54DAYS TO JUNE 7 ELECTION
13OBSERVER ORGANIZATIONS REGISTERED
12+CANDIDATE EXCEL EXPORTS ACCESSIBLE
10CEC STAFF IDENTIFIED BY NAME

The Discovery

OSINT VERIFIED As part of OWL's ongoing audit of Armenian government digital infrastructure, we ran a Wayback Machine CDX sweep against elections.am -- the official website of Armenia's Central Election Commission. What we found is that the June 7, 2026 parliamentary election is already fully loaded into the system, catalogued as generalId=131.

The election has not happened yet. Campaigning has barely begun. But the CEC's website already contains downloadable Excel exports of candidate lists, a full registry of observer organizations with member data, and identifiable CEC staff names -- all accessible through predictable URL patterns that require no authentication.

Fifty-four days before Armenians go to the polls, the infrastructure that will run their election is already leaking data.

What Is Exposed

CONFIRMED The elections.am website exposes several categories of election data through publicly accessible URLs:

The Excel exports are the most concerning. Candidate lists and observer member rolls are being served as downloadable spreadsheets. Anyone who can construct the correct URL -- and the URL pattern is predictable once you have one example -- can download these files. There is no authentication gate. There is no access control. The data is simply there, waiting to be collected.

The Observer List

CONFIRMED Thirteen organizations have registered as election observers for the June 7 vote. Each registration includes a downloadable Excel file containing the names of their observer members:

# ORGANIZATION REG ID TYPE
1Armenian Public TV#24STATE MEDIA
2CivilNet#26INDEPENDENT
3Aravot (aravot.am)#27INDEPENDENT
4Kentron TV#29PRIVATE MEDIA
5Shant TV#49PRIVATE MEDIA
6Radiolur#50STATE MEDIA
7Mediahub.am#54INDEPENDENT
8Panorama.am#58INDEPENDENT
9Armenpress#62STATE MEDIA
10Infocom.am#64INDEPENDENT
11Sputnik Armenia#67RUSSIAN STATE MEDIA
12Aysor.am#73INDEPENDENT
13ABC Media#78INDEPENDENT

Notable patterns: Three Armenian state media outlets (Public TV, Radiolur, Armenpress) will observe the election run by the government they serve. Sputnik Armenia -- a Russian state media operation -- has observer status in an Armenian election. The independent outlets range from established platforms like CivilNet and Aravot to smaller digital operations.

Each of these 13 organizations has a downloadable Excel file on the CEC website listing their observer members by name. These are the people who will be inside polling stations on June 7. Their identities are publicly downloadable today.

The CEC Staff

IDENTIFIED The elections.am system reveals 10 Central Election Commission staff members by name. These are the officials who will administer the June 7 election:

CENTRAL ELECTION COMMISSION -- IDENTIFIED STAFF ================================================ 1. Gevorg Petrosyan 2. Elena Ayvazyan 3. Svetik Grigoryan 4. Lilia Hakobyan 5. Hermine Harutyunyan 6. Melanya Melkonyan 7. Gohar Balayan 8. Sona Sargsyan 9. Nune Karapetyan 10. Seda Ghukasyan SOURCE: elections.am public data (generalId=131) DATE: April 14, 2026 -- 54 days before election

These ten people will oversee the mechanics of an election in which the ruling Civil Contract party -- already accused of election interference, military voting pressure, and fake donor schemes -- seeks to retain power. Their names, their roles, and their presence in the system are all discoverable through a basic web audit.

