Election Defense Alliance, Election Integrity and The Warren Poll are organizing an Election Verification Polling (EVP) project as a safeguard for the November 2008 presidential election -- and we're calling on you to help. Exit polling provides an independent check on "official results" reported by suspect computerized voting systems.
Citizens applying professionally managed, scientifically designed polling methodology will conduct exit poll voter surveys in strategically selected locations, presenting brief survey forms to voters exiting their polling places on Election Day (Tuesday, November 4th) 2008. The voters' anonymous responses reporting how they have cast their votes will be processed and analyzed in real time.
Unlike the national exit poll conducted by a private consortium of newsmedia corporations, who withhold their raw polling data and heavily "adjust" their results to match the reported election results (!), this Citizens' Exit Poll will fully disclose the data so there can be no doubt about the truth of the numbers and what they reveal about the purported truth of the official election results -- and, for that matter, the purported truth of the corporate newsmedia exit poll.
Fully transparent exit poll data is crucial in assessing the validity of the announced election outcomes.
Accept no substitutes.
Volunteering for EVP will be one of the most effective contributions you can make to guard against another stolen election.
Are you ready to volunteer for the Election Verification Poll?
SIGN UP HERE [2]
Further details are provided on the EVP sign-up page.
To volunteer, click the sign-up link above.
To LEARN MORE ABOUT EXIT POLLS, and why they are effective in assessing the validity of official election results,
click to this page: About Exit Polling [3]
Can you help us with an Exit Polling DONATION?
EVEP Election Day Report, 11/6/2008 12:05:00 PM
Election Defense Alliance and partners Election Integrity.org and The Warren Poll have completed the exhaustive Election Day phase of the 2008 Election Verification Exit Poll. With 350 interviewers, we conducted exit polls in 70 precincts in 12 states, covering these precincts with extraordinary thoroughness, approaching every exiting voter in many polling places, and in many cases generating response rates of 75 percent or higher.
This is the strongest data ever collected both for detecting election fraud and determining the efficacy of exit polling as a means for determining how voters actually cast their ballots.
Two election officials in Ohio tried to prevent us from conducting our polls, but a legal effort led by EI general counsel, Bob Fitrakis prevailed, permitting us to poll every site we selected. Some election officials refused to post the official outcomes. In at least one Florida polling site, this occurred explicitly because we had conducted our poll there. That said, most election officials were helpful and fully supportive, some even offering official support in following up any indication of a corrupted count.
The margin in the presidential election was too decisive for possible fraud to affect the outcome, but this was not true in all of Tuesday's races. Suspicious patterns were also revealed within the presidential race. We are currently analyzing the data and will post findings as they unfold.
* * * * * * *
To all those who participated and donated, we extend our appreciation and my congratulations. For the first time in 8 years, Americans have actually elected a president. Together, we played a role in that monumental fact about this historic election. After a series of increasingly extreme anti-democratic elections and initiatives (e.g., HAVA and the spread of electronic voting), we may have at least mitigated the trends.
As Steve Freeman [4] reminds us, "America’s election processing has hardly been fixed; nor will it be without our efforts. Whatever Obama's attributes as a man and a statesman, recall that his first act in Congress was to reject Stephanie Tubb's challenge to Ohio's electors; he was convinced that Bush won the 2004 Ohio election legitimately. (The Audacity of Hope, by Barack Obama, p. 7)
So please, stay involved and/or donate [5] so that others may continue this work.
We have a mountain of high quality data that needs to be coded and analyzed.**
We also hope to follow up on disparities between official numbers and survey results by hand-counting ballots and other investigative efforts. Obama may really have been America’s choice for President, but election integrity remains no less critical an issue.
This Election Day polling project was the largest citizen-run poll ever undertaken in this country (or perhaps anywhere). We have a very rich pool of data.
If it had been necessary to give a bottom line assessment on Election Night, we would have been able to do so, but as we saw early on that this would not be necessary, we decided to take a different approach in our analysis of the data. Consequently we do not have anything quantitative to report as yet.
We can, however, say that we are incredibly indebted to our donors and our volunteers who made this work possible, and that we hope to release our first definitive reporting very soon.
In parallel to the data analysis, a separate team is assessing the polling processes and is re-designing protocols and procedures for future years.
More soon.......
