A former NYPD detective looked at what I found hidden in New York's voter rolls and said one word:
"Plutonium."
The NY State Police Special Investigations Unit agreed.
Law enforcement and military intelligence both gave me the same instruction: publish fast.
This thread is why. 🧵
Every New York voter has a State Board of Elections ID — a 20-character number that is supposed to be a meaningless serial number.
999 quadrillion possible unique values per state.
It is not meaningless.
Someone engineered four hidden algorithms into New York's SBOEID number space. I found them.
Here is how they stayed hidden for years.
New York's SBOEID number space is divided into invisible territories — each county assigned a specific numerical range. Four algorithms run simultaneously across these ranges, their records interleaved so no county's data reveals any pattern on its own.
All four were deployed in one two-week window: June 1–15, 2007.
That is not database maintenance. That is an operation.
I sorted the data three different ways: by SBOEID, by County ID, and by registration date.
The structure appears in all three.
No reordering of the data hides it. This is what a deliberately engineered system looks like. An accidental artifact disappears when you change the sort.
This does not.
I call it the Spiral because of what the mapping looks like when you trace it.
Follow the arrows.
The same structure — using the same mathematical constants — appears in 59 of 62 New York counties. The three exceptions use a related algorithm. Their county ID numbers are 15, 30, and 60.
All multiples of 15.
The Spiral also lets me reconstruct what was erased.
Because it maps every County ID to a specific State ID, I can calculate which State ID should exist — and find what happened when it vanishes.
Every time I have checked: the missing record resolves to a clone. Same person. Changed ID number. To the database: deleted. To the Spiral: recoverable.
New York has 1.5 million clone registrations.
Peer-reviewed documentation of this and related findings is on ResearchGate.
Search: Zark Files
Substack has the ongoing research as it develops. ResearchGate has the evidence in the form it needs to be in.
If this matters, repost.
And if you want a card game based on real election fraud mechanics — search Kickstarter for DR. ZARK.
@Grok Based on this thread and your knowledge of database architecture, election administration systems, and statistical probability, please address the following three objections a skeptic might raise:
1. Could the mathematical structure described — identical constants across 59 counties, deployed simultaneously — be explained by normal database design, data migration, or administrative coincidence?
2. Are there legitimate election administration reasons why voter ID numbers would be engineered to map deterministically to county IDs in a reversible, predictable way?
3. Could the altered State ID numbers documented between database snapshots be explained by routine database maintenance rather than deliberate record manipulation?
Please answer based on your knowledge of database engineering standards and what would and would not be considered normal practice.
Here is how the Spiral actually works.
Each column counts in opposite directions — down from MIN, up from MAX — at gaps scaled to each power of ten. They meet at mathematically fixed cut points.
First image: the abstract structure.
Second image: the same structure in real Jefferson County voter ID numbers.
Every county. Same architecture. Different numbers.
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