Transcription of: 2042056059540394122.mp4 Generated on: 2026-04-09 16:56:41 Model used: whisper-base (language: en) ============================================================ A tabulator should never ever be able to vote about it. Okay, and these tabulators that you're using today can't. Okay? That's a problem, and here's why. The voting machine is called the Image Cast Evolution or ICE machine. It's made by Dominion. The Dominion Voting Image Cast Evolution or ICE is an all-in-one accessible paper-based voting system. This Image Cast Evolution Voting Machine has the physical ability to mark votes onto the ballot after the last time the voter seized the ballot. There's a bad guy, I love it, because all I get to do is change the logic slightly, and I put in a voted ballot. And I see that the machine sees that I didn't vote on some down ballot race. So it votes for me. It reverses the ballot. And what do we do when it reverses? We just feed it back in. Now, what I need to tell you, because of my travels, we saw something very unusual occurring across the country that is out of spec. In Georgia, the reversal rate on the tabulators was between 15 and 20%. And I said, what did you do? Well, we just feed it a second time, and then it takes it. Sometimes we have to feed it a third time and it takes it. But it always takes it. So you got to stop and say, what's going on here? Why is the tabulator reversing the ballot in the first place, and then it takes it on the second or third try? Are you talking about when they're using the ATI for it? No. So are you talking about if it's under voted? A normal ballot. No indication. No under vote. No problem. It reverses the ballot. And that's a disaster. If we lose the ability to trust that the paper trail really represents what the voter intended. Andrew Appell is a professor of computer science at Princeton University. My research is in software verification and election machinery. Image cast evolution. Where it's used in the United States. New Mexico in 2013 Ohio in Tennessee in 2013. California, Florida, Minnesota, Virginia, and Wisconsin in 2016. The machine is a combination of ballot marking device and optical scanner. According to information on the company's website, the voting machine is the only optical scan tabulator using a single ballot paper path. That means it's a printer and a scanner in one. If the machine is hacked, then they can install software that marks votes on the ballot after the voter lasts. And if the piece of paper can be marked by the computer after the last time the voter saw it and the whole paper trail is compromised. Security experts do not believe that the ice machine is the only voting machine being sold with the ability to add votes to paper ballots. Appell and other computer scientists believe that two versions of the express vote, a ballot marking device by another company, ESNS, have the same capability. That machine has already been purchased by half a dozen states, sometimes like in Philadelphia, over strong community opposition against expert advice. These barcodes go against the recommendation of the Blue River Commission on Pennsylvania's election security. And with indications that there were conflicts of interest in the procurement process. Because there were many, many issues in this process that are troubling. Six swing states have now purchased voting machines that security experts say have this problem. This problem, this is serious fraud and potential abuse is going on pretty much in plain sight. Nobody wanted to talk to the whistleblower eyewitnesses either. Now, regardless of what happened, this is exactly what I have been telling you. This is why election integrity measures are critical. And they need to happen and they need to happen now. An election audit in Maricopa County in Arizona is happening. The president, Karen Fan, quote, companies hired by the legislature to review the election results came up with a different number of ballots that Maricopa County officials.