26 Violations, One Election Office, and a Lot of Unanswered Questions

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On January 29, a post by Kevin Moncla shared a detailed investigative report focused on the 2020 election in Fulton County. The report was released January 6, 2026, and was co-authored by Moncla and nine others.

It alleges 26 separate violations that the authors say could undermine confidence in the election results.

And the timing added fuel to the fire.

One day earlier, on January 28, agents with the Federal Bureau of Investigation executed a search warrant at Fulton County’s election center.

The search wasn’t explained in detail at the time, but the overlap sent social media buzzing.

What the Report Claims

The report lays out a long list of alleged problems from the 2020 election.

Among them are claims that voting systems were not properly tested, absentee ballots were mishandled, memory cards were swapped without clear documentation, and key election records were destroyed.

The full document is publicly available on Scribd and runs dozens of pages, citing logs, chain-of-custody records, and public documents from Fulton County.

It doesn’t claim to prove who won or lost Georgia. Instead, it argues that the way the election was handled violated basic safeguards.

What Critics Say

Critics were quick to push back.

State officials in Georgia have repeatedly said audits and reviews did not find fraud that would have changed the outcome of the 2020 election. That includes earlier state-level audits that reviewed ballots and machine counts.

A 2024 media article also pointed out that Moncla has had personal legal issues unrelated to elections.

Supporters of the report argue that those matters have nothing to do with the documents and evidence cited in the investigation itself.

Even when audits find no outcome-changing fraud, sloppy procedures still matter.

If election officials don’t follow the rules, or can’t prove they did, voters are left wondering what else went wrong.

The standard shouldn’t be “no fraud was proven.” The standard should be “every rule was followed, every time.”

Bigger Than Georgia

This story isn’t really about Georgia versus Nevada, or even about one election in particular.

It’s about confidence.

People lock their doors at night not because they expect a break-in, but because clear rules and habits create peace of mind.

Elections should work the same way.

Whether the Fulton County allegations hold up under further review remains to be seen.

The opinions expressed by contributors are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Nevada News & Views. Digital technology was used in the research, writing, and production of this article. Please verify information and consult additional sources as needed.