Election incident reports are not required

Today, according to the DHS (Homeland Security), election officials and their vendors do not and have never been required to file incident reports.

If they did, people would know voting system systems are:

  • connected to the internet

  • fraudulent

Incident reports would also identify the following:

  • parties responsible for stealing elections

  • problems storing election data

  • people or machines counting votes and their locations

An incident is any unexpected interference that:

  • disrupts normal operations and

  • affects the ability to certify results

Examples include:

  • voter identification

  • mail-in ballots

  • early voting results

  • electronic poll books

  • using compromised software and hardware

  • outages

  • dropbox security

  • military online voting

  • breaches

  • amount of time systems are down or offline

  • chain of custody

  • glitzes

  • human error

Homeland Security’s 34-page report released this morning is linked here:

https://www.gao.gov/assets/gao-24-106917.pdf

Incident reports would also pinpoint the identities of the parties responsible for stealing elections.

Page Two of 34 Pages

https://www.gao.gov/assets/gao-24-106917.pdf

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