By Kartikay Mehrotra and Margaret Newkirk
November 8, 2019, 2:30 PM CST
"The first sign something was wrong with Northampton County, Pennsylvania’s state-of-the-art voting system came on Election Day when a voter called the local Democratic Party chairman to say a touchscreen in her precinct was acting “finicky.” As she scrolled down the ballot, the tick-marks next to candidates she’d selected kept disappearing."
Her experience Nov. 5 was no isolated glitch. Over the course of the day, the new election machinery, bought over the objections of cybersecurity experts, continued to malfunction. Built by Election Systems & Software, the ExpressVote XL was designed to marry touchscreen technology with a paper-trail for post-election audits. Instead, it created such chaos that poll workers had to crack open the machines, remove the ballot records and use scanners summoned from across state lines to conduct a recount that lasted until 5 a.m.
-----November 2019 in Pennsylvania-----

https://freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/3907796/posts?page=1#1
At least it hasn't been deleted yet.
Wonder why Pro's account banned or suspended now...
Password for entering ELECTION machines - is "highly secure" and complex. #WECAUGHTTHEMALL pic.twitter.com/xpWz3fDMxI— ToRE (@TweetWordz) November 19, 2020