The epoch times

Florida voter rolls found to have thousands of unexplained changes, watchdog reveals.

The names of thousands of voters ⁣disappeared from the voter ​rolls in a Florida county shortly ⁣before⁢ the 2022 midterm⁢ election only to reappear in the following weeks,​ according to an analysis of official voter ⁣rolls conducted by a Republican ‌watchdog group.

The vanishing act is⁢ among a number of ​peculiar changes to the voter rolls unearthed by Kris Jurski—vice-president for election integrity with the ​non-profit organization the Florida Republican Assembly (FRA) and founder of​ the ⁢Florida ​Peoples Audit.

In Broward County, during June and⁤ July of 2022,​ 1,600 registered voters had their addresses‌ changed to a different ‌town and zip code. Then, just ‌in time for the Aug. 2022 primary, the⁤ addresses ⁤were⁤ corrected and restored on the roll, ​according ⁢to the Jurski study.

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Mail-in ballots were sent out in⁤ mid-July.

Broward County Elections Supervisor Joe Scott did‌ not respond by press time to⁣ an email from The⁢ Epoch Times requesting an explanation.

Election watchdogs have a‍ term for what⁣ happened in Broward County—address⁣ flipping. One instance‌ of address flipping was first uncovered by Jurksi’s group in 2022 when nearly 40 registrants of a Florida town had their ‌street addresses⁤ broken without their knowledge. The new addresses were on a street that never existed in their town.

The anomaly, known as the “Red Belly‍ Road” incident, occurred ‌before the Aug. 2022 primary and was never explained ⁤by election officials.

Mr. Jurski told⁣ The Epoch Times: “In Sept. ​of 2022, I put all of Florida’s Supervisors of Elections⁣ on notice that‍ we would be carefully​ monitoring the‍ voter registration rolls for address flips.

“The practice of address flipping‍ stopped. They did not do it in the Nov. 2022 general election.”

By electronically matching voter ID numbers with vote-by-mail requests, ‌Mr. Jurski found ‌the names of​ many people across the state ⁣who voted by ⁣mail in the Nov. 8, 2022, election that ⁤were deleted‍ from the voter registration​ rolls just before and immediately after⁤ the election.

“We​ were shocked at the number of voter deletions across⁢ Florida. We discovered that ⁤more than 430,000 voters were removed from ⁤the⁢ state voter roll in November ⁣and December 2022.

“Why so many during and⁢ immediately after the election?” he asked.

In particular, Mr. Jurski⁣ is questioning why⁣ the⁢ registrations of 4,776 people listed in state records as having voted by mail were deleted from the state ‌voter roll in ‍October 2022. There‌ were⁢ 4,496 such deletions ‌in November,⁢ 3,574⁤ in December, and another 4,435 were deleted in January 2023 for ⁤a total of 17,461 to that point.

According to Mr. Jurski, these names were on the rolls for varying amounts of time with the vast​ majority on the‍ rolls for more than one month.

‘Shocking’

⁣ Mr.⁢ Jurski is an Air Force veteran, businessman, systems security ‌specialist, and tech expert. He called his findings “shocking.” He characterizes‍ his team’s discoveries as “accurate and indisputable” because they are​ based on the state’s own ​data.

Mr. Jurski‌ told The⁤ Epoch Times, ​“We⁤ found voters who have been previously‍ designated on the rolls as ‘Inactive,’ and known to have moved ​out-of-state, suddenly marked as ‘Active’ on the rolls of another Florida County.

“This is not just somebody moving around a lot. In some cases, the same person was assigned​ a new last name, new birth date, new activity status, and new political party affiliation.

‌ “We know it is the same voter because of the unique voter identification number given⁣ to the person ⁤at ​the‍ time ⁣of‌ registration.⁣ In Florida, voter ID numbers are incremented, serialized. No previously assigned number should ever be given to a new voter.”

Keeping Watch

Maintaining accurate voter registration‌ rolls in the digital age is a fluid process. Registrants die, move within their state, move ⁣out ‌of state, marry, divorce, and sometimes change party affiliation. To help manage the ever-changing rolls, election clerks have embraced software. Watchdog⁤ groups ‌have followed suit, developing algorithms capable of sorting through millions of names in ​search ‌of irregularities.

Kris Jurski, vice-president ​for Election ‍Integrity for the Florida Republican Assembly. (Courtesy of Kris Jurski)

Mr. Jurski said ​his ⁢group ⁣reviews Florida’s 15 million-name state voter roll on a monthly basis. The computer-assisted analysis compares voter rolls from subsequent months to assess the changes and spot anomalies.

“We could see voters who are clearly listed​ in state​ records as having voted by mail being‌ deleted from the ⁣roll. Statewide, there were 1,407 such names⁣ that were brought into the ‍system for a month‍ and then they quickly disappeared right‍ after the election. To ⁢date, these names have not been reinserted into the rolls. ‍They are gone.

“The names of these people did not appear on Florida voter rolls during the‍ months leading up to the Nov. 8,⁤ 2022, election (between April ⁤2022 ⁢and Oct. 2022). They got inserted into the rolls just in time to vote,” Mr. Jurski said.

⁤ ​Florida does not have​ same-day voter registration. To be eligible to vote, a person must be​ registered 30 days prior to election day.

Not‍ Necessarily Voter ⁣Fraud

‌ Though they ‍are not alleging voter fraud, Mr. Jurski and his team ⁢view the ‍huge number of changes to the state voter⁣ rolls and their timing as “a big⁣ concern.”

“We readily ⁢acknowledge that odd-looking changes in and of themselves don’t necessarily mean fraud. Bad changes could ​be due to ​incompetence. In any ⁢case, to improve voter confidence in ⁤the registration ⁤process, these changes must be explained.

“If there​ is⁢ a practical explanation for the number and timing of all the changes we discovered, we want to hear it. But how can that happen, ⁢how ‍can we⁣ get answers, if ‍the people responsible ignore ⁤our ⁣requests ​for explanation?

“The state Elections Division won’t talk to us,” he said.

The Epoch⁣ Times reached out to the Director of the Florida Division of ⁢Elections,‍ Maria‌ Matthews, ⁤asking why the thousands of ‌changes were made to the state voter roll before⁤ and ⁣after the 2022 ‌elections and ‌who is making‌ the changes.

Ms.​ Matthews has not responded as of press ‌time.

A slide of the changes to the voter registration‌ rolls in Palm Beach Co., ‍Fla. ⁣(Courtesy of Kris Jurski)

In Pa



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