I have a copy of Nassau County rolls dated 10/4/2021. I also have a copy of the NYSBOE (state) rolls dated 10/12/2021. Both dates are more than eleven months after the 2020 election. In a comparison of the two, there is a discrepancy in the vote count of the 2020 election.
According to the state rolls, 739,341 residents of Nassau County cast a vote in the 11/03/2020 General Election. The certified total for the county is 738,369 “votes”, but that includes blanks and voids. If those are removed, there are 730,983 certified votes in Nassau County. Either way, the difference is less than one percent of the total.
The number of votes cast according to the precincts of Nassau County is 732,756. The difference isn’t huge but is large enough to trigger an audit because the law grants only one error every 125,000 ballots. In this case, no matter how you look at it, the discrepancies exceed the 6 Nassau County is allowed.
Nassau’s rolls list every election by date. The 2020 election is listed as “E110320,” meaning, “Election held on 11/03/2020.” For these types of fields, some counties use a YES/NO code, or 0/1 to assign a vote. I saw some ones for other elections, so I typed in “1” and did a search. There were 346,187 votes with a “1” in the 2020 election field. That’s huge, but only because the search was performed improperly.
A closer look at the records show that “0” is not used at all, but other numbers, like “2” and “6” are. The numbers are codes for vote method, like in-person, mail-in, affidavit, military, etc. The search should have looked for any number in the E110320 field. Done that way, the Nassau rolls find 714,002 votes. That is a discrepancy of between 16,981 to 25,339 votes missing from the county but found in the state rolls, depending on what it is compared to, voter rolls or certified results.
A check of Nassau voters who were purged as of the time the two databases were made finds 13,929 records. Add another 9,354 for inactive records, and you get 23,283. This accounts for all but 2,056 votes. These appear in the state rolls but not the county rolls. To find them, I made a query for active records among those missing a county vote. That returned 3,179 records. Each of these is active and present in both county and state rolls. The purge factor is not an issue. However, the balance of voting is flipped.
Instead of missing county votes, these records are missing state votes. They make the county/state discrepancy bigger for this reason, not smaller. In every record, matched by ID number, there is a record of a 2020 vote in the county side of the records, but no record of the same vote for the same people in the state records.
On closer examination, these voters have two or more illegal state voter ID numbers. In the few I spot-checked, none showed a 2020 vote, though one or more of their corresponding county records did.
My point isn’t, “Holy cow look at all this fraud,” but that these records do not stand up to scrutiny. We trust our futures to governments elected on the basis of these records and others like them. They tell us who can vote, who can’t, and who did, yet we can’t trust the answers. Why do we trust the government?
For the record, “Holy cow.”
And Holy Cow! These people can't or don't seem to want to "hit the broadside of a barn." I am looking at the detail (type of voting totals--Absentee, Early, Election Day) pertaining to election results for 2012 (before the election reporting software) nothing ties. It is not off by a little. Then I look at the 2020 results (election reporting software running) and it sure ties but the jump in number of votes cast is "Fantasy Land". I think cows are being allowed to vote over here because I haven't seen the infrastructure that supports these leaps in "eligible" voters in some of these counties. Spotting a new grocery store here and there would help me to at least consider the possibility of the voter ID#s that were pumped out over a 34 month period that are enough to create 2 new counties. Thank you, you keep showing us new places to look.
Fascinating, pertinent and timely analysis especially for the vigilant investigative and civic citizens of Long Island who are doing all that is humanly possible to hold their local elected and appointed officials accountable. Thank You Dr. Zark, is an understatement of appreciation for you.