Election Infrastructure Map

CONFIRMED Beyond the main elections.am portal, three additional subdomains form the election infrastructure:

ELECTIONS.AM -- Infrastructure Map | +-- elections.am (MAIN PORTAL) | |-- Election data: generalId=131 (June 7, 2026) | |-- Observer registrations with Excel downloads | |-- Candidate lists with Excel exports | | |-- National lists: candidateId 64235, 64246, 64250, 64254 | | +-- TEC lists: candidateId 64533 through 65803 | +-- CEC staff data | +-- my.elections.am | |-- VOTER PERSONAL PORTAL | +-- Individual voter data access | +-- online.elections.am | |-- ONLINE ELECTION SYSTEM | +-- Purpose: remote/electronic voting infrastructure | +-- testelearning.elections.am | |-- TEST ENVIRONMENT | |-- E-learning / training system for election staff | +-- "test" prefix indicates non-production system | +-- /.well-known/openid-configuration |-- AUTHENTICATION CONFIG EXPOSED |-- OpenID Connect discovery document +-- Reveals auth endpoints, token URLs, supported scopes DISCOVERY METHOD: Wayback Machine CDX API + subdomain enumeration

The my.elections.am voter portal is particularly sensitive. This is where individual Armenian citizens access their voter registration data. The online.elections.am subdomain suggests electronic voting infrastructure. The testelearning.elections.am subdomain -- with its "test" prefix -- indicates a non-production environment that may contain training data, test accounts, or configuration details that mirror the production system.

The exposed OpenID configuration at /.well-known/openid-configuration reveals the authentication architecture: which endpoints handle logins, how tokens are issued, what scopes are supported. This is a roadmap for anyone attempting to understand -- or exploit -- the election system's authentication layer.

Who Designed This System

CONFIRMED Armenia's electoral system was designed under the influence of Daniel Ioannisyan and his organization, the Union of Informed Citizens. Ioannisyan's NGO has received $228,000 in funding from the Open Society Foundations -- George Soros's grant-making network.

The Union of Informed Citizens did not merely observe Armenian elections. They shaped the rules. Ioannisyan was instrumental in designing the electoral framework that governs how Armenian elections are conducted -- the registration systems, the observation protocols, the data management procedures. The man funded by foreign foundations wrote the rules of the game that determines who governs Armenia.

This is the same pattern OWL has documented across Armenian government institutions: Western-funded NGO operatives do not just monitor or advise. They design the systems themselves. And the systems they design are the ones now leaking data 54 days before a national election.

$228,000 from the Open Society Foundations bought influence over the rules that 2.6 million Armenian voters will live under. Whether that influence was benign or malign, the fact remains: a foreign-funded organization wrote the electoral rulebook for a sovereign nation. Armenians were not consulted about whether they wanted George Soros's grantees designing their democracy.

Why This Matters

ELECTION INTEGRITY With 54 days until Armenia's parliamentary election, here is what we already know:

This is not a post-election audit. This is a pre-election warning. The infrastructure is already visible. The data is already accessible. Any state actor, political party, or motivated individual with basic OSINT skills can monitor this system in real time -- watching for changes to candidate lists, new observer registrations, modifications to staff assignments, and alterations to the voting infrastructure.

Civil Contract has already been accused of election interference in previous cycles: military voting pressure where soldiers were forced to photograph their ballots, fake donor schemes to circumvent campaign finance limits, and systematic use of state resources for party purposes. The June 7 election infrastructure is now visible to anyone who wants to watch. Any manipulation will leave digital fingerprints.

OWL Election Watch

OWL will monitor elections.am infrastructure daily from now until June 7, 2026. Every change to candidate lists will be archived. Every new observer registration will be documented. Every modification to CEC staff assignments will be recorded. We have already taken baseline snapshots of all accessible data as of April 14, 2026.

If candidates are added or removed, we will report it. If observer organizations are registered or deregistered, we will report it. If the voter portal at my.elections.am changes its authentication or data exposure, we will report it. If Excel exports are modified between now and election day, we will have the before-and-after comparison.

Armenia's elections belong to the Armenian people -- not to the party in power, not to the CEC staff who administer them, and not to the foreign-funded organizations that designed the rules. Fifty-four days from now, 2.6 million voters will decide Armenia's future. OWL will make sure the infrastructure they vote through is watched by someone who answers to no one.

54 DAYS. EVERY CHANGE DOCUMENTED. EVERY EXPORT ARCHIVED. WE ARE WATCHING.