Once again, there seems to have been something fishy going on during the last Arizona election. The evidence is overwhelming, and it can’t be ignored anymore.
A legal team working for Arizona gubernatorial candidate Kari Lake has made what could be the most shocking discovery in this election cycle yet. Her team is claiming that 42.5% of the randomly examined ballots in Arizona’s Maricopa County for the 2022 governor’s race were illegitimate. Lake had been granted permission to inspect 50 election day ballots from six different polling centers, 50 spoiled ballots, and 50 early voting ballots in the wake of her allegations of an illegitimate election.
According to the Kari Lake War Room, which tweeted the findings, 48 out of 113 ballots reviewed during their examination were 19-inch ballots printed on 20-inch paper, causing chaos on election day and leading to the mass rejection of these votes as they were processed through tabulators.
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48 of 113 ballots reviewed during our examination were 19-inch ballots produced on 20-inch paper.
This one-inch discrepancy cause chaos on Election day. Causing the mass rejection of these votes as they were attempted to be read through the tabulators.
— Kari Lake War Room (@KariLakeWarRoom) December 21, 2022
Expert testimony at Lake’s ongoing voter fraud trial has suggested that this error was intentional, as it would have required an administrator to alter the ballot margins.
Maricopa County Elections Director Scott Jarrett confirmed that the printer setting change occurred on election day during the trial. Earlier in the proceedings, Jarrett had said that it wouldn’t have been possible for 19-inch ballot images to be printed on 20-inch paper, but later backtracked on this statement, claiming that this was a common issue that was not a significant problem.
Reporter Ben Berquam also noted that this ballot inaccuracy occurred during both the 2020 general election and the primary. The developments in Lake’s voter fraud trial will be closely watched as the legal team continues to investigate and present its findings. Berquam said, “[Scott Jarrett] magically came up with today, like it was no big deal, ‘oh yeah, it happens all the time, the printer is – you’ll just hit the fit to print setting, or shrink to fit, or print a page.’ Three different ways of saying this is no big deal.”