COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) — The South Carolina Election Fee is making an attempt to determine how a contract for brand spanking new machines for voting for $28 million ended up costing the company $4 million extra.
The investigation into shopping for the three,200 poll scanners in 2024 has led to the firing of the pinnacle of the election company and the second in command and price a 3rd staffer his job. And it is not the one drawback. with the Election Fee, Chairman Dennis Shedd stated at Wednesday’s month-to-month assembly.
There was a recording machine hidden within the room earlier than the commissioners met behind closed doorways to debate former Government Director Howard Knapp’s destiny and what Shedd known as Knapp’s “very shut good friend and fellow worker” Paige Salonich.
Salonich was the company’s deputy director earlier than officers stated she was fired for being caught on video planting the recorder and a issuing profane outburst after listening to Knapp had been let go.
“We’re discovering out new stuff that outdated administration did,” Shedd stated as he took time throughout the assembly to reply questions from reporters.
Shedd insisted any misconduct didn’t impact the integrity of any election.
Shedd did say at the very least three state companies are investigating the contract and different issues, and he doesn’t know what occurred to the $4 million distinction between the $28 million commissioners accepted and the $32 million licensed to be paid for the machines,
Knapp has not responded to requests for remark since he was fired, and Salonich’s lawyer stated he had no remark Wednesday. Salonich did sue the Election Fee shortly after she was fired, saying the company launched embarrassing particulars about her.
Knapp was fired on the Election Fee’s September assembly. That led to a month of hypothesis on whether or not he was let go due to the state’s ongoing negotiations with the U.S. Division of Justice over a request for information about all South Carolina voters — talks which are persevering with.
Shedd stated Knapp’s place on releasing the data was much like his: the data may very well be launched with a strict settlement on holding it safe. Shedd stated the firing had nothing to do with negotiations over the information.
Commissioners mentioned the request behind closed doorways at Wednesday’s assembly. Shedd stated they need a legally binding settlement that protects the privateness of the information, which incorporates names, addresses and different information the state sells together with data it would not like driver’s license numbers and the final 4 digits of Social Safety numbers.
“I have been hacked. My state tax return was hacked,” Shedd stated, recalling in 2012 when hackers stole private information from greater than 3.6 million individuals in South Carolina by acquiring Social Safety numbers and bank card data from tax returns.
Shedd stated the state can arrange a system much like what it has with about half the states within the U.S. They share the information in tightly managed settings to allow them to ferret out individuals registered to vote in multiple state.
South Carolina’s voter information “has already been shared with about 25 different states,” Shedd stated. “However that was shared below very strict safety protocols.”
A variety of states have pushed again more durable towards the Justice Division request. At the least eight have been sued by the federal authorities for not complying with the request.
The states stated the federal authorities has not defined what it needs to do with the data.