Investigator Wins Lawsuit for Access to 2020 Election Records in Pennsylvania

  • An investigator named Heather Honey will receive a digital copy of the cast vote record file from the Lycoming County Office of Voter Services
  • The file includes information from every precinct and central tabulator used in the 2020 election in Pennsylvania
  • Honey sought access to this information due to anomalies encountered while voting and evidence of a discrepancy between the number of registered voters and ballots counted in the 2020 general election
  • The court ruled that the Lycoming County cast vote record is not exempt from public access and ordered the Lycoming County Voter Services to provide Honey with a printed copy of the record from the 2020 general election
  • Previously, Honey’s requests for access to this information had been denied by officials

An investigator named Heather Honey will receive a digital copy of the cast vote record file from the Lycoming County Office of Voter Services, according to the Thomas More Society, according to a report from World Net Daily.

This file will include information from every precinct and central tabulator used in the 2020 election in Pennsylvania.

Honey had previously sought access to this information due to anomalies she encountered while voting in the 2020 presidential election.

According to the legal team, Honey’s “documented evidence” shows that there were 120,000 fewer registered voters in Pennsylvania than the number of ballots counted in the 2020 general election.

“That’s 120,000 votes that cannot be legally attached to an actual voter,” said Tom Breth, special counsel for the Thomas More Society.

Honey, an open-source investigator, became curious about the voting process in Pennsylvania after witnessing an elderly couple being told that the wife could not vote in person because she had already voted by mail, despite the couple insisting that this was not the case.

The woman was only allowed to cast a provisional ballot, with no guarantee that her vote would be counted.

As Breth explained, “The more that Ms. Honey learned, the more she came to believe that the Pennsylvania Department of State was giving guidance to election officials that was based on political reasons rather than the law. Honey observed that any activities that were purported to determine accuracy in the voting process were not based on Pennsylvania law, leading one to believe that these officials either don’t know what the law is, or they feel like they don’t have to follow it.”

The court ruled that the Lycoming County cast vote record is not exempt from public access because it does not contain “the contents of ballot boxes [or] voting machines.”

The Lycoming County Voter Services will now provide Honey with a printed copy of the cast vote record from the 2020 general election.

Previously, Honey’s requests for access to this information had been denied by officials.

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