Election 2008: Protect the Count
View short introductory videos here [6]
Download the 6-page set of instructions for the Protect the Count Project [7]
Citizens fan out across the nation, stationing themselves at polling places to observe, video, and broadcast live precinct-level results for the nation.
• Negative vote counts are caught and challenged and corrected on election night before they become official results.
• Statistically anomalous and unbelievable results are challenged and documented on election night and delivered to a court of law as post-election evidence of election fraud.
• Would-be election fraudsters are alerted to the “candid camera” citizen brigades: try to commit fraud, and any time, any where, when you least expect it, we will catch you in the act.
• Learn about the four categories of voting systems used in the nation [ View short introductory videos here [8] ]
• Identify the category of voting system used in your state [ Consult "The Verifier" [9] ]
• Learn how to protect the integrity of the ballot chain of custody and the vote count against vulnerabilities in the category of voting system used in your state
• Follow step-by-step instructions to become a citizen election watchdog
• Learn how to be part of the 2008 Election Poll Tape Posse, Seal Tracker, Switch Monitor, and Problem Child Watcher citizen watchdog teams, observing, documenting, and broadcasting precinct-level election results
In the past two decades, most American citizens have sat on the sidelines while the government has given away our public elections to private interests. Today, the private e-voting industry controls the vast majority of American elections with no public oversight whatsoever, programming the computers that cast our votes for us, count our votes for us, and even regulate who is able to vote through computerized voter registration databases.
In the 2006 Elections, computers programmed and controlled by private corporations using trade secret proprietary software cast and/or counted nearly 90% of America’s votes.
This year will be different.
In Election 2008, you can join citizens everywhere to actively protect the vote count.
• Become an engaged citizen election watchdog
• Be a hands-on participant and learn how our elections work and don’t work
• Document the vote count and publish it for all to see
• Put public officials on notice that We the People are watching them
• Put would-be election fraudsters and tamperers on notice that We the People are watching them
• Protect the vote count in your state
• Share your evidence and experiences with the nation and the world
1. Sign up to be part of the project at BlackBoxVoting.org
2. View a 3-minute training video and obtain the downloadable toolkit
3. Determine which category of voting system is used in your state See:
4. Find a buddy for your posse
5. Make sure your video equipment is fully charged and working
6. Review the instructions for the category of voting system you will be observing
7. Prepare with gas, snacks, cell phones, whatever
8. As soon as your video is ready, upload it here: http://www.videothevote.org/upload
9. Problems? Call the legal assistance hotline: 1-866-OUR-VOTE [1.866.687.8683]
The US Constitution
http://www.law.cornell.edu/constitution/index.html [10]
State Constitutions
http://www.constitution.org/cons/usstcons.htm [11]
http://www.findlaw.com/11stategov/indexconst.html [12]
Black Box Voting
http://www.BlackBoxVoting.ORG [13]
Election Defense Alliance
http://www.ElectionDefenseAlliance.org [14]
Protect the Count Project Instructions (6-page PDF)
http://electiondefensealliance.org/files/BBV_EDA_Protect_the_Count_08.pd... [15]



You can review the 4 Protect the Count videos here: http://www.ElectionDefenseAlliance.org/Protect_the_count [16]
In 2004, Ukrainians took to the streets to protest a stolen election. They demonstrated by the millions, for days on end, until they overwhelmed the attempted electoral coup. They demanded a revote, and they got their legitimate government back.No More Rolling Over

In 2004, we Americans had our votes stolen and our government hijacked, but we were immobilized with shock.
This time we will be ready.
Election Defense Alliance and other election integrity allies are monitoring the lead-up to the election for danger indicators. We will know where to look, and what to look for.
We will be analyzing election returns in real time, and when we find vote theft and suppression,
we will call on you to rally for the republic in mass protests strategically focused for maximum effect.
We are neither predicting or announcing where the protests will be called.
Our response will be swift and decisive with the element of surprise and the determination to sustain protest as long as necessary.
How long?
Until we get an honest accounting of the votes.
We need to know who will stand with us in defense of our votes and where we can reach you when the call goes out.
Can we count on you?
