Election officials are investigating a Florida lawyer who they say tried to register to vote in Georgia runoff that will decide control of the U.S. Senate.

MARIETTA, Ga. Election officials are investigating the actions of a Florida lawyer who they say tried to register to vote in a high-stakes runoff in Georgia that will decide control of the U.S. Senate. They say he was also captured on video urging other Floridians to do the same.
Moving to Georgia just to vote with no intention of staying in the state afterward can amount to a felony, Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger said in a statement Thursday announcing the investigation.
The lawyer went online and attempted to register to vote using the address of his brother in Hiram, Georgia, said Deidre Holden, the elections supervisor in Paulding County, Georgia. The system put his registration in a pending status because he didn’t provide a Georgia driver’s license number or other proof of address.
This is not about Republican or Democrat this is about doing whats right, Holden told The Associated Press on Thursday. Everybodys always screaming, The elections are fraudulent. No, were trying to do our job.”
We cant send this message that just because were mad that our candidate didnt win, we can go out and throw an election. It just breaks my heart to see that our country has come to this.
Raffensperger has repeatedly said there was no evidence of widespread voter fraud in the November election.
The Florida lawyer told WSB-TV that he was joking when he was captured on video speaking about the plan during a Nov. 7 political rally in the Sunshine State. He denied any wrongdoing.
But Holden said shes interested in learning whether any other out-of-state residents tried to register in Georgia after being encouraged to do so at the Florida rally.