I saw some reports floating around a little while back that fake ballots were printed overseas, e.g. https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2020/12/china-whistleblower-steps-forward-reveals-video-photos-alleged-chinese-counterfeit-ballot-printing-operations-us-ballots-mi-fl-nc/
The paper ballots are supposed to be preserved for some many months after the election. I’m sure it’s possible to forensically compare the physical paper to see if it’s made of the same material under a microscope, and the ballots are supposedly only printed by known contractors with known paper types. I’m wondering if it’s possible to do this comparison in counties with known irregularities to actually isolate the fraudulent votes, e.g. in the Georgia counties with affidavits claiming pristine batches of ballots all for Biden seemingly marked by a machine https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2020/11/several-georgia-recount-monitors-describe-odd-batches-ballots-stood-pristine-sheets-perfectly-marked-bubbles-100-joe-biden/. Theoretically if you found these batches of votes (even if some rats handled them after the fact to cover up and make them less pristine) with types of paper that don’t match other counties without irregularities using the same printing contractor, you’d be able to pretty easily isolate the fake ballots (and throw them out with high confidence without risk of disenfranchising).
Well at the so called "audits" and "hand recounts" in GA and here in AZ, nobody was allowed near enough to the ballots to see anything, much less examine them.
And the people in one state, MI IIRC that pointed out that some of the ballots weren't even folded, and many envelopes had identical signatures and such got fired.
They can analyze the ink, I know that for sure.
Yeah the ink too, and in tandem. But have investigators done this? These lawyers seem to always be 2 weeks behind with revealing data that was found on the ground to the public (not throwing shade). I just want to make sure something obvious wasn’t overlooked. Since we’ve had recounts in some places, I imagine it wouldn’t be much of a stretch to also investigate the paper/ink.