'2000 Mules' Director Apologizes for Flawed Election Fraud Claims

TL;DR Summary
Dinesh D'Souza, creator of the film '2000 Mules,' apologized to Mark Andrews, a Georgia man falsely accused of ballot fraud in the film. D'Souza admitted that the surveillance videos used were not accurately linked to geolocation data as initially claimed. Despite acknowledging the error, D'Souza maintains confidence in the film's message of election fraud. Andrews had filed a lawsuit against D'Souza and others involved, leading to an apology and removal of the film from distribution by Salem Media Group.
- Creator of '2000 Mules' apologizes to man falsely accused of ballot fraud in the film NPR
- Dinesh D’Souza, ’2000 Mules’ Director, Acknowledges the Film Was Flawed The New York Times
- ‘2000 Mules’ creator admits some of film’s claims are flawed CNN
- Claims from conspiratorial ‘2000 Mules’ film spark new apology MSNBC
- MAGA Filmmaker Trump Praised Admits 2020 Election Fraud Doc Was B.S. Rolling Stone
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