Yes! When the call comes, I will be there! [17]
SIGN UP HERE

Election Verification Polling
EDA commissioned or supported numerous independent exit polls and voter surveys in counties across the nation during the 2006 election to provide an independent means of evaluating the validity of official election returns generated by trade-secret software owned by private corporations. In the absence of direct citizen observation of the vote-counting, or any credible election auditing practices, these polls provide a valid means for independently assessing the veracity of intrinsically unverifiable electronic voting results. We have continued to refine these methods in subsequent elections and will, with your funding support, again be conducting exit polls and voter surveys in strategically selected locations in the November 2008 election.
Election Forensic Analysis
In computerized elections, citizens are denied access to the very evidence --ballots marked by voters-- necessary to confirm or deny the validity of officially reported election results. EDA has developed methods for independently assessing reported election results by comparing official precinct and county election returns to historical election baseline data, voter registration figures, pre-election tracking polls, and independently commissioned exit polls on election day. This multifactor analysis comparing reported election results to independently verifiable external measures can identify suspect patterns and internal contradictions in the election results indicating probability of accidental mistabulation or deliberate fraud to a very high degree of statistical certainty.
Media Messaging and Public Education
The unacceptable risks of computerized voting are rising into public awareness, but much more public education and advocacy will be needed to institute change in the U.S. electoral system. EDA is building media messaging capacity to provide consistent, corrective information and to issue alarms as necessary on a national scale.
Legal Action
Election Defense Alliance advocates a proactive, pre-emptive response to pervasive breaches in election security and obstruction of the public's right to know. We are devising legal tactics and assembling evidence to support legal intervention before, during, and after elections to enforce effective security procedures and uphold the public's right to monitor electoral processes and inspect public documents without obstruction.
Support for Local Organizing
Because we recognize that all elections are local, Election Defense Alliance emphasizes electoral integrity action at the level of local electoral jurisdiction. We support those efforts by developing research, fundraising, and publicity capacity on a national level and then channeling those resources where they can be applied most effectively: at the county and township level where elections are conducted.
Legislative Policy
Although we regard decentralized electoral administration and local citizen vigilance as the best prescription for election protection, EDA recognizes the present opportunity to repair damage wrought by HAVA (the Help America Vote Act of 2002) and avert similarly misguided and harmful federal legislation now and in the future. We will warn against ill-advised nonsolutions, recommend effective measures to counter electronic voting dangers, and promote handcounted paper ballots and manual audits as the solutions necessary to restore electoral integrity.
Click here to return to donation page [19]These and other actions are carried out by an EDA staff of volunteers who depend on your support to continue and expand these protections. Please invest in electoral legitimacy.
The Election Integrity "Superlist" E-mail Network Plan in Brief:
With your help, Election Defense Alliance proposes building a national election integrity E-mail network composed of many separate e-mail lists, each one a branch in the larger tree. Each branch will be managed by a participating individual or organization who agrees to transmit occasional election integrity messages to the addresses on the e-mail lists they manage.
RATIONALE
Information and Speech Are Still Free on the Internet (Use or Lose)
Let's make full use of internet e-mail, the only mass communications medium we have that is not subject to corporate censoring of news about fraudulent elections. The EI movement should put to full use the power of proliferating e-mail contacts to branch out beyond the core membership of our respective electoral integrity organizations. This is what it will take to build the level of mass awareness necessary to break through corporate media control and reclaim our elections and government from the corporations and "unduly electeds" who have usurped our democracy.
METHOD
Building the Election Integrity Superlist involves identifying managers of e-mail lists, persuading them to participate in a national election integrity e-mail network, and asking 10 questions about the characteristics of each list they manage.
Participation in the network is always voluntary. Each list manager will have discretionary control over which messages to send or not send.
Please note, we are not asking for lists of individual e-mail addressess (always a closely guarded resource!).
Rather, we are compiling a list of e-mail lists, and obtaining agreements from list managers to relay occasional messages of broad relevance to the election integrity cause.
All group and individual list managers participating in the network may propose messages to be sent over the network. Transmission of each message is always at the voluntary option of each participating group or list manager.
How to Participate
That's it in a nutshell. A project discussion and methodological details are presented in greater detail below.
A cover letter and list questionnaire forms are provided as downloadable files from links in this article.
Please contact us if you can help Build this National EI E-mail Network [21]. No contribution is too small. Every addition to this list of lists raises the multiplying power.
