Georgia state Sen. Greg Dolezal released new information this week alleging widespread irregularities in voter registrations in deep blue Fulton County, raising renewed questions about the accuracy of the county’s voter rolls.
Georgia law requires voters to register using their primary residential address and prohibits the use of P.O. boxes, commercial mailboxes or nonresidential locations. In a video posted online, Dolezal said a review of the county’s January voter rolls revealed numerous registrations tied to locations that do not qualify as lawful residences.
According to Dolezal, 70 individuals were registered at a single UPS store in Fulton County. Another 96 voters were registered at a second UPS store. He also said 19 voters were registered at an abandoned home.
Dolezal said an additional 138 voters were registered at an address operated by the virtual mailbox business Physical Address. He also identified approximately 1,900 voters registered at a homeless shelter located near the Georgia State Capitol.
In another case, Dolezal said 70 voters were registered at a homeless shelter that closed nearly a decade ago.
Dolezal also claimed that thousands of individuals on the voter rolls are listed with birth years of either 1800 or 1900, which he said raises concerns about whether those voters can be properly identified or verified.
Much of the background research cited by Dolezal was conducted by Jason Frazier, who said placeholder birth years are often used when an individual does not know or provide a valid date of birth.
Frazier said that, without a verifiable birth date, election officials may be unable to confirm whether a registrant is legally eligible to vote.
He also said his review of the data identified hundreds of duplicate registrations, including multiple variations of the same voter’s name tied to a single address.
Dolezal said the responsibility for maintaining accurate voter rolls rests with Fulton County election officials.
“The Fulton County registrar, this is their job,” Dolezal said. “They are the ones that are supposed to keep the voter rolls clean. It’s always Fulton County, and Fulton County has got to get their act cleaned up.”
Fulton County has been the focus of repeated election related scrutiny in recent years, particularly following the 2020 presidential election, when Georgia was decided by a narrow margin.
State law requires county election offices to regularly review and update voter rolls to remove ineligible, deceased or relocated voters. Election officials have previously said the presence of registrations tied to shelters or nontraditional addresses does not necessarily indicate voter fraud, noting that some individuals experiencing homelessness are legally allowed to register using certain shelter addresses.
Dolezal, however, said the scale and nature of the registrations he identified warrant immediate action.
Since the release of Dolezal’s findings, conservative activists and election integrity groups have called on Fulton County to conduct a comprehensive purge and audit of its voter rolls.
Fulton County election officials had not responded publicly to Dolezal’s claims as of publication.
FBI agents executed a sealed court-authorized search warrant issued by a magistrate judge on Wednesday at the Fulton County Election Hub and Operation Center in Union City, Georgia, seizing ballots, voting machine records, and other materials tied to the 2020 presidential election, according to law-enforcement sources and warrants reviewed by Fox News and other outlets.
FBI Atlanta confirmed that agents were conducting a court-authorized law-enforcement action at the facility on Campbellton Fairburn Road. Officials declined to provide additional details, citing the ongoing nature of the investigation.
Photos and video from the scene showed boxes of election materials being loaded onto vehicles by FBI personnel.
