Attorney General William Barr, in likely his last press conference as attorney general, said Monday that he does not think the federal government has the authority to seize voting machines amid election fraud allegations. When he was asked about whether Trump should implement a plan to seize voting machines that were used in the election, Barr said he doesn’t believe it should be carried out. Barr made the comments during an announcement about the 32nd anniversary of the Lockerbie bombing of Pan Am Flight 103 that killed 259 people near Scotland in 1988. “I see no basis now for seizing machines by the federal government,” Barr said before clarifying that it’s in regards to the “wholesale seizure of machines” by the government. The conference marks Barr’s last major public appearance before he leaves the Department of Justice (DOJ) after he submitted his resignation last week. Barr on Monday also stood …