Posted on 08/22/2022 12:06:31 PM PDT by Hostage
This is an EMERGENCY! The deadline is SEPTEMBER 3, 2022. You may be able to do this by email.
This concerns the 2020 Election Fraud. Federal Law requires counties and states to retain their election materials for 22 months. Any request for 2020 Election materials must be done now before the deadline September 3, 2022.
BACKGROUND
MOMENT OF TRUTH SUMMIT
May be better managed for listening using store apps for RSBN, FRANKSPEECH
Also available on Gettr, Truth Social, others.
FORM
Pursuant to our state’s freedom of information law, please remit the Cast Vote Records [insert jurisdiction] from the 2020 General Election. These records should include the following fields as a minimum:
Found it !!!
Then select your State and look to see if your County is listed. If not then it HAS NOT BEEN AQUIRED.
NEXT STEP IS TO MAKE THE REQUEST.
Since North Carolina has a sucking chest wound (meaning 0 Counties done.) I’m going to get My County.
I suggest Posting this on your State Discussion Board to hopefully get others involved ASAP !!!
I pulled the records for my county, and have several Excel files.
Looks like 85,932 ballots cast for president.
When I leave my precinct how can I find my ballot number?
Since this is Excel let me play with it a bit to see what I can find.
Thanks for the ping and information!
Your Voter I.D. Number should move with You from Precinct to Precinct when You do an ADDRESS CHANGE. the only way it would/should change is if You move out of state, register in new state and then move back to Texas and reregister, then You would get a NEW Voter I.D. Number.
Your Voter I.D. Number should link back to ALL Your Ballots
Wow Just WOW! Great Great Find by mabarker1!
I hope this list is kept current.
I see all the battleground states except one that were stolen from Trump have most of the CVRs from the cheating counties. AZ, GA MI, WI are doing well. PA has only Allegheny County’s CVR.
Much more needs to be done as it was proven last Sunday at the Moment of Truth Summit that nearly EVERY COUNTY election is controllable by machine. We just didn’t see all of it in Nov 2020 because they got what they needed in battleground states.
But the coming midterms are a different story. We need CVRs from as many counties as possible no matter how sleepy, backwater a county may be.
LadyDraza appears to be behind this list linked by mabarker1. She’s an awesome statistical mathematical genius who has nailed the fraud on so many levels.
Here’s her Telegram channel.
https://t.me/ladydraza
Many of us went first to Telegram before Gettr, Gab, TruthSocial and others were up and running.
Here’s her Gettr channel:
https://gettr.com/user/ladydraza
And her TruthSocial:
https://truthsocial.com/@LadyDraza
Thanks texas booster!
Please read and ping out the below important update:
mabarker1 has made a great find!
https://freerepublic.com/focus/bloggers/4087463/posts?page=41#41
The CVR totals on counties are kept here:
This site has involvement by LadyDraza who is a great assurance of credibility and competence. More on LadyDraza here:
https://freerepublic.com/focus/bloggers/4087463/posts?page=45#45
Bkmk
“can’t figure how to stream it on my pc like I could previously”
Is it working now? Lindell was on War Room a few days ago and said that his site had been attacked and streaming had been shut down. May it’s been corrected?
Keep
Los Angeles county and Cook county (Chicago) are still missing.
No, not yet. Wish I knew how to email them.
Bookmark
Yes. That’s it. Great work.
Email a copy of the Zipped file to the email address I sent you in Freepmail.
Check the following depository to confirm it was received.
Here’s where the CVR repository is found:
Keep your copy safe, handy. Having them will be very valuable in the weeks leading up to November 8.
I emailed the link. The downloaded file was almost 180 MB. Too big for email.
OK, I just got this in My E-Mail and thought it should be seen by Others, so here it is.
I was supposed to be a Poll Worker this Election but got a call that they had overbooked at that particular Voting Site and they would keep Me on the list for the next Election.
I’m pretty sure that most of the General Public knows nothing about the following procedures. So I’m Posting it to be seen.
State Board to Randomly Select Precincts for Post-Election Accuracy Checks
Raleigh, N.C. — The State Board of Elections on Wednesday, November 9, will randomly select precincts, early voting sites, and absentee-by-mail ballots to be counted by hand as part of a statutorily required post-election audit.
