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  1. #1
    Roll The Dice Hook Dem's Avatar
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    The CRAP has already to hit the fan.

    YOU DECIDE HOME FOX NEWS POLLS EYE ON THE ISSUES


    Fraud File: Point the Way
    Sunday, October 31, 2004

    STORIES BACKGROUND

    WASHINGTON < With Election Day fast approaching, some
    Americans have gotten a jump on the process. But although voters thought
    getting to the polls early would ensure a smooth process, some ran into
    problems along the way.

    Read below to find out how early voting is going in
    North Carolina and Florida, and keep scrolling for a wrap-up of the legal
    situation in several states.

    Repeat After Me

    Early voting has been underway in North Carolina
    (search) for nearly two weeks, but some voters are questioning the
    supposed impartiality of poll workers.

    FOX News heard voters complain that some poll workers
    suggested they cast their ballot for the Kerry-Edwards ticket without
    offering any alternative. In one case, a worker reportedly voted for a
    handicapped senior citizen without even asking her choice.

    Diane Thomas, a self-employed author and Web site
    builder who is a registered Republican, said she voted at the Steel Creek
    Library (search) in Charlotte on Tuesday. A poll worker activated the
    voting machine but then wouldn¹t leave, Thomas said.

    ³She began gesturing on the screen. 'This is where you
    vote for president,' she said, drawing an underline on the screen which
    left a mark, ending right under John Kerry's box. My jaw dropped. I said
    'You can't do that.' She said, 'I'm just showing you where to vote for
    president,'" Thomas told FOX News.

    Other early voters reported the same scenario at
    different polling places.

    Dr. David Newman, an OB/GYN and a registered Republican,
    voted at the University City public library in North Charlotte. After
    signing in, he was escorted to the voting machine by a female poll worker
    who activated the machine.

    "The worker said, 'In order to vote for him' < and her
    finger was directly over the John Kerry-John Edwards button, 'you push
    right here.' There was nothing vague about it. My jaw dropped. I was
    shocked. I was too stunned to reply. I called the Republican Party,²
    Newman said.

    Ron Dauenhauer, a businessman and a registered
    independent, went to vote at University City public library in North
    Charlotte. While standing in line outside, a poll worker handed large
    yellow sample ballots to the people on line and made references to voting
    for the Democratic ticket but said nothing about Republicans.

    ³I felt this violated the rules,² Dauenhauer said,
    adding that he called the Republican party in Raleigh to report what he
    saw. The GOP filed a complaint on the matter.

    Election officials admit there have been some problems
    in Charlotte but one official said the poll workers were just trying to be
    helpful.

    Michael erson, director of Charlotte¹s Board of
    Elections, offered one possible reason for the seemingly pro-Kerry
    comments by poll workers. ³Maybe because Kerry¹s name is the first one on
    the ballot,² erson said, adding that poll workers are supposed to be
    impartial and not name parties or candidates.

    North Carolina does have a favorite son in the race.
    Sen. John Edwards, the running mate on the Democratic ticket, represents
    the state in Congress. But the state has been a reliable backer of
    Republican presidential candidates for years < the last time it voted
    Democratic was in 1976 for Jimmy Carter.

    In this election, North Carolina is leaning toward
    giving its 15 electoral votes to President Bush. In other statewide races,
    GOP Rep. Richard Burr and Democrat Erskine Bowles are fighting for the
    Senate while Democratic Gov. Mike Easley is favored for re-election.

    < FOX News' Heather Nauert
    Voting Early

    More than 1.8 million Floridians have cast their ballots
    through early or absentee voting < nearly 2 1/2 times the number of people
    who voted early in 2000.

    Polling places were packed Saturday as people continued
    to stream in to vote early, with some localities reporting lines several
    hundred people deep and waits up to 2 1/2 hours.

    With early voting still available at polling stations
    Monday < and about 1.6 million requested absentee ballots still
    outstanding < officials expect the number of early voters to easily
    surpass 2 million.

    "It looks like the All-American tradition of voting on
    Election Day is going out the window," said Fred D. Galey, elections
    supervisor in Brevard County.

    Since the polls opened on Oct. 18, Democrats and
    Republicans alike have pressed their die-hard supporters to vote early.

    Political rallies end with shuttle buses headed to the
    polls. Speeches include exhortations to vote early. And nonprofit groups
    are renting vans to carry voters to the polls.

    In Miami-Dade County, which has the state's
    second-largest voter population, officials project about a third of
    registered voters will cast their ballot before Election Day. In
    Washington County in the Panhandle, more than 20 percent of registered
    voters had cast their ballots by Thursday.

