The claim: Voters told voting system in Fayette County, Kentucky, was down when it wasn’t
As voters headed to the polls, some feared fraud would stop their votes from being counted, despite ample evidence against that.
A woman in Fayette County, Kentucky, described a “sketchy” voting experience, which then spread on social media as a warning.
Facebook user Jennifer Clark wrote in the post, time-stamped 2 hours old in the screenshot posted by Facebook page Conservative Treehouse on Tuesday, that she went to vote this morning and was told by a poll worker that the “whole county’s system is down.” The poll worker allegedly said that the voters could leave their ballots with her to be counted later or leave and come back another day.
“Not one single person left. Not one single person ‘trusted’ her,” Clark wrote. “We all sat, and we all waited. Turns out, the system wasn’t down at all. Turns out when everyone waited, the system magically was working after all...”
Clark did not respond to USA TODAY’s request for more information about her experience. Conservative Treehouse, which amplified Clark’s post Tuesday, did not respond to USA TODAY’s request for comment.
Post is from Kentucky’s first day of early voting, exaggerates situation
Clark’s post is authentic, but it wasn’t made on Nov. 3 — and the Fayette County clerk explained the mishap wasn’t quite as dramatic.
Clark originally made the post on Oct. 13, which was Kentucky’s first day of early voting. The post was being redistributed on Nov. 3, seemingly attempting to raise doubts about the election’s security.
Donald Blevins, Fayette County clerk, said there was a brief holdup that day, but it was caused by simple error.
“Election officers in several locations forgot their training and failed to separate the accountability stubs from the ballots,” Blevins told USA TODAY via email. “As a result, the scanners would not (appropriately) accept the ballots. So it appeared to be a machine issue.
“Since multiple locations called with similar problems, the officers likely heard us say something to that effect. Then turned to their voters and said, ‘Yeah it’s county-wide,’” he added.
Blevins said it took about 15 minutes to fix “what turned out to be a simple mistake” and that once the stubs were removed, voting went “swimmingly.” He added that Fayette County’s voting was going smoothly on Election Day itself.
“There is NOTHING wrong today,” he said. “We are doing very well.”
Searches of "Fayette County voting system down" on local news organizations' websites, including the Lexington Herald Leader, Lex 18 News and WVLK turned up no results.
And a reporter for the Lexington Herald Leader also reported that Blevins called the claim "false and misleading."
Our rating: Partly false
While there was a brief holdup with voting the day the Facebook post was created, the Fayette County clerk said the delay was mischaracterized in the post. And the timing of the post's share is misleading. The post was made Oct. 13, not Nov. 3. We rate this claim PARTLY FALSE.
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This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Fact check: 'Nothing wrong' with voting in Kentucky county, clerk says