|
> Clazy, looks like this election's Florida is Florida! > > Published on Thursday, November 18, 2004 by CommonDreams.org > 'Stinking Evidence' of Possible Election Fraud Found in Florida > by Thom Hartmann > > > There was something odd about the poll tapes. > > A "poll tape" is the phrase used to describe a printout from an optical scan > voting machine made the evening of an election, after the machine has read all > the ballots and crunched the numbers on its internal computer. It shows the > total results of the election in that location. The printout is signed by the > polling officials present in that precinct/location, and then submitted to the > county elections office as the official record of how the people in that > particular precinct had voted. (Usually each location has only one single > optical scanner/reader, and thus produces only one poll tape.) > > Bev Harris of www.blackboxvoting.org, the erstwhile investigator of electronic > voting machines, along with people from Florida Fair Elections, showed up at > Florida's Volusia County Elections Office on the afternoon of Tuesday, November > 16, 2004, and asked to see, under a public records request, each of the poll > tapes for the 100+ optical scanners in the precincts in that county. The > elections workers - having been notified in advance of her request - handed her > a set of printouts, oddly dated November 15 and lacking signatures. > > Bev pointed out that the printouts given her were not the original poll tapes > and had no signatures, and thus were not what she'd requested. Obligingly, they > told her that the originals were held in another location, the Elections > Office's Warehouse, and that since it was the end of the day they should meet > Bev the following morning to show them to her. > > Bev showed up bright and early the morning of Wednesday the 17th - well before > the scheduled meeting - and discovered three of the elections officials in the > Elections Warehouse standing over a table covered with what looked like poll > tapes. When they saw Bev and her friends, Bev told me in a telephone interview > less than an hour later, "They immediately shoved us out and slammed the door." > > In a way, that was a blessing, because it led to the stinking evidence. > > "On the porch was a garbage bag," Bev said, "and so I looked in it and, and lo > and behold, there were public record tapes." > > Thrown away. Discarded. Waiting to be hauled off. > > "It was technically stinking, in fact," Bev added, "because what they had done > was to have thrown some of their polling tapes, which are the official records > of the election, into the garbage. These were the ones signed by the poll > workers. These are something we had done an official public records request > for." > > When the elections officials inside realized that the people outside were going > through the trash, they called the police and one came out to challenge Bev. > > Kathleen Wynne, a www.blackboxvoting.org investigator, was there. > > "We caught the whole thing on videotape," she said. "I don't think you'll ever > see anything like this - Bev Harris having a tug of war with an election worker > over a bag of garbage, and he held onto it and she pulled on it, and it split > right open, spilling out those poll tapes. They were throwing away our > democracy, and Bev wasn't going to let them do it." > > As I was interviewing Bev just moments after the tussle, she had to get off the > phone, because, "Two police cars just showed up." > > She told me later in the day, in an on-air interview, that when the police > arrived, "We all had a vigorous debate on the merits of my public records > request." > > The outcome of that debate was that they all went from the Elections Warehouse > back to the Elections Office, to compare the original, November 2 dated and > signed poll tapes with the November 15 printouts the Elections Office had > submitted to the Secretary of State. A camera crew from www.votergate.tv met > them there, as well. > > And then things got even odder. > > "We were sitting there comparing the real [signed, original] tapes with the > [later printout] ones that were given us," Bev said, "and finding things missing > and finding things not matching, when one of the elections employees took a bin > full of things that looked like garbage - that looked like polling tapes, > actually - and passed by and disappeared out the back of the building." > > This provoked investigator Ellen Brodsky to walk outside and check the garbage > of the Elections Office itself. Sure enough - more original, signed poll tapes, > freshly trashed. > > "And I must tell you," Bev said, "that whatever they had taken out [the back > door] just came right back in the front door and we said, 'What are these > polling place tapes doing in your dumpster?'" > > A November 18 call to the Volusia County Elections Office found that Elections > Supervisor Deanie Lowe was unavailable and nobody was willing to speak on the > record with an out-of-state reporter. However, The Daytona Beach News (in > Volusia County), in a November 17th article by staff writer Christine Girardin, > noted, "Harris went to the Department of Elections' warehouse on State Road 44 > in DeLand on Tuesday to inspect original Nov. 2 polling place tapes, after being > given a set of reprints dated Nov. 15. While there, Harris saw Nov. 2 polling > place tapes in a garbage bag, heightening her concern about the integrity of > voting records." > > The Daytona Beach News further noted that, "[Elections Supervisor] Lowe > confirmed Wednesday some backup copies of tapes from the Nov. 2 election were > destined for the shredder," but pointed out that, according to Lowe, that was > simply because there were two sets of tapes produced on election night, each > signed. "One tape is delivered in one car along with the ballots and a memory > card," the News reported. "The backup tape is delivered to the elections office > in a second car." > > Suggesting that duplicates don't need to be kept, Lowe claims that Harris didn't > want to hear an explanation of why some signed poll tapes would be in the > garbage. "She's not wanting to listen to an explanation," Lowe told the News of > Harris. "She has her own ideas." > > But the Ollie North action in two locations on two days was only half of the > surprise that awaited Bev and her associates. When they compared the discarded, > signed, original tapes with the recent printouts submitted to the state and used > to tabulate the Florida election winners, Harris says a disturbing pattern > emerged. > > "The difference was hundreds of votes in each of the different places we > examined," said Bev, "and most of those were in minority areas." > > When I asked Bev if the errors they were finding in precinct after precinct were > random, as one would expect from technical, clerical, or computer errors, she > became uncomfortable. > > "You have to understand that we are non-partisan," she said. "We're not trying > to change the outcome of an election, just to find out if there was any voting > fraud." > > That said, Bev added: "The pattern was very clear. The anomalies favored George > W. Bush. Every single time." > > Of course finding possible voting "anomalies" in one Florida county doesn't mean > they'll show up in all counties. It's even conceivable there are innocent > explanations for both the mismatched counts and trashed original records; this > story undoubtedly will continue to play out. And, unless further investigation > demonstrates a pervasive and statewide trend toward "anomalous" election results > in many of Florida's counties, odds are none of this will change the outcome of > the election (which exit polls showed John Kerry winning in Florida). > > Nonetheless, Bev and her merry band are off to hit another county. > > As she told me on her cell phone while driving toward their next destination, > "We just put Volusia County and their lawyers on notice that they need to > continue to keep a number of documents under seal, including all of the memory > cards to the ballot boxes, and all of the signed poll tapes." > > Why? > > "Simple," she said. "Because we found anomalies indicative of fraud." >
|