About 2,600 untallied ballots found in Floyd County, Georgia
While conducting its audit, elections officials in heavily Republican Floyd County discovered they inadvertently did not upload about 2,600 early voted ballots into its original results.
Statewide voting systems implementation manager Gabriel Sterling said that Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger would like to see the county's elections chief clerk step down from his position "because this was too important of an issue to have allowed to happen this way."
Sterling, during a virtual press conference, described the mistake as "an amazing blunder."
"This is why you do the audits," Sterling said. "There's no issues with any of the equipment or anything -- they just didn't scan these ballots it looks like, or the card was not put through properly."
"Obviously the secretary and our whole office is perturbed, to say the least, that this was allowed to happen in that county. It is the only county we've seen an issue like this so far," he added. "It's not an equipment issue. Again -- it's a person, not executing their job properly," he said.

An investigator has been dispatched to the county.
Sterling said these found ballots did change the results in Trump's favor by about 800 votes -- still nowhere near the approximately 14,000 votes the president needs to overtake Biden in Georgia.
"So far, from our checks with VotingWorks and our -- and the teams on the ground, nothing is making us see any substantive change in the outcome. It's verifying that we saw on election night," Sterling said. "The majority of the counties right now are finding zero deviations from the original number of ballots that they had into the system."
-ABC News' Quinn Scanlan







