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Fulton County Fraud: Senator Dolezal Brings the Receipts on Serious Allegations [WATCH]

Georgia State Sen. Greg Dolezal renewed allegations that Fulton County’s voter rolls remain deeply flawed, citing what he described as extensive evidence of illegal and improper registrations tied to non-residential locations, abandoned properties, and commercial addresses.

Dolezal said he first raised the issue publicly on the floor of the Georgia State Senate and followed up by documenting specific addresses he claims demonstrate ongoing failures by Fulton County election officials to maintain accurate voter rolls, as required under Georgia law.

“All right, y’all yesterday, I made a serious allegation on the floor of the Georgia State Senate that Fulton County’s voter rolls are, have been, and continue to be, a complete mess, and today we’re going to bring you the receipts,” Dolezal said.

“Currently in the state of Georgia, it is illegal to be registered to vote from anywhere other than your primary residence. Can’t register to vote at UPS, stores can’t register to vote at homeless shelters. Can’t register to vote under an overpass.”

Dolezal said that as of the January 5 Fulton County voter rolls, dozens of voters were listed at locations that do not qualify as primary residences.

“But today, and this is as of the January 5, Fulton County voter rolls, about 70 people are registered to vote right here. We’re going to bring you a couple more locations to show you that this is ‘. Fulton County has got to get their act together,” he said.

At another address, Dolezal pointed to an abandoned structure with active voter registrations.

“All right, y’all this is 850 Oak Street in Fulton County, and there are 19 people registered to vote at this abandoned house. And so again, this is on the Fulton County Registrar. They’ve got to clean up their voting rolls. This is not a new problem,” he said.

Dolezal referenced prior concerns dating back to the 2020 election cycle.

“And remember back in 2020, absentee ballot request forms were sent to every single registered voter, including at locations just like this,” he said.

Dolezal also highlighted a commercial address with a high number of registered voters and credited private citizens for uncovering the data.

“All right, so we are 1445, Woodmont Lane physical address.com, 138 people registered to vote,” Dolezal said.

“But I’ve got a treat for you. This is Jason Frazier… Jason is the guy that’s done all of the heavy lifting on this.”

Jason Frazier said identifying the questionable registrations required access to the voter roll data but little additional effort.

“You know, it’s not that difficult. The hardest part is getting a copy of the voter rolls. I mean, not everybody wants to spend $485 for the statewide voter roll,” Frazier said.

“But essentially, once you get it, just sort it based on number of people that want address. And this one jumped real far out of the page because there’s 138 people registered vote here.”

Frazier said the address was clearly not a residence.

“And when, when we turn the camera, you’ll see it’s just a looks like it used to be a house, but now it’s a commercial virtual mailbox. So I can’t fathom there’s 138 beds in that house, so they can’t be registered to vote there,” he said.

Dolezal said Fulton County already has the data necessary to catch such issues internally.

“Here’s the thing, Jason, that’s really compelling to me, the county has every piece of zoning information they know this is a commercial location. They obviously can do easy database sorting and searching,” Dolezal said.

Frazier said the problems extended beyond addresses and included questionable birth records and duplicate registrations.

“You also, though, have identified 1000 people that were born in the year 1900 that are on the Fulton County voter rolls,” Dolezal said.

“You’ve identified a couple 100 other people that are that very much seem to be the same person.”

Frazier said inaccurate or missing birth information raises serious verification concerns.

“I mean, there are a lot of folks across Georgia who show 1800 or 1900 as their date of birth, which means, what I’ve heard is that means they don’t know their date of birth,” Frazier said.

“If Fulton County, or anywhere in the state, they don’t know your date of birth. How can they be checking to see if you’re a legal resident?”

He added that duplicate entries often appear under slightly different names.

“So maybe it’s Bob and Robert. Maybe it’s Bob and Bob and and it’s clearly the same person at that address,” Frazier said.

“But if you’re if you’ve got typos in somebody’s name and you don’t know their date of birth, how in the world we know they’re a US citizen, and that just that just needs to be cleaned up so we can verify everything.”

Dolezal criticized county officials for relying on outside individuals to identify the issues.

“The fact that people like Jason and David and you know that a number of other people… have had to do this kind of work on their own? Is frankly absurd,” Dolezal said.

“The Fulton County Registrar, this is their job.”

He also cited additional locations, including shelters and commercial businesses, with large numbers of registered voters.

“This is 477 Peachtree Street. There’s 70 people registered to vote here. It’s a homeless shelter that closed in 2017,” Dolezal said.

“All right, y’all here we are. 2625 Piedmont, another UPS Store, 96 registered voters right here in direct violation of Georgia law.”

Frazier said similar patterns were found at active shelters.

“They’ve had as many as 2300, 2400 most have seen most I’ve seen,” he said.

“And I mean, you can go right on their website. They don’t have that many beds. This is a problem.”

“Not hard to find for us, apparently, pretty hard to find for Fulton County,” he said.

WATCH: