reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The report claims Georgia’s 2020 election should not have been certified, arguing that election data entered by counties and the Secretary of State was never proved or verified as accurate, and that Georgia counties and the Secretary of State blocked open records requests for paper ballots.
The report says Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger’s office, “through Ryan Germany,” instructed counties to refuse requests. It asserts the voting system was intended to provide an auditable paper trail via paper ballots and that state wording about making scanned ballot images available for public ballot counts was copied from Dominion marketing materials. It also claims Georgia counties deleted ballot images and references “a Franken count” in which a hand recount was required because “one million seven hundred thousand ballot images” were deleted. It reports open records request results from all 159 counties, stating 1.7 million missing ballots, and says a voter image tool and “Voter GA” reinforce that 74 counties could not produce original ballot images. It further claims that 48% of counties destroyed ballot images or refused to comply, six admitted having none, 22 admitted to having only recount images, and 28 admitted to partial originals (some mail-in, some in-person) with shortages.
It claims Raffensperger counted 300,000 too many votes statewide and cites a Today Show appearance where Raffensperger said 4.7 million votes had been cast with “about two percent left to go.” The report says the video feed cut out as those numbers were being discussed. It also claims that at the time Raffensperger said 4.7 million ballots, 158 of 159 counties had reported, with Fulton County the only one still incomplete, and that official certification later showed roughly 4,998,482 votes (about 5 million). It argues this implies additional votes came in from Fulton County precincts, and raises a question about where “three hundred thousand extra ballots” came from, asserting that the paper ballots cannot be checked without access.
The report focuses on Fulton County missing ballot images and authentication files. It claims Fulton County is missing 374,000 ballot images from the November 3 ballot count and 315,000 ballot images from advance voting, confirmed by county attorney Steven Rosenberg. It describes scanning outputs: a TIFF image, a results page attached to the TIFF, and a SHA authentication file meant to prove the image was not altered. It states Fulton County is missing 59,000 election-day ballot images and alleges ballot imaging was not required for the November 2020 election, though it claims Dominion’s contract required ballot images and SHA creation. It further claims Fulton County is missing nearly all SHA files: of 527,000 ballots, it alleges Fulton County provided only 16,000 SHA files to authenticate 527,000 ballots, and that it had 148,000 absentee-by-mail ballot images but far fewer SHA files. It also claims the December 9 final recount still lacked 18,000 ballot images.
Next, the report alleges “unsigned tabulator tapes” for 315,000 votes certified by Fulton County. It presents claims that tabulator tapes printed without signatures and witnesses’ sign-offs were used to certify votes affecting 315,000 ballots, including duplicated serial numbers supposedly “impossible.” It references rules requiring tabulator tape verification, printing at least three tapes per scanner, and witness signatures or written reasons for non-signing.
The report then alleges problems in Georgia’s “risk-limiting audit” process, calling it a “Franken count.” It cites a Secretary of State document stating that from November 11 to November 19 officials conducted a risk-limiting audit requiring a full manual count. The report quotes Philip Stark describing Georgia’s decision as a “Frankencount,” and it cites Carter Jones, a Fulton County consultant, alleging errors in the audit spreadsheet and claiming duplicates and miscounts. It states the report’s work found duplicate ballot counts and vote totals that resulted in “too many” votes for Biden and too many for Trump within a sample of absentee-by-mail ballots, and it argues that multiple counted batches did not match.
The report says it also found recount problems and missing images in Fulton County after a December 9 recount, alleging 17,724 missing ballot images and that 3,125 ballot images were counted twice, while another statewide tool purportedly shows duplication across other counties.
It further claims an “election day lie” about turnout in Fulton County. It contrasts the county’s reported 59,143 election-day votes with Carter Jones’s screenshot claiming about 21,843 election-day votes as of a specific timestamp (November 5 12:49 AM) and with meeting testimony from Dwight Brouwer asserting around 14,152 votes cast by about 5 PM, plus 598 provisional ballots. The report claims the math implies tens of thousands of additional votes were added quickly and contrasts that with purportedly low crowding and claims about the absence of long lines.
It alleges precinct-level vote count mismatches between the initial count (November 3) and the December 9 recount by comparing ballot images for specific precincts and races, claiming ballots were removed and inserted. It lists examples of precincts where it claims large proportions of ballots differed between counts.
The report also alleges that in the statewide recount Georgia still lacked over 500,000 ballot images, arguing this makes the vote count unverifiable without paper ballots.
Additional claims include:
- Logic and accuracy testing allegedly completed after early voting ended (it states testing should have been completed by October 5 but was completed October 31).
- Allegations of ballot trafficking shown in videos and requests to view specific clips.
- Claims that ballots can be changed or votes ignored via machine vulnerabilities, including a reference to “unclear ballot” demonstrations and an example of QR code signature mismatch affecting scanner handling (leading to misreads as provisional and missing subsequent ballots).
- A quoted audit expert (Philip Stark) asserting the lack of basic accounting controls makes it impossible to determine who really won and that this is not limited to Fulton County.
The report ends by asserting Georgia’s 2020 results are “totally unverifiable,” referencing archived official counts for late certification moments, and concludes with calls for Raffensperger and Brian Kemp to step down.