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Nbadan
12-09-2004, 12:50 PM
Election fraud or just suspicions?
Theodore D. Graves
Thursday, December 9, 2004

If the United States were a Third World country, our Nov. 2 election would not pass certification by international monitors. As former President Carter has explained on National Public Radio, we lack a central, nonpartisan election commission to guarantee fair and equal treatment of all voters nationwide, our candidates do not receive free and equal access to the media to deliver their message, voting procedures are not uniform throughout the county, and there is not a "paper trail" available in all cases to guarantee an honest recount where called for.

To insure against fraud in the counting and reporting of election results, international monitors depend on the same kind of election-day exit polls as were conducted in the United States. Unlike earlier polls that attempt to predict a future election outcome, which are therefore subject to all manner of potential errors, exit polls estimate the characteristics of a population which has already voted. It is as if you had a huge jar of M&Ms and you took out several handfuls at random, counted the proportion of each color in your sample, and knowing the total number of M&Ms in the jar, used these results to estimate how many were red, brown, green or yellow in the jar as a whole. If your sample was reasonably large and randomly drawn from the jar, it would estimate these totals with a high degree of accuracy.

In our own recent presidential election, exit polls were conducted nationwide for the media by two of the world's most respected professional exit-polling firms: Edison Media Research and Mitofsky International. Pollsters were sent to carefully selected, representative polling locations throughout each state. They then interviewed about every fifth voter emerging from the polling place during random periods throughout the day. Total samples from each state were large -- about 2,000 or more voters -- and the error of estimate was small -- plus or minus less than half of 1 percent in 99 cases out of 100.

By agreement among the networks, the results of these exit polls were not reported to the public on election day, so as not to influence the ongoing voting process or lead to embarrassing "premature" calling of outcomes by the networks, as happened for Florida in 2000. But they were shared with -- and believed by -- campaign officials and by the candidates themselves, and they were widely reported over the Internet. As we now know, on the basis of these exit polls, Kerry was expected to win.

Then the "actual" tallies began to pour in.

This was the "November surprise." In state after state, Kerry saw his expected lead shrink or vanish. And when he lost Ohio -- which exit polls estimated he would win by 4.5 percent -- he "lost" the election. According to Steven Freeman, who teaches research methods at the University of Pennsylvania, for 10 exit polls among the 11 battleground states he analyzed to be this far off as a result of random error, particularly when all discrepancies favored Bush, is essentially impossible.

As officials testified this week at a forum called by Rep. John Conyers Jr., D-Mich., and for an investigation by Congress' General Accounting Office, electronic voting theft is incredibly easy. There have also been widespread reports of election irregularities -- more than 38,000 nationwide at last count, according to Verified Voting Foundation's election-incident reporting system. Most of those irregularities appear to favor Republicans.

If this were an election taking place in a Third World dictatorship, or a former part of the Soviet Union (Georgia and Ukraine, for recent examples) people would be in the streets screaming "fraud" and demanding the president's resignation.

Democratic pundits have been wringing their hands, trying to figure out the best tactics for future victory. The answer is simple: Make sure every eligible voter gets a chance to vote, and that every vote gets recorded, counted and accurately reported -- and that a secure paper trail exists to ensure the validity of any required recount.

Suspicions of election fraud undermine the very foundation of our democracy and need to be addressed.

The San Francisco Gate (http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/2004/12/09/EDGSVA88P51.DTL)

Here are some excellent links to read up on the 04 election fraud...

Documentation that Kerry won Ohio
http://web.northnet.org/minstrel/supreme.htm


Strong Evidence of fraud in Miami County, Ohio
http://web.northnet.org/minstrel/miami.htm

High undercounts in Kerry precincts and low undercounts in Bush precincts in Cincinati
http://web.northnet.org/minstrel/cincinnati.htm

Indications of Fraud in several Ohio counties
www.flcv.vom/fraudioh.html

Indications of possible ballot box stuffing in S.W. Ohio counties
http://www.flcv.com/swohio.html
http://web.northnet.org/minstrel/warren.htm

Favoritism in the Suburbs http://web.northnet.org/minstrel/suburbs.htm

Stealing Votes in Cleveland http://web.northnet.org/minstrel/cleveland.htm

(this is without the huge amount of voter suppression that has been previously documented)

Nbadan
12-09-2004, 01:09 PM
New Mexico Was Blue - 18,635 Missing E-votes

In New Mexico, the election was very close. The official canvas at http://www.sos.state.nm.us/PDF/Gensumm_04.pdf shows just a 5988 vote win for Bush over Kerry. But also in the canvas is evidence of 18,997 missing votes. If one takes the 775,301 total voters at the top of the canvas and subtracts the presidential totals of all candidates (Kerry 370,942; Bush 376,930; Cobb 1226; Peroutka 771; Badnarik 2382; Nader 4053), one will find a nearly 19,000 vote discrepancy. It has been known. The question is from where and how did the discrepancy occur.

