A conservative researcher whose theories have often been rejected by Georgia election overseers and who once pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor charge of voyeurism is emerging as a central figure in the investigation that culminated in the FBIās shocking seizure of 2020 election records from Fulton County, Georgia, in late January.
The researcher, Kevin Moncla, has tried repeatedly to prove that the 2020 vote in Fulton County was tainted by fraud. Although many of his claims have been discredited or debunked, theyāve continued to be cited by President Donald Trump and those connected to Cleta Mitchell, a lawyer who helped Trump try to overturn the 2020 election and publicly pressed his administration to reinvestigate it.
Last week, Moncla told ProPublica heād been interviewed twice by āinvestigators, attorneys of various offices, who work on behalf of the U.S. governmentā regarding his claims that proof of fraud could be found in Fulton Countyās 2020 voting records. He said he provided them with data backing complaints heās filed to Georgiaās State Election Board.
Other conservative activists linked to Mitchell have also claimed that Monclaās work helped fuel government investigations related to Fulton County.
According to a recording of a December video conference call obtained by ProPublica, two activists associated with Mitchellās Election Integrity Network alleged that the Justice Department had used files and exhibits from Monclaās research in suing Fulton County for the same records seized by the FBI. The DOJ filed the suit the day after purportedly soliciting Monclaās materials, the activists said.
āThey went to Kevin Moncla for that information,ā Garland Favorito, a leader in the Election Integrity Network, said on the call. (Moncla denied speaking with Justice Department officials but wouldnāt say which agency he dealt with.) Favorito also claimed to have sent information to the DOJ himself.
āThe DOJ knows who to call to get the information that they need,ā he said. āI’ll be honest with you, they rely on a lot of our stuff.ā
A spokesperson for the DOJ declined to answer questions related to the claims by Moncla, Favorito and Mitchell, instead referring ProPublica to televised comments from Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche in which he said that the Trump administration is āinvestigating issues around elections to make sure we have completely fair and appropriate elections.ā Blanche also said he could not comment on criminal investigations.
Mitchell didnāt respond to a request for comment from ProPublica, but on the day of the FBI raid, she pointed to information in a report authored by Moncla as the basis for the action.

āThis is THE answer to everyoneās question, āwhy did the FBI raid Fulton Countyās election warehouse?āā Mitchell wrote on the social media platform X, linking to Monclaās report.
Favorito declined to answer specific questions, saying that heād āhad no contact with the FBI.ā
It is not known what evidence the federal government used to show probable cause for the raid because the underlying affidavit was sealed.
Last week, Fulton County commissioners sued to unseal the affidavit, arguing that ādebunked theoriesā from Moncla and Favorito had āsupported the federal warrant.ā
Experts said that if the affidavit was based on information sourced from the activists, it would raise questions about the raidās legitimacy.
āIf the underlying affidavit is based on thoroughly debunked assertions about unlawful activity, I think that is at least the basis for arguing that the probable cause does not exist,ā said Danielle Lang, the vice president of voting rights at the Campaign Legal Center.
Over the weekend, the judge ordered the affidavit to be unsealed by the close of business on Tuesday.
The 263-page report by Moncla, published in early January, is part of a yearslong campaign by him, Mitchell and others to get access to Fulton Countyās 2020 election records. He acknowledged that not much in the report is new, but rather a compilation of complaints he and the other contributors have filed to Georgiaās State Election Board over the past five years.
Many of the complaints have been dismissed by the board, after investigations by Georgiaās Republican secretary of state. Even when investigators have validated aspects of complaints, theyāve found no evidence of malfeasance.
In one high-profile instance, investigators reported that a small number of inconsistencies were ānot due to the intentional misconduct by Fulton Countyās election staffā but due to āhuman error in entering the data,ā and that these ādid not affect the result of the 2020 General Election Fulton County, which were confirmed as accurate.ā
Moncla said he didnāt trust the secretary of stateās conclusions, calling him āa politician who doesnāt have any fucking credibility,ā and said his own research proved the issues with Fulton Countyās 2020 vote went beyond human error.
The secretary of stateās office didn’t respond to questions about Monclaās criticism.
Trump and his lawyers have continued to cite Monclaās claims about election fraud in Fulton County even as unsavory incidents in his past have surfaced and other conservatives have called him untrustworthy.
In 2004, Moncla pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor voyeurism charge and was subsequently ordered by a jury to pay $3.25 million in damages after secretly filming guests in his home bathroom.
Moncla told ProPublica the matter had no bearing on his election-related research. āThat has nothing to do with this,ā he said. āThat was 20 years ago in a divorce custody battle.ā
In a case stemming from the 2020 election, a lawyer for the conservative website The Gateway Pundit called Moncla āa goddamned fraudā and āa known fabricator,ā according to a court filing. The messages were revealed in a defamation lawsuit against the website, which had accused two election workers in Fulton County of committing fraud. One of the siteās reporters had communicated with Moncla. The case ended in a settlement, the terms of which were not disclosed. Trumpās lawyer Rudy Giuliani was ordered to pay around $150 million for repeating related discredited claims against the two election workers.
Moncla said people were free to examine his research and make up their own minds. āI donāt want people to trust me,ā he said. āI want people to trust the countyās records and factsā and the report, which he described as āmeticulously documented.ā
Moncla said heād been surprised by the FBIās raid on the Fulton County election center, which he found out about via Fox News. He also said he thought his report was being āexploitedā for political gain and that what heās found shouldnāt be the basis for a criminal action.
āIām not saying that Trump won the election. Iām saying that Georgiaās election system is broken and needs to be fixed,ā he said. āI donāt want anyone to go to jail. I donāt want anyone to be hurt.ā




