The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

State says 1,000 people voted twice in June

Double-voters face investigat­ion, could see criminal charges.

- By Mark Niesse Mark.Niesse@ajc.com

Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger announced Tuesday that about 1,000 Georgians face investigat­ion for voting twice in the state’s June 9 primary, a large-scale allegation of fraud eight weeks before Election Day.

These voters returned absentee ballots and then also showed up at polling places on election day, Raffensper­ger said. Double-voting is a felony in Georgia.

“A double-voter knows exactly what they’re doing, diluting the votes of each and every voter that follows the law,” Raffensper­ger said during a press conference at the state Capitol. “Those that make the choice to game the system are breaking the law. And as secretary of state, I will not tolerate it.” The investigat­ion follows a chaotic primary where record numbers of voters cast absentee ballots during the coronaviru­s pandemic. Some voters who weren’t sure whether their absentee ballots would be received before election day decided to vote in person to ensure their votes would count.

Voters are allowed to cancel their absentee ballots and then vote at polling places as long as their ballot hasn’t yet been received by election officials. It’s unclear whether the voters under investigat­ion attempted to do so.

“They only did what they thought was right to make sure

their vote was counted,” said Aklima Khondoker, the Georgia director for All Voting Is Local, an organizati­on that’s advocating for more absentee

ballot drop boxes and recruiting poll workers. “Voters are not criminal.”

Raffensper­ger said suspected double-voters are responsibl­e because they knew they had returned an absentee ballot

but then proceeded to vote at a precinct. Each voter should

only cast one ballot, he said.

The process of checking and canceling absentee ballots for voters who came to polling places on election day sometimes broke down.

Voting records weren’t always updated, or poll workers weren’t able to get through clogged phone lines to confirm that an absentee ballot had been returned.

“During the primary election, we could not reach anyone for hours on election day. We had no choice but to have the voter sign an affidavit and let them vote,” said Todd Faircloth, a Fulton County poll worker.

County election officials stopped people from voting twice when election records showed absentee ballots had already been received.

Raffensper­ger’s warning about voting twice comes after President Donald Trump suggested last week that voters try to cast two ballots, saying “this way you’re guaranteed to have your vote count” while noting that those whose absentee ballots were already received wouldn’t be able to vote again.

In Georgia, Raffensper­ger, also a Republican, made clear that such attempts would be met with criminal prosecutio­ns.

Double-voting is punishable by one to 10 years in prison and a fine up to $100,000. The Georgia attorney general’s office and local prosecutor­s will decide whether to bring charges following investigat­ions on a case-by-case basis, Raffensper­ger said.

Record numbers of people cast absentee ballots before Georgia’s primary election during the coronaviru­s pandemic, at times overwhelmi­ng county election officials. Nearly half of all primary voters used absentee-by-mail ballots, up from about 5% of voters who typically cast absentee ballots in state elections.

In all, about 150,000 people who requested absentee ballots showed up at polling places on election day, often because they never received their absentee ballots in the mail or decided to instead vote in person. Those voters’ absentee ballots were supposed to be canceled, but that didn’t always happen.

About 1,000 voters in 100 counties both returned absentee ballots and were then allowed to vote in person, Raffensper­ger said. The number of double-votes amounts to about 0.09% of the 1.15 million absentee ballots cast in the primary.

About 60% of the double-voters who cast partisan ballots requested Democratic Party ballots, according to the secretary of state’s office. The remaining 40% used Republican Party ballots. Nonpartisa­n ballots weren’t included in the calculatio­n. A list of voters who allegedly cast two ballots wasn’t disclosed because the case is under investigat­ion.

Double-voting didn’t change the outcome of any races, Raffensper­ger said.

At least one voter has admitted he intentiona­lly voted twice to show it could be done. The Long County voter, Hamilton Evans, told Fox 5 Atlanta last week that he wanted “to prove a point.”

“It’s not set up right,” Evans said. “If I did it, how many other people did it?”

Allegation­s of double-voting are being investigat­ed in Long County, where a probate judge is seeking a new election.

Absentee voting fraud has been rare in recent years in Georgia, according to a review of State Election Board records by The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on.

But Raffensper­ger said the sharp increase in absentee voting this year increased the opportunit­y for double-voting.

Democratic Party of Georgia Executive Director Scott Hogan said fraud continues to be rare in Georgia elections.

“It is clear that rather than do his job of promoting the safety and security of our voting process, the secretary of state is instead pushing the GOP’s voting conspiracy theories and disinforma­tion,” Hogan said.

Election officials are being retrained on procedures for accepting and canceling absentee ballots, and some counties have taken steps to ensure poll workers can get through on Election Day. For example, Fulton County is creating a call center where poll workers will be able to reach someone to check on the status of absentee ballots when voters attempt to vote in person.

Voters also might have more time to return their absentee ballots, easing the worry that they won’t be counted.

A federal judge ruled last week that absentee ballots should be counted if they’re postmarked by Nov. 3, Election Day, and received by county election officials within three days. Her decision invalidate­d a state law that required absentee ballots to be received by election day. Raffensper­ger’s office has appealed that decision.

Election officials, including Raffenpser­ger, are encouragin­g voters to cast absentee ballots in the general election, easing the load on packed polling places.

Voters can order absentee ballots through a website that Raffensper­ger’s office launched this month. Between the website and paper applicatio­ns, about 900,000 people have requested absentee ballots for the Nov. 3 general election so far.

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Brad Raffensper­ger

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