 I'm Vermont Secretary of State Jim Kondos. Thank you for coming to today's audit of the 2022 general election results. The audit is a process that is required by law to take place after every general election. It is one important way that we verify the accuracy and integrity of the tabulation of votes in Vermont. It provides the public with the peace of mind that our official results match the will of the people. In a moment, I will turn today's proceedings over to elections director Will Senning over here to discuss how the process will actually be conducted. Before doing so, I wanted to take a moment to recognize all of the hard work that went into the conduct of the 2022 general election. I've got new progressive glasses so I'm trying to get used to them. Before doing so, I want to take a moment to recognize all of that hard work by everyone. This election was the first one conducted under Vermont's new universal ballot mailing law. The process surrounded a ballot mailing to over 440,000 active registered voters and that's no easy or trivial fee. General, our elections team is small but mighty and they work around the clock to ensure these processes went smoothly and that both our municipal clerks and our Vermont voters had the support they needed for this election to be successful. I want to take a moment to recognize Will Senning, Tammy Sink, is Tammy here yet? Lori Bjornlin, J.P. Isabel, and Dan Brown, where's Dan? They are the backbone, they are the elections team, the smallest elections team in the country, but they're very mighty. I also want to recognize our town and city clerks who are the hardest working people in municipal government. Over the years, our city and town clerks as our elections have become increasingly more complex from technological advances, cyber security, early processing of mailed ballots and to ballot curing, they are stay on top of it. Their diligent work keeps the doors to democracy open for voters and I want to express my most sincere gratitude for all that they do. I also want to thank and recognize every Vermont voter who has helped grow democracy in Vermont by voting, the very basis of our democracy. This year, Vermont voters did set a new record for voter turnout in a midterm election. Furthermore, of 191,000, almost 192,000 early in absentee ballots cast, only 809 were deemed defective. Of those, 492 were cured by voters under the new law, leaving only 317 defective ballots that were unable to be counted. That is a very, very low defective ballot rate of under 0.25%. Lastly, I want to say that serving as Vermont's chief election official for the last 12 years have been the greatest honor of my lifetime. Democracy runs in my veins, having the opportunity to lead Vermont and nationally on the voting rights in our civic processes have been an incredible privilege. I will always be proud of the number one national ranking that Vermont elections have in the MIT election performance index, and that goes back to presidential elections now. We managed to hold the highest voter turnout in Vermont history during a pandemic without forcing voters to choose between their health and their right to vote. We have consistently met these challenges to our elections process head on. We work to provide voters with trusted official information in the face of disinformation campaigns, in the face of that were designed to weaken the confidence of our election system. We defended our election systems from foreign cyber threats. As many of you know, we had seen an intrusion attempt back in August of 2018 by the Russians. And shortly after we informed Department of Homeland Security, they issued within 24 to 36 hours a nationwide alert to all election offices. We buck national trends by working with the legislature to pass and enact laws that make it easier for voters to exercise their constitutional right while also maintaining the integrity of our elections process. I'm proud of the work we've done in our brave little state, and I'm gonna turn it over to Will, but before I do, I just wanna recognize my deputy, Chris Winters, and our new Secretary of State, Sarah Copeland-Hanses, and her new deputy, Lauren Hibbert. With that, Will, the floor is yours. Thanks, Jim, and everybody here, and good morning, everybody. Thanks for coming. That was perfect for that one. I mean, I walked over there and I was carried by it. It was a whole manger. Yeah, right there. It was a big crowd. And the Abraham Lincoln group there in the hallway, there's people. Well, that'd be the advantage of not seeing them. And here, all the people who were there. Oh, yeah, and you're like, what's going on? You get all sleepy. Jim, you work today? Yeah. So you got some motion, how was it? Why? I know, that's why I was like- And that's different, that districts and everything, that's fun. Yeah, I just saw, I didn't see that that's a problem. Yeah, some of the towns that have, it doesn't go out yet. Yeah, it's the first time that multiple towns have been able to have different colors, not like Burlington does, because of their combinations for their awards and districts. This year, we allowed the other towns that have multiple districts to do it. And they're like, wow, it does make a difference because then they're like, they see and they start remembering, oh yeah, this district has this color. So they know that that voter's getting the correct ballot by color, so it's different. Otherwise, it would be, they normally look at the left-hand corner of the ballot, but sometimes they just go- So all ones just left-hand or left-hand or whatever? Rutland, I think, Bennington, it's a Rutland city, Bennington, I think Rutland town, that's it. Yeah, yeah. We offered it to the towns and most of them are like, yes. So they have multiple districts, rep districts in their town, like if they're split, yes, yeah. Right. Yeah, which now, it's all one, so. Right. I didn't know you'd have me off-page that. Yeah, I know, I haven't seen you in five minutes. Yeah. So it thinks that you're holding two ballots at once and it looks like it did. Yeah. So we'll pull things out from the top, from back at the bottom and you're gonna get a retry. If it was just one ballot and not two, you would just take them standing here, I guess. Once you get to the election day, the ballot settles off, because they're all nested together with the polls, and so this wouldn't have been the end of the world, it wouldn't have been just kind of adding it to this one. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And we can always delete it back. That was the one destroyer that it is, or who that is actually. So look, the Spain-Morocco. Standards that look at the, kind of sitting on the ballot and sort of on the goal line. Yeah. What do you do with the census? Inside the goal line to track the offsets. Not too much of an interest, though. Just what? Back to two and a half. At least that was two and one. No. You're gonna make Doug. But Doug does. One that we know has an unreadable should be put it aside, or... No, it's okay, we can do it digitally. Okay. No, yeah, because it's still scanning. Yeah, I wouldn't get it. Yeah, so let's look at this again. And we'll take a picture of, like, let's take an image, so that they know that ballot is put aside for us to look at it, and then, generally, we'll get it up to the coverage. Yeah, just taking it. Yeah, that's it. Yeah, you can see it a little bit more. Yeah. Right, yep. Yeah, what do I get? You get multiple ballots. We'll take them out first, and then put them down here, or it looks like it's just one specific one. Yeah. And then just hit the retry. Take one ballot at a time. Right. We're just gonna take this all out, so... That's fun. We'll do that with the hand count. Now, we used to out of all of these by hand. Back in the day. So now we did, but we wouldn't choose as many times. We have volunteers from all... Oh, there's some voteys in there. Oh. Did it. Did it go through? Yeah, it looks like it didn't read this one in the end, so it's just we'll just redo that ballot again. I think this is in there for now. No, they have... It's a little poll question. Oh, it is voted out. Yeah, but just put it in there for now, and we'll put it in here, not here. Yep. Yeah, I mean, they weren't making money before. Except in the back, at this point. We're telling about the lightshots in the house. Oh, really? We took the pictures on the floor, but they resold them. Did they do a lot? Safe route, safe route. No, it was like a brand new house and they had a freaking build. Oh, and they funded all of this stuff. I think that's one big poll. Did they want it? I said, you're not actually seeing it. The shit that was supposed to be... Yeah, he waited to say something. Jake, they had four of those things. The bond. The bond, they were incorrect now. They don't understand how you endur it in by word. You can just relate and use it. This person voted, this person voted, this person voted, and then they're associated. Yeah. And so, yeah, if you want to run out. I have no idea how she does the checklist. Yeah. I mean, the words... But she likes to over-complicate. Individuals, the words make sense. Yeah. But then, together, I was like, shh, I don't know what you're saying. It's, and I'm not sure why, but it must be the way it's told for annual meeting local polling places. Right, that's what I'm talking about. Yeah. When you said something, and she was there on her own, like, what, like, I didn't, I just couldn't get there. Apparently, actually, I'm not incorrect. Well, it's, yeah, it's just how she's, they set up their polling booths, I guess. See what he said, see what he was telling. My friend told me a funny story where he alleged lawyer intimidation. He was saying that it was like a sweet old lady who was running the ballots to the machine at his home. And that's why he didn't vote. He