FAQs
Do you clean the voter rolls?
No. We do not remove either a person or address.
Our focus in mail-in ballots to ineligible and preposterous addresses.
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 make sure Phineas does NOT get a mail-in ballot – because it may be intercepted by an NGO (non-governmental org) and voted for him.
Where do you get your data?
We use mostly publicly available data.
We use the official 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.
Do you work with state officials?
We are currently engaged in several states working with state officials.
We are working in one state with their Chief Auditor providing an analysis of their voter roll.
We are working in another state showing elected officials their voter roll anomalies.
In several states we are building a parallel system, with state officials, to their current voter system to show them a real time view of their voter anomalies.
What types of hijacking do you find?
We do not look for hijacking. We are data analysts and investigators with massively powerful data comparison tools.
We find anomalies.
Some may be ineligble– like a person registered to vote in a vacant lot.
Some are bad data like 143,000 addresses in Colorado – in the official 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!
Every such anomaly lowers confidence in U.S. elections. We expose these anomalies so they are fixed, and voter rolls can become accurate.
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. Another anomaly.
We show Billie is a woman – thus probably should not be live at a fraternity house.
While these are funny, we expose 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 will 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 it with Google street mapping generating a photo that this gas station is in a desolate area – no apartment there.
Thus, we find an anomaly.
We do this with 3 clicks, instantly showing the result on a phone or tablet.
Can you keep the Secretary of State or Election Commission honest?
The real time nature of our comparison keeps everyone in the system looking at the same data, at the same time, all the time.
When everyone sees the same data – honesty prevails.
We discovered in 2022, in one large county, the election commission or other government official added over 18,000 new voters days before the election.
These were invisible to at least one party’s political candidates.
Our recommendation is to monitor – during early voting – wherever possible, the voter rolls of a state, daily, compare them, show everyone, from any party if new voters have been added after the legal date to do so.
We found in Missouri, 40,000 voters were listed as ineligible. They were changed to eligible and voted. Then they were changed back to ineligible.
This kind of anomaly is invisible to current technology. Our team, using advanced technology finds it quickly.
Do you track NGOs?
Yes.
We built the system called the Dark Money Tracking System – to track every NGO, every dollar coming in – from any source, documenting it.
We track every dollar the NGO gives to any other organization.
We track every director or employee of every NGO in the government’s databases – and any relationship with any other NGO dating back years.
With a single click, we show relationships among NGOs who coordinate their activities for political and other purposes.
There has never been a real time system to track such massive data and its interrelationships.
Our Dark Money Tracking system makes the relationships of money and politics – via tax-exempt organizations, completely transparent.
Do you track Federal Election Commission contributions?
There are only 2 known 100% complete databases of every federal contribution since the FEC started keeping track of contributions in 1975.
One is the FEC itself – and it is massively difficult to traverse. It also changes all the time, rendering any prior data questionable.
The second source is our Common Sense Elections FEC system – with over 680,000,000 records – and we maintain the full accuracy of the system.
Thus, we can show any changes the FEC made to its system – and we can show every dollar, track it through the system and tie it to donors.
How are you funded?
We are funded by donations from citizens.
Why does your team not use relational technology?
Relational technology is a tech relic of the 1980s. Major corporations are moving away from it for their new systems as quickly as possible.
Relational technology is massively complex, requires data centers so energy intensive they must be built near power plants.
Our family of technologies finds anomalies in seconds, across billions of records, so economically relational database cannot compete.
Some of the technologies we use eliminate the need for large data centers.
Do you use artificial intelligence at all?
We have decades of experience in A.I.
Some of our team members worked at the MIT Artificial Intelligence Lab.
We currently use several A.I. subsystems for voter rolls.
One such system is the A.I. address matching engine.
A.I. thrives in our technology environment due to our exponentially faster processing speeds.
What do you do with the anomalies you find?
Our team finds anomalies no other technology can economically uncover.
We create a record of every anomaly, tying it to a government or other trusted source, like a property tax record, a Google street-view photo, and publish the aggregated results.
In some states we file challenges to an ineligible address receiving a mail-in ballot.
In some states we may help others on such challenges.
Should a ballot be sent to an ineligible address, our team flags it, documents it and wherever possible, challenges it.
We create the largest database of challengeable ballots, fully documented, for the 2024 election.
Do you work with state officials?
We are currently engaged in several states working with state officials.
We are working in one state with their Chief Auditor providing an analysis of their voter roll.
We are working in another state showing elected officials their voter roll anomalies.
In several states we are building a parallel system, with state officials, to their current voter system to show them a real time view of their voter anomalies.
What is the impact of challenging a ballot from an ineligible address?
The impact of challenging a ballot is about 100 to 1 versus running ads at this late date.
Ads are countered by opposing ads.
Ads have a diminishing return impact as we get closer to an election.
Every ballot legally challenged, is almost a 100% sure vote against Trump. Below is an analysis:
How do you find aliens on voter rolls?
The question of whether aliens are voting has been answered by others. It is now reported weekly states are finding aliens voting.
There is no database of aliens available to the public, thus we must use other techniques.
We can track any address in any state we monitor, to see if it is a legitimate address, then determine if registrants are aggregating at that address.
For any address we use time series analysis to see that on date 1, there are 5 people at that location, 6 weeks later there are 12, then a month later there are 35.
This does not prove they are aliens. It does, however, show ballot point aggregation so it serves as a starting point.
Members of our team built the foundational technology for the TSA No-Fly List – and we have some innovative ways to find some of our new arrivals who are getting on to voter rolls.