Election workers have singled out Maricopa County’s Mark McCall for Election Day negligence and maladministration. Cynthia Schlesinger said:
“Mark, who was the supposed leader, was the cause of most of the issues and did nothing to correct anything that was brought to his attention.”
The entire election in Maricopa County was botched and I think that was intentional since the bulk of the precincts that had tabulator problems were conservative districts. Tabulators that checked out fine the night before had problems the first thing on election day. And how do you run out of ink? Why does this never happen in deep blue precincts? I think we both know the answer to that question.
According to observations and signed affidavits, three poll workers and an election marshal who worked at the same Maricopa County voting center on Election Day witnessed concerning issues and irregularities at the hands of Maricopa County employees.
With the tabulators down the lines quickly became very long and many got disgusted and left. To add to the problems the voters were instructed to go to another precinct and vote. What they left out was you must sign out first. When those voters went to another precinct they were either denied or had to fill out a provisional ballot, which gets tossed without a count of the votes.
The four election workers who filed affidavits worked at the same precinct and fingered Mark McCall for a multitude of issues with the voting. For instance, if a vote gets spoiled, they have to write spoiled across the ballot. McCall told them not to write spoiled across the ballot, but to bring them to him. There were a suspicious amount of spoiled ballots.
VISIT OUR YOUTUBE CHANNELFour election workers detailed similar issues at the Grace in the Desert Church in Peoria, Arizona, including ballot reconciliation issues, suspicious ballot spoiling instructions, questionable testing procedures, and potential law violations.
Each of them fingered Maricopa County’s Mark McCall for Election Day negligence and maladministration.
Mark McCall was further accused of stuffing misread “box 3” ballots into black duffel bags instead of the designated transport bins and dropping unused tamper-evident security ties into the duffel bags. This breaks the chain of custody by potentially allowing bad actors to open these bags and reseal them without anybody knowing.
It also appears that Mark was also left alone in the tabulation center with no supervision. It is unclear whether or not there were live ballots in the room.
Marcella Heiman, corroborating Pam Cetina’s story:
“When Mark would spoil a ballot, he wouldn’t write across the printing on the back of the ballot but on the side, said Marcella Heiman, corroborating Pam Cetina’s story that “They didn’t want me writing SPOIL in the middle of the ballot and asked that when the customer was done with it, to find him/her.”
Uncover DC reported that “none of these poll workers knew each other prior to working on Election Day.”
Pam Cetina: I looked over the ballots carefully when the voters came back to spoil their ballots and could see no reason why they were being rejected. I finally went and found Mark McCall, our Inspector, and asked him what was going on; he just acted like it was no big deal. I spoke to others on our team, and they all knew this wasn’t normal. Even the customers were becoming suspicious, asking if this was going to be another 2020. Yami [Martinez], who is a[n] employee of the county and works directly with Mark McCall, would often hover in our area listening to what was going on. They didn’t want me writing SPOIL in the middle of the ballot and asked that when the customer was done with it, to find him/her, and he would take care of it. Yami [Martinez] was also working as a clerk. I started telling voters if they had any more problems to come back to me, and I would print another ballot for them.




















