Dominion Voting Systems has been sold to Liberty Vote, a new election technology firm led by former Republican election official Scott Leiendecker.
Leiendecker previously served as elections director in St. Louis, Missouri, and is best known as the founder of KNOWiNK, a company that supplies electronic poll books used across the country. (KNOWiNK has been one of the most widely adopted digital check-in systems for voters in the U.S.)
According to a press release from Liberty Vote, the company’s mission is to “restore public confidence” in elections by providing systems that are “transparent, secure, and trustworthy.”
“As of today, Dominion is gone,” the statement said. “Liberty Vote assumes full ownership and operational control.”
As Politico reports:
The voting company sued Fox News for the false claims and reached a $787.5 million settlement in the case — marking the largest defamation-related settlement. Newsmax similarly settled a defamation lawsuit for $67 million.
Dominion Voting Systems did not respond to a request for comment.
The St. Louis-based company has already outlined its top initiatives in the company’s rebrand — using hand-marked paper ballots, committing to entirely American ownership in its staffing and software development and incorporating third-party auditing to “verify election integrity.”
“Liberty Vote signals a new chapter for American elections — one where trust is rebuilt from the ground up,” Leiendecker said in the statement. “Liberty Vote is committed to delivering election technology that prioritizes paper-based transparency, security, and simplicity so that voters can be assured that every ballot is filled-in accurately and fairly counted.”
Coverage of the sale describes it as a turning point for the company, with new leadership putting a premium on paper-based voting, straightforward processes, and visible safeguards.