The scheduled certification of the recount for the Tuesday, June 11 primary election was postponed, raising concerns about the integrity of the electoral process in Washoe County. Set for 8 a.m. on Tuesday, July 2, the certification is rescheduled for 10 a.m. on Tuesday, July 9, during the regularly scheduled county commission meeting.
The Washoe County Registrar of Voters (ROV) cited an overload of scanner machines as the cause for the delay. Despite initial claims that the recount was nearly complete on Sunday, the process is dragging out with a minimal crew, using only two or three scanners.
Observers question the county’s reluctance to conduct a hand count, which was fully funded by the Franklin Project and demanded by three candidates. A machine recount is a waste because it will produce the same results as the initial count.
Amid this controversy, the Franklin Project conducted a forensic analysis of the election results using ChatGPT, data from the Washoe County ROV, and findings from Edward Solomon on election fraud (see November 6, 2022, “In the Numbers.”) The outcome indicated a 99 percent likelihood of manipulation in the certified election results for Washoe County, particularly in the races of Beth Smith, Perry Rosenstein, and Clara Andriola.
The forensic analysis revealed several findings, including multiple precincts reporting identical total ballot counts, suggesting data manipulation with a probability of approximately 99.99 percent. Several precincts reported identical vote proportions for listed candidates, indicating tampering with a probability of 99.999 percent.
Identical proportions of Election Day votes across precincts were found, suggesting adjusted vote counts to match specific ratios. There are also the same findings in mail-in votes across precincts, indicating potential tampering with a probability of approximately 99.995 percent.
Manipulation in favor of Smith, Andriola, and Rosenstein was found strongly suggesting that the election results are not a true reflection of the voters’ will. Immediate involvement of law enforcement is warranted.
Given the high probability of manipulation, the county commissioners should not certify the election as legitimate. The public’s trust in the election process hinges on the county’s willingness to address these allegations transparently and lawfully.
Again, the rescheduled certification will happen at 10 a.m. on Tuesday, July 9, at the Board of County Commissioners meeting location. Every concerned citizen should attend and voice their concerns peacefully.
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