Sunday, November 22, 2020

EVIDENCE: Dominion voting software "allows staff to adjust tally"- read the agreement

Public records of Santa Clara County, California published by John Solomon's team at Just The News.com reveal the agreement between the county and Dominion Voting Systems contains a requirement that "allows staff to adjust the tally" of votes.
The agreement also contains a second specification; that "logs all tally adjustments identifying the user making the adjustment..."
Santa Clara County, California, as part of its agreement with Dominion Voting Systems, stipulates that the company's software must allow county staff "to adjust tally based on review of scanned ballot images."
Evelyn Mendez, the public information officer for the Santa Clara County Registrar of Voters, said that "the wording [in the contract] is a little weird," but that it refers to a provision meant to ensure that "adjudication" of uncertain votes can occur.
Adjudication, Mendez told Just the News, is used in circumstances such as when there’s a contest in which a single candidate must be chosen yet "someone votes for two." 
"It’s the process of looking at the ballot and determining, 'Did the voter mean to do that'?" she said.  
"If someone puts in a dot instead of a checkmark," she added, "or if they didn’t bubble it the right way, our staff are looking at the ballot and confirming what's correct."

Listen to the first minute of this video where Eric Bolling interviews Sidney Powell-- "The system capability does in fact exist:"