GA poll worker attests to discovering fraudulent activity. Georgia Poll Worker Says She Found 'Pristine' Batch of Ballots That Went '98%' for Biden.
Woman says she took part in state recount, has 20 years' experience in handling ballots.
A Georgia poll worker who said she has 20 years of experience in handling ballots and recounts said in a sworn statement on Nov. 17 that she noticed an unusual batch of ballots in which the sheets had no signs of use or markings, and approximately 98 percent were marked for Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden.
Only about two of the ballots from that batch were marked for President Donald Trump, recount worker Susan Voyles said. Voyles filed an affidavit in support of attorney Lin Woodâs lawsuit against Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger in which she claimed that Raffensperger made changes to the stateâs election policy, arguing that only Georgiaâs legislature can make a change in a federal election.
Raffensperger has said on social media and in interviews that there is no evidence to suggest that fraud occurred on a wide enough scale to affect the electionâs outcome. âMy team secured and strengthened absentee ballots for the first time since 2005. As Secretary of State the first thing I did was push legislation thatâOUTLAWEDâabsentee ballot harvesting in Georgia,â he wrote on Facebook this week in a bid to dispute Woodâs lawsuit.
But Voylesâs allegations are sure to draw fresh attention and scrutiny to the vote-tabulation efforts in Georgia.
Georgia recount worker with 20 years of experience handling ballots described an odd batch that stood out. Pristine sheets with no markings and 98% for Biden.
â Ivan Pentchoukov (@IvanPentchoukov) November 18, 2020
Source: https://t.co/w9H3llLwJ8 pic.twitter.com/GBUjAvHdNS
Voyles said she worked at Fulton Countyâs Sandy Springs poll station and accepted the Fulton County Board of Electionsâ request to carry out its hand recount of the election.
At one point, Voyles said she noticed a batch of ballots that âwas pristine,â while noting that âmost of the ballotsâ she observed âhad already been handled; they had been written on by people, and the edges were worn,â showing obvious signs of use.
The âpristine ballotâ batch, however, showed âa difference in the texture of the paperâit was if they were intended for absentee use but had not been used for that purposes,â and there âwas a difference in the feel.â
âThese different ballots,â Voyles added, âincluded a slight depressed pre-fold so they could be easily folded and unfolded for use in scanning machines.â Also, âThere were no markings on the ballots to show where they had come from, or where they had been processed,â she said. âThese stood out.â
âIn my 20 yearsâ of experience of handling ballots,â she said, âI observed that the markings for the candidates on [the âpristine ballotsâ] were unusually uniform, perhaps even with a ballot-marking device.â
âBy my estimate in observing these ballots, approximately 98 percent constituted votes for Joseph Biden,â she said.
Georgiaâs GOP Chairman David Shafer noted that one of his poll watchers found a nearly 10,000-vote error in DeKalb County where âone batch was labeled 10,707 for Biden and 13 for Trump,â which is âimprobable ⌠for DeKalb standards.â Shafer said his attorneys turned over an affidavit from their monitor to the secretary of state for an investigation.
The Fulton County Board of Elections and Raffenspergerâs office havenât responded to a request for comment about Voylesâs claims.
It came as Raffensperger on Nov. 15 issued a statement to Trump and GOP officials about alleged election fraud on Nov. 3, describing Rep. Doug Collins (R-Ga.), who is leading efforts in Georgia on behalf of Trump, as a âfailed candidateâ and a âliar.â
âFor the first time in the history of Georgia, Absentee ballots submitted through our electronic portal required photo ID. My teamâwe made that happen,â said Raffensperger, who has come under fire from other Republicans who called on him to resign from his position and accused him of mismanaging the election.
Case: Wood v. Raffensperger (1:20-cv-04651)
Author: Jack Phillips, Senior reporter
Jack Phillips, is a reporter at The Epoch Times based in New York. @jackphillips5

