Fulton County’s admission of procedural violations affecting over 315,000 ballots in the 2020 election has reignited scrutiny over Georgia’s election integrity. However, an examination of the facts reveals the true nature of the issue: a documentation error concerning unsigned tabulator tapes, not evidence of fraudulent vote counting or altered election results. This article breaks down the violation, the extensive verification process, and the State Election Board’s legal response.
Story Overview
- Fulton County acknowledged 130 tabulator tapes lacked required signatures, affecting 315,000+ ballots
- The issue represents a paperwork compliance violation, not illegal vote counting or altered totals
- Multiple recounts and audits confirmed Biden’s 11,779-vote Georgia victory remained unchanged
- State Election Board referred the matter for administrative sanctions, not vote invalidation
The Documentation Violation Explained
Fulton County officials acknowledged that approximately 130 tabulator tapes from early in-person voting during the 2020 election lacked required signatures from election workers. This procedural violation affected documentation for more than 315,000 ballots, representing a breach of Georgia election procedures rather than election statutes. The unsigned tapes created administrative compliance issues but did not indicate fraudulent activity or compromised vote integrity.
Tabulator tapes serve as supplemental documentation records in Georgia’s election system, functioning alongside multiple redundant verification systems. These tapes are not the official vote count mechanism. Instead, votes were recorded through encrypted memory cards, centralized tabulation systems, comprehensive audits, and mandatory recounts. The missing signatures created a paperwork trail gap without affecting the actual ballot counting process or final tallies.
BREAKING – Republicans are demanding full restitution for Rudy Giuliani, who was charged with 13 felony counts and fined $148 million after contesting Georgia’s 2020 election, following Fulton County’s admission that 315,000 votes were fraudulently counted.
“We don’t dispute… pic.twitter.com/xkyzZnRQWO
— Right Angle News Network (@Rightanglenews) December 21, 2025
Election Results Verification Process
Georgia conducted extensive verification measures that confirmed the 2020 election results despite the documentation errors. The state performed a complete statewide hand recount that validated President Biden’s 11,779-vote victory margin over former President Trump. Subsequent machine recounts also confirmed the original results, demonstrating that the unsigned tape issue did not alter vote totals, create missing ballots, or change the election outcome.
The multiple verification layers built into Georgia’s election system provided redundant safeguards that caught and corrected potential discrepancies. These systematic checks included risk-limiting audits, signature verification processes, and poll monitor oversight throughout the counting process. The unsigned tabulator tapes represented one documentation component within a broader verification framework designed to ensure accuracy regardless of individual procedural lapses.
Legal Response and Administrative Action
Georgia law requires counties to certify election results even when procedural errors occur, a legal framework upheld by state courts and reinforced by the Georgia Court of Appeals. This provision recognizes that administrative mistakes should not invalidate legitimate votes when the underlying election integrity remains intact. The State Election Board appropriately referred the Fulton County matter to the Attorney General for possible administrative sanctions rather than vote invalidation or result challenges.
The distinction between procedural violations and election fraud remains crucial for maintaining public confidence in democratic processes. While accountability for administrative errors serves important oversight functions, conflating paperwork compliance issues with vote manipulation undermines legitimate election security concerns. Conservative voters rightfully demand transparent election administration, but accuracy in distinguishing between documentation problems and actual fraud protects the integrity of future election security efforts.
Watch the report: Fulton County admits to verifying 315,000 votes in 2020 without poll worker signatures
Sources:
Fulton County: 315k Votes Lacking Sign-Off Counted in ’20
Fact vs Fiction: Did Georgia Admit 315,000 Illegal Votes in the 2020 Election?
Raffensberger Says 2020 Election Blunder
















