BY Brenden AckermanMarch 11, 2026
1 hour ago
BY 
 | March 11, 2026
1 hour ago

Smartmatic blames Trump's 'retribution' in bid to dismiss money laundering indictment

Smartmatic, the election technology company facing a federal criminal indictment for money laundering, filed a motion Tuesday in Miami federal court to dismiss the charges, arguing that the prosecution is nothing more than political payback orchestrated by President Donald Trump and his allies.

The company's attorneys claim Trump's return to the White House turned Smartmatic into a target because of its role in the 2020 election and its $2.7 billion defamation lawsuit against the president's allies in the media. The filing frames the entire federal case as part of a broader "campaign of retribution."

It's a bold legal strategy. And it requires you to ignore quite a lot.

The Actual Charges Have Nothing to Do With 2020

The indictment at the center of this case doesn't involve the 2020 presidential election at all. Prosecutors allege that Smartmatic paid approximately $1 million in bribes to election officials in the Philippines to secure a contract to help run that country's 2016 presidential election, KSAT reported. The payments were allegedly made between 2015 and 2018.

Smartmatic's parent company, UK-based SGO Corporation, was added to the indictment last fall. Several executives, including co-founder Roger Pinate, face trial. Pinate, who no longer works for Smartmatic but remains a shareholder, has pleaded not guilty. In August, prosecutors sought the court's permission to introduce evidence that Smartmatic allegedly diverted revenue through what they described as a "slush fund" controlled by Pinate, which was used to secretly bribe Venezuela's longtime election chief.

So we have alleged bribery in the Philippines. An alleged slush fund tied to Venezuela. And Smartmatic's legal response is: Trump made them do it.

A Company With a Complicated History

Smartmatic was founded more than two decades ago and has provided election technology in 25 countries. The company secured a $300 million contract with Los Angeles County. Its early success came during the era of the late Hugo Chavez, who was described as a devotee of electronic voting.

In 2017, Smartmatic made an abrupt exit from Venezuela after accusing then-President Nicolas Maduro's government of manipulating tallied results in elections for a rubber-stamping constituent assembly. That departure was notable, but it came only after years of operating under a regime that conservatives and international observers had long identified as authoritarian.

None of this history suggests a company that was minding its own business until Donald Trump decided to single it out. It suggests a company that operated in some of the most politically volatile environments on earth, and that prosecutors believe crossed legal lines in at least two of them.

The 'Retribution' Defense

Smartmatic's filing leans heavily on the idea that its defamation lawsuit against Fox News and other Trump allies made it a target. From the filing:

"Smartmatic USA has exercised its right to hold those individuals and entities legally accountable for their deluge of defamatory statements and the attendant damage inflicts on its business, putting it squarely in the crosshairs for retribution."

The company also argued that the prosecution advances a political narrative. Again from the filing:

"The prosecution of SGO furthers their collective false narrative that President Trump did not actually lose the 2020 election."

This is a fascinating rhetorical move. Smartmatic is essentially asking a federal judge to believe that a money laundering case built on alleged bribes to Filipino election officials is really just an extension of a domestic political dispute about the 2020 election. The investigation itself began in 2021, and Smartmatic says it first learned of the probe that year. The company claims to have cooperated with the Justice Department, producing what its attorneys described as millions of pages of documents.

The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

A Pattern Worth Watching

Smartmatic is not the first entity to deploy the "political prosecution" defense in the current political environment. What makes this instance worth scrutinizing is the sheer distance between the alleged conduct and the claimed motive. The Philippines bribery allegations predate the 2020 election by years. The Venezuela-linked allegations go back even further. Framing a case rooted in foreign corruption as domestic political revenge requires a judge to accept that the entire Justice Department apparatus manufactured an international fraud case as a favor to one man's grudge list.

The source material notes a comparison to the case of Kilmar Armando Ábrego García, a Salvadoran migrant who was criminally charged for conduct years earlier after he successfully sued the Trump administration over its decision to deport him. Smartmatic's attorneys appear to be building a broader narrative that the administration weaponizes prosecution against its legal adversaries.

But drawing a line from a deportation dispute to a multi-country bribery indictment is a stretch that would make even the most creative conspiracy theorist pause. These are fundamentally different cases involving different agencies, different conduct, and different timelines.

What This Is Really About

Strip away the political theater, and what remains is straightforward. A company that operated in Venezuela under Chavez and Maduro, that allegedly bribed officials in the Philippines, and that is now facing federal money laundering charges, wants those charges to go away. The vehicle for that dismissal is a claim that the whole thing is politically motivated.

Maybe a federal judge will find that argument compelling. But for the rest of us, the question is simpler: Did Smartmatic pay bribes to foreign officials or didn't it? Did its executives launder money or didn't they?

Those questions have answers that exist entirely independent of who sits in the Oval Office. Smartmatic would prefer you forget that.

Written by: Brenden Ackerman
Brendan is is a political writer reporting on Capitol Hill, social issues, and the intersection of politics and culture.

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