparency, then we have to ask questions. And, Candice Stutzreim, I appreciate you asking these questions. We’ve got a minute left. What is the final thought you’d like to leave with our listeners today?
SPEAKER 10 :
Well, I think you touched on it right there, that the almost knee-jerk reaction to go into cover-up mode is – is what’s most concerning. It’s this, what’s the old expression, the cover-up is worse than the crime. In this case, I actually think this is a database error, although we have not gotten to the bottom of every single vote yet. Nevertheless, the idea, whose elections are these anyway? These are not elections run by the state for the purpose of the state to get the results that are compatible with the state. They should be resting in the hands of the citizens with complete transparency and oversight by concerned citizens like myself. And there are many, many in El Paso County. And I believe their response, once again, to this incident is indicative of this is our election, and they’re just oblivious or unable to hear or don’t want to hear the voice of the people asking questions. And once again, it seems that there is not an appropriate level of outrage with this response. I believe that there was basically no repercussions of the BIOS password breach, which is the most serious of all that I’ve witnessed in my time. When does it stop? I hope that the people are listening and they realize that once again, our gold standard elections are tarnishing, are tarnished underneath. And we have a right to get to the bottom of it. We have a right to ask questions and have them answered because we have a right to choose our own leadership.
SPEAKER 09 :
And that is what it’s about in America, which is the country where we, the people, govern ourselves. Kansas Stuts Green, thank you so much greatly. Appreciate all your great work. And we will talk with all of you tomorrow.
SPEAKER 13 :
The views and opinions expressed on KLZ 560 are those of the speaker, commentators, hosts, their guests, and callers. They are not necessarily the views and opinions of Crawford Broadcasting or KLZ management, employees, associates, or advertisers. KLZ 560 is a Crawford Broadcasting God and country station.