    In all, the early turnout is more than double the
    720,453 ballots cast before Election Day in 2000, when early voting wasn't
    an option in most places.

    Many Floridians said they prefer early voting because it
    gives them more confidence their votes will be counted.

    Odette Derosier, a Haitian immigrant who voted for the
    first time in 2000, said she went to the polls early because "everybody
    says if you vote early you've got more chance."

    "The other time I vote, my vote maybe goes in the
    garbage," said Derosier, who lives in Miami. "Now, I'm satisfied."

    Still, problems were still cropping up across the state.

    In Lee County, elections officials were besieged by
    complaints from hundreds of voters who hadn't received absentee ballots
    they had requested mostly through political parties and other
    organizations.

    Elections Supervisor Sharon Harrington said her office
    didn't know exactly how many ballots had been sent out in response.

    Other counties are fielding similar complaints,
    including Broward County, where officials this week sent thousands of
    replacement absentee ballots by overnight mail.

    Diana Davidson, a subs ute teacher and registered
    Republican from Orlando, waited more than 11/2 hours to cast her ballot at
    the polls after requesting but never receiving an absentee ballot.

    "I was afraid I wasn't going to get to vote, so I
    decided to come out just to be sure," she said.

    < The Associated Press

    Scene in the States

    Many states are facing legal challenges over possible
    voting problems Tuesday. A look at some of the latest developments:

    The Latest Reports

    ARIZONA

    The Secretary of State's office said that as many as
    2,300 Arizonans who registered to vote over the Internet may be missing
    from voter rolls. County recorders said some voters were rejected because
    their forms were improperly filled out, and that others appear on the
    rolls with name variations. Recorders have been instructed to take
    measures to ensure that properly registered voters are not turned away.

    FLORIDA

    A Republican operative filed suit against a civil rights
    organization for allegedly neglecting to turn in voter registration forms
    collected from citizens during a pe ion drive. The suit, filed on behalf
    of 11 Floridians, accuses the Association of Community Organizations for
    Reform Now of using the registrations as a ruse to get people to sign a
    minimum wage pe ion. ACORN said the suit is politically motivated.

    NEBRASKA

    Nearly 1,000 people who voted by absentee ballot were
    asked to recast their votes because the ballots they used lacked the
    necessary signatures of the election commissioner or a representative. New
    ballots were sent to voters by overnight mail.

    WISCONSIN

    A review by the Milwaukee city attorney's office found
    hundreds of addresses that the state Republican Party had claimed were
    incorrect or nonexistent. The state GOP has asked the Wisconsin Elections
    Board to remove the names of about 5,600 registered voters from the rolls,
    claiming addresses listed with city officials are fic ious. The city
    attorney's office found problems with the GOP's database, but a Republican
    official said most of the addresses are invalid.

    Earlier Reports

    COLORADO

    Oct. 28: Republican poll watchers filed a complaint
    claiming election officials in the Democratic stronghold of Pueblo County
    failed to require early voters to produce identification.

    Oct. 28: The machines that Boulder County uses to count
    votes bogged down in a recent test, choking on improperly marked ballots
    and prompting a three-day review to determine the final result.

    Oct. 27: As many as 3,700 people have registered to vote
    in more than one Colorado county this year, nearly two-thirds of them
    college-age voters, the Denver Post reported. Election officials said they
    are working to catch double registrations but concede double voting might
    occur.

    Oct. 26: A federal judge left it up to the voters to
    decide on Election Day whether to change the way Colorado distributes its
    electoral votes for president. The judge dismissed a lawsuit that
    challenged a Colorado ballot proposal involving the Electoral College.

    Oct. 25: Boulder County officials defended their
    election system against a privacy lawsuit, saying serial numbers on
    ballots cannot be used to reveal how an individual voted. Six voters filed
    a lawsuit last week saying the ballot numbers and bar codes violate their
    privacy rights.

    Oct. 21: The secretary of state issued strict guidelines
    for poll watchers across the state, limiting each party to one person per
    station and banning outside groups from sending out teams of lawyers to
    monitor the election. Parties use poll watchers to keep track of turnout
    and watch how balloting procedures are performed.

    Oct. 20: A company hired by Denver to print and mail
    absentee ballots failed to send out about 13,000 ballots, but election
    officials hoped to get them to voters by the end of the week.

    FLORIDA
    Oct. 28: A state appeals court ruled that Florida acted
    properly when it adopted a rule for manual recounts in 15 counties that
    use touch-screen voting machines.

    Oct. 26: A judge ruled that state election officials
    will not be required to process incomplete voter registration forms for
    the presidential election. At issue are registration forms from voters who
    do not check a box confirming they are American citizens, even if they
    sign an oath swearing they are citizens.

