Who benefitted from the Fraud is a question that we cannot answer. However, statistical data suggest that election fraud in no-no absentee ballots has been uncovered in Congressional District 14 and Pinellas County.
During a contentious election year, post-election data suggest that election fraud in absentee mail-in-ballots has been uncovered in Pinellas County & Congressional District 14 (CD-14) in the State of Florida. Congressional District 14 is a unique district and consists of a voter base that spans from Hillsborough County to Pinellas County’s region on the east side of St. Peterburg.
According to statistical data, 35,773 absentee ballots were illegally requested on September 9th 2024 in Pinellas’ CD-14 region. Arguably, a statistical anomaly for such a high count of absentee ballot requests in a single day, and is inconsistent with recorded dates prior to and after September 9th 2024, with the exception of September 13th which is still under investigation by our team at The People’s Olive Branch. Furthermore, 35,773 of these illegally requested absentee ballots were illegally issued, with 28,197 of these ballots being illegally cast for the 2024 general election.
An even larger statistical anomaly is statewide absentee ballot requests for September 9th 2024, which came to a total of 196,186, with a total of 195,286 of those requests attributed to Pinellas County alone, generating over 99% of No-No absentee ballots requested statewide in a single day.
In CD-14 alone, 35,773 No-No absentee ballot requests amounted to almost one-fifth or 18.3% of all No-No absentee ballot requests from all of Pinellas County, while Hillsborough County showed 0 No-No absentee ballot requests for September 9th 2024 for Congressional District 14.
No-No absentee ballots are ballots that were requested without proper identification. Proper identification is considered to be absentee ballots requested with a Florida driver’s license number, Florida state identification card number, or the last 4 digits of the social security number. As these requests were void of this specific identification data, they are considered No-No absentee ballots.
In 2021, the passage of SB 90 amended Florida Statute §101.62, introducing stricter requirements for verifying vote-by-mail ballot requests. Under the updated statute, any voter requesting a vote-by-mail ballot must provide one of the following identifiers to authenticate their request: a Florida driver’s license number, a Florida state identification card number, or the last four digits of their Social Security number.
County Supervisors of Elections are responsible for compiling this information daily and entering it into the Florida Voter Registration System (FVRS), as outlined in Fla. Stat. §101.62. These county-level records are then aggregated into a statewide report managed by the Florida Division of Elections. This consolidated report, accessible to authorized individuals and organizations under Fla. Stat. §101.62(2), includes critical details such as whether a voter provided the required identification.
The statewide report designates compliance using specific markers defined under DS-DE 145/Rule 1S-2.043, F.A.C.:
- “Y” indicates the voter provided a valid identifier.
- “N” indicates the identifier was not provided.
Following the 2024 election for Florida Congressional District 14, an analysis conducted by a former DAWIA Level II Certified Auditor with the Department of Defense uncovered several significant anomalies in the vote-by-mail ballot data. This discovery, based on a thorough review of the official vote-by-mail report, raises serious questions about irregularities in adherence to the requirements established by Florida Statute §101.62.
As there is no way to decipher whether these illegally cast No-No absentee ballots went to Democrats, Republicans, or other candidates, this could have had drastic ramifications for the Pinellas County 2024 election results, and by extension, Hillsborough County CD-14 would similarly be affected. According to a second source, the DoD Auditor will be meeting with the Florida’s AG’s office on Monday.
Absentee ballot request records are updated on a day-to-day basis according to a source who provided The People’s Olive Branch with visual observation of the raw text data and opened in Power BI to review the data.
This is a developing story, follow The People’s Olive Branch for follow-up reports, and contact our investigative team if you have evidence of potential election fraud in your county or state.
Updated 11/22/2021 12:12 p.m.