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Well, it looks like allegations of Help America Vote Act (HAVA) violations will NOT be investigated by the Connecticut State Election Enforcement Commission (SEEC) because the attorney feels that three years of investigation has caused the violations to be effectively "timed out."
Files 2025-055 and 2025-056 HAVA complaints, which were originally dismissed at the September 23rd meeting, and subsequently refiled within the 30-day required statute, have once again been recommended for dismissal by Attorney William Smith.
The complaints were in reference to elections in 2020, 2022 and 2024.
"After reviewing these complaints again, the Commission can make a determination that, based on the facts submitted by complainant with regard to the discovery of documents that she submitted regarding this complaint, as well as her overall assertion that because of her discovery, these complaints were based on a three-year investigation, the Commission can determine that there was a lack of reasonable due diligence in that these possible violations could have been discovered earlier," said Attorney Smith.
"Therefore... they remain untimely and I would ask that the Commission on the record dismiss files number 2025-055 and 056 and make a determination that they are not necessary to further investigate," concluded Attorney Smith.
The motion was made to dismiss the HAVA complaints "as having timed out" but one attorney asked for a clarification.
"I don't know if timed-out is the right word," said SEEC Commissioner Gregory W. Piecuch who asked for clarity on whether it was a "time-out."
Attorney Smith explained that the original complaint was dismissed for 30 days, but that the second complaint was a "reasonable due diligence standard for the discovery of potential violations in 2020, 2022, and 2024."
He said the Commission is "making a determination that the complainant's assertion that because she took three years to investigate them, therefore there wasn't an ability to discover the underlying violations."
Piecuch then moved to "dismiss and take no further action on the basis that the Commission determines that the complainant, with reasonable diligence, could have known about the potential HAVA violations based upon occurrences in 2020, 2022 and 2024, well before filing these complaints... in July of 2025."
The motion carried with five commissioners voting in favor.
The HAVA complaint alleges that the "accuracy of Connecticut's voter rolls exceed federal error requirements per HAVA."
"Connecticut's allowable error rate for the 2024 election is 12 errors. Connecticut has 115,526 apparent voter roll violations," the complaint alleges.

The complainant is part of Unite4Freedom, a non-partisan, volunteer, civic organization committed to restoring the fundamental right of every American citizen to legitimate representative government, through legally valid elections.
"There was a 2019 MOU from the Department of Justice that the Secretary Of State signed stating that they would have removed the dead people from the voter rolls and we found over 10,000 dead people, some of whom voted, so the Secretary Of State is in violation of that MOU and has been in violation for those three years," the complainant said.
Theoretically, when Town Clerks receive death notices, or Electronic Registration Information Center (ERIC) information from other states indicating that a voter has died, those voters are removed from the voter roll by the Town Clerk.
Member States share voter registration and motor vehicle department data with ERIC, which is also certified to use official death data from the Social Security Administration and subscribes to change of address data from the United States Postal Service.
ERIC uses those four data sources to generate reports that Town Clerks can use to "identify inaccurate or out-of-date voter registration records, deceased voters, individuals who appear to be eligible to vote but who are not yet registered, and possible cases of illegal voting" and update the voting rolls.
It's worth mentioning there is a George Soros connection to ERIC.
According to Influence Watch, ERIC was established by Pew Charitable Trusts in 2012.
One year prior in 2011, grant-making organization Foundation to Promote Open Society, funded by Soros, provided two grants to Pew Charitable Trusts totaling $725,000, “to support the Pew Center on the States’ voter registration modernization initiative” and “expand [its] scope and scale.”
"ERIC was supposed to have removed dead voters from its lists, so obviously the $25,000 the State of Connecticut paid for a membership fee and the annual dues for ERIC is money that is not being put to good use," said the complainant.
Unite4Freedom's most recent scorecard on Connecticut General Election Validity claims to have found 164,024 apparent registration violations, 137,545 apparent voting violations impacting 135,931 votes, and 58,864 more votes counted than voters.
Unite4Freedom claimed there were 135,921 unresolved voting errors in total.
The 2024 Election Validity Scorecard is still being finalized, so stay tuned.







