New Scan Counted Only 28 Percent of Test Ballots for GOP Candidates



Auditors who are examining votes in Windham, New Hampshire, may have figured out why initial results showed a discrepancy in the vote count for a Democratic candidate.

Republicans in Windham, New Hampshire, won all four seats in the legislative election on Nov. 3, but a Democratic candidate, Kristi St. Lauren, requested a recount, which was granted because she lost by only 24 votes.

However, during a hand recount, it was revealed that she didn’t lose by 24 votes. Instead, the effort revealed that the GOP candidates had actually received 300 additional votes, while St. Laurent Lost 99 votes.

The audit was carried out to determine why there was a discrepancy in the initial tally and the recount tally. Now, the auditors involved in the process said they may have discovered the reason why.

“We now have experimental confirmation that if the contest is undervoted, a fold through a vote target can create a vote. None of the 65 ballots was marked for St. Laurent, but the machines interpreted 25 of the folds as votes for her,” wrote the Twitter account, WindhamNHAuditors, which is operated by auditors Harri Hursti, Mark Lindeman, and Phillip Stark. It later clarified that it was 75 votes, not 65 votes.

The account included a photo of the fold lines in the ballots that apparently caused the scanner machine to interpret the fold lines as valid votes.

“Something we strongly suspect at this juncture, based on various evidence, is that in some cases, fold lines are being interpreted by the scanners as valid votes,” Lindeman, one of the auditors, told WMUR-TV.

The auditors, in another tweet, found that another machine had an “even more dramatic problem” and counted only 28 percent of the 75 votes for each Republican candidate in the contest.

“Because if someone voted for all four Republican candidates and the ballot happened to have its fold line going through St. Laurent’s target, then that might be interpreted by the machines as an overvote, which would then subtract votes from each of those four Republican candidates,” Stark, an auditor, told the station.

“Conversely, if there were not four votes already in that contest by the voter, a fold line through that target could have caused the machine to interpret it as a vote for St. Laurent.”

St. Laurent told WMUR-TV that it appears that the fold frequently went through her name on the ballot, suggesting that’s why she received more votes during the initial tally.

“Wherever the fold happened to be was, I guess, most commonly through my name,” the Democratic candidate said.

The Epoch Times has reached out to AccuVote, the machines involved in the audit and vote, for comment.





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Jack Phillips
Author: Jack Phillips

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