Good for the DA; that is what is supposed to happen if fraud is suspected. There is more chance for voter fraud in mail in ballots than any other way. I was the judge of the Early Voting Ballot Board for ten years and every mail in ballot "paperwork" has to be examined to prove it is a valid ballot. If it is not valid, it is rejected. In Texas, mail in ballots are examined starting a few days before election day. My group met for three days, two before the voting day and on voting day for the ones coming in that day. On the voting day, I paid for lunch to be brought in to them so we could keep working. If you are a worker, you get paid for that and that is the money I used, plus some of my personal money, to buy their lunch.
Here is the big problem getting Texas MEN to be on that board. In November, state legal hunting day starts on one of these days we work, and no hunting man wants to miss out on the first day of hunting, so they turned me down working on ballots.