5,000 Duplicate Ballots Sent To California Voters In Riverside County
Authored by Caden Pearson via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),
Around 5,000 residents of Riverside County in California received a duplicated ballot ahead of the November midterm elections this week, which officials blamed on a computer system error.
Voter stickers in Pasadena, Calif., on May 19, 2009. (David McNew/Getty Images)
Riverside County Registrar of Voters office said the 5,000 duplicate ballots were erroneously mailed to some voters in Canyon Lake, Menifee, Murrieta, Wildomar, and Winchester after a computer system error “mistakenly generated” the mailing files.
Officials said the error was identified over the weekend before they could be stopped from being delivered to the U.S. Postal Service.
“It is important to note that none of the duplicate ballots will result in a voter being able to cast more than one ballot,” said Registrar of Voters Rebecca Spencer in a statement. “I take election integrity seriously and apologize for the inconvenience.
Spencer said that every vote-by-mail envelope has a bar code and that once scanned as accepted at the Registrar of Voters office it automatically locks the voter’s record so that the person can only vote once.
Residents who received two ballots were advised to use vote with one and destroy the second, which Spencer said would be automatically voided once the other is scanned.
“The first ballot received would be processed and the second ballot would be automatically voided,” she said.
The country’s Registrar of Voters office said the computer system error was resolved and procedures have been put in place to prevent the error in the future.
California is one of nine states—including Colorado, Hawaii, Nevada, New Jersey, Oregon, Utah, Vermont, and Washington—to mail ballots to all registered voters.
All 50 states offer vote-by-mail, or absentee, ballot options to varying degrees.
California also offers early in-person voting, along with 45 other states. Alabama, Connecticut, Mississippi, and New Hampshire are the only exceptions, although all four provide vote-by-mail ballot options.
California also offers a 29-day period for in-person early voting. This year that is slated for Oct. 10 to Nov. 7.
Tyler Durden
Fri, 10/21/2022 – 18:20