Pennsylvania election data shows that over 432,000 votes were removed from President Donald Trump during the November election, data scientists say.
According to an analysis by the Data Integrity Group, obtained exclusively by The Epoch Times, votes for Trumpâfrom both Election Day and mail-in ballotsâwere removed from the totals in at least 15 counties.
Time-series election data shows Trumpâs votes decrementing in various counties at numerous time points instead of increasing as would be expected under normal circumstances.
The group said that Election Day vote removals happened during the vote tabulation process in at least 15 counties, including Lehigh County, Chester County, Allegheny County, Armstrong County, Westmoreland County, Northampton County, Delaware County, Montgomery County, Lackawanna County, Dauphin County, Pike County, Carbon County, Washington County, Erie County, and Luzerne County.
Meanwhile, absentee vote removals happened in Allegheny County, Chester County, and Lehigh County.
At least 432,116 votesâ213,707 election day votes and 218,409 absentee votesâwere removed in total.
âThere were vote movements across all candidates. However, we did not see the same type of negative decrements to any of the [other] candidates that we saw with President Trumpâs tallies, and they happened repeatedly with no explanation,â Lynda McLaughlin, a member of the group, told The Epoch Times.
The Pennsylvania Secretary of Stateâs office didnât respond to a request for comment from The Epoch Times.
The Data Integrity Group is a group of scientists, engineers, and machine learning experts who have been working together to check whether or not there was manipulation of data in the 2020 general election.
The groupâs lineup of data scientists includes Justin Mealey and Dave Lobue.
Mealey is a nine-year veteran of the U.S. Navy, where he worked as an electronic warfare technician, cryptologic technician, and Arabic linguist. He worked at the NSA as a mission manager for Levant/North Africa and later worked as a CIA contractor at the National Counter-Terrorism Center.
Lobue has 12 years of experience in data science and machine learning across financial services, telecommunications, and research consulting industries. He currently specializes in artificial intelligence applications.
Data scientists from the group have analyzed the election data for several states including Arizona and Georgia.
In their analysis of Georgiaâs election data, the group said it found that more than 30,000 votes had been removed from Trumpâs tally, and another 12,173 votes were switched to Biden.
The group didnât name any state official, county official, or related voting machine manufacturers for wrongdoing.
However, the group urged the state to authorize forensic audits to uphold election integrity and said itâs irresponsible to certify the results before the alleged errors and anomalies are explained.
âThe bottom line is the errors were made. Data confirms these errors and it shouldnât matter if they were machine or human, theyâre still errors and deserve a second review and thorough analysis with forensic audits to find the answers,â the group said.
Pennsylvaniaâs electors cast their votes for Biden and Kamala Harris as president-elect and vice president-elect on Dec. 14, 2020.
State-certified results show Biden won the Keystone State by 80,555 votes.
Edison Admits One Error in Vote Switching
During the vote tabulation process, the results, which are commonly known as tabulated results, are sent to the secretary of stateâs office. The data is then also shared with the media via Edison Research.
Errors could be made in several steps in the election result reporting process.
Though itâs unclear what caused the errors that were flagged by the Data Integrity Group, Edison Research did admit a reporting error that happened separately.
In a widely-circulated video clip of CNNâs live election night broadcast, 19,958 votes were seen being switched from Trump to Biden in 30 seconds.
Rob Farman, executive vice president at Edison, admitted that the âswitchingâ stemmed from a brief reporting error from Edison Research.
He told The Associated Press that a state feed from Armstrong, Pennsylvania, first showed the correct values of 24,233 votes for Trump and 4,275 for Biden, but a team member had mistakenly entered them backwardâ4,275 for Trump and 24,233 for Biden. Farman said the companyâs quality control team discovered the error and corrected it that night.