Sec. 16. To minimize the delay in the counting of the vote, canvassing must begin immediately upon the closing of the polls and continue without interruption until all votes are canvassed and all certificates of the vote required by section 6 of this chapter are completed and delivered to the persons entitled to receive the certificates. [Pre-1986 Recodification Citation: 3-1-25-16 part.] IC 3-12-2.5 Chapter 2.5. Repealed IC 3-12-3 Chapter 3. Counting Ballot Card Votes 3-12-3-1 Counting of ballot cards 3-12-3-1.1 Chapter establishes standards to define vote 3-12-3-1.2 Closing of all polls located in one room before vote count 3-12-3-1.5 Protest; marking and signing of protested ballots 3-12-3-2 Counted ballot cards; processing 3-12-3-2.2 Securing and returning electronic poll books, voting systems to county election board 3-12-3-2.5 Central counting location 3-12-3-3 Proceedings at central counting location; direction and observation; open to public 3-12-3-4 Opening of ballot cards container and removal of contents 3-12-3-5 Damaged or defective ballot card; absentee ballot of absent uniformed services voter or overseas voter; failure of tabulating machine 3-12-3-6 Duplicate ballot card to be clearly labeled and bear serial number 3-12-3-7 Duplicate ballot card to be counted 3-12-3-8 Votes to be counted manually if automatic tabulating machines test not conducted 3-12-3-9 Manual counting of ballot cards; compliance with tabulating standards 3-12-3-10 Procedures after vote totals have been taken and certified; ballot cards and automatic tabulating machines; disposition; inspector's oath 3-12-3-11 Official return of precinct; publication 3-12-3-12 Casting of votes by absentee voters; counting 3-12-3-12.5 Vote count to continue to completion 3-12-3-12.7 Required use of a universal serial bus (USB) drive containing anti-malware protection features or other approved data storage transfer methods to upload unofficial precinct election results 3-12-3-13 Recount; procedure 3-12-3-14 Repealed
‹ Prev All Indiana sections Next ›
Lexace provides legal information, not legal advice, and no attorney–client relationship is created. Statute text is provided for general information and may not reflect the most recent amendments; verify against the official state code.