UpdatedMon, May 3, 2021 at 4:37 pm ET
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Harri Hursti, the co-founder of ROMmon and a computer scientist, was chosen by Secretary of State Bill Gardner and New Hampshire Attorney General John Formella to be the state s choice on the Windham 2020 election audit. (Tony Schinella/Patch)
CONCORD, NH A computer programmer who has raised red flags for a number of years about the hackability of some electronic voting machines, including the optical scanning machines used in New Hampshire, has been named as the state s representative for the Windham 2020 election audit.
Harri Hursti, the co-founder of ROMmon and a computer scientist from Finland, has been chosen by Secretary of State Bill Gardner and New Hampshire Attorney General John Formella. Formella and Gardner informed Windham Town Counsel Bernard Campbell as well as Mark Lindeman, the acting-co-director of Verified Voting, who was chosen by the Windham Board of Selectmen last week, of their choice on Monday.
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