Within the voter fraud lawsuit Roy Moore filed late yesterday is an affidavit in which he says he took a polygraph examination that confirmed he did not know or have sexual contact with three of his accusers.

The affidavit said he took the examination sometime after the Senate election but gave few other details, other than to say it concerned sexual misconduct allegations made against him by Leigh Corfman, Beverly Nelson and Tina Johnson. Those three women accused Moore of a range of sexual contact in the 1970s, 80s and 90s.

Johnson told AL.com that she could see how Moore might not remember grabbing her butt in his office when she was there with her mother in the early 1990s, signing court documents.

"He might have forgotten about me the day I left his office, but the good Lord knows he did it," she said. "I often wondered if he remembered he did it. I remember it because it was something I would never forget."

She does not believe he passed an unbiased polygraph test, nor that he doesn't remember sexual contact with Corfman and Nelson.

"He can say that if he wants to, but those girls, in my opinion, are not lying," she said. "There's too much truth in their story."

Johnson also pointed out that Moore is a first cousin of her brother-in-law, so it's unlikely that he "did not know" her as stated in the affidavit.

Gloria Allred, attorney for Nelson, said her client has volunteered to testify under oath about her claim that Moore tried to force her to perform a sex act on him when she was a teen and he was in his early 30s.

"Moore's desperate efforts to challenge this election and cast doubt on Beverly and the other women who allege that they were victims were and will continue to be unsuccessful," said Allred in an emailed statement.

Leigh Corfman could not be reached for comment.

In the affidavit, Moore did not say who the polygraph examiner was, just that the person was "a licensed member of the Alabama Association of Polygraph Examiners, ('AAPE'), whom I had never met previously."

Moore's campaign chairman, Bill Armistead, and his attorney, Trent Garmon, have not answered AL.com's requests for further information about the polygraph examination.

The Alabama Association of Polygraph Examiners is a professional organization. It is not affiliated with the Alabama Polygraph Examiners Board, which is the state entity that licenses professional polygraph examiners. In order for a person to legally administer polygraph tests in Alabama, that person must be licensed through the state board.

"Most members of the Association are licensed Alabama polygraph examiners, but not all of them," said Brian Williams, past president of the Association and appointed legal counsel to the Board. "You can be a member of the association without being a state licensed polygraph examiner."

He said Alabama has some of the highest standards in the country when it comes to licensing polygraph examiners, but individual tests can vary.

"Without having known who gave (Moore) his test and which type of test was used, and specifically how the questions were formulated, I can't give an opinion," on the polygraph test that Moore said he took.

Joan Beck, with the Alabama Polygraph Examiners Board, said there are about 105 licensed polygraph examiners in the state. The bulk of them are law enforcement examiners.

She said she is often contacted by people wanting the names and numbers of private polygraph examiners in their area. She said she was not contacted by Roy Moore or anyone who said they were part of the Moore campaign.

The quality of a polygraph can depend, she said.

"Your surgery is as good as the surgeon you have, and it's the same with the polygraph," she said. "Alabama has very good examiners. In most cases they are correct."

To be licensed in Alabama, polygraph examiners must take a five-part test that includes written and oral components and complete a six-month internship under an experienced polygraph examiner.

State law does not strictly define the types of questions that must be asked on a test.

The affidavit was included in a lawsuit Moore filed late yesterday, seeking to delay certification of the election and claiming "systemic election fraud."

Alabama Secretary of State John Merrill has said the state canvassing board will meet as scheduled at 1 p.m. today to certify that Doug Jones won the election.