Strong Evidence of Chinese Influencing U.S. Elections Revealed

after Catherine Englebrecht of TrueTheVote and Gregg Phillips of OPSEC organized an event on Saturday, August 13th in Arizona called โ€œthe Pitโ€.

During that event, they revealed that they had been part of a year-long investigation into Konnech with federal law enforcement after discovering a Konnech serverโ€™s IP address switched locations between Zhejiang, China, and Grand Rapids, Michigan.

Independent tech journalist, Cognitive Carbon, who attended the Arizona event wrote:

โ€œWhat they found was shocking: they found data that included personal details of nearly 1.8 million US poll workers. Details like their names, phone numbers, addresses, etc. Even the names of family members: things that might routinely be collected when you hire someone and issue them a paycheck.

But they also reportedly found rich details about where election machines were located, including floorplans of buildings used in elections. Nominally, this information would be of use by the election agencies, because the application they were using helped them track their election machine inventory.

But none of this should have been left out in the open for just anyone to see; and it sure as hell shouldnโ€™t have been done in China.โ€

In a past newsletter, now scrubbed off many internet sites and correspondence, evidence suggests a Chinese heavily-connected voting services company in Michigan has direct influence on American elections.

In a post entitled “Have Chinese Spies Infiltrated American Elections?”, independent and reliable reports from Kanecka The Great revealed a past statement written by Eugene Yu, the Founder & CEO of Konnech Inc., the election company based out of East Lansing, Michigan.

“After the 17th National Congress of the Communist Party of China, with the continuous development of political and economic reform, all kinds of election activities will become more and more a norm,” Yu wrote.

“We have a senior professional team that has been engaged in election service and management for a long time, and we have the experience of overseas election internship and exchange,” he continued.

“We can provide the most professional election consulting service and election activity solutions for all places and levels of Party committees, NPCs, CPPCCs, trade unions, overseas Chinese Federation, women’s federations, Communist Youth League; villages, towns, streets, communities and units that have the need for election and evaluation of priorities.โ€

[All Chinese translated with Google & DeepL]

This quote is from the now-deleted website for the Chinese company, Jinhua Yulian Network Technology Co.

Yu, who graduated from Zhejiang University in 1982 before receiving his MBA from Wake Forest University in 1988, founded Michiganโ€™s Konnech Inc. on March 20, 2002, registering the domain โ€œwww.konnech.comโ€ a month later.

Eugene Yu at the 2014 National Association of Secretaries of State Conference

On November 29, 2005, the Michigan CEO whose Chinese name is Jianwei Yu (ไบŽๅปบไผŸ), founded Jinhua Yulian Network Technology Co. in Jinhua City, Zhejiang Province, China.

On February 25, 2006, Yu registered the website โ€œwww.yu-lian.cnโ€ for his Chinese election company to his American election companyโ€™s email address โ€œeyu@konnech.comโ€.

In a 2013 archived version of the website, Yu referred to the former Chinese President as โ€œComrade Jiang Zeminโ€ as he wrote in Chinese:

https://web.archive.org/web/20131207150515/http://yu-lian.cn/Services.html
https://web.archive.org/web/20220901015518/https://whois-history.whoisxmlapi.com/lookup-report/ax5DgQQp26

On a website page labeled โ€œSuccess Storiesโ€, Yu listed in Chinese; โ€œElection Management Solutions, Detroit, Michigan, USAโ€, โ€œElection Volunteer Management Systemโ€, โ€œElection District Point Management Systemโ€, โ€œElection Warehouse Management Systemโ€, โ€œElection Call Help Service Centerโ€, and lastly, โ€œUS Overseas Voter Election Management Systemโ€, a program in which he managed voting for U.S. citizens and military service members residing overseas.

https://web.archive.org/web/20131207151051/http://yu-lian.cn/Case.html

Yu, who previously redirected traffic from his Chinese election companyโ€™s website โ€œwww.yu-lian.cnโ€ to his American election companyโ€™s website โ€œwww.konnech.comโ€, even prominently featured the same banner image on the top of both of his websites.

https://web.archive.org/web/20220104091602/http://yu-lian.cn/
https://web.archive.org/web/20180920210143/http://www.konnech.com/ContactUs.asp
https://web.archive.org/web/20131207141349/http://yu-lian.cn/ContactUs.aspx

Kanecka The Great’s investigation into Eugene Yu and Konnech Inc. began two weeks ago after Catherine Englebrecht of TrueTheVote and Gregg Phillips of OPSEC organized an event on Saturday, August 13th in Arizona called โ€œthe Pitโ€.

During that event, they revealed that they had been part of a year-long investigation into Konnech with federal law enforcement after discovering a Konnech serverโ€™s IP address switched locations between Zhejiang, China, and Grand Rapids, Michigan.

Independent tech journalist, Cognitive Carbon, who attended the Arizona event wrote:

In Kanecka The Great’s investigation, he was able to use Linkedin profiles, Facebook posts, domain registrations, internet archives, company patents, and Chinese search engines among other open-source tools to string together a disturbing connection between Konnech Inc. and two Chinese election companies โ€” Jinhua Yulian Network Technology Co., Ltd. and Jinhua Hongzheng Technology Co., Ltd.

Subsequently, Kanecka The Great researched and wrote about the connections between these companies and their two founders โ€” Eugene Yu and Lin Yu โ€” in three articles and numerous social media posts over the last two weeks:


These articles document how Konnech Inc.:

๐Ÿ”นpreviously built a โ€œcommunication platformโ€ for the Confucius Institute,

๐Ÿ”นhow the American company has been hiring Chinese coders for their โ€œbranch in Jinhua, Zhejiangโ€ since at least 2005,

๐Ÿ”นhow Australian Parliament Members complained about these Chinese coders during their 2020 election,

๐Ÿ”นhow one of the Chinese companies named Hongzheng Technology โ€” after being founded by Lin Yu on April 13, 2015, and registered to Eugene Yuโ€™s Michigan website on July 31, 2015 โ€” has been building voting technology for China’s National People’s Congress in partnership with Lenovo, Huawei, China Unicom, China Telecom, and China Mobile.


https://web.archive.org/web/20220901202006/https://viewdns.info/reversewhois/?q=admin%40konnech.com
In May 2022, Chinaโ€™s National Peopleโ€™s Congress in Zhejiang province voted using tablets and software built by Eugene Yuโ€™s and Lin Yuโ€™s www.hongzhengtech.cn.

Yesterday, an independent journalist named, Digger Sleuth โ€” who published this monumental article on August 16th which laid the foundation for my Chinese research โ€” discovered the archived version of Eugene Yuโ€™s โ€œwww.yu-lian.cnโ€.

Incredibly, in the copyright featured at the bottom, Eugene Yu mixed an American site he registered “reddatesoft.com” with Lin Yuโ€™s Chinese company โ€œJinhua Red Date Software Co.โ€ on his Chinese election companyโ€™s website “www.yu-lian.cn” which was registered to his American election companyโ€™s email address โ€œeyu@konnech.comโ€.

Perfectly linking a voting technology company in Australia, Canada, and the United States โ€” through Konnech Inc., Eugene Yu, Yulian Network Co., Lin Yu, Red Date Software Co., and Hongzheng Technology Co. โ€” to a Chinese Communist Party election company partnered with Chinaโ€™s largest telecom giants in Jinhua City, Zhejiang Province, China.

https://web.archive.org/web/20130718125224/http://yu-lian.cn/

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