The good thing about New Mexico is that Democrats are running the show and have nothing to hide. They are likely as perplexed by the data as anyone else. Try getting some of these numbers from Ohio and Florida, for example, and you will get a royal runaround. I know -- I've asked. But here in New Mexico we have a full canvass posted with county figures broken down by absentee, early voting, and election day precincts. It's a simple matter to simply take a county's total voters and subtract the presidential votes cast to discover exactly how many votes are missing in each county. My first guess was that it would be fairly uniform and undecipherable, just another dead-end.

I was wrong, and I was startled. There was a discrepancy, a big discrepancy, and it lay flatly at the feet of the counties using electronic voting technology. There are only 33 counties in New Mexico. In the eleven optical scan counties there were a total of only 338 missing votes, a miniscule percentage of 0.47 of the total voters. But in 22 the e-voting counties, there were an astonishing 18,659 missing votes, a 2.65 missing vote percentage. What is more, there is a strong correlation of missing votes to how strongly a county voted for Kerry. In general, the more people voted for Kerry, the more missing votes added up.

Only Danaher and Sequoia have e-voting contracts in the state and both faired poorly. Counties with predominant Sequoia e-voting returned a 3.09% missing vote rate, while predominant Danaher Controls counties came in at 2.55%. DeBaca is the lone optical scan county out of place. It only had just over 1000 votes, so either there is misplaced batch or one of their three scanners needs repair. Only two predominately e-voting counties rated below a 2% missing rate, Lea County with the highest percentage (79%) of Bush voters in the state and Valencia who went Bush (56%) and who se primary system is Sequoia's Edge rather than the AVC Advantage that dominates other e-voting counties.

Here are the full results ranked by percentage of missing votes:

County:......Kerry%:.no.miss:..%miss:..Voting System
DeBaca:......28%:.....91:......8.39%:..OpScan ES&S (3)
McKinley:....63%:.....1600:....7.20%:..E-Voting: Sequoia AVC (115) & Edge (33), ES&S Optech (2)
Cibola:......52%:.....516:.....6.45%:..E-Voting: Danaher Shouptronic (53), Sequoia AVC Edge (23)
Mora:........66%:.....175:.....5.83%:..E-Voting: Danaher Shouptronic (20)
San Miguel:..72%:.....716:.....5.58%:..E-Voting: Danaher Shouptronic (55)
Colfax:......47%:.....291:.....4.65%:..E-Voting: Danaher Shouptronic (25), ES&S Optech (2) & Eagle (2)
Taos:........74%:.....647:.....4.18%:..E-Voting: Danaher Shouptronic (52)
Rio Arriba:..65%:.....614:.....3.93%:..E-Voting: Sequoia AVC (60)
Socorro:.....51%:.....307:.....3.76%:..E-Voting Danaher Shouptronic (45)
Guadalupe:...59%:.....87:......3.70%:..E-Voting: Sequoia AVC (18)
Torrance:....37%:.....208:.....3.10%:..E-Voting: Sequoia AVC (23), Seq. Edge (1), ES&S Optech (2)
Sandoval:....48%:.....1322:....2.88%:..E-Voting: Danaher Shouptronic (150), Sequoia AVC Edge (25)
Dona Ana:....51%:.....1817:....2.85%:..E-Voting: Sequoia AVC (200), Sequoia Edge (75)
Lincoln:.....31%:.....259:.....2.79%:..E-Voting: Sequoia AVC (55), Sequoia Edge (1)
Otero:.......31%:.....562:.....2.64%:..E-Voting: Sequoia AVC (100)
Grant:.......53%:.....359:.....2.61%:..E-Voting: Danaher Shouptronic (64), Sequoia AVC Edge (26)
Sierra:......37%:.....129:.....2.44%:..E-Voting: Sequoia AVC (20)
Santa Fe:....71%:.....1582:....2.33%:..E-Voting: Sequoia AVC (238)
Bernalillo:..51%:.....5806:....2.21%:..E-Voting: Danaher Shoup. (1098), Seq. Edge (300), ES&S Op-Tech (16)
Chaves:......31%:.....451:.....2.04%:..E-Voting: Sequoia AVC (120), ES&S Optech (5)
San Juan:....33%:.....932:.....2.03%:..E-Voting: Danaher Shouptronic (188), ES&S I-Votronic (25) & OpTech (1)
Harding:.....40%:.....5:.......0.77%:..OpScan: ES&S Optech (3)
Lea:.........20%:.....136:.....0.74%:..E-Voting: Danaher Shouptronic (100), ES&S Optech (2)
Union:.......22%:.....13:......0.69%:..OpScan: ES&S Optech (20)
Catron:......28%:.....13:......0.65%:..OpScan: ES&S Optech (6)
Hidalgo:.....44%:.....11:......0.56%:..OpScan: ES&S Optech (10)
Valencia:....43%:.....143:.....0.55%:..E-Voting: Sequoia Edge (115); Danaher Shoup. (97), ES&S Optech (6)
Luna:........44%:.....32:......0.42%:..OpScan: ES&S Optech (16)
Eddy:........34%:.....70:......0.34%:..OpScan: ES&S Optech (50)
Los Alamos:..46%:.....35:......0.31%:..OpScan: ES&S Optech (18)
Quay:........35%:.....12:......0.29%:..OpScan: ES&S Optech (15)
Roosevelt:...29%:.....19:......0.27%:..OpScan: ES&S Optech (23)
Curry:.......25%:.....37:......0.26%:..OpScan: ES&S Optech (42)


