Polygraphs conducted by Georgia’s most respected detectives establish that Stan Fitzgerald is the victim of civil lawfare in relation to a Miami court order.
It has been widely reported that the Trump administration utilized polygraph tests within DHS and the Pentagon without any significant challenges to their credibility from either side of the political spectrum. It is also common knowledge that the FBI and many law enforcement agencies regularly employ polygraphs.
The two polygraph tests that Fitzgerald took and passed were administered by two of Georgia’s most highly regarded former law enforcement officers:
-
Morris Nix, a legendary cold case detective with 40 years of service in the Cobb County Sheriff’s Office, has been featured in shows such as Nancy Grace and Bloodline Detectives with “Murder in Marietta.” Nix is a certified member of the Georgia Polygraph Association and has conducted over 15,000 polygraphs. Before administering the test, he conducted an hour-long interview with Fitzgerald, covering the last two years of backstory and incidents related to the Miami court order.
-
Daniel Sosnowski, also a certified member of the Georgia Polygraph Association, is a retired Chicago law enforcement officer who relocated to Georgia. He travels across the country teaching interrogation techniques at police academies, including those in Virginia.
Virginia DCJS has an open investigation into Collis. The current investigation into Patrick Collis is being conducted by Agent Sandi Kurek of Virginia Criminal Justice. Case #2024-1001, opened in December, and is ongoing. The investigation focuses on allegations that: -
Patrick Collis submitted a false affidavit and provided false testimony in the Miami court case.
-
Collis conspired with Butch Conz of North Carolina and another woman to manipulate the court’s outcome against Fitzgerald.
Agent Kurek requested 28 emails from Collis be forwarded by Stan Fitzgerald and asked Jared Craig for proof that Collis was threatened by Butch Conz.
It appears that the FBI are also conducting a related probe based on information submitted in December 2023. A retired Miami FBI agent confirmed the investigation’s existence. Atlanta FBI Agent Casey Weaver recently visited the Cobb County Sheriff’s Office to interview VFAF’s Frederick Mulika in connection with the probe into the other involved parties. Additionally, Mar-A-Lago event organizer Diane Ventura, of the National Veterans Parade, confirmed that the individual bringing the lawfare against Fitzgerald does not pass Secret Service background checks.
For the past two years, Stan Fitzgerald has been the target of doxxing by the same woman and Butch Conz. They have exposed his home address, business address, and vacation home address. The Fitzgeralds received harrasarement phone calls. Calls for violence inferred against Fitzgerald were posted on verified social media accounts. Fitzgerald’s customers and business associates have been harassed with fake complaints. Butch Conz has falsely claimed to be the national president of Veterans for America First (VFAF) while impersonating the organization to undermine Trump-endorsed candidates. Conz has made threats, used racial slurs, and his rehtoric inspired an online gun threat directed at Fitzgerald. Furthermore, Butch Conz sent harassing letters to Fitzgerald’s neighbors, leading to the hospitalization of Fitzgerald’s 81-year-old mother due to stress-related complications.
Despite Fitzgerald filing a police report in Kennesaw, Georgia, Cobb County Police stated that doxxing is not illegal, and the threats were not specific enough to warrant legal action. Fitzgerald’s Florida attorney, Jason Smith, sought a restraining order in an open defamation case, but the judge ruled that the threats did not meet the legal threshold for such an order in Florida. Fitzgerald has not responded to any of these attacks outside of political free speech, and his polygraph results confirm this.
A recent Miami court hearing, which would typically last 15 minutes via zoom, extended into a two-day bench trial mostly focused on accusations of defamation, emails, doxxing, and harassment in press and online posts. The woman seeking the order had been denied twice previously based on the same evidence, making this an appeal. Florida law indicates the court would rule on was there a threat , did the threat cause reasonable fear and would it happen again if no order was issued.
At trial, the trio of Patrick Collis, Butch Conz and a female witness conspired to construct a false narrative that Fitzgerald was a grifter who had stolen from L-Strategies LLC, where the woman claimed to be a whistleblower. This was done to create a false motive that Fitzgerald harrased based on he , not the woman, was a grifter. However, the embezzlement case against her in Georgia was dismissed on procedural grounds without addressing the factual allegations. The case for embezzlement by diversion was proved beyond doubt through legally recorded audio evidence, which is publicly available. Additionally, bank statements have been online for public review, confirming that Fitzgerald did not remove any funds.
Fitzgerald polygraphed that all three witnesses against him committed perjury to rig the outcome against him, in a seperate polygraph question Fitzgerald confirmed the woman committed numerous acts of perjury.
-
Fitzgerald polygraphed that he did not remove funds from L-Strategies LLC.
-
Fitzgerald also passed a broad polygraph question affirming that he had never grifted anyone in Republican politics, establishing his total and complete integrity and transparency over the past four years in the MAGA movement.
-
The woman falsely testified that Fitzgerald had doxxed phone numbers belonging to her children, leading to others texting inappropriate images. To be clear Fitzgerald was not accused of personally sending the images and Fitzgerald polygraphed that he never sent such images, confirming his innocence in all ways.
-
This woman also claimed that Fitzgerald posts encouraged tire slashing. However, the address in question was never doxxed, as she had not lived there, and Fitzgerald had no knowledge of any tire slashing by anyone. His polygraph confirmed this.
-
A false hearsay claim suggested that Fitzgerald was present at Swire’s Miami office. Fitzgerald polygraphed that he was never there and provided proof that process servers, not himself, delivered legal documents.
-
The woman accused Fitzgerald of creating an AI-generated image of her. His polygraph results proved he had no involvement. The image had been published online before Fitzgerald ever met her
Polygraph Reports: