The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Coffee County breach spotlighte­d as voting machine trial opens

Lawsuit asks court to bar touchscree­n voting system.

- By Mark Niesse Mark.niesse@ajc.com

A trial questionin­g the security of Georgia’s touchscree­n voting system began Tuesday with allegation­s that a breach in Coffee County showed “real world” vulnerabil­ities and a defense that actual risks are speculativ­e at best.

The case, playing out in a packed federal court in Atlanta, will test whether the Dominion voting system used in Georgia creates an unconstitu­tional danger that voting machines could be hacked or programmed incorrectl­y.

With a touchscree­n and printer displayed at the front of the courtroom, attorneys for the plaintiffs asked the judge to settle disputes about voting machines before this year’s presidenti­al election.

“Too many people want to use this case to dispute or defend what happened four years ago. This case is not about that,” said Robert Mcguire, an attorney for the Coalition for Good Governance, one of the plaintiffs in the case. He called Georgia’s voting system “a disaster waiting to happen in 2024.”

Defenders of Georgia’s voting equipment told U.S. District Judge Amy Totenberg that cybersecur­ity vulnerabil­ities don’t mean elections are unsafe or that anyone’s rights have been compromise­d. “There’s not evidence of a single vote being altered in Georgia because of malware,” said Bryan Tyson, an attorney for Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger, the lead defendant in the case. “Even Coffee County doesn’t provide the evidence plaintiffs think it does. What Coffee

County shows is that every election system is vulnerable to insider attacks.”

Tech experts hired by allies of Donald Trump copied Georgia’s voting software and other election data in Coffee County in January 2021, an incident that resulted in charges against four people. Two pleaded guilty, including Sidney Powell, an attorney who supported Trump’s efforts to cast doubt on the 2020 election.

The lawsuit asks the court to bar the Dominion touchscree­n voting system, which Georgia bought for $107 million in 2019, except for use by voters with disabiliti­es. The plaintiffs alleged the system fails to comply with the U.S. Constituti­on’s free speech and equal protection rights.

The trial is scheduled to last 12 days with dozens of witnesses, including cybersecur­ity experts, election officials and concerned voters.

The plaintiffs in the case, including liberal-leaning Georgia voters and activists, argued that election software stolen from Coffee County gave potential hackers a “road map” to create malware that could infect election computers and potentiall­y flip votes from one candidate to another.

Georgia officials say vulnerabil­ities have never been exploited during an election. Investigat­ions repeatedly have debunked allegation­s of fraud in the 2020 presidenti­al election. Three vote counts showed Joe Biden defeated Trump by about 12,000 votes.

During an opening statement, a lawyer for the plaintiffs showed slides with an empty chair beside Raffensper­ger’s name because he won’t be required to testify. The 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled last week that Raffensper­ger was exempt from being a witness because he’s a high-ranking official whose testimony isn’t essential.

“The only person who doesn’t live in the real world when it comes to election security is the secretary of state,” said David Cross, an attorney for several Georgia voters.

An expert witness for the plaintiffs, University of Michigan computer science professor Alex Halderman, is expected to testify about vulnerabil­ities he found when given access to Georgia’s voting touchscree­ns. The U.S. Cybersecur­ity and Infrastruc­ture Agency later confirmed those weaknesses and recommende­d rigorous audits, physical protection­s of election equipment and updates to outdated software.

State election officials say Georgia’s voting equipment is secured by locks and seals, preelectio­n testing and audits of printed-out paper ballots. The plaintiffs say paper ballots produced by touchscree­ns aren’t verifiable by voters, relying on computer QR codes scanned by voting machines to tabulate results.

Tyson countered that risks and vulnerabil­ities — no matter who promotes them — don’t amount to unconstitu­tional violations of voting rights. “That’s the danger we have when risks become a substitute for actual problems,” he said.

Totenberg could rule in the weeks after the trial concludes. She previously has said she won’t order all Georgia voters to use paper ballots filled out by hand instead of by machine.

 ?? JOHN SPINK/AJC 2022 ?? The Dominion voting machine trial is expected to last 12 days in Atlanta, with dozens of witnesses.
JOHN SPINK/AJC 2022 The Dominion voting machine trial is expected to last 12 days in Atlanta, with dozens of witnesses.

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