FAQ

  • Do you clean the voter rolls?

    No. We do not remove either a person or address.

    We will not disenfranchise anyone, nor will we participate in disenfranchising any person.

    If Phineas, who is registered to vote at a Walmart, shows up to vote, that’s fine. We just make sure Phineas does NOT get a mail-in ballot – because it will be intercepted by an NGO (non-governmental org) and voted for him.

  • Are you tied to a political party?

    We are 100% non-partisan. We are particularly non-partisan in that we dislike most of the politicians from all political parties. We do not accept donations from a political party.

  • Where do you get your data?

    We use mostly publicly available data. We use the oKicial Secretary of State voter databases whenever possible. We import property tax records for comparison of the building description whenever possible. We import public databases like UPS locations, hospital locations, hotel locations etc.

  • What types of FRAUD to you find?

    We do not look for fraud because we are not lawyers or oKicials. We are data analysts with massively powerful data comparison tools.

    We find anomalies.

    Some may be illegal – like a person registered to vote in a vacant lot.

    Some are bad data like 143,000 addresses in Colorado – in the oKicial voter roll – where the zip code does not match the city.

    Some are hilarious – like the person in Kansas registered to vote at a prison – that has been closed for years!

    We make anomalies visible – often for the first time – and others take it from there.

  • Can you do time series analysis?

    Yes.

    We take several, up to hundreds – of copies of a voter roll on different dates, compare them and find subtle, yet important anomalies.

    For instance, Billie votes from a frat house.

    Not a problem across 1 voter roll, but we show Billie has been voting from the frat house for 20 years – thus an issue.

    We also show that Billie is 105 years old. Thus a problem.

    And we show that Billie is a woman – thus probably should not be live at a fraternity house.

    While these are funny, we show these by the thousands in every state we study.

  • Can you compare property tax rolls with voter rolls?

    Yes.

    In Georgia, for instance, we have the property tax rolls for many of the large counties.

    Eventually we may add every county.

    We compare the property tax roll with the voter roll. The voter roll shows Wilma is registered at a 123 Elmont Street, for instance.

    The voter roll tells us nothing about that address.

    We compare that address with the property tax roll and learn it is a gas station.

    We compare with Google street mapping and get a photo that this gas station is in a desolate area – no apartment there.

    Thus, we see an anomaly. We do this with 3 clicks, instantly showing the result on a phone or tablet.