Previously Unreleased Document Raises More Questions About Fulton County’s 2020 ElectionFulton County was unaware that the document was in someone's possession prior to its release.ADDISON BASURTO October 14, 2022A previously unreleased document for the certified vote recount (Machine Count 2) conducted on December 1st and 2nd, 2020 — titled “Batches Loaded Report #1” (BLR1), raises even more serious questions about how the certified vote count for the 2020 U.S. Presidential Election in Fulton County, Georgia was obtained.
Joe Rossi, a former business executive and chemical engineer, is a Georgia citizen whose election integrity group’s work was the basis for Governor Brian P. Kemp’s letter date November 17, 2021, where Kemp (R) said the State Election Board (SEB) “must act swiftly” regarding the Risk-Limiting Audit Report for Fulton County.
Specifically, the governor stated that, “the data that exists in public view on the Secretary of State’s website of the RLA report, does not inspire confidence. It is sloppy, inconsistent and presents questions.”
On December 2, 2020 at 11:52 PM, Fulton County Georgia announced, “Fulton County Has Completed The Recount Of The November 3 Presidential Election. Results will be released by the Secretary of State’s Office.”
Subsequently, on December 3rd, 2020 at 12:06 PM, the first Batches Loaded Report (BLR1) report was time-stamped. The BLR is produced after uploading each tabulator’s memory card to the Dominion Election Management System and is the final vote count.
The metadata for BLR1, measured in Zulu Time, said the BLR1 report was created at 12:06 PM, while the email from then-Fulton County Elections Director Richard Barron to Ryan Macias, a member of the National Task Force on Election Crises and “elections expert,” was sent at 12:13 PM, just seven minutes later. The email had an attachment, “Batches Loaded Report.xml.”
Barron admitted in a Fulton Elections Board Meeting on December 4th, 2020 that their vote count was short of Machine Count 1’s total, the original November 3rd tally. In that same meeting, Barron stated that “the state” told them to “reconcile” it.
Seven minutes later, at 12:13 PM, Batches Loaded Report 1 (BLR1) was attached in an email sent by Richard Barron to Ryan Macias.
In the aftermath of the 2020 US Presidential Election, Ryan Macias came to the aide of former Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency for the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), Chris Krebs, by agreeing with his assessment that the reports about problems in Georgia’s election were “factually inaccurate.”
511,727 votes were recorded in Batches Loaded Report 1 (BLR1), about 17,000 votes short of the November 3rd total from Machine Count 1.
The reconciliation process requested of Richard Barron by “the state” resulted in the generation of Batches Loaded Report #2 (BLR2) sometime after 12:06 PM on December 3rd, 2020. Batches Loaded Report #2 (BLR2) totaled 527,925 votes.
These questions remain unanswered for the reconciliation process for Machine Count 2, which generated the BLR2 total of 527,925 votes.
- Why were there 3,125 confirmed duplicate ballot images?
- Why were there 17,852 confirmed missing ballot images?
- Why were there 13,642 early votes backloaded between 10:16 PM on December 3rd and 12:30 AM on December 4th?
- Why were 239 absentee ballots added on December 3rd, 2020 at 1:48 PM?
- Why were 2,897 absentee ballots added on December 3rd, 2020 between 8:10 PM and 8:18 PM?
This information reinforces the idea that something suspicious occurred regarding Batches Loaded Report #2 (BLR2).
The Office of the Fulton County attorney confirmed in an email that there is no record for the tabulator tapes listed below:
https://nationalfile.com/previously-unreleased-document-raises-more-questions-about-fulton-countys-2020-election/
That's almost 21,000 votes with non-existing ballots being added to the election total. And this is only one county.
Trump, Purdue, and Loeffler all won their races in 2020. Comfortably. Not only was this election stolen, it has been proven to have been stolen.