The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

No evidence to back ballot fraud claim, GBI chief says

Fulton Co. elections board denies attempt to disqualify 562 voters. Cellphone signals fall short of meriting inquiry, he tells GOP.

- By Mark Niesse Mark.niesse@ajc.com By Mark Niesse Mark.niesse@ajc.com and Greg Bluestein

Efforts to disqualify hundreds of voters returned to Georgia on Thursday, a renewed attempt to challenge their eligibilit­y under the state’s new voting law just before next month’s elections.

The Fulton County elections board voted unanimousl­y to reject the move to cancel the registrati­ons of 562 voters who might have moved. The two voters who brought the challenges didn’t show up at the hearing, and their list of voter names didn’t prove

The head of the Georgia Bureau of Investigat­ion told the state GOP chairman that there’s not enough evidence to pursue unsubstant­iated claims of ballot harvesting in the 2020 elections based on cellphone signals collected by a those persons named were no longer legitimate voters.

The board’s decision comes after the Texas-based group True the Vote worked with members of the Republican Party to question the eligibilit­y of 360,000 Georgia voters during runoffs for the U.S. Senate in January. Local election officials across the state ended up disqualify­ing just a few dozen ballots.

It’s unclear what prompted the voter challenges or whether they’re politicall­y motivated, election officials said. The people who brought the challenges, Samuel Ambrose of Buckhead and Pauline Capps of Alpharetta, provided lists of names of people conservati­ve organizati­on.

In a letter obtained Thursday by The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on, GBI Director Vic Reynolds wrote that GPS signals alone, without any witnesses or perpetrato­rs, fall short of meriting a fresh law enforcemen­t inquiry.

“Based on what has been provided and what has not been provided, an investigat­ion is not justified,” Reynolds wrote.

It’s the latest in a string of setbacks to allies of former Presi

Donald Trump who have

State election officials canceled the registrati­ons of 101,000 voters this year who had either moved or hadn’t participat­ed in elections since 2012. State law requires systemic cancellati­ons every other year to remove ineligible or infrequent voters from the state’s rolls.

who filed change of address forms with the U.S. Postal Service.

“The burden is on the challenger to prove to us that there is a problem that this voter is not a voter. It’s not for us to try to find birth dates, to track people down and do all of that. They have to bring us the evidence,” said Cathy Woolard, chairwoman for the Fulton elections board.

Many of the questioned voters might have moved out of state, according to informatio­n provided to the board by the secretary of state’s office.

Of the 562 challenged voters, 363 were mailed notices last month asking them to cancel their Georgia voter registrati­ons if they have moved. Voters who don’t respond by Nov. 2 will be designated “inactive” voters who will lose their Georgia voter registrati­on if they miss the next two general elections. Anyone who votes in a state in which they don’t live could be prosecuted.

“The evidence that we have isn’t enough to 100% determine if these voters have moved out of state or weren’t qualified,” Fulton Elections Director Richard Barron said.

Voters might remain eligible in Georgia if they’re students or in the military, temporaril­y living elsewhere, or if they retain Georgia as their primary residence.

State election officials canceled the registrati­ons of 101,000 voters this year who had either moved or hadn’t participat­ed in elections since 2012. State law requires systemic cancellati­ons every other year to remove ineligible or infrequent voters from the state’s rolls.

Individual­s can also try to remove voters by filing complaints with their county election offices.

Georgia’s voting law, Senate Bill 202, allows any voter to challenge the eligibilit­y of an unlimited number of voters in their county or municipali­ty. County election boards must consider the claims within 10 days.

So far, voter challenges haven’t spread far beyond Fulton County this year. No challenge has been filed in Cobb and Dekalb counties, and one is pending in Gwinnett County, according to its election offices.

Attempts by voters to file sweeping challenges to the eligibilit­y of voters might be just beginning, said Aaron Johnson, a Fulton elections board member.

“I think it’s only going to get crazier next year” during elections for Georgia governor and the U.S. Senate, Johnson said.

 ?? AJC STAFF ?? “The burden is on the challenger to prove to us that there is a problem,” board chairwoman Cathy Woolard said.
AJC STAFF “The burden is on the challenger to prove to us that there is a problem,” board chairwoman Cathy Woolard said.

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