Brad Raffensperger Says Georgia Counties 'Cannot Continue' to Violate Ballot Drop Box Rules

Georgia's Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger said in a Twitter post on Monday that the state's counties "cannot continue" to violate ballot drop box rules.

Raffensperger's office spokesman Ari Schaffer said the tweet referenced a Fulton County elections employee's comments to conservative news site The Georgia Star News. The site reported Fulton County produced drop box transfer forms due to an open records request and some were missing. Georgia's temporary 2020 election rules required each county to sign a drop box transfer form when absentee ballots were collected.

"New revelations that Fulton County is unable to produce all ballot drop box transfer documents will be investigated thoroughly, as we have with other counties that failed to follow Georgia rules and regulations regarding drop boxes. This cannot continue," Raffensperger tweeted.

Fulton County spokeswoman Jessica Corbitt told the Associated Press that the county stuck to the rules when collecting absentee ballots.

For more reporting from the Associated Press, see below:

Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger
Brad Raffensperger, Georgia Secretary of State speaks onstage during 2020 Martin Luther King, Jr. Commemorative Service at Ebenezer Baptist Church on January 20, 2020 in Atlanta, Georgia. Raffensperger wrote in a tweet that Georgia counties "cannot continue" to violate ballot drop box rules. Paras Griffin

Raffnesperger says his office is reviewing the handling of paperwork related to ballot drop boxes in the state's most populous county during last year's election.

Temporary rules passed by the State Election Board last year allowed voters to return absentee ballots by putting them in secure drop boxes. The rules required the county to collect ballots from each drop box location at least once every 24 hours and have each collection team complete and sign a transfer form upon removing the ballots. The form was supposed to include the date, time, location and number of ballots.

The Georgia Star News report quotes a statement from Mariska Bodison, with Fulton County Registration and Elections, saying that officials noticed "a few forms are missing." She said that when a COVID-19 outbreak happened at a county elections warehouse in October "some procedural paperwork may have been misplaced."

"We maintain a large quantity of documents and are researching our files from last year," Corbitt said Tuesday. "The majority of the ballot transfer forms have already been produced and we are continuing to research a handful."

She said the county has been in touch with the secretary of state's office to update them on its progress.

The investigation comes as some Republicans and supporters of former Republican President Donald Trump continue to perpetuate Trump's false claim that he lost the November election to President Joe Biden because of widespread fraud, including in Georgia.

Georgia was one of several states to pass a sweeping new elections law this year, prompting numerous lawsuits from voting rights advocates who say it is aimed at limiting minority and other voters who helped Democrats win.

Raffensperger announced in April that his office had referred three counties for investigation after they failed to fill out the transfer forms when collecting ballots from drop boxes. Those three counties had a combined population of about 76,000 people, according to 2019 estimates by the U.S. Census.

Raffensperger said at the time that his office had confirmed with the other 120 counties that had drop boxes during the November election that they had completed the ballot transfer documents.

The drop box rule was a temporary measure implemented in response to the increased demand for absentee ballots driven by fears about the coronavirus pandemic. The state's new election law requires each county to have at least one drop box but also puts stricter limits on where they can be and how many a county can have.

Georgia Ballot Drop Box
In this Monday, Oct. 19, 2020 file photo, a voter submits a ballot in an official drop box during early voting in Athens, Ga. Georgia’s secretary of state says, Tuesday, June 15, 2021, his office is reviewing the handling of paperwork related to ballot drop boxes in the state’s most populous county during last year’s election. John Bazemore/AP Photo