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WASHINGTON— Voting Systems has come under scrutiny for its ownership structure after its parent company raised funds with the help of a Swiss bank before the 2020 U.S. presidential election. The transaction, peculiar in several ways, has led some to speculate a Chinese entity could be the indirect of Dominion.

Staple Street Capital Group LLC, a New York-based private equity (PE) firm, acquired Dominion Voting Systems Corp. in 2018. The maker of electronic voting systems has been at the center of election fraud claims since Nov. 3.

Securities LLC, the New York-based subsidiary of Swiss bank UBS, helped Staple Street raise $400 million from investors for its third fund on Oct. 8, according to public records.

The New York-subsidiary operates as the investment banking division of the Swiss bank, providing investment and broker-dealer services to its global clients. In this transaction, UBS is assumed to serve as a placement agent, selling partnership interests of the PE fund to UBS’s clients.

The recent fundraising, however, prompted some to speculate that a Chinese entity or China-affiliated intermediary could be an investor in the fund, making it also an indirect owner of Dominion.

Dominion is a portfolio company of funds managed by Staple Street and neither UBS nor the private equity firm have disclosed details of investors in its third fund despite questions surrounding Dominion’s ownership.

Staple Street raised this fund in an unusual way, as well. According to a Buyouts Insider article, the private equity firm received the money in a “one-and-done” deal, “pushing through marketing despite the pandemic-slowed fundraising environment.”

The article also mentions that while the third fund was targeting $400 million, it closed on $520 million in financing. And SEC filings suggest that UBS helped to raise the majority of the capital.

The speed and structure of the fundraising is abnormal, according to a senior executive at a large hedge fund in New York, who wished to remain anonymous.

“Typically, when you’re raising a commingled PE fund it is a year-long process with multiple closes. PE funds aren’t raised with just one close unless there’s a single strategic client taking up the entire fund, which may be the case if only one bank is involved.”

Staple Street didn’t respond to requests by The Epoch Times for comment.

UBS Abruptly Removes Chinese Board Members

Unusual activity also occurred in the New York subsidiary of UBS recently, in the weeks following Staple Street’s fundraising and the November U.S. elections.

A NTD TV report on Dec. 5 showed that three board members of UBS Securities LLC appeared to be Chinese, including Luo Qiang, Ye Xiang, and Mu Lina, according to the company’s profile page on Bloomberg. Later these names were taken down from the profile page, raising questions about whether the company made changes following media reports.

An LLC or Limited Liability Company is not required to have a board of directors but it can choose to have one. A 2019 year-end report filed with the SEC does not disclose any information about the board of directors at UBS Securities LLC.

It is unusual to name Chinese citizens on the board of a New York subsidiary. This raises the question of whether the bank appointed these members for temporary compliance purposes, such as getting the signoff of the board of directors to facilitate a specific transaction that otherwise may not have been approved.

UBS didn’t respond to requests by The Epoch Times for comment.

A closer look into these names also showed that other than Luo Qiang, who has French nationality, the other two are Chinese nationals. They all have very close ties to Beijing-based UBS Securities Co. Limited. The Chinese regime owns 49 percent of the UBS in Beijing. In an unusual move, the Beijing subsidiary also replaced 11 of 14 board members right after the U.S. 2020 election, according to the by The Epoch Times.

Based on public information, Ye Xiang served on the board of both UBS Securities LLC and UBS Securities Co. Ltd until his name was removed from both entities. Ye had been chairman of the board at UBS Beijing for over 10 years. He previously worked at the Chinese regime’s central bank, the state-owned Bank of China, as well as the Hong Kong government’s financial regulatory agencies. He is also the founder of a China-based asset management firm VisionGain Capital Limited.

Luo Qiang, another board member at UBS Securities LLC, also served on the board of UBS Beijing between 2004 and 2012.

Mu Lina, who was a board member of the New York subsidiary, worked as the director of wealth management funds and head of fund operations at UBS Beijing, based on public information. Mu was previously a board member of China TransInfo, a major surveillance camera producer in China. It provides big data and artificial intelligence to Chinese authorities. Its chairman is a Chinese Communist Party (CCP) member. Mu served as a board member at China TransInfo for the past six years until she left the position in September this year.

UBS group became the first foreign company to own a full securities operation license in China in 2018. The company’s board and executives are all Chinese nationals with strong ties to the CCP.

Attorney Lin Wood, a member of President Donald Trump’s legal team, wrote on Twitter Dec. 1 that “Information being received NOW that Communist China purchased Dominion Voting on October 8 for $400M.” In a follow-up tweet, Wood mentioned the close ties between the New York and Bejing subsidiaries of UBS but did not elaborate on details of the connection between China and Dominion.

In response to allegations, Dominion published a statement on its website, saying that the company “is a non-partisan American company.”

“No foreign national directly or indirectly owns or controls the company,” the statement read. “Dominion and other voting system manufacturers submit extensive company disclosures to federal and state authorities as terms of product testing and system certification. The company has no ownership ties whatsoever to UBS, or the governments of China, Cuba, or Venezuela.”

Shortly after the election on Nov. 3, Staple Street Capital’s website underwent a . All information about the company’s founders and investment portfolios were deleted, including its relationship with Dominion.

Dominion has also exhibited strange behavior. For example, over 100 of its employees, a third of the total workforce have , including Dominion’s employees in Serbia when the company became a global focus after the election.

Follow Emel on Twitter: @mlakan

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