Atlanta – The Electoral Board of the State of Georgia voted on Wednesday to dismiss a demand that seeks to enforce a summons against a conservative group that was Unable to produce evidence to support your voting fillings in the state.
True The Vote in 2021, based in Texas, filed complaints before the Secretary of State Brad Raffensper, including one in which he said he had obtained “a detailed account of the coordinated efforts to collect and deposit the tickets in the boxes of the Atlanta Metro” 2021.
The investigators of the secretary’s office analyzed the complaints of the group and in April 2022 they cited the vote of evidence that supports their accusations. A group’s lawyer wrote to a state prosecutor in May 2023 that a complete response would require identifying the people he had promised confidentiality and said he withdrew his complaints.
The then president of the State Electoral Board, William Duffey, replied that the group had made “serious accusations” and that it would not allow the complaints to be withdrawn. He asked the state attorney general’s office to enforce the summons, and the Board filed a lawsuit.
A Fulton County Judge in November 2023 ordered True for the vote to provide evidence that had compiled, including the names of the people who, he said, had provided information. The organization said that in a subsequent presentation that presents no names, contact information or other documentary evidence to provide. The case was closed administratively in January 2024.
The member of the Electoral Board, Janice Johnston, proposed on Wednesday to dismiss the demand, withdraw the citation and dismiss the group’s complaint. She said that it is evident that an alleged complainant to whom the vote said that it depended on the evidence “will not be identified or cannot be identified” and that the investigation was unlikely to be successful as a result.
After a brief discussion, the Board voted to approve Johnston’s proposal.
Catherine EngelBrecht, president of True The Vote, said in a statement sent by email that the organization welcomes the dismissal of the case, which she described as “a legal dispute that should never have begun.” She said the organization “remains committed to our mission.”
The accusations of the true vote that the people who participated in the voting filling in Georgia were largely based for “2000 mules”, to Broadly discouraged movie By expert and conservative filmmaker DINEH D’ABVEL Doubt the results of the presidential elections of 2020. A state investigation of the Electoral Board found that the images of the surveillance chamber used in the film showed the people presenting ballots for them and relatives who lived with them, which is allowed under Georgia’s law.
D’Ouza in December issued a statement by saying that “inaccurate information” was provided about the vigilance video of the polls and apologizing to a man from Georgia who was falsely accused of voting filling in the film. Previously, in May, Salem Media Group, editor of “2000 mules”, It also apologized publicly to the same man.