Jason Shepherd
The Cobb Board of Elections will meet Friday to consider a complaint filed by Jason Shepherd, chairman of the Cobb Republican Party, who has alleged that more than 16,000 people registered to vote in the Jan. 5 runoff election have moved out of the county, forfeiting their right to vote in the runoff.
The board will only determine whether probable cause exists, county elections director Janine Eveler said.
Janine Eveler
âIf the board votes (Friday) to sustain the challenge, the voters are not removed,â she explained in an email. âThey will be marked âchallengedâ and if they vote in the January runoff, there will be a hearing in which the challenger must provide proof that the person has moved their residency and should not vote in Georgia. The challenged voter can also present their side.â
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The Cobb County elections board denied three challenges aimed at disqualifying thousands of voters ahead of the Senate runoffs. (Shutterstock)
MARIETTA, GA The Cobb County Board of Elections and Registration unanimously voted to deny a hearing on three separate challenges aimed at disqualifying thousands of Cobb County voters ahead of the Jan. 5 Senate runoff election.
The board called a special meeting Friday to hear the three challenges one from Cobb County GOP Chairman Jason Shepherd, and two from Pamela Reardon, a Cobb County real estate agent and determine if there was probable cause for a full hearing.
Shepherd s challenge was against 16,024 voters, while Reardon s two challenges were against 32,378 voters collectively. It is possible that there is some overlap between the individual voters on each of the lists, officials said during the meeting.
Georgia Witness Testimony: ‘Voters Were Directed to Machines and Their Printed Ballots Did Not Scan’
Over 40 witnesses spoke to the media at Cobb Country Republican Party Headquarters in Georgia on Dec 9, 10, 13, and 14. They presented evidence of election irregularities and fraud they had collected during the 2020 election ballot counts and recount. Some of them did not get the chance to give their testimonies in person, but sent their video testimonies or did a video interview online.
Realtor Pamela Reardon, who works on campaigns and is involved in the Georgia Republican Party, said on Dec. 9 that voters were directed to machines in many instances and their printed ballots didn’t get scanned they went to a “secret box” instead.
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