Georgia election integrity questions that were brushed aside for years just came roaring back into the open, and the implications are enormous. On Wednesday, the Georgia State Election Board finally allowed Joe Rossi, co-author of SEB Complaint 2023-025, to present a rebuttal that he and co-author Kevin Moncla were denied during a May 2024 hearing. What Rossi laid out was not a minor accounting issue, it was a detailed roadmap of duplicated ballots, concealed discrepancies, and internal emails showing election officials knew something was wrong in November 2020.
Question:
Does this look like "human error" or "just a mistake"???
(also: this isn't the bombshell we'll be discussing live in 10 minutes on my Rumble Channel and on Badlands Media) pic.twitter.com/WlCK2Wumte
— CannCon (@canncon) January 22, 2026
One of the core claims in the complaint is that thousands of duplicate ballots were added during the December 4, 2020 machine recount in Fulton County. That number was originally 3,125. Rossi testified this week that it has now grown to roughly 3,900, a figure he says was identified during a Department of Justice investigation that has already begun. According to Rossi, the way these ballots were “shuffled” and scanned makes accidental human error highly unlikely and also makes the problem extremely difficult to detect through normal audits.
It gets worse. Rossi also documented 6,961 ballots in Fulton County that were double and triple counted during the November 16, 2020 hand recount. That finding was not speculative. It was confirmed by the office of Brian Kemp in November 2021, which sent a letter to the Secretary of State acknowledging the discrepancy. Yet Fulton County officials and the Secretary of State’s office repeatedly denied any problem, pointing instead to the fact that three recounts supposedly aligned.
@canncon & @AsheinAmerica on the Fulton County, GA election fraud revelations.
"They KNEW — Fulton County in Nov. 2020 KNEW there were MASSIVE discrepancies in the count… I don't know how you don't look at this as treason or seditious conspiracy." pic.twitter.com/uWd1Z1EyR7
— Spoetzl (@Spoetzl) January 22, 2026
Rossi blew that claim apart during the hearing. He revealed an email sent on November 19, 2020 by Michael Prendergast of The Elections Group to then Deputy Director Nadine Williams and then Elections Director Richard Barron. The attachment detailed “multiple errors in the hand-count/audit results,” errors consistent with those later discovered by Rossi himself. That email was sent just three days after the hand count was reported and the same day the Secretary of State released results to the public.
Even more troubling, Barron later emailed another Elections Group member, Ryan Macias, on December 3, 2020, expressing concern that the second machine count showed roughly 511,000 votes, about 17,000 fewer than initially reported. By the next morning, 16,198 votes had been added to bring the total back up.
All of this lands in the shadow of the criminal prosecution of President Trump and 18 co-defendants for questioning the election and proposing alternate electors. Meanwhile, internal records show Fulton County officials knew counts did not match and never corrected them.
Discrepancies were not limited to Fulton County. Floyd, Douglas, Fayette, and Walton counties all showed significant increases between machine counts and hand counts, increases that netted votes for President Trump. Those same voting systems were then used in the January 5, 2021 runoff that flipped control of the Senate to Democrats.
The obvious questions remain unanswered. If these discrepancies had been corrected, would a runoff have even been necessary? And if Fulton County had admitted what it knew in November 2020, would those machines have been cleared for use in January at all? What is clear now is that the “nothing to see here” narrative is no longer holding up.

