The Roy Moore campaign filed a complaint Wednesday to have the election certification delayed "until a full investigation of voter fraud is conducted," according to a statement from his campaign.

But Alabama Secretary of State John Merrill told The Associated Press Wednesday evening that he has no intention of delaying the canvassing board meeting.

"It is not going to delay certification, and Doug Jones will be certified (Thursday) at 1 p.m., and he will be sworn in by Vice President Pence on the third of January," Merrill said.

Merrill repeated that Thursday morning on CNN.

Moore's complaint includes affidavits from three "national election integrity experts" who claim election fraud occurred and a statement from Moore saying he successfully completed a polygraph test confirming the representations of misconduct made against him during the campaign are "completely false."

Moore has not conceded the election more than two weeks after he was defeated by Democrat Doug Jones.

"This is not a Republican or Democrat issue as election integrity should matter to everyone," Moore said. "We call on Secretary of State Merrill to delay certification until there is a thorough investigation of what three independent election experts agree took place: election fraud sufficient to overturn the outcome of the election."

The complaint was filed in the Montgomery Circuit Court Wednesday on behalf of Roy S. Moore and Judge Roy Moore for U.S. Senate, according to the campaign statement.

The campaign claimed three national election integrity experts all concluded "with a reasonable degree of statistical and mathematical certainty...election fraud occurred." The experts said the irregularities in the 20 Jefferson County precincts alone are enough to reverse the outcome of the election, the campaign said.

Each expert filed affidavits in the complaint filed Wednesday.

The complaints says both Moore and the people of Alabama "will suffer irreparable harm if the election results are certified without preserving and investigating all the evidence of potential fraud."

One of the three experts, Richard Charnin, said the possibility of the election results in the Jefferson County precincts happening naturally is "less than one in 15 billion," according to the campaign.

"It's appalling that the Democrat Senate Majority PAC and the Republican Senate Leadership Fund both spent millions to run false and malicious ads against me in this campaign," Moore said.

The complaint also mentions rumors of people being bused into the state from across the state to vote for Jones and claims out of state ID's were accepted at some polling places.

Roy Moore Complaint by KentFaulk on Scribd