Ballot Collector #1 completed the task of removing ballots from the dropbox, emptying the box’s contents into a transfer bag, then both Ballot Collectors waited for the individual inside the library, who returned with a piece of paper and handed it to Ballot Collector #1.” When the individual opened the door, Ballot Collector #2 handed the individual the stack of ballot envelopes, along with a piece of paper. While Ballot Collector #1 emptied the contents of the dropbox, Ballot Collector #2 knocked on the door of the library and waited for the individual inside the library to come to the door. Per the complaint letter, TTV observed on the video an “exchange occurred between two individuals who were collecting ballots (“Ballot Collector”) from the library dropbox and an unknown individual who came out from inside the library.
We offered the video evidence in our Novemcomplaint letter to Raffensperger.” Engelbrecht says that she and her partner in the investigation, Gregg Phillips of OPSEC, “began to look at the Senatorial runoff election in late November/early December.” Engelbrecht is hopeful that “the Secretary of State may have found a very logical explanation for this. UncoverDC spoke with TTV founder Catherine Engelbrecht on April 29, 2022. TTV went forward with an October 27, 2021, public records request “in an effort to better understand what could have happened to explain these actions.” TTV requested “All documentation, including all written communications, proofs of delivery, tracking documentation, or similar, related to absentee ballots, absentee ballot envelopes, and any other election-related materials delivered to the Metropolitan Library polling location in Atlanta, Georgia, between Decem– December 29, 2020.” On NovemFulton County notified us by email that “No responsive records exist.” Catherine Engelbrecht/Cap TimesĪccording to TTV, there were allegedly an “estimate 250 ballot envelopes involved” in the exchange.