    Oct. 26: Nearly 300 voters in St. Petersburg received
    absentee ballots that were missing the second of two pages, Pinellas
    County elections officials acknowledged. County Elections Supervisor
    Deborah Clark promised Tuesday to correct the error by Nov. 2. Her office
    has mailed the inadvertently omitted page to the 293 affected voters,
    along with an explanation and a postage-paid envelope.

    Oct. 25: A judge ruled that Florida's touch-screen
    voting machines do not have to produce a paper record for use in case a
    recount becomes necessary. A Democratic congressman had filed the lawsuit,
    seeking a paper trail or a switch to paper ballots in 15 counties.

    Oct. 25: A judge denied a request from a coalition of
    unions and black groups to add four early voting sites in Duval County,
    home to Jacksonville.

    Oct. 21: A federal judge said the state must reject
    provisional ballots if they are cast in the wrong precinct < another
    defeat to Democrats who wanted looser requirements. The ruling is in line
    with one handed down this week by the state Supreme Court in a similar
    case.

    Oct. 21: Republicans accused Democrats of breaking
    political money laws in Florida. They said Democrats engaged in cozy
    arrangements among candidates, unions and outside fund-raising groups as
    part of an effort to turn out voters. Democrats said the allegation was
    absurd.

    Oct. 21: Tens of thousands of Florida voters may be
    illegally registered to vote in two states, and more than 1,600 may have
    cast ballots in Florida and one of two other states in recent elections,
    the Orlando Sentinel reported in Friday's editions. The Sentinel
    examination of voting records from Florida, Georgia and North Carolina
    found more than 68,000 cases in which voters with the same names and dates
    of birth were registered in two states.

    GEORGIA
    Oct. 28: Nearly 100 Hispanic voters were summoned to a
    Georgia courthouse to defend their right to vote, based on a complaint
    that an Atkinson County board ultimately threw out. Three men filed the
    complaint against 78 percent of the rural county's Hispanics, alleging
    that a county commissioner had attempted to register non-U.S. citizens to
    vote.

    Oct. 20: A group of international election observers
    said in a report that Georgia's electronic voting machines should create
    paper receipts and poll workers should get more training. The report is
    the result of a visit to Georgia in September by a 20-member team of civic
    leaders, professors and lawyers from 15 countries.

    ILLINOIS:

    Oct. 25: Officials denied a request to extend the
    counting period for absentee ballots that are postmarked before the
    election but not received until afterward. The decision does not affect
    military votes. Other ballots received after the close of polls on
    Election Day cannot be counted under Illinois election law.

    IOWA

    Oct. 28: The attorney general said election officials
    will not count ballots cast in the wrong precincts on election night, but
    will set them aside in the event of a lawsuit seeking to determine their
    legality.

    Oct. 27: Five voters who sued the secretary of state
    over a provisional ballots decision did not exhaust administrative
    remedies, the state argued in court. The plaintiffs, who argue ballots
    cast in the wrong polling place may dilute properly cast votes, present
    their arguments later Wednesday.

    Oct. 26: Five Republican voters have filed a lawsuit
    challenging a rule requiring provisional ballots cast in the wrong
    precinct to be counted. A judge was set to hear arguments Wednesday.

    MICHIGAN

    Oct. 26: A federal appeals court ruled that provisional
    ballots cast outside the precinct where a voter resides cannot be counted
    in Michigan. The ruling followed a similar decision by the same court in
    an Ohio case over the weekend. It is yet another defeat to Democrats over
    provisional ballots.

    Oct. 21: Top elections officials said they were worried
    about the ramifications of a court ruling this week on how to handle
    provisional ballots. They are concerned about voter confusion and whether
    they will have enough time to provide local clerks with the proper
    Election Day instructions.

    MINNESOTA

    Oct. 29: Media groups asked Minnesota's county auditors
    to grant journalists complete access to polling places. The request was in
    response to a new state law that requires journalists to have a written
    letter of permission from election officials to observe in a polling
    place.

    NEVADA

    Oct. 25: Two Republican voters asked a Nevada judge to
    reject a Democrat's request to reopen voter registration based on his
    claim that his voter application form was destroyed by a GOP-funded group.
    The Republicans said one voter's complaint should not apply broadly to all
    voters. Nevada's voter registration deadline was Oct. 2.

    Oct. 20: The state's top elections official insisted
    that exit pollsters for media outlets must stay 100 feet from the polls to
    ensure "hassle-free, intimidation-free" voting sites. The law is intended
    to block partisan activity near the polls, but an attorney for news
    organizations including The Associated Press questioned why it should
    apply to the media.