Quite obviously, with the lone exception of DeBaca, we find all the op-scan counties (with a paper trail) bunched at the bottom with very few missing votes and correspondingly small missing percentage. All but two of the e-voting counties break well above them with the strongest Kerry counties generally settling near the top and the strongest Bush counties dropping near the bottom. If we break the e-voting counties down into county groups according to how strongly they voted Kerry, indeed we find a sliding scale:

Strong Kerry: (7 counties): 3.89% missing votes
Favor Kerry: (5 counties): 2.47% missing votes
Favor Bush: (3 counties): 2.24% missing votes
Strong Bush: (7 counties): 2.08% missing votes


The seven counties that were Strong Kerry look like this:

Taos: 74% Kerry 4.18% missing votes
San Miguel: 72% Kerry 5.58% missing votes
Santa Fe: 71% Kerry 2.33% missing votes
Mora: 66% Kerry 5.83% missing votes
Rio Arriba: 65% Kerry 3.93% missing votes
McKinley: 63% Kerry 7.20% missing votes
Guadalupe: 59% Kerry 3.70% missing votes

All but Santa Fe had an absurd amount of missing votes even for e-voting counties. Six of the seven round to a percentage of 4% or higher missing votes.

Now, here are the seven e-voting counties that were Strong Bush followed by the
amount of Bush's vote and the percentage of missing votes:

Torrance: 62% Bush 3.10% missing votes
Sierra: 61% Bush 2.44% missing votes
San Juan: 66% Bush 2.03% missing votes
Lincoln: 67% Bush 2.79% missing votes
Otero: 68% Bush 2.64% missing votes
Chaves: 68% Bush 2.04% missing votes
Lea: 79% Bush 0.74% missing votes

It's night and day. It is absolute proof that the higher the percentage of Bush votes, the fewer missing votes we find. I can only conclude that this is because there were fewer Kerry voters. If there is another explanation, I would like to hear it. I even thought perhaps it is an anomaly of high absentee votes that are counted differently, so I subtracted the absentee votes and recalculated the missing percentage without them. The results rank nearly identical except of course with higher values. Santa Fe, for instance, jumped to a 3.30%. Here is the breakdown of missing vote percentage for the same counties with the absentee vote subtracted:

Strong Kerry: 4.86% missing votes
Favor Kerry: 3.11% missing votes
Favor Bush: 2.84% missing votes
Strong Bush: 2.57% missing votes

Overall Kerry counties: 3.60%
Overall Bush counties: 2.67%

These results demand an explanation. The discrepancy between e-voting counties and op-scan counties is too great for it to be an aberration. The correlation of missing vote percentage to Kerry support is glaring. It strongly suggests a New Mexico win for Kerry if the votes hadn't vanished. If it is in New Mexico, county by county by county, it will doubtless be in other states as well.

Useruser666
12-09-2004, 01:27 PM
Holy shit!

I really like this link:

http://web.northnet.org/minstrel/supreme.htm

Why does it say at the top:

"WELCOME TO THE LYRIC POETRY WEBSITE"?

Is this where the political "in-the-know" get their info?


If it is in New Mexico, county by county by county, it will doubtless be in other states as well.

It is also total speculation based of opinions that, they of themselves are hard to substantiate.

Why do you continue to bring this topic up? If my canidate would have lost by the margin Kerry did, I would not feel the need to endlessly complain about the proccess in which I know nothing about.

Like the saying goes, "Figures don't lie, but liars can figure!"