Ohio Democratic Party

10/30/2024 | Press release | Archived content

Bernie Moreno Caught in Another Lie – This Time About Using Anti-Recording Device Inside Campaign Events

Bernie Moreno Caught in Another Lie - This Time About Using Anti-Recording Device Inside Campaign Events

October 30, 2024

Mother Jones: "The Republican Senate Candidate Often Invites Crowds To Tape His Remarks. But He's Recently Deployed Technology That Distorts Recordings."

Columbus, OH - Last week, Bernie Moreno got caught using an anti-recording device to prevent Ohioans from hearing what he has to say - and now, new reporting from Mother Jones has caught Moreno in yet another lie, this time about using the anti-recording device on Ohio voters to "block people from recording his events," despite Moreno falsely claiming that "the gadget was 'only being used against trackers, rather than regular event attendees.'"

Moreno's use of the device follows him "land[ing] himself in hot water" after he was caught "mocking" Ohio women and calling them "a little crazy" for wanting to make their own health care decisions.

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Mother Jones: ​​Bernie Moreno Is Using Audio Jammers to Block People From Recording His Events
Abby Vesoulis
October 30, 2024

  • "I have two rules," Bernie Moreno, Ohio's Republican candidate for US Senate, told a crowd at a Columbus-area event earlier this year. "Rule number one is you can videotape and tape record anything I say. What I say to you here is what I'll say to the media, is what I say privately, is what I say to my own team… Rule number two," he continued, "is please ask difficult questions."
  • Moreno, who rose to prominence as the owner of multiple luxury car dealerships, has made similar declarations at least half a dozen times on the 2024 campaign trail. But while Moreno brags about his dedication to transparency, his campaign also uses a machine at his events that renders voice recordings and videos taken by everyday voters inaudible as his race against incumbent three-term Senator Sherrod Brown narrows to a slim margin; the winner of this close race will help determine which political party controls the US Senate.
  • The so-called "anti-recording devices" are available on Amazon for $399.99 and work by emitting white noise and ultrasonic waves that recording devices pick up but people present in person generally do not.
  • Moreno's decision to muffle recordings with the gadget may have been prompted by criticism he's received for leaked audio in which he discusses his thoughts about abortion: In late September, Moreno was recorded at an event saying that suburban women making abortion their top issue at the polls is "a little crazy by the way-especially for women that are like past 50, I'm thinking to myself, 'I don't think that's an issue for you.'"
  • Business Insider first reported on October 25 that Moreno's campaign was using the anti-recording tools to thwart political trackers, who are paid to trace candidates' every move, from recording Moreno soundbites. The campaign told the publication that the gadget was "only being used against trackers, rather than regular event attendees."
  • Mother Jones, however, has learned from an Ohio voter that the device also distorted the audio she tried to record at a mid-October event hosted by Moreno in Ottawa County, Ohio… Instead, the recordings the woman took ended up sounding something like launching an internet dial-up connection or tuning a decades-old radio.
  • Mother Jones has verified this voter does not work for any political campaigns.
  • After the Business Insider account published, a conservative political strategist whose firm, Big Dog Strategies, has worked with Moreno's campaign went so far as to share the Amazon listing: "For all our friends asking, here's the link." A spokesperson for the Moreno campaign did not respond to specific questions sent by Mother Jones.
  • The Spy Associates-brand product listing confirms its audio-jamming device is effective in preventing anyone within a wide radius-not just political staffers-from recording: "Our ultrasound anti-recording speech protector, with its advanced noise and ultrasonic waves," the description says, "ensures unauthorized recordings within a range of +/- 6.5-33 feet and a 270-degree interference angle are rendered indecipherable."

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