wanted to vote through the school construction thing. We didn't want the sweet old lady to see us in the vote as she fed his ballot into the machine. Why did she feed him then? Well, I guess she, she wasn't feeding him, she was looking to make sure that goes through. I put it in there. No, then it didn't give us an issue. I'm just curious if we're gonna. No, it hasn't got through yet. No, it hasn't got through yet. She took it out of there. Oh, he did, I'm sorry. I just happened to be, sorry, I was fixing up my piles. It would, and then it wouldn't read it. And it would be like, what is this all about? Which we should just put on, remember to put them on top, exactly. Yeah, it's because of, yeah. Yeah, it's a free drive. She said the other election officials, that's why, and I was the first to also remember in the last name, no, of the one that made the, yeah. Her name was the name of the, for her. Yeah, her name was for her. What does she say? That's right, that's right, that's right. Yeah, do you want me to do, do you want me to get out? You made me think of the he-mailed thing. Talk to me. Yeah, I don't know if that was what you thought. Yeah, I think it defaults to view, so I think it's fine. Oh, I'm gonna get the clock. But it's only one, it's only the fourth, so it might be the same one. That's a good one, yeah. Just one, because the other person is not, I mean, they're not really getting good timing, so I get the results like three. Right, right, I may be. Okay, okay. May I ask for two things? Yeah. I'm just gonna tell them Tam is up the next three days. Yeah. And it's hard to be able to get a fish. Oh, right, yeah. Well, yeah, maybe do it before you leave. Yeah. And then you can add them, just to look at. Yeah. I think we'd probably a little messy. That's fine. So we can add them. Yeah. Yeah, because we keep, like, the senas in the door, examples of where the address is correct, but it's completely changed. There's a little change. Yeah. Yeah, I got some of the bar code, and yeah. So I'm gonna go to the side, and we can add them. I don't want to do, we're still trying to do it, if there's an ad issue, we have to do it. Okay, you just hopefully add to your list of screws over the side of your business. Two days, huh? What the rest of you are gonna be doing. That's gonna be, like, cool, you can use your screw to put it in, instead of what happened that we had. That's not true, yeah, no. Just to be, like, super, didn't go through a... No, no, because we didn't want to run out of it anymore, and so, Jim, we have to do it with all... What can you, actually, just get paid on it. If you're okay with that. So we can't add it, you can't just add it to the gallery without something to do with it. But we can scan it if you just put it on the table. And then we can decide to also add it out. Okay, I'll go up to the front desk and we'll take it at the top. Yeah. Here we are. Put that value here. Oh, okay. We need to get this edge. We need to have something to... I mean we could theoretically just put these paper in and then call it a bell. We might as well do this. So it'll be five or six that we have to manually do here in it. No, that's it. That's it. But this one is your bell. Oh, because... Is it readable? I think so, yeah. We can block that one. I can hold it out. Thank you guys. Good job. Oh, it is? Yeah, even with all those janitors, you get the right number. Good thing. Should we check that out? I just want to pull it out. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. It was on this one over here. What should I look for? The last one. Yes. Okay. Yeah. Right in front of the camera. Oh, yeah. That's not bad at all. I don't think he was too happy with it. Yeah. Yeah. That's nice. No, we just have to do that. Did you get the thumb drive? Yeah. Okay, that's everything, J.P. Do you have another... We're all set, yeah? Yeah, we look that up. Cobra is the center of the top of the first front page. The top of the pole. Six tabulated panels in one hand count, because we run that, are you waiting for me? We just have the five on readables to do, yeah. Yeah, okay. I can see it. Eighteen, zero, three, seven, eight, five, seven, two, three, all you want is to make you look at the results. Let me know when you're ready. I'm ready. All right. Proposal two is a yes, proposal five is a yes, for U.S. Senator Peter Fulch, for Representative Becca Ballant, for Lieutenant Governor David Zuckerman, oh, I'm sorry, for Governor Phil Zuckerman, for State Treasurer Mike Pichek, for Secretary of State Sarah Copeland-Hanses, for Auditor Doug Topper, Attorney General Charity Clark, State Senator Tom Chitman, Virginia Lyons, and Keisha Roth-Dinsdale, for State Rep Tiffany Blumlee, and Gabrielle Stevens. Provate Judge Greg Levin, Assistant Judge Suzanne Brown, Connie Ramsey, State's Attorney Sarah George, Dan Gamlin-Blake, Hivella, James Mallon, for Justices of the Peace, Robert Boliard, and I think that's all I see. This is a school bond for Burlington, yes, just, yeah, I'm ready, there's no green line there. Oh, sorry. We're just... Is it? Yeah. It looks just like one went in skewed. Yeah, hold it at the top, so the green line's going to be a little bit off. So the Proposal 2 is yes, Proposal 5 is yes, oh, I see, yeah, I can't get them in. For US Senator is Peter Welch, for Rep Becca Ballant, for Governor Phil Scott, for Lieutenant Governor Zuckerman, for Secretary of State, Hanses, oh, Treasurer's above it, do we have the actual ballot? Is it not showing the back? Well, it's not showing the... State Treasurer. There's one race up here, that's folded over. You can see State Treasurer just above the fold, oh, I see what's happening. It's folded over itself, yeah. So we're in the ballots put away with the targeting cards on top of it. Wow. So the targeting cards were pulled out before they were put back in the box. Let's make note of the fact that we couldn't read the State Treasurer race on this ballot, then it'll be on point. Okay. All right, so for... You've got Hanses. So for Secretary of State. Hanses. Yeah. For Auditor of Accounts, Hopper, Attorney General, Charity Clark, State Senator, Chittenden, Lyons, and Enstale, State Rep, Blumlee, and Stevens, Probate Judge Greg Lennon, Assistant Judge Brown and Ramsey, State Attorney George, Sheriff Gantlin, Hyde-Elef Mallon, for Justices of the Peace. You ready? Yep. So what happened? Alsoff, Bergman, Barychus, Gina, Koeh, Franz, Gerlach, Kuzn, Hightower, Krosny, Lueck, McGee, and Neubiser. Oh, Schneider, and Sorkino. Sorkino. Last one. And for the school bond, no. So we go to separate ballots. We have to get it over there. Okay. So actually this is gonna be all by one ballot, right? Not voteable. Because we got one of these in there. It was a solid waste of time. Oh okay. Am I just clicking the same one over and over again? Yeah. I'm going to say, so this is, what balance time is it? 16.06. Ready? I'm ready. Prop 2, yes. Prop 5, yes. U.S. Senator Peter Welch. Reb, back to the ballot. Governor Phil Scott. Lieutenant Governor Blank. State Treasurer D.Chack. Secretary of State Hansis. Blank for Auditor. Attorney General Clark. State Senator Chittman Lyons Hinsdale. State Rep. Blumlee Stebbins. Probate Judge Glennon. Assistant Judge Brown and Ramsey. State's Attorney George Sheriff Damlin. High Bill of Major. Four Justices on the Peace. Alemnick. Boliard. Bericious. Champagne. Compton. Ellis. You missed Bericious. No, I said Bericious. Oh, I missed Bericious. I missed it. Andrew Champagne too. Compton. Ellis. Ellis you got. George. Cooper. Crannick. Lefebvre. Lorber. Lorber. Rappaport. Paddle Roof. Stone. Travers. School Bond. No. You ready? Yep. Prop 2. Yes. Prop 5. Yes. For U.S. Senator. Patrick Rahid. He. For Congress. Matt Druze. For Lieutenant Governor. Betting. In this Governor. Oh, I'm sorry. Peter Duvall. Betting. Mike B. Check. Kansas. Blank. Blank. For State Senator Lyons. Blank. I see nothing but blanks except for. You scroll down make sure there's no writings. Yep. Okay. And a yes vote on the bond. Okay. Is that one that's up there is no ballot? Yeah. No one that's up here is the, this one. Right. Okay. Oh, do I have to, maybe I have to select. Thank you. That's good. Okay. We're all set. Yeah, I'll run the report. Well, we'll develop it and then I think one of the, one of the was able to prop out that, and that's why we fought for it. Yeah. It was great. Right. Because I need glasses. Do you know how to turn the light on? Right there. Okay. Right. This one's set off. Yep. It's a bottom up. Yeah. Yeah. I remember my sandwich. The last thing I did. You should have told me we were mature. Yeah, it looks like we're both in the wrong. I would have won. But I'm thinking that because we're at your part, we didn't know what to do together. Okay. We will see. Yeah. Who's going to have to do their way out? Yeah. We could have just rescanned that one back, right? Yeah. We have to pull that. We don't want to go get food. About 50 minutes. But could you have like a batch that was added? Yes. That was less than that. Yeah. We've got to be treated. Yeah. The visual dimensions. Yeah. So that, say 29 or 22 was on top of that batch. It means every image, 22 dash 1, 22 dash 2. So we're going to go through the results from Burlington, Chittenden 13. And we know at the outset here that we scanned one less ballot than was reported on election night. It may have been a duplicate that was grounded by the machine and not rejected as the vast majority of those are. So we can see that. But out of 4,018 ballots being off by one is not uncommon. It's pretty good. So we'll account for that with any discrepancies in the totals we're going to be here for these. So I'll start with the constitutional limits for crop two from the audit. We've got, yes, set 3,666. No at 147. And no lower votes and 204.3. Two less, yes. Two more, yes. So there might be some. There you go. Could be some light marks. Yeah. If you look at the oval density of those last two, see it says 12% oval density. An image cast machine is set to not read anything lower than a 30% oval density. So we picked up a marker. Two more. This X is just a regular X. So it looks like that's how they did it. So for proposal five, we got 33,518, yes, 338, no, no over votes and 161. So we kind of want an extra here. Kind of one extra, yes. Either goes to, yeah, it could have been very light. Yeah, it's just less than 30%. That's two different on the blanks. Two, so those are those. Yeah. For Senator. On the audit scan, we had Mark Coaster, nine. Natasha Dynastonca, 23. Steven Duke, three. Don Ellis, 55. Chris Erickson, eight. Gerald Malloy, 297. Carrie Patrick Reb, five. Peter Welch, 3,528. 