Method in Medium Detail
If you will gather and send to EDA the contact information described in the following method, EDA will compile those e-mail list contact addresses into a national election integrity network directory. Messages for national distribution will be sent to this master list of list managers, who will have agreed to relay EI announcements on to the address lists they manage.
How to Begin
Think of all the political, civic, and social circles you move in, and how many of those entities have e-mail communication lists. Probably most of them do.
Next, identify who the persons are who manage e-mail communications for each of those groups.
It helps if you already know the people who manage the e-mail lists and can call them on the phone; but if not, send them a personal note at their e-mail address, including a copy of the explanatory cover letter. This is essentially cold-call salesmanship by printed word.
In your phone call or letter to list managers, explain the e-mail network idea, and ask for their agreement to carry a few initial messages over their list from Election Defense Alliance. Then ask them 10 short questions about the characteristics of their lists, enter the answers on a form, and send completed forms to Info@electiondefensealliance.org [22].
If you have a phone number for the list manager, follow up your initial e-mail with a phone call. If you don't have their phone number, request it when you write to them, and if they respond, follow up with a call.
Cover Letter
I've prepared a cover letter [23] to send to all the list managers you can identify in your region. The cover letter explains how the national EI e-mail list will work, what we are asking of them, and why the movement to establish transparent, publicly accountable electoral processes is fundamental to every desired social and political goal these other organizations wish to attain.
The cover letter, called SuperListCover_rev5.pdf, can be downloaded here [24].
Feel free to personalize the cover letter in any way that seems productive to you.
10 Questions
Two additional files will make it easier for you to collect the requested list information.
The Excel file [25] is a live spreadsheet form. This live data form is preferred, but if you don't have Excel, or a comparable spreadsheet application, you can use the printable PDF form [26] that you can fill in by hand and transmit as a fax. NOTE: The list collection forms are designed to print on legal paper (8.5 x 14") in landscape mode (horizontal).
Phase 1: Initial contacts
There are two phases to this e-mail network plan. The first phase is entirely dependent on the involvement of EDA participants and the voluntary cooperation of list managers across the country who, in response to our request and explanation of this plan, agree to transmit occasional election integrity messages to the lists of addresses they manage.
Phase 2: Opt-in subscriptions
In the second phase EDA will gradually develop its own list of subscribers who have voluntarily opted to join the EDA e-mail list, by responding to the subscription links that will be embedded in each message sent over the Superlist network.
Initially, the e-mail network will be a hybrid, consisting partly of early subscribers to EDA's own e-mail address list, but primarily composed of links to e-lists whose managers have agreed to transmist EDA messages over their own lists but who retain control of the actual addresses.
Gradually, EDA will accumulate its own subscriber base that we hope will include a majority of the persons originally contacted via messages relayed for us over other organization's mailing lists.
EDA will add individuals who voluntarily opt-in to the EDA subscription list for regular EDA organizational communications.
But, the Election Integrity Network "superlist of lists" will remain available for periodic transmission of major election integrity announcements of a nationwide significance, either as prepared by EDA, or by any other EI organizations that participate in building the list.
This could be a powerful tool of mutual benefit to all participating organizations, while building the mass civil constituency that will be necessary to bring about social change for transparent, publicly accountable elections.
We would hope that election integrity groups, as well as civil rights and social justice organizations of all kinds, would recognize the shared benefits of such a communications network, and voluntarily assist in its development and maintenance.
Please contact us if you can help Build this National EI E-mail Network [27].
Rationale and Method in Full Length
(Already convinced? Skip to Recap at the end)
Most every individual and organization participating in the election integrity movement has an e-mail list, or maybe even a large listserv, that they regularly use in their political work. Those lists could include anywhere from a dozen to several thousand names each. Beyond the EI movement, you know and probably participate in many other civic and social organizations in your region, and most of them also have e-mail lists. Draw up a list of all the lists you personally have, and as many other lists that you know or think exist for other organizations you are familiar with. Find out who the person is who manages each of those lists--either by asking people you know in the organizations, or by searching the "Contact us" information on their group's website. A webmaster is often the person who manages the group's e-mail list; or if not, will surely know who does. Whoever receives e-mail addresses of the form Info@xyz is very likely the e-mail list manager.
