The episode is a live breakdown and reaction show by host BKP (The Georgia Hour on VoiceofRuralAmerica.com) covering the bombshell December 9, 2025 Georgia State Election Board (SEB) meeting on case SEB 2022-015 — a complaint filed by citizen investigator David Cross (with heavy assistance from Kevin Moncla and others) regarding massive violations in Fulton County’s handling of 2020 early-voting tabulator tapes.
Core allegations proven in the hearing:
- Fulton County produced zero signed tabulator results tapes for early voting in 2020, despite Georgia rule 183–1‑12.12-.12 requiring three poll-worker signatures on every closing tape (one for the polling place, one with the memory card, one with the recap form).
- These tapes represent 315,892 ballots cast in early voting across 148 tabulators.
- 10 tapes are completely missing (the same 10 tapes central to the separate Joe Rossi/Kevin Moncla case SEB 2023-025).
- Numerous tapes show duplicate scanner serial numbers, tapes printed on different machines than the ones that scanned the ballots, and impossible print times (e.g., polls “closed” at 1:56 AM and 2:09 AM on Nov 4, 2020).
- No “zero tapes” (opening tapes proving the tabulator started at 0 ballots) were provided for early voting — breaking chain of custody completely.
- Fulton County openly admitted the tapes were unsigned and 10 are missing/lost/destroyed, but claimed “new leadership, new building, new procedures” fixed everything and essentially told the board “do whatever you want, we’re done looking.”
Key moments from the SEB meeting:
- Dr. Janice Johnston (acting chair) and Janelle King eviscerated Fulton’s excuses, calling the situation “a national disgrace,” “sloppy and lazy at best,” and stating Fulton County “had no lawful authority to certify” its 2020 early-voting results.
- Board members repeatedly pointed out that without signed zero and closing tapes on the same machine, there is no possible way to verify or replicate the 2020 early-voting results in Fulton County.
- After Fulton’s representative essentially shrugged and said “we’ve given you everything we have,” the three present board members (Johnston, King, and Jeffares — both the chairman and the Democrat member were absent) voted 3–0 to:
- Refer the entire case to Georgia Attorney General Chris Carr for investigation and enforcement.
- Request the maximum $5,000 fine per unsigned tape (134 unsigned tapes = $670,000 potential penalty).
Interview with complainant David Cross
- Cross explains he filed the complaint in March 2022, spent $15,800 on open-records requests, and waited almost four years for a hearing.
- Emphasizes this is non-partisan: the electronic system in Georgia is inherently insecure and hackable no matter who is in power.
- Calls for hand-marked, hand-counted paper ballots counted in public on camera as the only trustworthy solution.
- Notes the executive director of the SEB said he is “absolutely sick” of Fulton County being “the embarrassment of the state.”
Host BKP’s takeaway
- This is the first time in five years a major 2020 Fulton County case has been formally referred to the Attorney General’s office with teeth (potential massive fines and public acknowledgment of invalid certification).
- The host sees this as a crack in the wall — the same board will hear the even bigger Joe Rossi missing-tapes case (SEB 2023-025) the following day.
- Ends on an optimistic note: “It is not a dark hole… I see this as our chance.”
In short: After five years of stonewalling, Fulton County finally had to admit on record that its 2020 early-voting results were never legally certified, and the State Election Board just sent the case to the Attorney General for punishment and further investigation.

