1/6 Nevada Clark County uses a signature verification system called "Versus Pro" offered by Phoenix company Runbeck Election Services which matches sigs from the mail-in ballot and original voter registration record. #ElectionIntegrity#ElectionIntegrity
2/6 Versus Pro recommends an accuracy setting of "50/100" but in Clark County, election officials chose to lower that to "40/100" where almost NO ballots were rejected.
3/6 Anthony Paiz, vice president of field services of Runbeck Election Services, which owns the Versus Pro software said "That score is a “confidence level, and changes should be “done with bipartisan” buy-in." (whatever that means). reviewjournal.com/news/politics-…
4/6 But the few that get rejected are still eligible for "ballot cure" where the original voter is contacted. As of Nov 10, almost 10,000 Clark County ballots were "cured." 76% of them were Democrat or "other," and only 24% Republican were republican. nvsos.gov/sos/home/showd…
5/6 But because of the 40/100" ratio, Nov 12 Clark Co Offical Victor Joeks found multiple ballot signature mistakes that were missed (not cured). Including 8 ballots he signed for other voters that were accepted as "valid."
6/6 Nevada SOS wrongly says (Fact #9) "Mail ballots ... returned must be signed by the voter. This signature is compared to the signature on file at the election office for the voter, and if the signature does not match, the ballot is rejected.
3/4 This article identifies Smartmatic Chairman Mark Malloch-Brown as a former "vice-chairman of George Soros’s Investment Funds, as well as his Open Society Institute (OSI)"
2/8 NYT June 11 article cites many problems with the newest Dominion Voting Machines, esp in Georgia, and links to several sources. nytimes.com/2020/06/11/us/…
3/8 "A cascade of problems caused block-long lines across Georgia, as primary voters stood for hours while poll workers waited for equipment to be delivered or struggled to activate the system’s components." nytimes.com/2020/06/10/us/…
1/ NYT June 11 article cites many problems with the newest Dominion Voting Machines and links to several sources. nytimes.com/2020/06/11/us/…
2/ "A cascade of problems caused block-long lines across Georgia, as primary voters stood for hours while poll workers waited for equipment to be delivered or struggled to activate the system’s components." nytimes.com/2020/06/10/us/…
3/ Kay Stimson, the director of government relations for Dominion, said the company had to replace only 20 components for about 30,000 machines. “That’s a very low number for a statewide voting system rollout across 159 counties,” she said.