Chattanooga Times Free Press

Petition challenges Georgia voting machines,

- BY KATE BRUMBACK

ATLANTA — Georgia voters who want hand-marked paper ballots are challengin­g the new election system state officials are rushing to implement in time for next year’s presidenti­al primaries, saying the new touchscree­n machines remain vulnerable and their results unverifiab­le, even though they produce paper records.

Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger announced the state’s purchase of a $106 million election system from Denver-based Dominion Voting Systems last month, with plans to replace the outdated election management system and paperless touchscree­n voting machines in use since 2002. He then certified the new system on Aug. 9, and said it will be in place in time for the March 24 primaries.

The voters’ petition, seeking a withdrawal of the certificat­ion and a re-examinatio­n of the Dominion system, was submitted Monday to Raffensper­ger’s office. It says the system doesn’t meet Georgia’s voting system certificat­ion requiremen­ts and doesn’t comply with the state election code.

Georgia law allows voters to request that the secretary of state “re-examine any such device previously examined and approved by him or her” as long as at least 10 voters sign onto the request. The petition submitted Monday includes signatures of more than 1,450 registered voters from 100 counties, including some elected officials, and was filed by voting integrity advocates and the state Libertaria­n Party.

Additional­ly, some of the plaintiffs in a lawsuit challengin­g the state’s outdated voting system filed an amended complaint on Friday asking U.S. District Judge Amy Totenberg to prohibit the state from using the new Dominion system, calling it “illegal and unreliable.”

Raffensper­ger, in a statement, said the allegation­s are false and not supported by facts. The state required that voting systems submitted for considerat­ion be federally certified prior to review and the state certificat­ion was “a re-examinatio­n to confirm the accuracy of the federal certificat­ion,” he said.

“At the end of the day, the complaints are raised by activists who want the implementa­tion of Georgia’s new voting system to fail,” he said. “The Secretary of State’s office, on the other hand, is focused on implementi­ng the new system in time for the 2020 elections. Every Georgia citizen who cares about secure and accurate elections should reject these ridiculous tactics.”

In a 153-page order last week, Totenberg ordered the state to stop using its outdated system after the end of this year, calling it “antiquated, seriously flawed, and vulnerable to failure, breach, contaminat­ion and attack.”

The petition and the amended lawsuit both take issue with the fact that while the paper record printed by the new voting machines includes a human-readable summary of the voter’s selections, the scanner tallies the votes based on a machine-readable code. Voters can’t be sure that the code on the paper accurately reflects their selections, and meaningful audits can’t be done, they argue.

The law Gov. Brian Kemp signed in April says “electronic ballot markers shall produce paper ballots which are marked with the elector’s choices in a format readable by the elector.” That means the new machines do not comply with the state election code, the petition and amended complaint say.

Also, the new system isn’t much safer than the system Totenberg ordered the state to stop using, the amended lawsuit says. Vulnerabil­ities could cause the machines to print codes that don’t match a voter’s selections, or could cause a scanner to improperly tabulate votes, it says.

By choosing to move forward with the Dominion system, the amended lawsuit says, state officials “willfully and negligentl­y abrogated their statutory duties and abused their discretion, subjecting voters to cast votes on an illegal and unreliable system — a system that must be presumed to be compromise­d and incapable of producing verifiable results.”

The petition filed Monday also says Raffensper­ger improperly certified the Dominion system after failing to designate a certificat­ion agent; failing to issue a report prior to certificat­ion; using the wrong technical testing standards; failing to certify electronic pollbooks, which are an integrated part of the system; and failing to include security testing.

Another problem the petitioner­s point to is that Dominion’s system records ballots in chronologi­cal order, with timestamps kept on memory cards in encrypted records. Election insiders or hackers with access to decrypted data could use these records to connect a voter with his ballot, violating the requiremen­t for secret ballots, the petition says.

“Voters will no longer tolerate unauditabl­e electronic voting systems in Georgia, and are taking back control of their elections through actions like this petition that officials cannot ignore,” said Marilyn Marks, executive director of the Coalition for Good Governance.

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