Georgia Governor: Container Video Is ‘Concerning,’ Secretary of State Should Offer Explanation

Georgia Governor: Container Video Is ‘Concerning,’ Secretary of State Should Offer Explanation
A man is seen carrying a suitcase or container allegedly filled with ballots without poll challenger supervision on the night of Nov. 3, 2020. NTD screenshot - State Farm Arena surveillance
Jack Phillips
Updated:

Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp noted that the video showing suitcase-like containers of ballots being wheeled out from under tables in Fulton County on Election Night—after poll watchers allegedly departed the location—is of concern and needs an explanation from election officials including the secretary of state.

Kemp, a Republican, described the footage that was presented by President Donald Trump’s team at a Georgia State Legislature hearing Thursday as “concerning.” Earlier, he called on the secretary to conduct a signature audit in light of the video and allegations.

“Certainly, Laura, today was concerning. I think we are working right now, and hopefully, the secretary of state will update us on exactly what was going on. I have heard they had a monitor there,” Kemp told Fox News on Thursday in reference to the footage.

“I think it would be good for [Raffensberger] to come out and say exactly what was going on. But I think this also gives him an opportunity to really look at specifically at the Fulton County recount that’s still going on to make sure that that recount has been done in the right way and that we know if these were ballots, were they counted correctly and if there were signatures on that,” Kemp said.

After the video was displayed, President Trump as well as lawyers Rudy Giuliani and Jenna Ellis said it’s evidence of fraudulent activity.

During the Thursday hearing, Jacki Pick, a lawyer volunteering for Trump’s legal efforts, noted: “Everyone clears out, including the Republican observers and the press, but four people stay behind and continue counting and tabulating well into the night.” It occurred at around 10 p.m., while the workers stayed until after 1 a.m., according to Pick and the video footage.

Pick said that at 11 p.m., once everyone was gone, workers are seen pulling out the suitcase-looking containers and asked rhetorically whether it’s normal to “store suitcases of ballots under a table cloth.” After reviewing hours of the footage, she said that it doesn’t appear to be a normal procedure.

Georgia Governor Brian Kemp speaks at a press conference announcing expanded statewide COVID testing in Atlanta, Ga. on Aug. 10, 2020. (Elijah Nouvelage/Getty Images)
Georgia Governor Brian Kemp speaks at a press conference announcing expanded statewide COVID testing in Atlanta, Ga. on Aug. 10, 2020. Elijah Nouvelage/Getty Images

Election officials later said those weren’t “suitcases” per se but are containers used for ballots.

Two election officials in Georgia, including state voting systems manager Gabriel Sterling, told a fact-checking website that what workers were doing in the video is not unusual at all, saying that the workers who were told to leave were involved in a different process—while those who stayed behind were involved in scanning ballots. However, they did not explain why the containers were wheeled out from underneath a table at around 11 p.m. when poll observers and other workers went home.

The officials also did not say why the containers allegedly filled with ballots were placed underneath the tablecloth-clad table or who placed them there.

A woman is seen carrying a suitcase or container allegedly filled with ballots without poll challenger supervision on the night of Nov. 3, 2020. (NTD screenshot - State Farm Arena surveillance)
A woman is seen carrying a suitcase or container allegedly filled with ballots without poll challenger supervision on the night of Nov. 3, 2020. NTD screenshot - State Farm Arena surveillance

“We’ve had our investigators watch all, many, several hours of it yesterday and what essentially happened is, and we knew about part of this on election night itself, around 10:15-10:20, there’s two groups of people in this room that are working,“ Sterling, Georgia’s voting system implementation manager, said to Newsmax after the video was released. ”There are cutters, the people who are opening the envelopes, and there’s the ones who are scanning.”

He added that there was an “82-minute” period where no election monitor was present. “Nothing was brought in without the monitors there. So everything was there. There was nothing new brought in. We didn’t see somebody wheeling stuff into the room,” Sterling said.

State officials also claimed poll observers were not necessarily sent home for the night and were free to come back to the State Farm Arena. This claim has been disputed by GOP officials, including state Republican Party Chair David Shafer, who wrote Thursday that the notion observers were there and watching is “untrue, as the video shows. Our position is unchanged. Ballots were counted unlawfully and in secret.”

“Even had state monitors been present, the law still requires that ballot counting be open to partisan monitors and the public. But state monitors were not present, as the @GaSecofState now acknowledges and the video shows,” Shafer wrote.

Another issue left unaddressed was why Fulton County officials said a pipe burst caused a two-hour delay to vote counting in a room where absentee ballots were tabulated at the State Farm Arena.

A local attorney who filed a records request about the burst pipe only received a brief text message exchange about the incident describing it as “highly exaggerated … a slow leak that caused about an hour-and-a-half delay” and that “we contained it quickly—it did not spread,” according to the text conversation that the attorney, Paul Dzikowski, shared with The Epoch Times. “As it turns out, there never was a burst pipe or water main, which some news outlets reported,” Dzikowski told The Epoch Times in an email.
Jack Phillips
Jack Phillips
Breaking News Reporter
Jack Phillips is a breaking news reporter with 15 years experience who started as a local New York City reporter. Having joined The Epoch Times' news team in 2009, Jack was born and raised near Modesto in California's Central Valley. Follow him on X: https://twitter.com/jackphillips5
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