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GBI opening criminal investigation of alleged computer crimes at request of Kemp's office

Even as the GBI opened its investigation, the Democratic Party of Georgia held a news conference strongly denouncing Kemp's allegations.

ATLANTA -- The GBI's Georgia Cyber Crime Center is opening a criminal investigation of alleged computer crimes at the request of the Georgia Secretary of State's office.

According to a statement from the GBI early Monday afternoon, the allegations are of "computer crimes related to the Secretary of State's website(s)."

Secretary of State Brian Kemp's office reiterated on Monday morning allegations of "failed attempts to hack" the state's voter registration system against the Democratic Party of Georgia.

In addition to his position as Secretary of State, Kemp is also the Republican nominee for governor, and engaged in one of the nation's most-watched races with less than 24 hours until the polls open on Election Day.

According to an email from spokesperson Candice Broce, the Georgia Secretary of State's office was meeting with officials from the federal Department of Homeland Security, the FBI and the Georgia Bureau of Investigation about what she called "these failed attempts to hack the My Voter Page and online voter registration system."

This came one day after the office issued a statement accusing the state's Democratic Party of hacking the voter registration system.

RELATED | Kemp's office opens investigation after accusing Dems of trying to hack voting system

According to a New York Times report, the Secretary of State's investigation was prompted by an email Kemp's office had obtained which showed someone named "Rachel Small" was talking about "trying to hack the Secretary of State's system."

Sunday evening, the Democratic Party of Georgia responded via email. They said Rachel Small is a volunteer for the Democratic Party of Georgia who works on their voter protection hotline.

They supplied an email exchange between Small and Richard Wright, who is not affiliated with the Democratic Party. Wright sent information to Small on Saturday morning alleging issues he had discovered with the My Voter Page.

According to information supplied by the Democratic Party of Georgia on the email exchange, once she received the email from Wright, Small forwarded it on to Sara Ghazal, voter protection director for the Democratic Party of Georgia.

In both emails, Wright and Small pointed out that individuals are able to "download anyone's data," which would include drivers license information and the last four digits of an individual's social security number.

In a statement on Sunday, Democratic Party executive director Rebecca DeHart recalled that a data breach in the Secretary of State's office in 2015 forced them to offer credit monitoring to more than 6 million voters statewide.

MORE | GA Secy. of State offers free credit monitoring following data breach

"It is also a fact that Brian Kemp is the last person who can be trusted on cybersecurity, given his record of leaking the personal information and social security numbers of 6 million Georgians," DeHart's statement said. "Brian Kemp is desperate to save his failing campaign, and it's likely we'll see even more of his abuses of power as the election nears, but Georgians will keep working hard, knocking on doors, making phone calls, and voting to make sure he doesn't get a promotion."

Democratic Party spokesperson Maggie Chambers demanded that the Secretary of State's office cease their accusations against the party, going as far as to suggest that the action is being taken by the Kemp campaign.

"As is abundantly clear from these emails, it was Richard Wright, not Rachel Small, who performed the actions described. The Kemp campaign has no case and must immediately retract their defamatory accusations," Chambers said.

RELATED | Over 2 million people voted early in Georgia | Candidates for governor make final push to voters

VERIFY | Can Brian Kemp run for governor while he is secretary of state?

On Monday, Kemp's spokesperson insisted that the problems highlighted by the Democratic Party's emails could not be replicated by their own technical staff.

"To be clear, our security team, which includes private sector vendors, were unable to replicate the vulnerabilities alleged by third parties," Broce said in an email to 11Alive News on Monday morning.

At a news conference Monday, state Democratic chairman Dubose Porter was even more forceful with his statement on Kemp and his tactics.

"He has yet to provide any evidence any possible hack by the Democratic Party, and the reason is that it does not exist," Porter said from the steps of the Georgia State Capitol building. "He's trying to scare people from going to the polls tomorrow. And what we're doing is saying don't reward this bad behavior -- go vote!"

Porter was joined by David Worley, the Democratic appointee to the state's election board.

"As the day wore on yesterday, it became clear -- and as evidence and other reporting came out -- it became very clear that the Democratic Party of Georgia did exactly what it was supposed to do," Worley said. "They had some information referred to them about vulnerabilities in the voting system, they referred it to experts. That information got to lawyers who sent it to the FBI -- before Brian Kemp even contacted the FBI. That was what the Democratic Party was supposed to do."

Kemp's Democratic opponent in the governor's race, Democrat Stacey Abrams, appeared on CNN's 'State of the Union' Sunday and called Kemp's announcement a "desperate attempt on the part of my opponent to distract people from" judicial rulings against decisions he had previously made as secretary of state.

On Friday, a federal district judge ruled against Kemp. In that ruling, the judge said the state would have to make it easier for voters who had previously been flagged under the secretary's 'Exact Match' rules to vote.

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