thumbnail of tokenist.png
thumbnail of tokenist.png
tokenist png
(1.87 MB, 2528x5776)
tokenist.com/what-we-know-dominion-voting-systems-and-ubs-securities
This in an extremely useful article for sorting out some of the confusion.
Explains not only the significance of Dominion but the COVER-UP attempted after the Oct 8 transaction.
Lends credence to the idea that there was a definite effort to make it look like UBS-Sec-LLC (NY) was completely separate from UBS-Sec-LTD (China) when this was not true. What we don't know is who pulled the strings - was it the Swiss parent company UBS AG?


What We Know: Dominion Voting Systems & UBS Securities and the Oct 8th $400mil investment
Tim Fries, Last updated on December 07, 2020

Some claims have surfaced suggesting Dominion Voting Systems—the company that provided voting hardware and software used in 28 states during the most recent US presidential election—was under majority Chinese ownership.

While this isn’t exactly the case, SEC-filed paperwork indicates a connection of some kind.


Dominion Voting Systems and a $400 Million Investment

On December 1, Trump-hired attorney Lin Wood first revealed that China bought Dominion for $400 million. Despite providing the SEC form D for this claim, it was not quite correct. Namely, the link between Dominion and China was not as straightforward as Wood first claimed. However, the convoluted chain of links does connect Dominion to China in some way:

- The payer of the $400 million was UBS Securities LLC [NYC], which is a subsidiary of Swiss investment bank UBS.
- The receiver of the payment was Staple Street Capital, which previously bought Dominion Voting Systems in 2018.
- The payment occurred on October 8, 2020.
- Although there is a Chinese bank and investment firm named ‘UBS Securities’, it is UBS Securities Co. Ltd (based in Beijing), not UBS Securities LLC (based in New York). [BUT BOTH ARE OWNED BY UBS AG FROM SWITZERLAND]
- However, with regard to UBS Securities LLC (based in New York), three out of four board directors were Chinese nationals. One of them, Ye Xiang, also served on board of the other subsidiary, UBS Securities Co. Ltd (based in Beijing). He also worked for China’s central bank.
- UBS received a special, fully-licensed status in China, which is rarely given to foreign banks. [GOT TO BE REFERRING TO UBS AG]
- The deal broker was none other than Chinese vice premier Wang Qishan, who has a reputation as a finance specialist in the Chinese government.

page 1