21 right ends. And one over votes, 67 blank. Oh, we're missing one. That's the one ballot. Yep. Missing ballot counts for Don Marie Ellis's. Pectic Congress, Pekka Ballant 3377. Matt Dresba, 67. Liam Madden, 325. Adam Ortiz, 10. Eric Heretic, 114. Luke Talbot, 16. 11 right ends. Three over votes. 95 points. 94 points, excuse me. We're missing ballot points for that race, it looks like. For Governor Peter DeWall, 36. Kevin Hoyt, 10. Bernie Peters, eight. Phil Scott, 21, 44. Brenda Siegel, 16, 54. 23 right ends. Two over votes, 140 on their votes. Yep, the missing one is Phil Scott. Lieutenant Governor Joe Benning, 733. Ian Dynaston, 97. David Zuckerman, 28, 52. 49 right ends. Zero over votes, 286 blanks. And it looks like that missing ballot contained Brenda Siegel's vote. Or no, excuse me, Zuckerman. State Treasurer, we have age per page, 403. Mike Kijek, 3373. 13 right ends. Two over votes, 226 blank. Missing ballot was for who? Secretary of State, Sarah Copeland-Hondes, 3,335. Age per page, 410. 15 right ends. Zero over votes, 257 blanks. Missing blank. Auditor Doug Hopper, 3315. Richard Morton, 403. 13 right ends. Zero over votes, 287 blank. Another blank vote from Missing ballot. For Attorney General, Charity Clark, 3,356. Michael Tagliabia, 430. 13 right ends. Zero over votes, 218 blanks. One over with Tagliabia. You open up the one with the X. Yes, I can. I think that's the one with the X. Same ballot and it looks like that was recorded as blank on election night. This is one less there. If we give us 219 and then we're missing one. We're missing one. Yep. For State Senator. For State Senator. No. No. No. It just... This one. This one. It's just in a weird order. Sorry about that. No problem. For State Senator in the audit. We had Thomas Chinden, 3082. Jenny Lyons, 3065. Keisha Ron Hinsdale, 2,880. Dean Rowland, 446. Rohan St. Marthy, 335. What do we have there? 41 right ends. Zero over votes, 2,202 blanks. So we've got two extra in the state. Two extra for Keisha. I'll call it that one. So that was two... Most to least confident. Yeah. Basically it's a lot of order of all instructions. You look at the end of the last couple. It's usually in there. Two more blanks in that one. 22,04. Yeah. Yeah. Did you look at those last few ballots on Ron Hinsdale? Yep. Could we go back to those Ron Hinsdale? Yes, please do. Blow up the ballots on us. Yep. So they filled in most other points of this. Interesting. They started and it's how they filled it. Thought about it and then stopped. I can see them not counting. Yeah. I can see them counting too. That's a very interesting mark. Yeah. It's a very interesting unique mark. You see that every day. You all look at the end of them. So it looks like they started to fill it. Yeah. They stopped. They realized it was not the one they wanted. It's almost like the same thing here. That was definitely, to me, more clear. It was definitely, yeah. It was born in town. Yeah. And, you know, they put these through the scanner and then didn't flag them as needing to be reviewed or hand counted. That's what we ended up with. So Thomas, I don't know if you've heard. I right here say that the scanners, the tabulators go to about 30% of the shading whereas this gets even lower. Yeah. We do like 10 or less sometimes. State graph. Tiff Lumley, 3083. Tom Lakata, 607. Gabrielle Stevens, 2863. 35. 35 write-ins. Two overvotes and 1,444 blank. Because the blanks were too short. It's 12 for two. It's right. 12 for two, missing one ballot that was blank voted. Yeah. Yeah. Good call. Her will be Judge Gregory J. Glennon, 2824. 28 write-ins, one overvote, 1,165 blanks. So it was missing a, missing ballot at a blank vote. I don't want to vote. Sorry. I don't want to listen to you. Assistant Judge. Superzan Brown, 2,593. Connie Kane Ramsey, 2,561. Two 37 write-ins. Zero overvotes, 2,843 blanks. So it was over missing a blank. That's a vote for two also. One for Connie and one blank. State's attorney. State's attorney. We had Sarah George with 2879. 214 write-ins, one overvote. And 923 undervotes. Yeah. It was two different blanks. You guys counted that. So it filled in the rest pretty well. It was one extra under a net. It was a mouse and a ballot. It was one again. It was the other one. Some write-ins. One moved to blank. You really see my bad spelling. Was that Taylor's? Full tide. Abolish the police. Defund the police. The votes. That sure does. Do you pack up to what you can't call them? They were Jessopas, I think. Jess Oskie. They had a double. Of that, you've gone. There were two more of them. I'll bother still, please. What do you look at? That's Oskie. One more. Jessica Oskie. How did they get counted? For the store? Jessica Oskie. For a box? Yeah. How did they get counted? I see 10 recorded on this ORB for her. Oh, she's got some of the first columns. Yeah, there's quite a few there. I think those, the non-countable names account for the difference that we're looking at. I've seen that there may have been more than the difference. I would explain that by their two different sets of election officials looking at these at the two different wards who may have been more or less careful about moving those write-in names to blanks. Does anybody write any of those terms in here? There's an abolish the police on here. You're right, Tammy. There's a blank entry here. I'm not going to take the time to do all the math on those right now. I'm sure that's where it's accounted for. We can tell Sarah to remind her counters that those don't need to be reported. Hi, Bill. Michael Major, 21-13. James Madlin, 610. 34 write-ins. One overvote. 1259 blanks. That's a good clue where the blank entry is now. And that's it. So that also was a really nice job by the Burlington election officials. I predict which two wards it is, but Chittenden 13 crosses two wards. And we're most likely believe that the missing ballot is a result of a scanning error here today. I wanted to finish Burlington by noon. Yeah. Might as well get another one going before the sandwiches get here. Do you have a favor for us to just say that because it's smaller than what you should have? Sure. I'm really curious actually. Which one are you going to do? Mount Tavor. NT... T-A-B-O-R? No. Or Mount. Spelled out. That was good. That was good. Did you guys see what we were talking about? No. My sheet didn't make any changes. I want to see if they don't. There's only 94 ballots. Well, this one was quick. It's all there is. Yeah. And these were hand counted. It was a hand count count. 94 ballots. That's stuck from the last. Because that happened... Let's just do this one more time. Bachelor, are you going to make a new BDF? No, let's just delete it. Could it have been the last ballot that we scanned for Burlington? That was taped today. Now that we saw it, we looked at it when I scanned it. It looked dead. Yeah, it looked dead. It was the last ballot. Because they were picking up an extra. They weren't any good news. I don't think so. No. He's just deleting the whole... Yeah, I think it's only 94 ballots. Yeah, exactly. That's great to do BDF. You just didn't scan that. Yeah. I tried it. Is there a way you can check for that? Yeah. Yeah. Of course. Okay, I don't want to touch the ballots. So here's the over data. That's the over? Yeah. That's the future. Yeah. No, it's going to work. So bottom one or... Yeah, the one... Okay, just because of the card and the other ballot. Okay. Yeah. It does help. The first one, do we have any idea what the count was of? Some from last time? Yeah, some were stuck. Were they stuck in there as a folder that it goes to? So the images were just... So we just clear those out and then we just scan it. Got it. So on our first scan through these mount tabers, there were still a few images left over from the Burlington scanning in the folder on the scanners. And we'll be careful to check those beforehand. For the next towns, we ended up with 94 ballots counted from Mount Tabor, which was the ballot number on the ORV. And this was a hand count down? It was a hand count down. And so we'll start going through for proposal two. There were 71 yes, nine no, no overvotes and 14 blank. I'll check. Yeah, so we counted a couple. So like these ones that are very heavy, we picked up, but most of these light ones, if we want to go through and, since this is a hand count, we probably count all these. If you want to go through and we can just put these all in, that might be easier when we're going forward. Put these ballots in. We've done that in the past. Yeah, so put these votes in. Yeah. So that way, we won't have to look at them. So why don't we just go through this? We're finding, how many do you think there are? I think there's three. Three that appear to evolve and mark with check marks that won't be read by the clear ballot software. So we're going to put them in before we do our comparisons of the rest of the votes. That's all right. All right, yes. Yes. Mark Custer, Matt Zruba, Kevin Hoyt, Brooke Page, Brooke Page, Morton, Taglia Villa, Williams, Gaiotti, Anderson, Walk, Sullivan, Fox, and Dixby. That's why. There's also this one? Yes. Yes. Yes. Custer, Zruba, Diamonds, I'm sorry, Hoyt, Diamonds Stone, Brooke Page, Brooke Page, Morton, Taglia Villa, Williams, Gaiotti, Anderson, Sullivan, Fox, and Dixby. That was identical to the other one. Yes. That's over. You could have put them up side by side. Yes. So this one, it looks like there was just the props. It looks like the props they served. Yes. We'll get most of those. We can actually see that it got all of the other votes. Right, just not the props. Just not the props. Yes, they encountered it. They probably did. I'm just going to quickly just thumb through to make sure the rest of these got counted. That was it. I'm going to rerun the report. Now, should we just start at the top again? Yeah, let's do that. For proposal two, we have 74 yes, 9 no, and 9 blanks. Exact match. For proposal five, we have 65 yes, 23 no, and 6 blanks. Let's take a look at that. One more yes and one less no. One more yes. Prop five. There would have been one of the main losers. Because they filled in all of the best consistent. Hand counted, I would have expected that to be counted as a yes, but my assumption here is a missed recording on the tally sheet. Not going to be surprised here that, you know, actual unexplainable single vote discrepancies in a hand counted town are what we've historically found with hand count towns. That's why we say the tabulators are more accurate than hand counts. Because just simple recording mistakes on the tally summary sheets can lead to a little discrepancies. So we're missing one. That's the mistake on the hand count. That was a yes recorded, is it not? Yeah. So, let's go to this for what are we doing? U.S. Senator Mark Custer to Natasha Belute 0, Steven Duke 0, Don Ellis 1, Chris Erickson 0, Gerald Malloy 37, Kerry Rahab Place 1, Peter Welch 3, two write-ins No overvotes, three blanks. Is that right on? Yeah, it's right on. For Rep to Congress Becca Ballant 37, Matt Bruseva 3, Liam Madden 38, Adam Ortiz 2, Eric Erick 5, and Luke Talbot 4. No write-ins, no overvotes, five blanks. Governor Peter DeVall 4, Kevin Boyd 3, Bernie Peter 0, Phil Scott 68, Brenda Siegel 18, no write-ins, no overvotes, one blank. Last for Siegel and one more for Scott. We're missing, we're missing, they showed 19, we had 18. Oh, they're pretty good. Those look pretty good. Again, I'm going to assume that's a tally sheet there. This is why it's good to do a hand count. For Lieutenant Governor Joe Banning, 53, Ian Dimon Stone 7, David Zuckerman 26, two write-ins, no overvotes, six blanks. Two more Zuckerman and two less. So we'll chop that up to a reporting error on the tally sheets. So we've had one vote and one of the props, one in the governor and two there. The treasurer, page for page 43, no write-in, no overvotes, seven blanks. For Secretary of State Sarah Copeland-Hanses, 42, page for page 47, no write-ins, no overvotes, five blanks. Probably the same thing, you can look at those votes. One less here. The votes look like good votes, especially for a hand count. Unfortunately, Sarah, it looks like he beat you by even one more vote than was reported. For Attorney Jen, or Auditor of Accounts, Doug Poffer, 43, Rick Morton, 42, no write-ins, no overvotes, nine blanks. For AG, Charity Clark, 45, Michael Tagli via 43, no write-ins, no overvotes, six blanks. State Senator, there you are. You've got them all all about styles. For State Senator Brian DC, Colomor, 41, Joshua Ferguson, 24, Bridget Graham, 35, Amatadio, 29, David Weeks, Croctor, 42, Terry Williams, 41, no write-ins, no overvotes, 70 blanks. You've got that one. State Rep. You've got the right one. And you had it before. There. So State Rep. For Mike Rice, 18, zero write-in, zero overvotes, two blanks. Four. Well, and we're missing. Yeah, that's a blank. Yeah, so let's look at the gaiotti first. So four less, and then five more with one less blank. So that adds up, too. The same amount. I assume the four were transposed. You might as well look barely clear on the gaiotti. Yeah, because all the ovals are one. They look pretty normal. These are old testament people. Can you click? There's one, do you see over on the right? Yeah, on that one. I think it's just seeing the line. It's just seeing the line from the other from gaiotti. I think at first it's clear that it was recorded for what? For gaiotti that would rice those and then the other somehow moved to a blank. Sorry, this is a lesson for the counters. Be very careful when you're doing your tally sheets. Carl C. Anderson, yeah. 68 for Anderson, one write-in, zero overvotes, 25 blanks. Steve Bernard, senior two, eight walk 41 two write-ins zero over 93 blanks. I'm missing one walk for the counters. One blank. Yeah, these are all blanks. Tiny dots. You have one more blank, right? Yeah, we have one extra blank. I just have to double check. Yep, somehow a blank got recorded as four and I'm not going to take the time to do it right now. It's potentially if we looked through all those blank recorded ballots there could be a mark outside of like far from the oval that we're not seeing here in the clear ballot screen. I mean, if somebody will circle a name or you know put a big arrow toward a name that you guys might have missed entirely. If we want to go back later and look at the blank phones in the system church we can maybe find it. State's attorney? State's attorney. Ian Sullivan 61 write-in no overvotes 33 blank. Sheriff? Right. Sheriff David Fox 67 one write-in zero overvotes and 26 blanks. Another one like the previous one I think the blanks don't really work. Yep. But we have one extra vote. Oh, God. Fox. That's what they determine you have one extra vote for Fox and one less blank, right? That's what I'm saying in the blank votes that you look at there there may be a marking that we don't see here outside of this view that somehow told them that Fox was getting a vote. Well, no. So one of these they would have counted as a blank because we're counting I see that. Excuse me. Because they have 66 over here. So one of these they counted as a blank. Four. You could put that one circle three out right there. That is one. All the others were much better filled. I think they would count that though. You think they would count that on a hand count? I don't know. Maybe not. I made it look so different from the other. Yeah. Didn't complete it and thought that he didn't complete it fully. Yeah, no it couldn't be. So that means we're blank then. I bailed Jonathan Bixby 67 two right ends no overvotes 25 blank. It looks to me like they're the blanks and no overvotes. And so we also counted one more right end. I look at the right ends. Four overvotes versus two. So let's do one more blank. So that was give us one extra on here. Which would bring us to that gives us the right number of right ends. One right end. We'd have 26 under us and then if you just put that four into 26 Those two lines are next to each other on the tally sheets. The hash marks would be put in the wrong place. And then that's it. Proposes. So I know you've heard it come out of the secretary's mouth a lot of times but that's another good example that there are typically just more mistakes made in filling out the tally in summary. She's not even interpreting the ballots in the hand count that can lead to those errors. That's why we have recounts when races are within the margin and if they are candidates have the chance to ask for a recount and go back and get those ballots correctly recorded I would say during the recount. Now it's lunch. It could be that rather than some errors that just said still we can always just print one that's not a finite resource. No I just they're all they have other local question ballots they should not know So I don't know I was hearing the guy walk out this morning with the Just to say head on out it maybe the full scene I think there's no data there are probably three in one we can let's do that that. Yeah, that way we know. Yeah, renew the same heart rate. Yeah. Yes. They were talking to the former. No, this guy was an electronic one. Actually, second piece just in case. No, no, it's not. We take it together. We could take it together, but if we just get one page, we could just see that even though there's no image of it, we could just do it. Yeah. Oh, but as long as there's that. Yeah. But it has two seats that account for its two ballots. Yeah. So we take this one out of this. Yeah. Okay. Yeah. Well, I mean, I could, it doesn't matter. Yeah. Right. But we could always take it together too. Yeah, there's three. There was one that was tiny. The rest, the other two are the normal size. Here's the tiny one, I think. Pretty sure this is the tiny one because there's no back. Yep. Well, we had, we had three with no back. Okay. So here's, so here's one. All right. So what, let me just go into that batch. What was that? 25? Yeah, there may be only, you might have to come up with an variable, but we're soft. What was it? What was it? And did you put them through at the beginning? Yeah, they're all red at the beginning. Yes, they're going to... I think it did. Well, yeah, but what did you do for the things on the batch? We haven't really countered the points. So we'll have to... Is there a back? No. There's no back. There are backs. But there are backs. Yeah. Yeah, we didn't scan it. Oh, I got you. Yeah. So we'll have to digitalize you to get all three of those. So here's, so one, two, three. Yeah. Okay. So we'll probably do that first. Are you wanting to do the whole ballot? Yeah, okay. Yeah, the whole ballot. Yep. And they're in the same order. Yeah, you should probably store them together anyway. So how many did you have to do? Just three. I'm comfortable with either one. Yes. Yes. Peter Welch for U.S. Senate. Rebecca Valen. Brenda Siegel. Siegel. Zuckerman. P-Checks. Copeland-Hanses. Hopper. Clark. Engels. Woody