Nearly 3,000 votes were discovered on a memory card in Fayette County, Georgia that had not been uploaded properly.

Nearly 3,000 votes were discovered on a memory card in Fayette County, Georgia that had not been uploaded properly in the state’s 2020 presidential election, the Georgia Secretary of States Office announced Tuesday.
Of the 2,755 votes, 1,577 were for President Trump, while 1,128 went to former Vice President Joe Biden. The remaining votes were for Libertarian candidate Jo Jorgensen or write-ins. The updated tally changes the margin by 500 votes. Biden now leads President Trump in the Peach State by 12,929 votes.
New: a memory card was found during the audit in Fayette county with 2,755 votes. Decreased Biden statewide lead by 449. New margin total statewide in GA is a 12,929 lead for Biden
— Justin Gray (@JustinGrayWSB) November 17, 2020
Fayette County is scheduled to re-certify its election results Wednesday.
The announcement comes one day after Floyd County discovered roughly 2,600 uncounted ballots during the states manual recount of votes.
In a statement, Georgia voting system manager Gabriel Sterling described the uncounted ballots as an amazing blunder and said the secretary of states office will probe the matter.
They just didnt scan these ballots, or the card was not put through properly, said Sterling. Obviously the secretary and our whole office is perturbed, to say the least, that this was allowed to happen in that county. He described it as too important of an issue to have allowed to happen this way and said that, as such, the secretary of state would seek the resignation of Floyd Countys election director.
Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger said Tuesday an audit of the state’s voting machines found no evidence of tampering.
Raffensperger said in a statement announcing the completion of the audit that there was “no sign of foul play.”
He ordered Pro V&V, a U.S. Election Assistance Commission-certified testing laboratory, to conduct the audit on a random sample of Dominion Voting Systems machines statewide, which used forensic techniques and verification processes to confirm no tampering, cyberattacks or election hacking.
“Pro V&V found no evidence of the machines being tampered,” the secretary of state’s office said.
“We are glad but not surprised that the audit of the state’s voting machines was an unqualified success,” Raffensperger said in a statement. “Election security has been a top priority since day one of may administration. We have partnered with the Department of Homeland Security, the Georgia Cyber Center, Georgia Tech security experts, and wide range of other election security experts around the state and country so Georgia voters can be confident that their vote is safe and secure.”
The UPI contributed to this report.