US President Donald Trump on Tuesday shared a post from the X platform on his personal social network "Truth Social", which states that Elon Musk prevented the manipulation of the results of the 2024 US presidential election by blocking the computers of the company "Dominion Voting Systems" in Serbia.

He lost the 2020 presidential election for a second term to Democratic candidate Joe Biden. He claimed that Democrats had stolen the election, and these claims culminated in his supporters attacking the US Congress on January 6, 2021, writes N1.


Now he has shared the message of one of his loyalists with a verified account, Johnny St. Pete, who on X published information from the American conservative commentator and columnist, Benny Johnson, who, according to him, X's owner, Elon Musk, saved the 2024 presidential election by monitoring IP addresses in foreign countries through which votes were counted and blocking their computers.

"Musk knew he would win the election and it seems that this happened because they identified the systems and machines in foreign countries that would do what we saw in 2020," St. Pete wrote in the post that Trump also shared, the Telegraph reports.

He adds that Musk tracked the IP addresses of the company "Dominion Voting Systems" in Serbia and blocked the computers a few days before the 2024 elections. In his post, which Trump also seems to agree with, St. Pete refers to Emerald Robinson, a former White House correspondent who worked for several media outlets, including Newsmax, and is now one of the most well-known conspiracy theorists in the US.

Voting machines and the connection with Serbia

The second American conspiracy theorist, Patrick M. Byrne, has also put forward theories about vote-rigging through vote-counting machines. In one of the lawsuits filed against him by the company “Dominion” in 2021, it is said that Byrne posted on his blog that year that there had been an external attack on the voting system in the states of Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin, Arizona, Nevada and Georgia, with the aim of influencing the outcome of the elections.

Referring to statements by a senior military security official, Byrne claimed that the "Dominion Voting System" is controlled and owned by individuals and companies outside America and that control over the data of these machines is lost once they leave the US.

He added that electronic information from voting and vote counting machines from the US in the 2020 elections was sent to Germany, Barcelona, ​​Serbia and Canada, where it was manipulated and the altered data was sent back to the US.

The theory further alleged that the Dominion company corrupted American election officials and that the machines tampered with and destroyed ballots to hide fraud committed electronically abroad.

The company stated in its lawsuit that all of these allegations are false and that Byrne had hired people to create false "evidence" which he published on his personal blog to support his claims.

Who is Emerald Robinson?

Precisely because of the spread of conspiracy theories about COVID-19, Newsmax fired Emerald Robinson in 2022. She now has a program called “Absolute Truth” on the Lindell TV network, which advertises itself as a network where journalism is guided by truth and challenges the mainstream narrative. This year, the President of Serbia, Aleksandar Vučić, was also invited to this channel.

Robinson, on his personal account on X, attempted to explain what happened during the 2024 elections and how vote theft was supposed to be carried out.

According to her, Donald Trump in December 2020 requested an investigation into allegations of election fraud that year. The data revealed, according to her, shows that the voting and vote-counting machines of the company “Dominion Voting System” and the Smartmatic software played a key role in the electoral fraud. The same scheme, according to her claims, was used four years later.

Canadian company, branch in Serbia

Dominion Voting Systems, headquartered in Toronto, Canada, manufactures electronic voting machines and optical scanning equipment used to count ballots. In the 2020 elections, their equipment was used in 28 US states, including the key states of Wisconsin and Georgia.

Dominion has software development branches in the US, Canada and Serbia. The company has been present on the Serbian market since 2011.

In March 2024, 2000 pages of confidential emails from Dominion employees were posted on social media. The documents were posted on the X account under the name and photo of Sheriff Dara Lief, who led the investigation into alleged election fraud in his Michigan district in 2020.

A purported letter from the sheriff was also published on social media, in which he claimed to have evidence “of foreign nationals from Serbia entering our electoral system while the votes were being counted and before certification.” Dominion has responded by saying that these claims are xenophobic and that the fact that people of other nationalities work in their companies does not prove any criminal offense.

The American website "Stolen Elections Facts" published that "Dominion" has opened a data center in Belgrade through the Serbian company "Roaming Networks", also known as "Dot Networks", which also operates in the American market.

It is interesting that the main clients of "Roaming Networks" in Serbia are large state-owned companies such as Telecom of Serbia, EPS, Elektromreza of Serbia, but also the Bank of China, according to the American portal.

The owner of "Roaming Networks" is Nenad Kovac, also known as Nesha Roming, whom Forbes Serbia has written about as one of the representatives of the new Serbian business elite.

He founded his first personal company, "Roaming:" for the sale of mobile phones in 2000. He became known to the public when it was revealed that he was behind the company that was part of the consortium to which the Municipality of Belgrade handed over the public transport charging service, known as the "Bus plus" system, in 2010.

He later exited that business to add "Tehnomania" to his portfolio, in addition to several other companies. /Telegraph/