Pennsylvania Dataset: Addition and Subtraction Mysteries After the 2020 General Election

Nearly two months after the election, the Pennsylvania mail-in ballot dataset should be completely stable by now.  Meanwhile, as of December 28th, 135 thousand ballots were still missing from the Pennsylvania registered voters' databset compared to the official figures.  Due to the dramatic changes in these two datasets over the past few weeks, the author had been diligently downloading them for comparative analysis, to find out the crux, and to seek the truth.

To this date, I have downloaded all the four updates of the mail-in ballot data from Pennsylvania's official website. The first two (updated on November 6th and November 10th respectively) have exactly the same data, so I will only compare the changes in the data in three dataset snapshots (November 6th, November 16th, and December 16th).

A. Mail-in ballot dataset

The following explains the four problems with the mail-in ballot data. The discussion follows.


1. There were 148 mail-in ballots were entered to the dataset after November 3rd, the date of the General Election.  These mail-in ballots were requested, approved, mailed, and returned all on the same day.

 

It cannot be explained with common sense how such mail-in ballots appeared after Nov. 3rd.  The frequency of their occurrences per day is listed here.
 

2. Mail-in ballots received after the deadline


Using November 6th as the legal deadline for receipt of mail ballots, Many mail-in ballots were found to be received and added to the dataset after November 6, totaling 19,660. According to the law, these ballots should not be accepted.

3. Mail-in ballots are strangely reducing

October 27th was the last date to request mail-in ballots in Pennsylvania, and November 3rd was the deadline for walk-in.  Therefore, the total number of mail-in ballots should have remained the same since November 3rd at the latest since their records should have been kept in the database from the date of request.  However, the total number of mail-in ballots was gradually decreasing.



From 3,098,705 on November 6, to 3,088,942 on November 16, and then to 3,085,255 on December 16, a total of 13,450 ballots were subtracted.

4. Mail-in ballots with blank dates of birth

Comparing the data from November 6th, November 16th, and December 16th, there were always over 500 records with blank birth dates, although the blank dates of birth (D.O.B.) in three versions varied a bit.


The information in the mail-in ballot records must have been transferred from the registered voter roll, except for the dates of application, approval, mailing, and return.  Since the mail-in ballot dataset does not list voter ID, we have no way of knowing exactly who these five hundred or so records belong to.


Then, when the registered voter table was examined, it turned out there were only 9 voters in the registered voter database without the D.O.B. information, and only four of them were active voters.

So, are these additional 500 blank birth date found in mail-in ballot records really there? It is impossible to verify whether these people exist or not.


B.  A gap between the official voting figures and the voters counted in the database

In my previous article, I have pointed out the number of voters counted in the Pennsylvania registered voter database has been lagging behind the number of votes officially reported, with a difference of millions of votes. This number is slowly closing in, but today (Dec. 28), more than half a month after certification, it is still 135,000 votes short of the official number.


As we've discussed before, the failure of the mechanism to eliminate duplicate ballots is the reason for this discrepancy. And here we can see the results it led to.

(Source of the certified votes:  https://www.electionreturns.pa.gov/ )
The difference between Biden's and Trump's certified vote counts was 81 thousand votes.

(80,555 =3,458,229-3,377,674 )

The total number of votes officially announced was 6,915,283.

 (6,915,283 = Biden 3,458,229 + Trump 3,377,674 + Jorgensen 79,380 )

From the Dec. 28th voter registration dataset, the voted number was found to be: 6,780,018, which is less than the official figure by over 135 thousand+ votes .  

(135,265 = 6915283 - 6780018)
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The above five aspects are the changes in the Pennsylvania database on the timeline after the general election. Perhaps by adding and subtracting a bit, the data will finally conform to common sense at some point. 

But at least the abnormal spectrum of the dataset has been broken down and recorded here.

Ting Mei 2020.12.31

Translated from Chinese Epochtimes: https://www.epochtimes.com/gb/20/12/31/n12655982.htm

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