Accident! Joe State Election Official Admits Out-of-State Woman Stole His Home Address to Vote

Gabriel Sterling, manager of the voting system for the Georgia Secretary of State’s office, answers questions from the media during a news conference on the status of the vote count in Atlanta on Nov. 6, 2020.

Gabriel Sterling, the Georgia official in charge of the 2020 election, has released a statement accusing a woman of using his address to vote fraudulently. The official, who has always claimed that there is no election fraud in the state of Joe, was surprised by the sudden accusations of election fraud, and by his own admission, his actions were ironic.

According to the National File, a conservative news site, Gabriel Sterling, the executive manager of Georgia’s voting system, issued a statement on the afternoon of the 23rd, announcing a formal challenge to a female voter who alleged that the woman used his home address to vote fraudulently in the 2020 election.

The report said the Democrats’ Operation Fair Fight group sent a letter to Sterling’s home in the name of a woman reminding her to vote, which led Sterling to discover that the home’s original owner, Ms. Meron Fissha, had voted in the 2020 election using his home address, and that the woman had relocated to Maryland after selling the house to him two years ago. Unlike Georgia, Maryland is not competitive in the 2020 presidential election.

Ironically, Fair Fight Action, a group formed in 2018, has been working against a variety of election security standards, arguing that they are “unnecessary” and even claiming that some security measures are “racist.

Sterling tweeted that Fraser also used his address to vote fraudulently in the 2018 election. He believes Fraser may have committed multiple crimes because she not only voted repeatedly over the past two years by falsely registering, but also signed an affidavit claiming she lived at Sterling’s home address.

Sterling had made a big deal of a video on Dec. 1 in which he loudly accused Trump of endangering the safety of election officials by questioning election fraud, the newspaper said. He admitted that it was “super ironic” that he had spent weeks attacking Trump’s claims of widespread voter irregularities in Joe’s state, only to now challenge the election fraud himself.