H. Page. Angela Ross. Bachelors. And Hardin. Pardon? And two. Oh, yes, Hardin. Barrett. Harlow Jacobs. And Blank. All of them. No write-ins. All of them. Yes. Peter Welch. Rebecca Valen. Blank. Blank. Blank. Blank. Blank. Blank. Blank. Blank. Blank. Blank. Blank. And the rest is all blank. It's easy. You know what they want and what they want. And then there should be the last one. Yes. Blank. Yes. Welch. Valen. Blank. All the way through. Well, this one they voted for out five. Okay, that's it. You were giving an interview, right? She did pronounce it all properly. I have to say a lot of blanks. One, three, six, nine. So that's 12 more. More. More than more. Oh, this was probably those hand counts. Maybe we shouldn't have included those hand counts. No. No, because he did them on the hand count. And we should have. They should have been tallied anyway. Yeah, they should have always been so great. Was that 12 ballots? Did he give any explanation? I'll walk into this. Was that very last of that? That was going to happen. That was going to happen. That was going to happen. Actually, we can look here too. Bash 25. Bash 25. Yeah. We'll just see how many ballots is in there. Yes. Actually, three voters for Check Rock did not vote. Yeah, that doesn't have to do with those. Right. That is very close. That's 13 ballots, which could be the. So what is this? So this says one, three, six, nine. I mean, it does say rejected. Right. One, three, five, seven. But it's funny that they decided to hand count them. Right. If they're going to then transfer them on to readable ballots. Oh. Which they could have used. Oh, maybe they did. They might have transferred them on to readable ballots. We can just delete that. Yeah. Yeah. But it's just odd that they decided to tally them by hand. So are we making that call? Yes. I don't know if he's there, but he was going back up there. He was. That's gotta be this different. He should have included them in his count. He didn't just scan them. No, just had this where they were counted. You had 13. Yeah. 13. That's what we were counting on. Unless that 13 counts the part, which I'm not sure if it does. Oh. Let me double check that. There was another one. Why isn't there one? Yeah. I got it. Are we calling it? Yeah. Yeah. Call. Oh, yeah. Yeah. So they did, even though they tallyed it by hand, they did scan it on to. Yeah. JP. I deleted the batch. They say we're good. I looked at his tape. It just dawned on me. I looked at his tape. Yeah. So now it's 1356. Is it going to bring you out, John? There's the story of one short on short. Yeah. So it looks like they got a tube to get it grabbed. Did you scan it? Didn't know the way to find which batch that. Only if we find the image that's, like, not done. Should we have it figured out? Yeah. We're still going to put one down. Yeah. You're all ready. So we're ready. But let everybody know we, there were 12 ballots set out in the bag marked as rejected. There was a hand count tally on top of them. So we assumed that the hand count had been included in their totals on their ORV. But we've confirmed with both the clerk and then when you look at the tabulator tape that it's clear they both hand tallyed those ballots that wouldn't go through and then decided to transfer them to tabulator readable ballots, which they're authorized to do under the statute and feed them through the tabulator. So we then removed those 12 that were set out as the rejected ballots because there were remates of those ballots already included in the main body of ballots in the bag. So our initial after scanning those rejected ones had come out in a month. 13 ballots above. Okay. Yeah. What the target number was on the ORV. And we've now backed out 12 of those because we essentially double scanned them. And with that we have a one ballot discrepancy, right? Yeah, we're one fewer. One fewer scams today than reported. So we're going to see that discrepancy. And for proposal two we have 1036. Yes. No, it was 202. One over vote, 117 blank votes. So the missing ballot was a yes. Looks like otherwise the same. The crop five, yes was 825. No, it was 447. Two over votes, 8200 votes. So the missing ballot was a yes. And the US Senator, Mark Coaster nine, Natasha, the moon seven, Stephen Duke 10, Don Marie, LS 11, Chris Areson six, Gerald Bolloy, 463, Kerry Reheb, five, Peter Welch beat 26. Two right ends, two over vote, 15 under vote. Two right ends. The blanks there. Take a look. The missing ballot there was an over vote. One is blank and one they glossed it out. Sort of two. I think if you can get that. This one, the pop up to go away so we can see both of them there. Oh yeah, they're there. Either way. Is this it? Just to cross out right here. Okay. And the second one. Just fill in the old one. And so that, so that would take away our two. Yep. And the missing ballot was like an over. Yep. Sort of two of them. To Congress. Becca Ballant, 691, Matt Dresba, 26. Liam Madden, 463, Adam Ortiz, 16. Eric Heretic, 46. Luke Talbot, 72. Five right ends. Two over votes. 35, 20. Another old one. The missing ballot. We have Peter DePaul, 29. Kevin Boyk, 28. Bernie Peters, 57. Bill Scott, 1003. Brenda Siegel, 210. Five right ends. Two over votes. 22 blank. Missing it over and then. No trouble for Peters. One less. One less for Scott. Peter Scott over Peters, right? Yeah, I'm a little bit Peter's first. Yeah. They just scribbled through a lot of things, too. So we counted that. So that would give the vote for Scott. So that Scott would be good. Yeah, but this is counted as an over. So if that counted for Scott, that would give Scott the right number of votes. More for Peters. We have one more. Peters, 56. We have 37. That looks like it might be a pencil. Or a long anchor pencil or something. It's like it could be a pencil. Yeah. Yeah, this one is definitely in line with Scott 11. I wonder if that was a pencil. We have heard that they have issues with pencils. If they're not made really dark. Lieutenant Governor, Joe Bannon, 7-11. Diamonds, 7-31. Sunkerman, 5-67. 7 right in. Zero over. 40 votes. There still must be an over. We've got a couple of right votes. Two blanks. Two. None of the above. Two blanks. That's four. Three. Three. So they counted Siegel. Four. One, two, three, four. So that's three right. Could it be a seven? One, two. That would be a four. Six, seven. Yeah. And so that would be good. Yeah. State Treasurer for page 603. Mike P. Jack, 701. Four right in. Zero over. 48. Two. Okay. One of them may be a mark in another oval. Well, there was a ballot that had me here. Yeah. So we can take a look at pages of ovals. And see if they filled in. Not here. Here. Oh, there it is. So they filled in a little bit. So they filled in a little bit of this oval over here. And it's possible that the count of that is an over vote. And it also takes away the vote for P. Jack. Yeah. So that would go to the Secretary and give us an extra vote. Yeah. Both of them. Okay. So here as well. And that would go to both of our voters. It's out of the votes for P. Jack. And if they're missing both, it would be four. Because that would balance both of our holders. Yeah. You got a 699 plus one less under vote. 46. Six right in. Zero over. 48. 48. Two extra right in. Six right in. Two extra right in. Six right in. Two extra right in. So we know it's a prime and typical. It's an account. Probably. I think Colbert Winkter is in the page. They didn't put James Douglas on it. The auditor is done. Offer 7.41. Right in. 5.46. 6 right in. Zero over. 6.3. 4. 4. Attorney General. Attorney Clark 7.21.ал in. 5.44. 4. 4. 5. 5. 5. 5. 5. 5. 5. 6. 4. 4. 5. 7. 5. 5. 5. 5. 7. 6. 5. 5. 5. 6. 8. 9. 82 right in, and middle over those 288 points. I'm missing the whole one extra vote. Yes. That's about it. And then we can look at the right over there. I don't think there's quite a lot off there. It's going to be funky. So we have 82, and it's supposed to be 65. Yes. Oh, I have 13s. I kind of, the trunk is not on. That's why I'm looking at comparison again. Yeah. The points. 306, and we have 280. 80. So this is my first... Where? Favorite. Favorite. Right at the top. Woodman Page 1036. 49 right in, 0 over those 271. And there's two overs here. There's two overs here and nine here. So that's my right. So we have 49, and there should be four. And we're already in the right. It's not right. Yeah, I'm seeing it pretty close. I'm seeing the eight. Yeah. What was the count? Two. There's two. Yeah, there's two. So we have... So we can look at these orbitals and see what... We always write our names that put into the named candidate, right? Oh, did he have to? No, they were two over. Yeah, we were two over. So we're gonna check that. We're outside of the oval and the rest of these. For most of these, you'd write that center of the oval. And this one is a little off-center, kind of to the right. Much wider than the other ones. Yeah. That's awesome. Those are pencil ones. Pencil ones could be a lot wider. Pencil ones. So the only scanner will reflect the light. Yeah. So light, not off-center. Very much. Very much. Angel Ross, 1074. 