Mail-in ballots should be sufficient enough to prevent the deceased from voting. It also should spark a return to sender movement that can lead to the removal of names from the voter rolls. Whether "just moved" or the former occupant is deceased a return to sender ballot should trigger it's own investigation to determine the true voter roles. Tracing property taxes and/or state income tax filing should solve the problem.
This year there are going to be more deceased voters than other years because of the pandemic.
December 3, 2020
By Nicole Cart
Bill Price is seen in a now-deleted Facebook Live video, speaking to the Bay County GOP members in Florida on Nov. 7th. It was about half an hour after the election was called for the Joe Biden-Kamala Harris ticket.
Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger confirmed the video is being investigated and released the following statement Thursday:
“Make no mistake, individuals who attempt to undermine the integrity of Georgia’s elections will be investigated and prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law,” said Raffensperger. “Those who move to Georgia just to vote in the Senate runoffs with no intention of staying are committing a felony that is punishable with jailtime and hefty fines. They will be found, they will be investigated, and they will be punished.”...
October 8, 2020
By Henry Redman
In the last decade, (click here) millions of registered voters across the country have been removed from voter rolls. In 2019, Ohio removed more than 460,000 voter registration files from its list. Georgia removed 313,000 people from its rolls in October 2019 alone, and in Michigan, from 2011 to 2018, 1.2 million voters were removed from voter lists.
This practice, known as list maintenance, is required by a federal law — the National Voter Registration Act (NVRA - click here).
Some of those removals came after voters moved or died, and it’s in the best interest of states to keep their lists updated...