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In a federal courthouse in Albany, a group of ordinary New Yorkers has taken an extraordinary stand: they're suing New York State Attorney General Letitia James and top election officials, accusing them of retaliating against citizens who dared to question the integrity of the state's voting system. The lawsuit, filed October 16th by the nonprofit RealAmerica.Vote on behalf of NY Citizens Audit, isn't just about one election—it's a cry for every American who believes their vote should count, and that those in power must answer when it doesn't—something the law requires.
It started with volunteers. Moms, retirees, small-business owners—people like you and me—traveled county by county, poring over public records alongside experts in data analytics and computer programming. What they found wasn't conspiracy, it was evidence from New York's own documents: voter rolls with millions of errors, unreconcilable tallies, a "Loss of Control" cyber breach, and procedures that violated state and federal laws. They compiled reports, including a peer-reviewed study published in the Journal of Information Warfare and shared them with officials, asking a simple question: Can you fix this?
Instead of answers, they got threats.
State officials labeled them "malicious" and "anti-democratic," preemptively interfering with their representation. Then came the hammer: Attorney General Letitia James publicly launched a criminal investigation under the Ku Klux Klan Act—implying that the election audits were racially motivated—turning laws meant to protect civil rights against the very citizens they are supposed to defend. As a result, over a thousand volunteers quit in fear, some having received menacing letters. Others worried about their families. One volunteer said: "I just wanted my grandkids to grow up in a country where their voice matters. I never thought asking questions would make me a target."
But they didn't stay silent.
On October 28, just steps from the White House at the historic Hay-Adams hotel, the remaining citizens who refused to be intimidated stood together. Marly Hornik, CEO of RealAmerica.Vote and a plaintiff in the suit, spoke with quiet steel: "We're not going away. And we're not asking for permission to hold our government accountable."