16, right in zero. Hold the vote. Two, 66, what? Let's look at our right-ends first. That's six extra. Fill in the oval. But that probably... That's four. The last one, that's it. They counted Kanye and Trump. They counted Kanye, but they didn't count Trump. Interesting. Let's see if it's 75. They did count Kanye. Yeah. Well, we won under one of two total ballots. We won under one. So we're gonna miss it. We're gonna say that right here. Two extra votes for the votes. Maybe it doesn't count for him, too. Oh, do we have? Yeah. So then I can... General... Generalowski? Yeah. So we're gonna have to be... And then this one... Let's vote this guy. I can't imagine. I can't imagine. Pencil. Markets. Yeah, I think those are... Yeah. So that's one. And then it's probably also either this one or this one. The first. That would mean that both door missing is over. Like the rest of them. That we don't have it over. Yeah. A combination of... The reporting names is blank. Better right ends. White pencil markings. And missing ballots. If you can. Benjamin Benchelder. We have 9.50. Curtis Harding, 9.07. Nine right ends. Zero over vote, 846 blanks. They're missing the vote, right? And that's that one vote here. There's a different vote for both of us. Oh, it's a vote for two. It's because it's a vote for two. Oh, yeah. So we count for a missing vote. And then we've got 9 right ends. Yeah, so then the right ends are 8 blanks. Yeah, that's the one for Trump and Barrett. Yeah, that's a... Yeah, they just didn't count Barrett. So it states to turn in. Jennifer Barrett, 9.82. Share it. Jennifer Jacobs, 11.37. And that's a... So 89 right ends, no more votes. And 1,267 blanks. We've got 18 extra votes. So those were pretty good in Newport City. Just right at one ballot missing. A bunch of moves from right ends to blanks. And we think some pencil markings were the other culprit for some of the one or two undercounted candidate votes. And that was, I'll take the chance to say that was a common critique of the clerks and something we're going to work on with to tag in their company. Do you have the central scanner? Like what they use for the early votes? Yeah, they call it their ICC. Yeah, I'm going to use it the same. Did that happen? I call this a little bit. That one was... Now I wrote this one up. That's biggest is Waitsville, you guys. If you want to approach through the bill. Go hard or easier. Yes. In Newport City, there was one last ballot run-through, right? Yeah. Year 1, June 9, 1994. Yeah. We do. How was Jen's bag, Lori? It was good. Right, not realizing we were here all day. They're frosty. Take a nap. Light. It's like being on stage. Yeah. There's no way for you to move. Yeah, you don't have to. Yeah. So you'll audit your machines. No one else will do it. And that's how it started. That's everything? Yeah. So it does look like I'm seeing 990. We're supposed to be 1,000 in some place? Yeah. How many did you say? We have a 993 scan. I'm not sure what the... 1036. So 40 almost. 990? That's a 993 scan so far. You should probably scan that batch. That's true. We could go with the leader. Yeah. That looks pretty close. This is 60 right here. 45. 45. But there's no reason why there weren't... Yeah. So we're at 1,000. We've been having a paper jam issue. We didn't want to use the auxiliary slot. We ripped up this ballot and ran out of it. I know what I'm supposed to say. I'm not allowed to say what they have on there. Should we scan? It's not that. It's supposed to be 1038? 1038, yeah. No, it's supposed to be 1036. 1036. So we're at 8. That's kind of a lot. I mean there's been... We could try a standard again. Yeah. It's not going to hurt anything. Yeah. Let's try a standard again. What was the number we got now? We're 8 shorter. 8 shorter? Yeah. 1028. Just to see if we get that again. Yeah. 15 minutes of our lives to give it a shot. Yeah, exactly. We can use the same cover sheets. I'm going to create a new election database. And if we don't match it. But we're short by 2 less. Well, so... Yeah. I guess... Okay, so that's the same. Yeah, I guess it is the same. Yeah. So the total count doesn't include unreadables? It goes down here. It doesn't up here. So I probably just wasn't looking at it last time. So what are we supposed to have? So we're short 6. 1036. Yeah. But as she... I mean she said there were some jams. So perhaps... But they have 1,038 people checked out their checklist. Oh, interesting. Yeah. And how many... Effective? Any defective? One. One defective? What's the tape? The tape says 1,038. And there was one abandoned ballot, right? Just went through a... Yeah. And threw out a part of it. Yeah. Right out. That's actually another one over on the checklist. Yeah. So I think that's all it's said. So there's two over on... No, there's a defective. Right. Where's her defective? Is it actually in here? Yeah. So where are our view ads up? I know. There's nothing we can do besides tell Jan... Right. ...that we came up with. So was it 6.00 less? Yeah. 6.00 less. But it was having paper jams. So perhaps she put another ballot through that was jammed in the image cast. So a ballot... Ballots get read twice instead of once. And that could be... Especially with writings, that happens because of the... Or it could be like war and there's six ballots sitting on her desk. No. Yeah. Yeah. Remember that? Or her check was out four years ago. Four years ago. Did she have anything... No. ...or if she'd be over, her voters checked off the checklist. If she doesn't... If she doesn't... The ballots are over because she accounted for the checklist correctly. The checklist is correct. Right. But if there's paper jams in the tabulator and it read... Yeah. I mean, but I hear what you're saying. Yes. No. Yeah. Yeah. There's six ballots. Or... So then... Yeah. Who knows? Six ballots that didn't make it into the bag. Or... A denture. We've done it twice. Or six that somehow double fed here. We weren't counted here. They didn't have... Yeah. This time you guys didn't really have any paper jams. No jams. You didn't have any jams. You didn't have any jams this time. Yeah. We will have to talk to Jim. They checked more people. We can't answer it all here. We'll have to ask her. Just gonna make this a little... We're just gonna have to assume it's all about six votes. Yeah. But I think you should go through it anyway. It might be readily apparent in a lot of cases like this. Yeah. Proposal two. We had, yes, eight ninety-three, no sixty-three, no overvotes, seventy-four undervotes. So that is a missing six. Yes. Yes, it is. For prop five, we have eight hundred and fifty-nine, yes. Hundred and seventeen-two, noes. No overvotes, fifty-four born. So that's a missing one, no. Five, yes. Six ballots. You have a senator, coasting two, diamondstone four, Duke five, Alice seven, Erickson three, Maloy one sixty-two, Rahab two, Welch eight twenty-six, two right ends, no overvotes, seventeen blank. One for us. Five. Okay. Candidate votes missing on the ballots on the count of four. Right to Congress. Balance seven seventy-five, Dresba twenty-two, Madden one seventy-one, Ortiz six, right twenty-three, Calvin four, three right ends, no overvotes, thirty-one blank. Five and one. Locked by the six. No ballots. Governor DeGal ten, Hoyt fourteen, Peters three, Scott six ninety-one, Segal two eighty, two right end, zero over thirty blank. So that's four and two, but we also have a right end, an extra right end so we can look that up. And less of blank. So it's going to be one of those. Governor. Turn it up, turn it off, watch which role they are. Our issue there. Ten and Governor, we have Benning three twenty-two, Diamonds seven seventeen, Zuckerman six thirty, three right ends, no overvotes, fifty-eight blanks. One thirty-two on that one. There's two blanks missing. But, we can get those adds up. A treasurer of book page, two oh eight, P. Jack seven seventy-four, no right end, no overvote, forty-eight blank. One and five, six ballots. Secretary of State, Kansas seven fifty-one, page two oh eight, two right ends, zero over sixty-nine blank. Auditor, Hoffer seven fifty-three, Morton two oh seven, no right end, no overvote, seventy blank. Four and two. One and two, Clark, excuse me, Attorney General Clark seven fifty-four, Taglia Villa one ninety-four, one right end, no overvote, eighty-one blank. Four and two. One and two. We have D and two thirty, Cummings seven forty-nine, LeFavre one twenty-one, Perchlet five ninety, Tucker one fifty-six, Watson six thirty-one, two right ends, no overvotes, six hundred and eleven blank. This one's a little harder because it's a vote for three. So it'll actually be off by eighty-two. So two on the first one, four and six, four and ten, eleven, fourteen, fifteen, thirty-eight, twenty-two. Got there. State rep, three is eight, three ninety-nine, Warren one twenty-three, Dolan seven sixty, Tory four ninety-nine, seven right ends, four overvotes, two hundred sixty-eight blank, two, so two hundred twelve. So we have one more right end, it looks like. Yes, that wasn't me. Probe judge, killed over seven ninety-six, five right ends, one overvote, two hundred twenty-eight blank, two in the candidate. I think we do have some right ends we need to look at. So two blank ones, two right ends we need to look at. Like that, I think that works. Overvoted one, which they may have changed as well. Changed as well. Yeah. That works. So they may have kept that overvote then. Yeah, it looks like. Made that three, seventy-four. Yep, six. Four ends up being four and two. Four ends up being four and two. Assistant judge, book two. Badi, six forty-seven, Cushing Jr., one eighty-one, Jones, six oh two, Meyer, one sixty-three, no right ends, no overvotes, four hundred sixty-seven blank. Four, plus two is six, plus four is ten, plus two is twelve, twelve is four. Date's attorney, Donnelly, seven seventy-seven, five right in, zero over, two hundred forty-eight blank. Looks like, moved to blank. This would be on the, three and three, six. Sheriff. Sheriff, cool in seven ninety-one, four right ends, no overvotes, two hundred thirty-five blanks. Four and two. Four and two. Bailiff, McManus, seven seventy-five, four right ends, no overvotes, two hundred fifty-one blanks. Two right ends. Pablo's a dog. Oh, for sure. Yeah. An actual dog. It's a literal dog. Oh, okay, cool. Like on TV somewhere or are you in waitstores? No, they live in waitstores. Okay. They live across the street from Jen. So Jen would know. So Jen would know there's a dog and Mark that has a dog. That's it now? All right, cool. So I just want to point out to people with wastefield that, so we had a discrepancy