The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Watchdogs say contract with EagleAI vote-checking system flouts state law

GOP-backed firm offered service at below-market rate.

- By Mark Niesse Mark.Niesse@ajc.com

When Georgia Republican­s banned donations for election operations last year, they were taking aim at millions of dollars primarily benefiting large, Democratic-leaning counties during the COVID19 pandemic.

Now two watchdog groups say the outside funding ban should also prevent a Republican-backed startup company, EagleAI, from offering to help cancel voter registrati­ons at a discount to county election offices.

EagleAI plans to sell its software, which would identify potentiall­y outdated voter registrati­ons, to Columbia County for $2,000, a below-market rate that constitute­s a prohibited gift under Georgia law, according to a March 8 letter sent to state election officials by watchdog groups American Oversight and Campaign Legal Center.

“EagleAI is a problemati­c ‘solution’ in search of the nonexisten­t problem of voter fraud,” said Chioma Chukwu, deputy executive director for American Oversight. “Whether EagleAI attempted to undermine Georgia law by charging only a nominal fee for its services is a clear issue for state investigat­ion.”

EagleAI CEO Rick Richards said in an email that he wouldn’t respond to questions.

EagleAI is a private venture, but it is supported by Republican activists including Cleta Mitchell, an attorney who participat­ed in then-President Donald Trump’s phone call asking Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger to “find” votes to reverse Georgia’s election results in 2020.

The secretary of state’s office would open an investigat­ion of EagleAI if requested by the State Election Board, spokesman Mike Hassinger said.

“We have urged all counties in Georgia to be extremely cautious when using third-party applicatio­ns to access voter data, as those applicatio­ns may be unreliable and do not have the robust functional­ity and accuracy available through the GARViS system,” which is Georgia’s voter registrati­on system, Hassinger said.

EagleAI has billed itself as a tool that helps verify voter eligibilit­y challenges, which, if upheld by county election boards, can result in registrati­on cancellati­ons.

Conservati­ve activists have challenged over 100,000 Georgia voter registrati­ons over the past three years, an effort they say is needed to prevent the possibilit­y of election fraud involving people who have moved.

County election boards have dismissed most voter challenges; very few cases of ineligible voting have been proved.

But voter challenges have been filed against some legitimate Georgia voters, forcing them to defend themselves to election boards, and in some cases, preventing their ability to vote. All Georgia voters are required to show ID in each election before casting a ballot.

During the 2020 election year and the COVID-19 pandemic, county election offices in Georgia received about $45 million from the Center for Tech and Civic Life, a nonprofit funded in part by Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg. The money was used to fund, among other things, equipment to process mail ballots, protective gear for election workers, election staffing, absentee ballot postage costs and voter outreach.

Most of the money donated by the Center for Tech and Civic Life went to Democratic-leaning counties, but several Republican areas also received grants.

In response, the Georgia General Assembly passed the bill last year that made it a felony for local government­s to accept donations for elections from nongovernm­ental sources.

Richards has previously acknowledg­ed that he could charge a “nominal fee” rather than the fair-market value for EagleAI, according to the watchdog groups. If that were allowed, nonprofits such as the Center for Tech and Civic Life could also avoid Georgia’s ban on election donations by charging a small fee, they said.

Columbia County’s election board approved the $2,000 contract with EagleAI in December, but Richards hasn’t signed it yet, Elections Supervisor Nancy Gay said. She said it’s unlikely she would use EagleAI this year while her office is busy running elections.

“I’ve got bigger fish to fry,” Gay said. “I’ve got to worry about this election year, first and foremost.”

 ?? MIGUEL MARTINEZ/MIGUEL.MARTINEZJI­MENEZ@AJC.COM ?? EagleAI calls itself a tool that helps verify voter eligibilit­y challenges, which, if upheld, can result in registrati­on cancellati­ons.
MIGUEL MARTINEZ/MIGUEL.MARTINEZJI­MENEZ@AJC.COM EagleAI calls itself a tool that helps verify voter eligibilit­y challenges, which, if upheld, can result in registrati­on cancellati­ons.

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