Georgia Dominion voting system questioned

 Washington Examiner:

'Secret report' on alleged voting system vulnerabilities roils Georgia ahead of midterm elections

...

 "The 'secret report' referenced by the Atlanta Journal-Constitution today is not an objective, academic study by a non-biased actor. It is assertions by an individual who is paid to espouse opinions supporting the elimination of electronic voting systems to help a lawsuit brought by liberal activists, including one funded by Stacey Abrams’ Fair Fight Action," Raffensperger's office said in a statement.

...

The media report in question talks about Halderman, who is described as an expert for plaintiffs in a long-running lawsuit seeking to get Georgia to ditch electronic voting machines in favor of hand-marked paper ballots, being granted access to Dominion voting equipment in Fulton County for 12 weeks and producing a 25,000-word "secret report" that has been filed under seal. Halderman found that malicious software could be installed in voting touchscreens to alter QR codes printed on ballots that are then scanned to record votes, or a hacker could wreak havoc by gaining access to election management system computers, according to court records.

The Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported that the Georgia secretary of state’s office, a defendant in the court case, had not asked to see Halderman's findings, which U.S. District Judge Amy Totenberg so far had only allowed attorneys and expert witnesses to access, and security experts raised concerns about the risk for the elections this year.

...

There is more.

There appears to be a lot of distrust about Georgia's election system and it is not limited to issues raised by President Trump in 2020. 

See, also:

AJC poll: Biden’s approval in Georgia takes a nosedive

And: 

Meltdown in Georgia: Black voter disapproval of Biden quadruples

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