The Superlist information form* consists of 10 short questions to gather the key information about each e-mail list. Write (or better, phone) the list manager, introduce yourself, describe the Election Integrity Superlist idea, and ask if they would be willing to help build this network by agreeing to transmit an occasionalelection integrity message over their list(s). If their own group is an election integrity organizations, participating in the list will build public awareness of their own EI efforts. But no matter what an organization's programmatic goals are, honest elections are essential to their attainment. Mention to everyone you contact that the right to have one's vote counted as cast is the fundamental right that secures all others.
*(The Excel form (Superlist_form.xls) [28] is live and editable, and preferred for those who have Excel; the Superlist_form.PDF [29] is a static form that can be entered by hand and then faxed).
Important Distinction: E-List Contacts, not Individual Addresses
No e-mail addresses are requested other than the contact addresses for list managers. Participation is always voluntary. Each list manager will have discretionary control over which messages to send or not send. As each Alliance message is sent out, we will ask list managers to reply whether and when they sent or did not send each message proposed, and if they did not send, to please state their objections or other reasons for declining a message. This way we will gradually acquire a sense of the character of each branch in the network, and how to tailor messages for maximum transmission rates).
Network rules of the road will evolve as the list grows. Rather than attempt to answer here all policy questions that may arise, let us simply emphasize that list managers will always retain control of their lists and have the option to accept or reject transmission of any given message to their lists.
Each e-message sent over the combined e-network will be embedded with links pointing back to a subscription form at the EDA webpage, which recipients can use to subscribe directly to the EDA contact list if they wish to. This way, every message sent out over the network will have the potential to draw visitors to the EDA webpage, and to add subscribers to the EDA e-mail list that will grow into a primary component of the larger EI national e-mail network.
Geometric Growth Potential
E-mail messages are like seeds on the wind. You never know how far they will travel or how many times they will be reproduced. The geometric progression potential is enormous. For example, assume an intial message goes out to 500 addresses. Assume each recipient forwards to just 5 additional persons, and each successive recipient forwards to another 5. Assume that each successive wave takes one day to propagate. On the 5th day, the total is 312,500 messages. On the 9th day, the total is over 190 million. (Get out your calculators if that's hard to believe).
Of course, few if any messages propagate at the maximum theoretical rate. But once in circulation, any message has a potentially limitless lifespan. The more compelling the information we send out, the more likely it is to be reproduced. We will be contacting a population that, by virtue of being on the message lists we have selected, is already receptive and disposed to share the information. We are offering information that is largely absent from any other communications medium. I think we can expect fairly high transmission rates.
Network Also Builds a Subscriber Base for EDA Communications
Each outgoing message on the list will include an EDA e-mail subscription link. People who reply to the subscription link will be signaling their interest in receiving regular announcements and important news items about election activism from EDA directly. This EDA subscription list will start out small but eventually become a central component of the national EI e-mail network.
EI Network Can Continue to Grow as Shared Resource
The EDA subscription list will be used for EDA organizational communications, but the original EI network of cooperating e-list managers will not be abandoned. The network list can continue to be developed and maintained for occasional use by EDA as well as by other participating election integrity organizations, to transmit occasional announcements of nationwide significance.
As EI messages are passed along and travel beyond the pathways of the originating e-mail lists, every person who reads them can potentially forward those messages to other people in their personal address books. If these secondary message recipients belong to politically active organizations responsive to the electoral integrity cause, they can ask their own list managers to participate as new branches in the expanding EI e-mail network.
E-mails Are Our Electronic Broadsheets
Despite the corporate news establishment's continuing resistance to the notion that elections can be and have been electronically stolen, about 60% of the general population (and about 80% of registered Democrats) think it is likely, or very likely, that the 2004 election was rigged.
Sources:
These numbers have increased about 50% since the 2004 election. How is this possible? I think the explanation is that the alternative media of e-mail lists and websites have been reaching and educating an ever larger share of the population about the electoral integrity crisis.
Information and Speech Are Still Free on the Internet (Use or Lose)
Let's make full use of internet e-mail, the only mass communications medium we have that is not subject to corporate censoring of news about fraudulent elections. The EI movement should put to full use the power of proliferating e-mail contacts to branch out beyond the core membership of our respective electoral integrity organizations. This is what it will take to build the level of mass awareness necessary to break through corporate media control and reclaim our elections and government from the corporations and "unduly electeds" who have usurped our democracy.
