The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Ruling on paper-ballot suit in 6th District is coming soon

Superior Court judge expects to issue decision by Friday.

- By Kristina Torres ktorres@ajc.com

Voters in Georgia’s 6th Congressio­nal District will likely know by week’s end whether they can continue using electronic machines or will have to cast ballots on paper.

A decision to go with paper ballots would all but void the state’s current voting system with less than two weeks to go before a key election.

A Fulton County judge heard eight hours of testimony and arguments Wednesday in a lawsuit calling for paper ballots in the hotly contested June 20 runoff between Republican Karen Handel and Democrat Jon Ossoff.

At issue, according to the suit, is Georgia’s reliance on voting machines it calls too old, unreliable and vulnerable to malicious attacks without a forensic review of their operating systems.

There is no evidence that the state’s system has been compromise­d. Georgia experience­d no major problems during last year’s presidenti­al election.

State and local election officials say changing that system now could bring chaos.

More than 63,000 people have already voted ahead of the runoff on the current system. The counties in the 6th District — Cobb, DeKalb and Fulton — would face thousands of dollars in unexpected costs to print paper ballots and buy things like ballot boxes.

But those seeking the paper ballots say it’s an issue of voter confidence.

“When you’re filling in bubbles on paper, there’s a record,” said Robert McGuire III, the attorney representi­ng those who brought the suit, including the Colorado-based Rocky Mountain Foundation as well as two Georgia voters, Donna Curling and Donna Price.

Georgia uses touch-screen direct-recording electronic voting machines. The state committed to the machines in 2002 when it last overhauled its elections system. At the same time, it eliminated a paper trail of recorded votes.

Having a paper trail is something that many experts consider to be a “best practice” — particular­ly in an age of heightened cybersecur­ity awareness and hacking threats, as evidenced by the hacking attempts detailed in a top-secret government report published this week by The Intercept about Russia’s meddling in the 2016 presidenti­al election.

Superior Court Judge Kimberly Esmond Adams said she expects to issue a ruling no later than Friday.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Karen Handel (top) and Jon Ossoff (bottom) are in a special election June 20 to determine who will represent Georgia’s 6th District in the House of Representa­tives.
CONTRIBUTE­D Karen Handel (top) and Jon Ossoff (bottom) are in a special election June 20 to determine who will represent Georgia’s 6th District in the House of Representa­tives.
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