A judge in Georgia heard motions on June 21 to dismiss a high-profile election case but declined to immediately decide on them.
“I think it’s important that I take a little bit of time to review it and think about it,” Henry County Superior Court Chief Judge Brian Amero, who is presiding over the case, said during a hearing. He noted that there has been a flurry of filings in the case, which asserts there were fraudulent ballots counted during the 2020 election in Fulton County.
The judge didn’t indicate when his decision would be announced.
County officials argued in filings that the complaint should be dismissed because the petitioners were trying to file an elections contest but failed to meet the requirements to do so. Lawyers for the county argued in court on June 21 that petitioners aren’t entitled to declaratory judgment, that they lack standing, and that they only offered “generalized grievances.”
Lawyers for petitioners countered that their clients, as registered voters, do have standing, and that they aren’t contesting the election. The petition focuses on alleged violations of the voters’ constitutional rights, including equal protection rights.
“If that’s not denial of equal protection, I don’t know what is,” Cheeley said.
A preliminary examination of ballot images by David Sawyer, an expert retained by the petitioners, showed that at least 150 ballot batches weren’t turned over to Raffensperger and that approximately 30 batches were double-counted.
Petitioners’ proposed forensic examination of the 147,000 absentee ballots is necessary to prevent fraudulent ballots from being inserted in future elections, especially given that officials have taken no steps to correct the problems seen in the 2020 election, Cheeley said. Ten experts were prepared to use “high-powered microscopes” to look at each ballot to see if it was filled out by a person or a printer.
The county responded by saying they agree with the plaintiffs that fraudulent ballots shouldn’t be counted in future elections. A lawyer for the county’s board of elections also said that ballots shouldn’t be scanned twice.
The judge said the motions had to be heard before plaintiffs could get the fresh images.
Fulton County officials have denied wrongdoing and claim they are being “targeted” by people who refuse to accept the election results.