The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

‘2000 Mules’ alleges ballot harvesting in 2020

What’s missing in film is concrete evidence of the voter fraud claims.

- By Mark Niesse Mark.niesse@ajc.com

A new movie spreading suspicions of voter fraud, “2000 Mules,” shows surveillan­ce video of Georgia voters dropping off multiple ballots.

Conservati­ve filmmaker Dinesh D’souza says that’s a crime, suggesting that a network of unnamed “mules” rigged the presidenti­al election for Democrat Joe Biden and against Republican Donald Trump.

Based on these unproven allegation­s, the documentar­y-style movie jumps to the conclusion that the election was stolen.

The hour and a half-long film leaves voters uninformed about precaution­s that help prevent mass absentee ballot fraud, instead encouragin­g them to believe elections were subverted by a shadowy cabal of nonprofit organizati­ons.

The movie hinges on the theory that 2,000 people in five states, including 242 in metro Atlanta, collected and delivered multiple absentee ballots, a practice called “ballot harvesting.” Georgia law prohibits voters from delivering anyone’s ballot besides their own, with exceptions for family members and caregivers of disabled voters.

While it’s possible that some of the alleged perpetrato­rs shown in the movie actually committed a crime, video surveillan­ce of drop boxes alone doesn’t prove anything. Voters might have been delivering ballots for their relatives, which is allowed.

Even if there were a ballot harvesting scheme, it wouldn’t invalidate legitimate ballots just because they were turned in by unauthoriz­ed individual­s. Verified ballots of registered voters still count, regardless of how they were delivered.

Election investigat­ors have reviewed several videos included in “2000 Mules” and found no illegal behavior, including a video

that showed a Gwinnett County man inserting ballots into a drop box, according to the secretary of state’s office.

“We investigat­ed, and the five ballots that he turned in were all for himself and his family members,” said Republican Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger during a debate last week.

In the movie, D’souza promotes

allegation­s made by True the Vote, a Texas-based organizati­on that gathered drop box surveillan­ce video and cellphone location data in parts of Georgia, Arizona, Wisconsin, Michigan and Pennsylvan­ia. All were swing states where Biden won.

True the Vote hasn’t cooperated with Georgia’s election investigat­ions, refusing to disclose the

names of people who allegedly harvested ballots. The State Election Board issued subpoenas on the organizati­on last month to seek documents, recordings and names of individual­s involved.

The organizati­on also doesn’t explain how ballot harvesting could have occurred.

Every absentee ballot is assigned to the voter who requested it, and voters can only cast one ballot each.

Returned ballots must be included in an envelope that includes the voter’s registrati­on informatio­n, signature, and a bar code. Ballots delivered without an envelope aren’t counted, meaning ballot-stuffing wouldn’t work.

True the Vote claims that cellphone location records show that “mules” visited multiple drop boxes in a day, but publicly available location data often aren’t accurate enough to prove that people actually stopped at drop boxes. They could have been driving by drop boxes on busy streets as they travel to and from work.

None of the surveillan­ce videos in the movie shows anyone visiting more than one drop box in a day.

A map of downtown Atlanta displays cellphone travel patterns, but few of them intersect with drop boxes, which were required to be located on government property such as the Fulton County Government Center.

True the Vote founder Catherine Engelbrech­t said in the movie that her organizati­on tracked cellphones that were near both drop boxes and unidentifi­ed nonprofit organizati­ons, which she believes coordinate­d the ballot harvesting operation.

“What does this even mean if this is happening in broad daylight and nobody’s doing anything to stop it?” Engelbrech­t said. “It won’t stop unless we stop it.”

The GBI reviewed True the Vote’s allegation­s last fall and found they lacked sufficient evidence to merit a law enforcemen­t investigat­ion.

“What has not been provided is any other kind of evidence that ties these cellphones to ballot harvesting,” wrote GBI Director Vic Reynolds in a Sept. 30 letter. “As it exists, the data, while curious, does not rise to the level of probable cause that a crime has been committed.”

While the movie blames drop boxes for enabling ballot harvesting, it ignores the fact that multiple ballots could more easily be returned through the Post Office or home mailboxes, where there isn’t video surveillan­ce. There’s no indication of ballot harvesting in mailed ballots during the 2020 election.

D’souza, the filmmaker and narrator, has produced several movies and books that promote conspiracy theories and rightwing propaganda, including “The Big Lie: Exposing the Nazi Roots of the American Left” and “Hillary’s America: The Secret History of the Democratic Party.”

D’souza pleaded guilty to a felony campaign finance violation in 2014 for using straw donors to exceed contributi­on limits to a Republican candidate running for a U.S. Senate seat in New York. Trump pardoned D’souza in 2018.

The movie, which costs $29.99 to stream online, ends with a QR code that directs voters to a website where they can donate money to True the Vote.

 ?? AJC 2020 ?? A Gwinnett County voter places his mail-in ballot inside an official drop box in Lawrencevi­lle during early voting in 2020. Election investigat­ors have reviewed several videos included in “2000 Mules” and found no illegal behavior.
AJC 2020 A Gwinnett County voter places his mail-in ballot inside an official drop box in Lawrencevi­lle during early voting in 2020. Election investigat­ors have reviewed several videos included in “2000 Mules” and found no illegal behavior.
 ?? COURTESY ?? The movie “2000 Mules” includes video surveillan­ce of a Fulton County ballot drop box that shows a man delivering ballots at night during the 2020 presidenti­al election.
COURTESY The movie “2000 Mules” includes video surveillan­ce of a Fulton County ballot drop box that shows a man delivering ballots at night during the 2020 presidenti­al election.

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