Conservative activists find errors in software they hoped would root out voter fraud

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Jane C. Timm is a senior reporter for NBC News.

After months of testing, some conservative activists are finding that the vigilante computer programs they'd hoped would give them the ability to root out redundancies and fraud in the country’s voter rolls aren’t very reliable. Last year, those activists excitedly embraced EagleAI and similar programs that promised to help them look through voter rolls across the country in search of outdated or fraudulent voter registrations, even as experts warned about the programs' limitations.

is a group of activists allied with the national Election Integrity Network, which was founded by Cleta Mitchell, a lawyer who aided Trump’s efforts to overturn the 2020 election results. Last year, EagleAI founder Dr. John W. “Rick” Richards Jr. introduced the program to the groups. “I talked to Cleta about it last week, and she’s concerned, too, because it’s not just us,”

president Jim Womack told the activists in the March call. “Cleta and I are gonna look into what it’s gonna take to get Rick where he can get this thing rolled out reliably in all the states.” Mitchell defended the program in an email and said Womack had “never said one negative word to me about Eagle AI.” “I have NO problems with Eagle AI. Dr Rick is a national hero. He is amazing and doing amazing work,” she said.

leader Womack also defended the database in an email. “Eagle AI is a superb tool,” Womack said in an email. “As with all newly fielded applications, we have had to work through a few technical challenges that were unique to North Carolina’s publicly available voter and election databases. We are making progress and we anticipate being fully operational with Eagle AI as the primary

List Maintenance tool this year.” In some states, EagleAI is clearly operational, as activists in Florida and Georgia have used it to challenge voters’ eligibility. In May, NBC News reported that a Florida official shared a list generated by EagleAI with election officials and urged them to “take action.” One local election official who examined the data found it was almost entirely outdated in their county, though.

 

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