The more we learn about the 2020 and 2022 elections in Georgia, the less confident we can be about the legitimacy of the elections we have. During the 2020 Election in Fulton County, a “non-partisan” observer by the name of Carter Jones observed “nearly 270 hours” as part of a consent order with the state and county election board. Jones wrote of the Fulton County election:
“At no time did I ever observe any conduct by Fulton County election officials that involved dishonesty, fraud, or intentional malfeasance. During my weeks of monitoring, I witnessed neither ‘ballot stuffing’ nor ‘double-counting’ nor any other fraudulent conduct that would undermine the validity, fairness, and accuracy of the results published and certified by Fulton County.”
However, that is diametrically opposed to what he reported on election night. He said that the process was breaking down and that Ralph (Jones) was double-counting ballots at the State Farm Center! What made him change his mind? Was it pressure or was it money? Maybe a little of both.

After Part 3 of this series documents the State Election Board (SEB) entering into a Consent Order with Fulton County Board of Registrations and Elections (BRE) regarding 36 inconsistencies that add up to a 4,057 vote surplus for Joe Biden, it seems clear that “they made the numbers add up.” But, in all fairness, the hand-count wasn’t the “official count”. So how did the Election Day Machine Count (MC1), hand-recount and the Machine Recount (MC2) “add up” then?
Rossi and Moncla submitted a SEB Complaint 2023-025 on July 8th, 2022, in which they lay out two claims:
VISIT OUR YOUTUBE CHANNEL1. Irregularities in the Recount that lead to the addition of 16,382 votes
to the “Batches Loaded Report” (BLR) of December 3, 2020 to the
“certified result,” on December 4, which included 3,125 duplicate
ballots and 17,852 votes of unknown provenance – that is, for which
no physical ballot was in evidence.2. Additional tabulator results from unreported and unidentifiable
tabulators that accounted for 20,713 votes in the November 3rd vote
totals.
In claim #2 above, based on evidence provided by officials they showed that the original count on November 3 was missing 20,713 ballot images and count-confirming tabulator tapes. Furthermore, this count of 20,713 ballots came from ten Advance Voting tabulators that have no record of existing. Open Records Requests were made for public documents explicitly regarding those ten tabulators, to which Fulton County responded they had “No such records.”
This means that there are no poll tapes. There are no daily status tapes. There are no poll closing tapes. They are not in the Logic and Accuracy testing logs. They do not appear in the equipment distribution logs nor the machine pick-up logs. They apparently don’t exist.
The following chart documents where each of the 20,713 votes were counted and on which specific “tabulator” according to the Cast Vote Record:

Moncla sought further confirmation and followed up with a request to the Fulton County Records Department and Fulton County Custodian of Records, Steve Rosenberg, to “confirm they don’t exist”. The Records Department replied, “This request has no additional responsive records. The records received in ORR R008635-120121 were complete.” The aforementioned email inquiries and responses were reviewed by The Gateway Pundit’s Brian Lupo. The tabulators documented in the chart above specifically were identified in the request.
Below are the relevant screenshots from responses regarding the non-existent tabulators:

So far, Carter Jones statements do not hold water. The hand-count was off by a significant amount. The 4,057 vote surplus for Biden was a difference of 34% of the margin of victory in just one county that accounts for only 10% of Georgia’s electorate. MC1 was not any better. In fact, it was significantly worse: 20,713 votes that have no record and were recorded on machines that don’t seem to exist at all.
But where did those 16,382 votes come from? Through an Open Records Request on an unrelated topic, Moncla stumbled upon an email dated December 3, 2020 from Fulton County Elections Director Rick Barron to Ryan Macias of the Elections Group. Macias was formerly the acting Director of the EAC’s testing and certification and is a “Subject Matter Expert” for the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA).




















