Rome News-Tribune

Lawsuit seeks to void Georgia congressio­nal election results

-

ATLANTA — Georgia’s electronic touchscree­n voting system is so riddled with problems that the results of the most expensive House race in U.S. history should be tossed out and a new election held, according to a lawsuit filed by a government watchdog group and six Georgia voters.

The lawsuit was filed Monday in Fulton County Superior Court by the Colorado-based Coalition for Good Governance and voters who are members of the group. It seeks to overturn the results of the June 20 runoff election between Republican Karen Handel and Democrat Jon Ossoff in Georgia’s 6th Congressio­nal District. Handel was declared the winner with 52 percent of the vote to Ossoff’s 48.

The named defendants include Georgia Secretary of State Brian Kemp, members of the State Election Board, local election officials in Fulton, Cobb and DeKalb counties and the Center for Election Systems at Kennesaw State University.

The lawsuit claims Georgia’s touchscree­n voting system has severe security problems, lacks verifiable paper ballots and cannot be legally used for elections.

A judge in June threw out a related lawsuit that attempted to force Georgia to use paper ballots.

The new lawsuit comes weeks after the publicatio­n of a classified National Security Agency report describing a sophistica­ted scheme, allegedly by Russian military intelligen­ce, to infiltrate local U.S. elections systems using phishing emails.

The suit cites the work of private cybersecur­ity researcher Logan Lamb, who discovered last August that a misconfigu­red server had left Georgia’s 6.7 million voter records and other sensitive files exposed to hackers. The complaint also notes that seven months after Lamb made that discovery, another researcher was able to do the same.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States