The random selection of voting groups to be counted by hand in each county will take place at 1 p.m. Wednesday, November 9. The public is invited to attend the random selection in the Board Room, State Board of Elections office, Third Floor, Dobbs Building, 430 N. Salisbury St., Raleigh.
Interested parties may also access the event as follows:
Live online on Teams (Video will be available at the conclusion of the event.)
After the random selection, bipartisan teams at each county board of elections will hand count the chosen precincts, one-stop early voting sites, or absentee-by-mail ballots and compare them with the results of the machine counts. Required by state law, the sample audit count helps ensure the reliability of election results tabulated by machine. See N.C.G.S. § 163-182.1.
Wednesday’s event will entail multiple steps:
Ten 10-sided dice are rolled sequentially to determine a 10-digit seed number. The seed number method is used to initialize the random number generator in a way that can be replicated by any member of the public who wishes to do so.
The seed number is inputted into a software program, along with the input file (which contains a list of Election Day precincts, one-stop early voting sites, and all absentee-by-mail ballots for each county).
The software program is run using the seed number, the input file, and the code to generate a random sample of two groups of ballots cast from each county. These groups of ballots include Election Day precinct(s), early voting site(s), and absentee-by-mail ballots (considered a single administrative voting site since these are tabulated at the board of elections).
After being generated, the list of random groups of ballots is posted to NCSBE.gov and provided to the county boards of elections.
For transparency, members of the public can produce the same output using the seed number, the input file, and the free software.
Instructions for installing the software, as well as the code itself, are available here: https://dl.ncsbe.gov/?prefix=ENRS/sample_audit/code/.
The input file will be available here: https://dl.ncsbe.gov/?prefix=ENRS/sample_audit/2022_11_08/
The output file (i.e., the resulting randomly selected groups of ballots for each county to audit) will also be available here: https://dl.ncsbe.gov/?prefix=ENRS/sample_audit/2022_11_08/
Before every election, each county board of elections tests every tabulator that will be used in the election to ensure ballots are properly coded and the machine accurately counts the ballots. For more information, see Preparing for Accurate Elections.
The State Board office conducts a series of additional post-election audits and, where necessary, investigations, to ensure the reliability of election results. For more information on election security and audits, visit Post-Election Procedures and Audits.
Before every election, each county board of elections tests every tabulator that will be used in the election to ensure ballots are properly coded and the machine accurately counts the ballots.
except AZ...
I promise you that the machines got tested out there, they did exactly what they wanted them to in certain places !!! damn it ain’t who votes for whatever is who count the votes that damn bitch run for office the governor and issued an official decree still Secretary of State and they charge a run in the elections what’s wrong with this picture ???
The Count Continued:
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Wednesday, November 9, 2022
Patrick Gannon, Public Information Director
With November 8 in the Past, Election Officials Still Have Work to Do
Raleigh, N.C. — No election ends on Election Day. This is by design – and by state and federal law.
This has always been the case. In the days after each election in North Carolina, the 100 county boards of elections count the absentee-by-mail ballots that arrive after Election Day and provisional ballots, conduct a series of post-election audits, and complete any necessary recounts. The State Board of Elections conducts additional audits to ensure a fair and accurate count.
These processes culminate in the final certification of results. County boards of elections will hold their canvass meeting at 11 a.m. Friday, November 18. The State Board will meet on Tuesday, November 29, to certify the election.
“We are extraordinarily grateful to our county boards of elections, our county elections staffs, and the thousands of poll workers who made the 2022 general election a success in a highly charged political environment,” said Karen Brinson Bell, executive director of the State Board of Elections. “Our work is not done. State and county elections officials take many steps after every election to ensure all eligible votes are counted and the results are checked, double-checked and accurate. We will follow these procedures to certify the 2022 midterm election as well.”
More than 3.7 million North Carolinians cast ballot in this election, or nearly 51% of the state’s 7.4 million registered voters.
What happens now?
Please see below for details on the canvass process, including post-election audits, recounts, and more:
Absentee ballots. Mail-in, civilian absentee ballots postmarked on or before Election Day will be accepted by county boards of elections until 5 p.m. November 14. See Numbered Memo 2022-09. Overseas and military absentee ballots are accepted through 5 p.m. November 17, according to state law. These ballots will be added to the unofficial results during the canvass period. All county boards of elections will conduct meetings in the days after the election to consider these absentee ballots and add them to the totals.
