Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger's office announced Wednesday it has opened an investigation into Coffee County's handling of the election recount.
Raffensperger re-certified the statewide election results on Monday afternoon, after reporters had been told the re-certification would be done the prior Friday. Coffee County was the reason the certification had to be pushed.
While the county's hand audit was off by one vote compared to the county's original results, the machine recount was off by 51 votes. It was possible that the same batch of 50 ballots was inadvertently scanned twice, but the county's election director, Misty Martin, could not say for sure, according to Raffensperger's office.
The county issued a letter that "blamed the voting system for the 51-vote discrepancy, but Ms. Martin could not specify what machine problems were encountered."
The secretary of state's office told Martin she needed to figure out the issue, resolve it, and, if necessary, re-certify the results, but Martin said she wanted to use the election night results, which was not the protocol.
On Friday afternoon, Chris Harvey, the elections director in Raffensperger's office, called Martin, who told him she was experiencing an issue with the scanners. Harvey dispatched a Dominion tech.
Later, when Harvey tried to call Martin back to check on the progress, he couldn't get a hold of her, and later learned from Dominion that the county Board of Elections told Martin to go home and resume working Monday.
On Monday, Raffensperger's office told Martin and the county they needed to resume counting as soon as possible -- not noon as they planned -- because the state needed to re-certify. Martin did that.
"Every other county was able to complete this task within the given time limits," the press release said. "In some cases, counties realized they made mistakes in scanning ballots and had to rescan, or realized they neglected to scan some ballots and had to correct that error. But nonetheless, those counties completed the recount on time."
-ABC News' Quinn Scanlan