Racine county’s GOP have identified over 23,000 voters in the 2020 election all had the same phone number. They also found that 4,120 voters had the same identical registration date of 1/1/1918 and 40 people with no date at all.
In addition, the Sheriff in Racine uncovered an elderly voting scheme where nursing homes were targeted and votes harvested from the elderly in these homes without their consent.
Joe Biden was awarded the state of Wisconsin by 20,000 votes. Over 140,000 votes for Joe Biden alone were dropped on Election Night early in the morning. This was impossible and therefore fraudulent.
The Racine County Republican Party Committee on Election fraud is submitting requests to the municipal clerks to view the absentee ballot envelopes for those individuals registered in 2020 with that phone number to confirm they truly designated that phone number; and they are challenging the 40 who registered but have no date.
The Wisconsin Election Committee is acting as a rogue agency, they have proved that they are unable to maintain and secure our very vital voter records.
The concerning question is whether this is the only county to experience voter fraud or is it just the only one that has been exposed so far.
The Wisconsin Elections Commission’s website shows, before 2005, municipalities in Wisconsin with a population of less than 5,000 did not require voter registration. For municipalities with a population of more than 5,000, voters were registered in a number of independent databases.
This changed with the Help America Vote Act of 2002 (HAVA) (here), which required statewide voter registration. The WEC (formerly the Government Accountability Board and before that the State Elections Board) created a voter registration database for the state called SVRS, since superseded by WisVote.
By 2006, when statewide voter registration was fully implemented, municipalities of more than 5,000 people had to transfer their own voter registration databases (referred to as “legacy systems” by the Commission) to SVRS.
The WEC explained that phone numbers are not a current requirement of voter registration, but municipalities that previously required one may have entered a default number in their legacy databases when the information was missing.
Riley Vetterkind, a public information officer at the WEC tried to debunk the voter fraud. He claims, “Default dates of birth and voter registration dates in the WisVote database is not a newly discovered issue or an indication of voter fraud.”