Checking Nevada Voter Dataset...

So I downloaded the dataset snapshot of the Nevada Registered Voter list. The cutoff time was dated around 10:00 a.m. PST on November 7. Expanded into a database to expand the analysis, the information presented here illustrates the litigation issues facing Nevada today. I just want to mention here a few of the issues observed.


Let's start with the basic numbers: the database shows 2,031,274 voters registered (including about 900 who registered after November 3 and thus didn't vote). As of the evening of November 6th, a total of 1,394,715 (68.7%) had voted in the general election, and the total reported by the news on 15 November was 99 per cent, or 1,405,376 (69.2 per cent), so the numbers seem to be roughly in line.


So which part of the process went wrong that has prevented the state from producing a convincing election result so far? Where was the dark area that breeds fraud?  Which group of voters should Matt Braynard's (director of data and strategy for the Trump campaign) team's "Voter Integrity" to run first? Where should attorneys start to get law breakers to court? With that question in mind, let's read the following charts.


Here's a quick overview of the database:  Each person's information is stored in a row, and their 24 attributes (such as name, date of birth, date of registration, address, party, etc.) are separated by columns.


There is a very important attribute here called ID Required. It's supposed to represent whether the voter is required to check the ID when showing up at the polling station. Its figures were first looked at: only 2,752 people (0.2 per cent) among the voted were required to show an ID, while as many as 1,391,879 were not (99.8 per cent).


Since a whopping 99.8% of people don't need ID verification and there are automatic statewide mail-in ballots, Nevada's elections department is relying solely on the list in the database to screen the legitimacy of the votes. So, let's check the accuracy of Nevada's data now.


1. What Did They Check?
 There is no record how old the oldest person in Nevada is, but the oldest person in the United States is named Hester Ford living in North Carolina, and is documented as being born in 1904.
Nevada's database records 29 people older than her, born from 1884 to 1902, and 13 of them voted in this election. Seven of them are Democrats, five are non-partisan and one is a Republican.

Three of these 13 people who have voted in this General Election needed ID check.  The bizarre thing is what these validators found?  Are these three still alive?


2. Voter Registration Day
According to the database, 1,453 people were registered before 1960, of which 1,207 were registered on January 1, 1900 and one on January 1, 1800.


3. Furthermore, 2,077 were registered as voters before the age of 17.


4. Registration Beforehand

Quite absurdly, 1247 people on record were registered to vote on or before their date of birth.


5. Campgrounds
When checking addresses, it turns out some people's mailing addresses are campgrounds. Is the address on their driver's license also campground? There are many campgrounds, The following chart lists just a few examples.  The same campground address, being used by many people over and over again.  The problem is: if a voter drives away and the campground receives a mail-in ballot, anyone can fill out and mail back the ballot and it can't be verified!

6. No Fixed Addresses

Another 47 voters who bluntly stated that they had no fixed address.

 

7. Facilities

There are some people living at fixed addresses, but their addresses are large facilities such as casinos, hotels, nursing homes, or shelters.  Their rooms or beds are not specified and thus highly suspicious.  Only the following nine facilities are listed below, covering 453 people voted in this General Election.

 

8. Enthusiastic Voters

The last group worth mentioned are a group of people with blank addresses. A total of 20,206 people are registered, 17,322 of whom have voted this time. Their birthdays ranged from 1917 to 2002, and only one had to show ID to vote! These are likely to be legitimate voters, however, as Nevada allows voters to apply to have their addresses and other information withheld.  But because of the sheer number of them, their voting history is specifically checked: in the database records, they turned out to be a group of voting enthusiasts! They are particularly active, having voted an average of 11.8 times per person over the twenty-four years covered in the database (204,595 votes/17,322 people). For the rest of the population, people have voted an average of only 6.3 times per person (8,696,124 votes/1,377,393 people).
 

9. Non-Citizen Voters

Now, the difference in votes in the Nevada presidential race is only 3,500 votes, and the number of people mentioned above in the database whose voter eligibility alone is clearly questionable has reached 4,375. And that doesn't include the voting enthusiasts just mentioned, nor does it include one Japanese green card holder Tadashi Igarashi who lives in Nevada and doesn't need ID to vote!


https://www.epochtimes.com/gb/20/11/16/n12553842.htm
 

Mr. Igarashi, a green card holder who was never registered as a voter, suddenly received a ballot in the mail but declined to vote, according to an interview at a rally.  We did find information about him in the database that showed he was registered as a Republican voter in 2017. He is also marked as someone who does not need ID proof to vote.

Who registered on behalf of Mr. Tadashi Igarashi and intentionally stated that he was a member of the Republican Party?  And how many “Tadashi Igarashi” are here? According to a news reported by Rob Lauer of Las Vegas 360 News on November 10, 2020, one Nevada county alone has found 30 non-citizen voters disqualified from voting in 2019, and the report also estimates that 140,000 non-citizens across the state received mail-in ballots this time around as quoted below.


https://360newslasvegas.com/nevada-140k-non-citizens-received-mail-in-ballots/
 

10. Summary

When people move out of state, change their names, change to/from their maiden names, die, and if this database list is not updated in a timely manner, these people's voter registration could be taken advantage of.
 

Summing up the above analysis: It's very likely there are a significant number of ineligible voters in the 99.8% of those who do not need verification to vote.  Nevada's state government must now carefully screen the state's voters to ensure that every ballot was cast by a U.S. citizen 18 years of age or older who is still living in the state, purging the dead and those who have moved out of the state but still eligible to vote in the state, or those who come specifically just to vote fraudulently. Without careful verification at this point of voter eligibility, even if the votes are recounted, we have reason to remain highly skeptical of the impartiality of the state's elections!


This election was the first time Nevada had a fully automated mail-in ballot. The mess displayed in its database is bound to bring about confusion in the delivery of ballots and the unverifiable legitimacy of voters. With this as an example, all states of mail-in ballots, especially those who automatically mail ballots to all registered voters, intentionally or unintentionally open the door to election fraud!

The data provided above came from the Nevada State Government website that provides big data. Readers who are capable of database analysis are encouraged to ask the state government for their own copy and download to do the research so that the truth be known.

Official: https://www.nvsos.gov/sos/elections/voters/nevvoter-statewide-list

 

by Ting Mei 2020.11.17

Translated from a news story from Epochtimes in Chinese.


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