of six ballots that, so there were six more ballots counted on election night than here at the audit. That's something we'll certainly follow up with the clerk about to see if we can nail down where those six unaccounted four ballots are. But I'd like to make the point that the goal of the audit is to audit the machines and the counting. This was a tabulated town. So as far as the ballots, we could pass through the scanners today and match the results that were counted on election night on the tabulated minus the six ballots that are uncounted four times. Good job. How many did you get to check this before? One, zero, three, eight. Minus? More than. And so there was a guy that ripped up his ballot? Yeah. And then there was an effective? Thank you. And then who was what? A defective. A defective, thank you. And that's accounted for on your, Thomas, and she described the guy getting the hat and ripping up his voted ballot. We had a couple instances of that this year when they were asked to sign the affidavit that some folks. Yeah. Zero, three, seven, eight. You guys even off the lights or would you rather? I'd rather not have them, please. Yeah. Which one are you doing? Richford. Yeah. It's definitely going to be unreadable, but if we put it right here, at least we'll have something to attribute to it. Yeah. Do you want to put the rest of those? Because it was pointed. Maybe these are. Yeah. That's very remarkable. We should look at what the number is. Make sure I remember to check back up everything on the thumb drive and save the DS reports on the thumb drive so they're going to see how that applies to you today. Yeah. I think it's still easier than the one before that. Don't put your task balance in your back. Are they hopefully marked? Yeah, they are. Don't do that. I think it's still easier than the one before that. Call it Dr. Forensic. Somebody was getting aggressive with the ball. No, don't put your task balance in your back. Or do it first. Switch sides. It got bad yet. Yes, Collins, Corning, Fletcher, Greenwood, Lavery, Majority, New Robinson. So in the town of Richford, today we scanned the exact number of votes that were recorded on the ORV as voted on election night since 1969. And we'll look through the results. For product two, we had 483 yes, 125 no, one over vote, 60 under votes, product five, 391 yes, 240 no, one over vote, and 371. That was according to the, I'm sorry, it should be yes. Our system read this all as votes. It's hard to tell what the image cast would have done. But that is the least confident yes vote. One more no. It looks like they circled in them here. So if we take away one of the yeses that wasn't a large percentage of the oval filled out and then add this no in. Well, actually there's two noes that are circled. Well, that's two different prompts. Two prompts. We're just looking at product five though. I mean, that's a beauty of it. It's hard to say for sure. It's sort of like an exclamation point. Since they filled in the rest of the oldest. There have been several ballots we've looked at today that have done that. The marketing of the proposals is different than the marketing of offices. Well, Townsend today, we started remembering the pencil marks too. That's a new variable for this process where clear ballot might pick one up. So for U.S. Senator. Mark Coaster one Kahoot nine Duke five Ellis six Erickson zero Maloy 267 Rahab three P watch three 66 one right in no overvote 11 undervotes. Perfect. Right. Congress ballot 269. Trust but 26 madden 279 or tease nine red 26 Talbot 24 six right in no overvotes 30. We've all 18 point 16 Peter 17. Scott 502 Segal 91. Seven. Right. No. 18 under time. Under betting 365. Diamond stone 20. Zuckerman 261. Five. Right. No. 18 undervotes. So it appears that we didn't capture one right in. The name without noble. Right is without a noble. A treasurer. Page 326. He checked 314. Three right in zero over 26 under. Secretary. Secretary six. Hanzas 296. Page 330 right in five zero over 38 under. HG attorney general. Auditor. Sorry. Auditor. Offer 317. Morton 307. Two right in zero over 43. Right. So it looks like we picked up one more. Probably the light marker. Right there. Looks like maybe it was erased. Or the last one. Or the last one. What's the percent on that? 17 percent. 17 percent. Look at both of them. If you pick up both of those. I was looking at the ballot. The rest of this ballot does look like it was filled out correctly. Looks like you might try to erase that. Smudge up a ballot. Yeah. Yeah. And these look like they were probably correct. We're going to see differences on the races. Just for kicks and grins. How about the X? I think this was that same one we looked at. Yeah. We good? Good. Attorney general. Clark. 322. 9,133. No blanks. Number nine in the Good Sister ballot. Noudge 30. 226. 12 write-in, zero over-votes, 410 blank, probate judge, combo 353 for our 286, four write-ins, three over-votes, 23 blank. We got one less over-vote and one more for our less for our took out an over and gave it to for our. You guys had one more over, right? Yeah, one less for our. That's it, yeah, that makes sense. Those are the great examples of the software. Probate? Yeah. System, system. Aldrich 202, Gosselin 326, Sweeney 336, seven write-ins, zero over 460, seven blank. Bane's attorney will go away 313, wait 313, and three write-in, zero over, 40 under. So there's two over's and one less on each. Yeah, but the over's were counted on the other cells in Canada. So if this had been counted, it would have counted. This is an over. A little bit of an on edge. Yeah. They're better than other markings on the valve. We can't see. Yeah. We made them decided with an overvote. Like this. That's, oh, they're bleeding through it. I'm seeing very obvious one for this. So this is the second page. Go back to the first page on that one. Go back to the first page of the ballot. Which ballot? This one. The one that had the bleed. I'm sorry. Oh, the one with the bleed. That one. That's kind of all over the city. Through a bunch. That's interesting. Those of us who are going to miss the old polls, all the bleed through. Right. That's what we have. Sure, people. But why did it go through? They must have used a very heavy marker. Sharp. What? The bleed through? Yeah. I have to imagine there was something on their hand reviewed that made them think another candidate was marked in that race. Yeah, can you look at the comparison now? Yeah. Just side by side. One more in each of these. And then to this. Was there a recount on this one? No. So I'm saying that they're on the way. It's the county office. So we did not. We did not. Yeah, we did. Yeah, we did. This says we made the account. We dwell. Reverend, it's the county office. So there's other towns that have. Oh, okay. I'm sorry. You're right. Yeah, right. Just tighten it. End of the day here. Yeah. So the ballot that we adjudicated. Yeah. Adjudicated. I don't think we looked at that. What race were we in? State's 20. State's 20. State's 20. And this one. Yeah. It was in the writing box, but I don't think they would count that. You know what? Would that have? No, that would have counted. If our machines had counted it, it would have counted it. Yeah, but if it was a write-in, it would have counted it. That would have known. Yeah. Yeah. That's right. And look at that. That's what we do. This has instances where you tabulate it. It's really sensitive in the write-in box, though, and see that little marking in the write-in space. If you back up. Just to dot not that whole X. It could have been right as a write-in. And there were two older ones, right? Yeah. Maybe some of these. It shouldn't be. There is a write-in. Oops. That was just a write-in. I wonder if those bleeds into that write-in box might have been doing that. White out on this one. Yeah, but that might have messed with it. It's possible that the Dominion machine read the white out as the white out. That over. Yeah. Yeah. If you combine that with the one with the error mark, I think that gets us there. Do stay on an election official handing out white out. It's a dump. It was obviously a home. It should have probably done at home. What's that? Yeah. Oh, or that. That does appear to be the only place on this ballot. I've bet in the white out and that dump we saw. Yeah, that's just my bet. Yeah. That's true. Sheriff John Grissmore in 320. Write-in's 210. No older votes, 139 blank. So this is going to be quite a few write-ins. Move to the blank. So they had one more for Grissmore, but if there was a write-in for Grissmore, do they add that? Yeah. You want to look through the written? Okay. That's a lot. We're going to be finding Grissmore in there. We'll be looking quickly. What's that? Is it Franklin County? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah, we didn't see Grissmore, did we? Yeah. So let's take a look. What's his birthday? John. John. The third one. There we go. They probably counted that. Yup. Yeah. Okay. How are we going to get satisfied with that one? That's a couple of marks. Ooh. And just bail us out. We're high and bail us out. I mean, I learned 5, 14, 16, right? Zero over 139 line. You have one more for each. I mean, this one or this one. Yeah. Or this one. Those are all good candidates. I read that one. The third and last one. This one looks like it was almost erased. Yeah. That whole ballot is pretty messy. Yeah. There's a blank. Yeah. Or two. Two lines. Where's the other one? Yeah. Does that make sense? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Oh. It was there. Pretty good job by Richford. Put it in there. Lots of exact matches. Yeah. Same number of ballots counted. Yeah. Sarah is still here. I was going to say that's one project. It's kept people off of councils. Yeah. I just think they knew it was Bill. It's hard to control the... Put the ascending. Center mall. Put a marker in whatever. Put the... The big marker. Not the Sharpies but the big markers. No. They're two words. What? Two words or one... Two. Two. The ballot. Yeah. You can put the line in the center. 988. This one says, like, oh yeah. Oh yeah, Bob. Is there a speaker system in here that you play Final Fantasy? There it is. You say gross. Yeah, once you go in the hallway, it's like you're in a trap or a temper. Are these, do we have squirrels? I don't like these bags. They're fine for the primary. So what kind of battle box do the ICPs sit on, right? Is it like a metal box? It's huge. It looks like a R2-D2. Yeah. So it's like one of these in Arizona. Yeah, it's a flat one. I used to know that song really well. It was my walkout song. Oh really? Yeah. I'm thinking this is actually probably not what you guys have heard. Do you see this? No, not. It's, yeah, no, not that one. It's like a metal, black. Yeah, it's a fake metal. Black. Yeah, it's not metal. Is it? It's a cheap plastic. Have you seen this before? I mean, I'm actually on it. 98. That's 53. Oh. I had Jeff tear it up. Oh, okay. Sorry. It took a little while. I did check the hole, but there's nothing in there. Just refresh it. There's a water bottle in here. There's a flush hole there. It takes a lot of flush. It's water. Yeah. So, but it's like... Getting dirty already? Yeah. I think it was like a silicon dye detector on the ceiling. Mountain streams. I would do it. Do you have the mountain streams? I mean, when I was a kid, we would like, I think we had a lot of gravel there. But, yeah. Yeah, I used to do that. One of my friends got dirty on the concrete. Yeah, my kids. How would that be? For me to smell. But, Jerry, you don't know where we're going. I used to call him Jerry and Jeff. Jerry and Jeff. The stupidest hike in the long trail ever to grab a bunch of potatoes for food. I'm thinking that he was going to be above that process for the timber line where he didn't have fires. Instead of throwing the potatoes away, he hiked the rest of the long trail with a bunch of potatoes in his bag so he wouldn't have to see it. Actually, he was re-hiking for anyone. Even if you had fire. I was like, overlapped at all. You can just take a video of it. It was just really beautiful. Yeah. It likes to grab a candy. I tried. I did. It's down here. And you know what I think is happening? I don't need to dye it. It's not going to work too far. You can see it in that image. Yeah. Okay. I can continue. It keeps grabbing from down low. Should I say, should I say continue? It looks good. It took an image. Is it buttons? The opposite way that it was. Oh yeah. You know my jacket? The purple jacket I have? Because the zipper's on. But everybody told me I was crazy. I don't guess that it doesn't matter anymore. No, but I think she said her shirt is on the opposite side. But they're making this. They're calling it European. Now there's like, I'm not going to have such. Or I might not have enough. I might forget where it is. Yeah. Someone told me that they only had 13 daughters at Ward 8. Oh wow. Not a smikes? Not a smikes? Not a smikes. I guess that was the rule of information on board registration. Just excuse me. I'll give you a conclusion. 98. We're wet. Yeah, I've got enough. Oh, okay. There's all those. Yeah. That was the last one. What were you at? 100? We're 100. Yeah. Which is what? Which is what it said that it was... That's what it was at first. Two checklist match at this time, finding discrepancies. No, that's quite an explanation. Yeah. But J.B., it's not... 97 was the checklist. We have the checklist. Oh, sorry. Yeah. Minus the defective will actually be 96. Otherwise, the defective... They counted 98. That's too wrong. It'd be satisfied with that scan, right? No, with your reward. Yeah. Okay, so this is our last summary of the day. We got the town of Fairhaven, and today, here at the audit, we ended up... The result of the scan was one less ballot scan than was counted on election night, but the follow-up was clear. So, I'm going to send you all this PDF reports and they balance the ballot sample. Okay, so this is our last summary of the day. We'll have to follow-up and click on that as well. But for now, we'll account for that one ballot difference as we look through the results. And we'll start with Proposal 2, which has, yes, 763, no, 155, one overvote, and 68 undervotes. So, we're missing out on one vote. For Proposal 2, we had 619, yes, 325, no, one overvote, and 43 blanks. 40... 20 or whatever it is. 20, yeah. We're missing one hour, vice versa, which is the missing ballot. Right. So, one of the, yes, is looking like it wasn't read and we're missing a no on the voting. Not on the missing ballot. Excuse me, Rep 2, our U.S. Senator, comes through 10, Kahoot 6, Duke 4, 4, Ellis 12, Erickson 4, Malloy 440, Redhead 4, Welch 490, five-right ends, no blights, no overruns, 12 blights. No, there was a sort of a switch here. So they have one more and less for their Welch. That is the same. Less for Welch. Probably that. I'm not seeing anything obvious, but it may be the missing ballot. Is there going to be one more? Is there going to be one more or more? Well, no. We're going to go to the Malloy. The Malloy. It's much. So that just goes from Malloy to Welch. So it's just the Welch. All right. So that means there's been missing a Welch. Rep to Congress. So there's been two. I'm sure we spoke 11. Matt has 423. Ortees 42, Reddick 55, Talbot 14, two right and two over vote. 36 on there. One more for the Vanguards. And I bet you it's that same pencil. Like pencil ballot again. So you need either to get it or that's pretty clear. That's for Vanguards. And then we're missing one from Madden. Which is probably the missing ballot. So that should work out the rest of it. Yeah. Because that light would have been from that one. Oh, Ryan's helping with the math this late in the day. Governor Deval 27, Hawaii 34, Peter 17, Scott 7, 36, Siegel 138, 13 right and zero over 22. We have one less for Scott, which is probably the missing ballot. And we have two more Reddick, which we talked for. Tuske works for me. So that's a good bet. I've found Vanguards 536, Diamondstone 26, Zuckerman 383, 9 Reddick. Both votes 33 under. So we have a couple more. State Treasurer. Page 520. P-Jet 428. One right end, one over vote, 37 under votes. We have a right end. They're not, no, it's just a blank. Longer right end. So right end, go on that and vote. Just go on for a bit. Yep. Secretary of State. Governor Deval 27. Page 510. Three right ends, zero over 47. SOS. They worked on coming to work. At work, Ellie. So they did right down here. Alessandro. Yeah. Whatever it is. They don't have anyone to read that last name. Counts. Poffert 427. Brickmoreton 499. Zero right end, zero vote, 61 under votes. They don't have this working moment. Attorney General. Clark 415. Tango V-523. Zero right end, zero vote, 49 under votes. State Senator. We have a column or 520. Ferguson 425. Remington 360. Biodio 264. Proctor 382. Williams 540. Three right ends, zero over votes. 567. Both for the three. Williams 540. Powell and Rocker. To all more right end. And this one. Two right ends, move down. Two right ends, move down. Use mine. Williams 2 is my problem. Oh, he doesn't live here. True. Hold on. Not realistic Senate. Those in cabinet. What they report. They reported just Laramie. So they worked up. Who's my name, Bob? Who's mine? Bob Helm is a former rep, right? I know, I didn't leave him off. From Ferry? No. No, I mean that's why I didn't leave him off. State rep. I can't tell the 1231 right ends. One over vote. 243 right ends. So they only had 28 right ends. This is great. Yes, this is where the rest of that should be. Miss the missing was an old one. Oh, yeah, interesting. Probably judge. Anderson 833. 12 right ends. Zero over 143 right ends. 5 right ends. So we have a missing. Bo Johnson. Maybe Bo Johnson. We'll see you in five. Maybe a five. Bo Johnson. 917-544. Walk 599. 11. No. 13 right ends. No over vote. 818 right ends. This is judge for two. They were four. There are also these two. Those two. Martin Luther King Jr. So I think that gets up to 818. It's a long one to reach. State's turn. 692 for Sullivan. 35 right ends. Zero over 268. Missing ballots from the Sullivan. You want to go back to that? No. 777-11 right ends. No over votes. No over votes. 199. 64. 64. W. W. W. W. W. W. W. W. W. W. W. W. W. W. W. W. W. W. W. W. W. Bailing. 766. No over votes. The right hand is in the open, the vote is canceled out. Is that correct? Five is able to get in. Is Judge Dredd a real person? No, Judge Dredd is not a real person. Let's just look at the bell. Yeah, I got it. We just got it. Brett M. Look at the abling in just for fun while we're on our last review. I think that was all invalid too, wasn't it? Yeah. Good taste. That's right. Nice that we could still have a honest day in all these positions. So that was really a pretty positive result for Fairhaven also. Except for the counting one less ballot, which we will again work on with the clerk. There is always the possibility that we're in a double scan area. It's pretty rare, but when we only have one difference, that's as possible as anything else I would say. So with that, I want to thank the guys from ClearBallet. I want to thank Orca Television for being here today and broadcasting. I thank Thomas for being our one member of the public interested enough to come watch in person. You're welcome. Thank Jim and Chris for their last post-election audit. We'll see y'all next year, or two years. Thanks to our elections team too. I'm just going to ride with Dan to unload the ballots back over there. Thank you everyone. See you y'all. So this is just going to take us a little while to wrap up. We'll be out by 4.30. And actually we can start bringing this part down. Can I help you guys if you need it?