RECAP: Ready, Set, Go
To start construction of the Election Integrity E-mail Network, download the cover letter [30] and either the Excel [31] (preferred) or the PDF version [32] of the 10-question list information form. Answer the 10 questions about each e-mail list you personally have to contribute, or that you interview a list manager about. If you don't have Excel or a comparable spreadsheet application, print the PDF, fill it in by hand, and fax the completed form (write for faxing directions). The lists of e-lists you provide will constitute the first build of the national Election Integrity E-mail Network.
Here are the 10 questions to answer on the list collection form:
Please send your completed list collection forms to this address [33].
Questions? Comments? Write to us [34].
Please contact us if you can help Build this National EI E-mail Network [35]. No contribution is too small. Every addition to this list of lists raises the multiplying power.
Note: The Paper Ballot Platform Plank proposal has evolved through several stages over the past four onths. Beginning here with the current incarnation, the plan's evolution is presented in reverse chronological order.
1. Go to http://change.gov/page/s/yourvision [36] and let the President-Elect know what the people want and need from our government.
2. Please forward this email to everyone you know. [Click the "E-mail This Page" link at the foot of this article].
If they hear from millions of us, it will make a difference!
Since we've recently had elections with very slim margins, no undocumented totals should be relied upon in presidential or congressional voting. All across the country, instances of paperless, electronic touch-screen (DRE’s) voting machines’ losing, misdirecting, or miscounting large numbers of votes has been well-documented. In the interest of ensuring auditable and trustworthy election results:
PLEASE support immediate passage of ELECTION REFORM legislation requiring that paper ballots replace paperless, touch-screen voting systems in time for the November 2010 congressional elections.
Trust in elections is central to trust in government. Only with a tangible, paper ballot can voters have confidence that there is something to count.
Complete Details with Live Links at: http://www.paperballot.info/ [37]



Complete Details with Live Links at: http://www.paperballot.info/ [38]

* Downloadable PDF Flyer
* Intro by Dale Axelrod
* Paper Ballot Plank Contacts and Links
* Press Release
=========================
Update Aug. 18, 2008
Our multipartisan Paper Ballot Platform Plank strategy, while successful in having our resolution's language adopted and reported by a number of the Obama campaign's "Listening to America" platform meetings, did not fully achieve our goal.
The Democratic party platform drafting committee (for whatever reason) didn't get it exactly right---and the platform contains only general language, as follows:
"We will call for a national standard for voting that includes voter-verified paper ballots."
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
We would have liked to have seen added to the end of this sentence, "as the ballots of record."
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
With these words the Democratic platform would clearly specifiy this central election integrity tenet---that the paper (not touch-screen) ballots are what must be counted.
Mission impossible?
The Democratic Draft Platform was amended and adopted by the Platform Committee on August 9, without any delegate offering a friendly amendment clarifying our issue---and it now goes to the Convention for adoption without any chance of changes.
However, despite this missed opportunity, we can still TAKE EFFECTIVE ACTION:
1---PUSH the Obama campaign to interpret the platform language as implying that voter-verified paper ballots only have meaning if they are the ballots of record.
2---PUSH to have our preferred language (or conforming concept) adopted as a plank in the Republican party platform. Submissions to their online drafting process (link: http://www.gopplatform2008.com/rpc_faq.aspx [39] ) will be reviewed starting on Tuesday, August 26th:
3---If successful in both or either of these efforts, WAGE an URGENT campaign to PUSH Congress to reconsider and fast-track Rush Holt's bill H.R. 5036, Emergency Assistance for Secure Elections Act of 2008.*
Please let me know about your thoughts on, and multipartisan resources for all of these proposed actions.
For our democracy,
Dale Axelrod
*H.R. 5036 would establish funds to reimburse to certain jurisdictions for the costs of implementing paper voting systems for the November 2008 elections. It would also establish funds to reimburse jurisdictions for the costs of conducting post-election audits as described in the bill.

