You can trust Judicial Watch to investigate and expose the conduct of the 2020 elections. Our efforts are well under way with dozens of open records requests and other investigations.
For example, we just collected voter data showing that more than 4,700 absentee voters in the presidential election listed non-residential addresses as their places of residence. Georgia law requires citizens registering to vote to reside “in that place in which such person’s habitation is fixed …”
We shared our data with the Georgia Secretary of State and requested an investigation.
A total of 9,989 Georgia voters seem to be registered at non-residential addresses: 1,882 at commercial addresses, 1,336 registered at county and state governmental buildings, and 6,735 at either hotels or motels.
Additionally, 215 new registrations (between November 4-December 14) for the special election are linked to non-residential addresses.
We previously alerted the Georgia Secretary of Office to the voter registration address issue in April 2020.
This issue must be immediately investigated. We are concerned about the impact on Georgia’s elections in November and earlier this week.
This is part of our years-long effort to clean up voter rolls.
In September of 2020, we released a study revealing that 353 U.S. counties had 1.8 million more registered voters than eligible voting-age citizens.
In other words, the registration rates of those counties exceeded 100% of eligible voters.
In Georgia: Bryan County (118%); Forsyth County (114%); Dawson County (113%); Oconee County (111%); Fayette County (111%); Fulton County (109%); Cherokee County (109%); Jackson County (107%); Henry County (106%); Lee County (106%); Morgan County (105%); Clayton County (105%); DeKalb County (105%); Gwinnett County (104%); Greene County (104%); Cobb County (104%); Effingham County (103%); Walton County (102%); Rockdale County (102%); Barrow County (101%); Douglas County (101%); Newton County (100%); Hall County (100%)
You can learn more about our election efforts here.
Tom Fitton is the president of Judicial Watch. He's a nationally recognized expert on government corruption. A former talk radio and television host and analyst, Mr. Fitton is well known across the country as a national spokesperson for the conservative cause. He has been quoted in Time, Vanity Fair, The Washington Post, The New York Times, and most every other major newspaper in the country. Read Tom Fitton's Reports — More Here.