    NEW JERSEY

    Oct. 26: A judge ruled that voters will be able to use
    electronic voting machines Nov. 2, rejecting an effort to alter the way 3
    million residents cast their ballots. The judge said the machines have a
    long record of being reliable.

    NORTH CAROLINA

    Oct. 26: The state Republican Party filed a complaint
    with the Mecklenburg County Board of Elections, charging election
    officials coached voters on how to cast a straight Democratic-party
    ticket. Mecklenburg County is home to Charlotte.

    Oct. 21: At least half of North Carolina's National
    Guard troops in Iraq didn't receive their absentee ballots in time for
    their votes to be counted, said Lt. Mic e Locke, who helped with voting
    at a base northeast of Baghdad. Locke, who didn't get her ballot, said
    troops who wanted to vote in the Nov. 2 general election received special
    all-write-in ballots that had been sent by the military in case something
    went wrong.
    >
    OHIO

    Oct. 29: Republicans lost an attempt to restart hearings
    on thousands of voter registrations that the party has contested. The
    decision by state attorney general refused to comply with the request.

    Oct. 28: A former Cincinnati City Council member and her
    husband sued to stop GOP representatives who plan to challenge voters
    about their iden y and voting qualifications in Hamilton County.

    Oct. 26: The secretary of state ordered county election
    boards to let voters whose registrations are successfully challenged to
    still cast provisional ballots on Election Day. The order followed the
    Ohio Republican Party's challenge of the registrations of 35,000 voters
    last week.

    Oct. 26: The U.S. Supreme Court declined to put
    Independent presidential candidate Ralph Nader on the ballot in Ohio.

    Oct. 25: Republicans withdrew thousands of challenges to
    new voter registrations because of errors in their filings apparently
    caused by a computer glitch. In filing the challenges, the GOP said mail
    sent to the newly registered voters was returned as undeliverable.

    Oct. 21: County elections officials say a court battle
    over the votes of people who go to the wrong polling place has left them
    unsure how to train poll workers and what to tell voters about where they
    can cast ballots. Ohio is the site of an intense, back-and-forth legal
    battle over provisional ballots.

    PENNSYLVANIA
    Oct. 29: A federal judge approved a settlement between
    Democratic Gov. Ed Rendell and the parents of two servicemen who sued to
    extend the deadline for counting overseas military and civilian ballots
    for president.

    Oct. 20: Workers taking part in a Republican-funded
    voter registration drive said they were told to avoid signing up Democrats
    or people who might vote for John Kerry. The Republican National Committee
    denied the accusations and suggested that Democrats were orchestrating the
    charges.

    SOUTH CAROLINA

    Oct. 20: A health organization that promised flu shots
    on Election Day in six of South Carolina's poorest counties has drawn
    criticism from Republicans that the effort is politically motivated. The
    GOP says some of the targeted counties are Democratic-leaning. The
    organization denied the allegations and said the mailing was sent to areas
    with low vaccination rates based on federal data.

    WASHINGTON, D.C.

    Oct. 28: The Justice Department will send out three
    times as many poll watchers on Election Day than in 2000. The watchers
    will be looking for difficulties with absentee ballots and the handling of
    ballots cast in the wrong precinct.

    WISCONSIN

    Oct. 29: The state GOP asked the Wisconsin Elections
    Board to remove the names of about 5,600 people registered to vote in
    Milwaukee. Republicans said the addresses listed with city officials are
    fic ious. A board attorney there was not enough time to convene a
    hearing on the matter.

    Oct. 28: The superintendent of Milwaukee schools halted
    a get-out-the-vote program involving students after complaints were raised
    about its link to a pro-Kerry organization.

    Oct. 28: Milwaukee's election commission threw out a
    complaint alleging that more than 5,600 addresses on the city's voter
    rolls may not exist, saying Republicans had not proven the registrations
    were invalid. GOP officials said they visited 37 of the addresses and took
    pictures showing vacant lots, a gyro stand and a park. Democrats said
    typographical errors and old registrations could have accounted for the
    discrepancies.
    < The Associated Press contributed to this report.

  2. #2
    Alabama Spurs Fan dcole50's Avatar
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    I have a bad feeling that this election is going to be even more controversial than the 2000 one.

  3. #3
    Free Throw Coach Aggie Hoopsfan's Avatar
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    Just think, in 48 hours we will know where all the lawsuits will be filed, what allegations have supposedly occurred, and how the other side is trying to hijack the election...

  4. #4
    Damn You Commies T Park's Avatar
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    Already heard about the town in Ohio where there are 200 thousand people registered to vote, wich is higher than the population of the town itself.

    Also where about 30 thousand who are registered to vote in Ohio are also registered to vote in Florida.

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