>>11509077 (p/b)
>Here’s a giant list of dead voters that all mailed votes in PA.
UNDERSTANDING VOTER RECORDS
There is a lot of data tracked by the Secretaries of States concerning voter record.
The data includes what county, which election, whether they are active/inactive/removable/not eligible, which precincts and various districts, mailing address, physical address, YOB, party, voter ID # and more.
When it comes to ABSENTEE BALLOT the image attached is a small section from REAL voter records for the 2020 general election in my state for illustrative purposes. I squished the last name column to protect the voters.
TheVOTE TYPEindicates if the person requested an absentee ballot or voted in person during the early voting period.
When voters request an absentee ballot, the date the application is received is recorded, as well as the source (paper via mail, email, in person, or electronic). The clerk's office then has to verify the voter is eligible to vote in that state/county. The application is either accepted or rejected. If rejected, the voter has a chance to cure the problem.
If accepted the date the ballot is mailed to the voter is recorded. The ballot status stays at "sent" until it is returned from the voter. In the example, 2 voters either forgot to mail the ballot back, or it was "lost" in either the mail or in the clerk's office.
The date the ballot is returned from the voter is recorded. At that point the clerk's office has to inspect the absentee ballot envelope to make sure the voter has the proper information. If they missed putting some information, they are given a chance to cure the problem (sign the ballot, enter the correct YOB or SSN, whichever is required, etc.)
The information related to the election does not include a column for dead/alive.
Trying to find death information takes a lot more work. If the voter died, but has not yet been removed from the voter registration rolls (that occurs every other year), the voter record is marked as removable or dead (depending on the state). If I find a "removable" voter has voted I start digging more.
Some of the removables are convicted felons. Others have moved out of state. Others (not many in my state) turn up in obituary notices.
It takes a lot of man hours to go thru these.
Currently for dead people not voting, we have to rely on the clerk's office keeping the voter registration records up to date. Sadly, this is not the case. Many times locally, the older people die in nursing homes located in other counties. Death notices seem to be slow walked big time to the secretary of state, who in turn disseminates the data down to the county where the voter was registered.
A centralized voter database linked automatically to SSN death records with no override button in the clerk's offices is in order.
I also think a national voter card is needed to prevent people voting in multiple states. Our challengers caught people doing just this, and yes, those voters have been reported.