Thanks, I missed that. But it doesn't really answer my question. Someone can tell us stats like "400 of 2600 people (15%) have been erroneously purged", so if you know that, what percentage were legitimately purged? The remaining 85%? [...]
I doubt the state of FL would release that information, since I'm sure it will disprove their case. However, referring again to the graphic, you can do the math:
Duvall County: 18 on purge list, 17 did not respond, 1 cleared as legitimate voter. So, the 17 had moved on (another state, another country, who knows?) or knew they weren't legal to vote, or simply moved to another FL address and did not get the letter. There is simply no way to know, other than tracking each of those 17 down.
Citrus County: 3 on purge list, 1 did not respond, 2 cleared as legitimate voter. Yes, this is probably the worst example for FL's argument.
Miami-Dade County: 1638 on purge list, 1243 did not respond, 385 cleared as legitimate voter. In this case the math does not add up, so it looks like they identified 10 unqualified voters. Doing similar math on the other larger counties shows 2 unqualified voters in Broward County, 1 in Charlotte County, 3 in Orange County, 1 in Brevard County, and 1 in Pinellas county, for a total of 18 valid hits out of some 2150 shots -- with some 400 definitely invalid hits (those that 'proved' themselves legitimate), and some 1,700 that did not respond at all for whatever reason.
Those are really bad stats. I understand the desire to 'clean up' the registration rolls, but all the evidence (and lack thereof) indicates the zeal to do so is not based on a real problem, but an imagined -- or, more likely, concocted -- one.