In December 2021, I first had the idea that if cloned voter records weren't innocent mistakes but deliberate additions, whoever put them there needed a way to secretly track them. It wasn't until April 23rd, 2022 that I glimpsed how this might work.
Here's what I wrote on Telegram that day:
“I just noticed that SBOEID numbers may be assigned by county. If you sort by SBOEID, then take a look at County ID, you'll see that many sequences are all in the same county. There are exceptions but I haven't seen a lot of them so far. Maybe each county is assigned a range? That would be an innocent explanation for the numbers going back and forth.”
This observation, and my subsequent mapping of the number space, showed how NY's ID numbers were partitioned to hide structure within chaos.
Then on May 9th, 2022, I caught the first hint of the Spiral algorithm:
'Grouped the CID numbers by how many digits they had; 1,2,3,4,5. Then sorted by SBOEID. Because, the different sequences woven together each had the same number of digits... important numbers are: 1, 11, 111, 1111, 11111, 111111'
New York took two and a half years. Along the way, I examined New Jersey and solved an algorithm there. Others began looking at their states, and sometimes I took a peek too. North Carolina, Pennsylvania, and Texas showed partitioning, patterns, and favorite numbers, but I couldn't dig deeper while focused on New York.
The work took its toll. I developed shoulder impingements in both arms and realized I hadn't earned real income since starting. I needed to return to my career - except universities weren't welcoming to conservatives, and New York's commercial photography world felt equally closed. I took what came: freelance comic book work.
In June 2024, everything shifted. Dr. Jerome Corsi (known for his Obama birth certificate and swift boat veterans work) called unexpectedly. He'd heard about my research through others and wanted to discuss it. He wanted to write about it - and wanted me to write about it too. Soon, we were.
I told Corsi upfront, 'I can't guarantee I'll find anything. There might not be anything to find, or I might miss it.' Despite this caveat, I found more than expected, and faster than New York. That groundwork had prepared me well.
Current status of findings:
NY: Preliminary report published in Journal of Information Warfare, May, 2023. (I should write a new report, because I have learned many things since this article was published)
NJ: This has been accepted for publication in a peer-reviewed journal. It isn’t out yet, so I can’t provide a link. However, it shoudn’t be long to wait. I originally wrote it last year, but forgot about it after awhile. I mentioned it to Dr. Corsi, who encouraged me to submit it, so I did. This is the second time I’ve written a complicated article, then forgotten about it for about a year before submitting them and subsequent publication.
OH: My first report in cooperation with GodsFiveStones
OK: I haven’t put this on my site because I didn’t find much in Oklahoma. I only had 24 hours to examine their rolls at first, but later took another look and they still looked fairly clean compared to other states. Not perfect, but far from awful. Here is the report on GodsFiveStones.
TX: I looked at two counties. One was fascinating, the other looked normal. I am told this report may have been published somewhere, so I am waiting for a URL so it can be shared.
PA: I thought I wouldn’t find anything in PA because I’d looked before and hadn't gotten anywhere. This time, it looked like it would be the same for the first few weeks, but then I found something and it started to unravel.
WI: The estimable Peter Bernegger, who has done outstanding work in Wisconsin and other places, asked me to take a look at the Wisconsin rolls. I did, and this is what I found.
GA: Georgia, like Wisconsin, had a lot of clones. And algorithms.
AZ: I’d been wanting to look at Arizona for a few years, and finally got the chance, thanks to Mark Finchem and others. Arizona was surprisingly similar to NY. After so many states that bore no resemblance to each other, this was very interesting.
CA: I finished this two days ago, but there is a hold on publishing it for another day or three. I’ll write an article about it when it’s up in full.
Note: all of these papers can be found on my ResearchGate page or Dr. Corsi’s site, GodsFiveStones.com.
I never expected to write 10 technical reports about voter roll algorithms in ten different states, let alone writing 8 of them in the last few months. And yet, here we are. I even had the chance to draw a story for a comic commissioned by the US Army.
Now, I have to get back to a graphic novel I had started a couple months ago, but had to set aside for this research. The writer, Mike Baron, is an award-winning conservative bare knuckles humorist, known for Nexus, Badger, Punisher, and many other projects. He has a substack also, right here.
A great summary. I support Judicial Watch. Yesterday they sent me a survey and some advertising information. They were "bragging" about their work in analysis of voter registration databases. So I sent them a letter, telling them their intent was great, but their work was mundane. I suggested they become informed, by getting up to speed with your work. I hope this is helpful to you.
I’m very glad you’ve done some work on California’s rolls! Thank you very much!