Election officials around the country, including the Maricopa County Recorder, saw a flurry of public records requests at the end of August asking for the “cast vote record” (CVR) from the 2020 presidential election. The requests came after My Pillow CEO Mike Lindell, who is actively investigating election discrepancies in 2020, urged attendees at his Moment of Truth Summit in August to request them. The CVR reveals the type of ballot used by each voter and how they cast their votes, without exposing their identity.
Walter C. Daugherity, who has a background in computers and engineering, two degrees from Harvard University, and experience in artificial intelligence and quantum computing, submitted a declaration about his analysis of CVRs in a lawsuit filed by Trump-endorsed gubernatorial candidate Kari Lake and Trump-endorsed candidate for State Representative Mark Finchem (R-Oro Valley), who is running for Arizona secretary of state. Their complaint aims to stop the use of electronic voting machine readers in the November 8 election.
In his declaration, Daugherity stated his analysis “shows to a reasonable degree of scientific and mathematical certainty that vote-counting by electronic voting machines used in Maricopa County, Pima County, and other counties throughout the United States that I have examined was manipulated and tightly controlled to reach predetermined outcomes.”
Daugherity highlighted what he saw as “systematically implausible” blocks of ballots that gradually decreased in a neat downward line, decreasing support for Republican candidates as the batches got further along. Instead of jumping around like “63 percent or 85 percent or some other value,” the batches revealed “the first block of ballots being 75 percent for a candidate, the next block of ballots being 74 percent for the candidate, the next block of ballots being 73 percent, and so on.”
Read the rest of the article at The Arizona Sun Times