The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Election Board issues subpoenas seeking evidence of ballot collection

Conservati­ve group asked to turn over documents, names.

- By Mark Niesse Mark.niesse@ajc.com

The State Election Board has issued subpoenas to find out whether there’s substance behind accusation­s of a ballot collection scheme in the 2020 election in Georgia.

The subpoenas, sent Thursday, seek evidence of allegation­s that unnamed organizati­ons paid individual­s $10 per absentee bal- lot delivered to drop boxes across metro Atlanta.

The practice of collecting multiple absentee bal- lots, called ballot harvest- ing, is illegal in Georgia, with exceptions for family members and caregivers.

The subpoenas followed a Nov. 30 complaint by True the Vote, a conservati­ve elec- tion organizati­on, which didn’t provide details supporting its allegation­s. The State Election Board voted last month to issue the subpoenas.

“They need to provide us the names of those people that they say harvested the ballots. We’re going to find out who they are and where they live, were they paid, and how much were they paid,” Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger said Saturday during a debate in Ellijay.

The subpoenas compel True the Vote to turn over documents, recordings and names allegedly connected to ballot harvesting. The subpoenas also require deposition­s of True the Vote founder Catherine Englebrech­t and her colleague, Gregg Phillips.

The complaint repeats several allegation­s that the GBI reviewed in the fall before declining to open an investigat­ion. The organizati­on said it tracked cellphone GPS signals to show illegal ballot collection at drop boxes.

GBI Director Vic Reynolds said in September that “an investigat­ion is not justified” because there was no other evidence tying cellphone signals to ballot harvesting.

The subpoenas will provide informatio­n to investigat­ors in the secretary of state’s office. When they finish the investigat­ion, they’ll present findings to the State Election Board, which has the power to levy fines or refer cases to prosecutor­s.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States