Provisional ballot meetings. Provisional ballots are cast when an individual’s name does not appear on the poll book or other questions arise about that person’s eligibility to vote or to vote a particular ballot.
Every county board of elections meets before certifying the results to make decisions on provisional applications submitted by voters. If the board determines that the voter is eligible, the provisional ballot is counted. If the voter is eligible for some contests on the ballot but not others, the voter’s selections in the eligible contests will be counted. These ballots will be added to the unofficial results during the canvass process. These meetings are open to the public.
Also, under state law, elections officials must release the number of provisional ballots cast in each county by noon two days after each election. The State Board will post these data on its website by noon, November 10 and send out a news release with the information.
Sample Audit. Under state law, every county must conduct a sample hand-to-eye count of ballots in two randomly selected precincts, early voting sites, or absentee ballots to confirm results tabulated by machine. Bipartisan teams of counters conduct the hand counts during public meetings.
On Wednesday, the State Board randomly selected these voting groups to determine which ballots will be hand counted in every county. As a result of the random selection, 28 counties will count a one-stop early voting site by hand, 98 counties will count one or two Election Day precincts, and 14 counties will count all absentee-by-mail ballots as part of the audit. See sample audit selection results (output file).
These audits must be conducted in public. Results of the hand count are compared to the results as tabulated by voting machines to ensure accuracy.
County canvass. County boards of elections will certify their results at public meetings held at 11 a.m. Friday, November 18. The county board reviews election records for accuracy and certifies contests and referenda within the county boundaries.
Recounts. Any mandatory recounts would be conducted by county boards of elections after the county canvass and before the state canvass. For statewide contests, the vote difference must be 10,000 votes or fewer for a second-place candidate to demand a recount. For non-statewide contests, the difference between the candidates must be 1 percent or less of the total votes cast in the contest after county canvass. In contests under the jurisdiction of the State Board of Elections, the recount demand must be in writing and received by the State Board of Elections no later than noon on Tuesday, November 22. If a recount is demanded, the State Board of Elections office would issue a schedule, and the counties would conduct recounts individually during open meetings.
For contests under jurisdiction of county boards of elections, a demand for recount must be made in writing to the county board of elections by 5 p.m. Monday, November 21.
N.C.G.S. § 163-182.7.
See general guidelines for recounts: 08 NCAC 09 .0106.
And see Recount of Optical Scan Ballots: 08 NCAC 09 .0107.
State canvass. The State Board of Elections will certify statewide results for all federal, statewide, multi-county district, judicial, and district attorney contests at a public meeting held at 11 a.m. Tuesday, November 29. Results in each contest are not considered official until certified by the State Board. As part of the state canvass, the State Board will issue a post-election audit report. After state canvass, the board of elections with jurisdiction over each contest will issue a certificate of election to the prevailing candidate.
For more information about NC election audits and canvass, see Post-Election Procedures and Audits.
Next Update from NCSBE:
State Board Releases Number of Provisional Ballots Cast in 2022 General Election
Raleigh, N.C. – Under state law, election officials must release the number of provisional ballots cast in each county by noon two days after each election. The State Board surveyed the county boards of elections to provide the count of provisional ballots cast during the 2022 general election.
See Provisionals Cast - November 2022 General (PDF).
(This PDF will be updated as soon as additional data become available.)
A voter may cast a provisional ballot when their name does not appear on the poll book or other questions arise about their eligibility to vote or to vote a particular ballot. The provisional voter fills out a form called a provisional application, which includes information that the county board can use to research the voter’s eligibility.
County board staff research each provisional application to determine if the voter is eligible. After Election Day, each county board of elections meets before certifying the results to make decisions on provisional applications submitted by voters. If the board determines that the voter is eligible, the provisional ballot is counted. If the voter is eligible for some contests on the ballot but not others, the eligible contests will be counted for that voter. These ballots will be added to the official results during the canvass process.
County canvass for the November 8 election will be Friday, November 18. The final certification of votes by the State Board of Elections will take place during a board meeting on at 11 a.m. Tuesday, November 29.
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