CLICK HERE [40] to download and distribute the Paper Ballot Platform Plank Flyer
For more information on this MULTI-PARTISAN appeal TO DEMAND transparent election standards:
Campaign Updates: http://www.PaperBallot.info [41]
Press and General Queries 510.233.2144 or e-mail Info[at]ElectionDefenseAlliance[dot]org [42]
Link to Republican Party Platform online drafting process. Click to submit suggestions: http://www.gopplatform2008.com/rpc_faq.aspx [43]
2008 California State Democratic Party Platform
(p.10, Political Reform, paragraph 8)
http://www.cadem.org/site/c.jrLZK2PyHmF/b.1193757/k.A452/Political_Reform.htm [44]
Paper Ballot Platform Plank at PaperBallot.info
http://www.PaperBallot.info [45]
Paper Ballot Platform Plank at Election Defense Alliance.org
http://www.ElectionDefenseAlliance.org/paper_ballot_plank [46]
Tangible Ballot Initiative
http://www.TangibleBallot.org [47]
Verifygra
http://www.verifygra.com [48]
Come hear what really happened in Ohio, 2004 Richard Hayes Phillips has been the leading investigator of the fraudulent 2004 presidential election in Ohio. His work was relied upon by John Conyers in challenging the Ohio electors in Congress, by Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. in his article for Rolling Stone magazine, and by Justice Algenon L. Marbley in issuing his federal court order protecting the ballots from destruction. Assisted by teams of volunteers equipped with digital cameras, Phillips amassed some 30,000 images of forensic evidence. Phillips began investigating the Ohio election when he received an unsolicited e-mail containing obviously erroneous election results from Cleveland. He quickly found that hundreds of votes in certain precincts had inexplicably shifted from John Kerry to other presidential candidates. This made him a witness to a crime, with a duty to investigate further and to present his findings publicly. The result is the book, Witness to a Crime [50]. It is an investigative report and eyewitness history, the document of record for what really happened in Ohio. Mon. Sept. 8, 7:00 P.M. Tue. Sept. 9, 7:00 P.M. Wed. Sept. 10, 1:00 p.m. Thur. Sept. 11, Book signing, Noon to midnight Fri. Sept. 12, 7:00 p.m. Thanks to Radio KKGN "Green 960" for promotional support of the Northern California appearances OREGON Mon. Sept. 15, 6:30 p.m. Wed. Sept. 17, 7:00-9:00 p.m. Elliot Hall, First Unitarian Church WASHINGTON Fri. Sept. 19, 7:00 p.m. MONTANA Tue. Sept. 23, 7:00 P.M. Free general admission Wed. Sept. 24, Election auditing workshop, 1:00 p.m. Thur. Sept. 25, 6:00 p.m. NEW MEXICO Mon. Sept. 29, 7:00-10:00 p.m. Tue. Sept. 30, 7:00 p.m. Wed. Oct. 1, 6:30 p.m. Thur. Oct. 2, Venue and Time TBA TEXAS Fri. Oct. 3, 7:00 p.m. OHIO Sat. Oct. 11, 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Scroll Down for Witness to a Crime Fall Tour Schedule Below
Witness to a Crime:
A Citizens' Audit of an American Election
Then he analyzed it all himself, examining 126,000 ballots, 127 poll books, and 141 voter signature books from 18 counties in Ohio.
PLATE 9. Two of 24 "wild card" absentee ballots found among nine precincts in Darke County. These ballots have nothing printed on the back side. In these precincts there were 70 extra ballots -- more ballots photographed than the official number of ballots cast, or the number of persons who attempted to vote,or both. These "wild cards" could have been available for use by any county on an "as needed" basis in a scheme of old-fashioned ballot box stuffing. (See pages 276-277).
Schedule source: http://www.witnesstoacrime.com/schedule.htm [51]
Help promote these speaking engagements.
Forward this schedule to others
Click the "E-mail this page" link at the foot of the page.
Schedule of Events for Richard Hayes Phillips' Fall Tour
WITNESS TO A CRIME: A Citizens' Audit of an American Election
CALIFORNIA
Marin Peace and Justice Coalition
First Methodist Church
9 Ross Valley Road
San Rafael
Election Defense Alliance
Grand Lake Theater
3200 Grand Avenue
Oakland, California
Book Passage
51 Tamal Vista Blvd.
Corte Madera
Election Defense Alliance
Grand Lake Theater
3200 Grand Avenue
Oakland, California
Humboldt County Green Party
Northtown Books
957 H Street
Arcata
What Happened in Ohio?
LISTEN UP [52] 
Eugene Peace Works
World Café
449 Blair Boulevard
Eugene
Alliance for Democracy, Portland Chapter
and Democracy Action Group of the First Unitarian Church
1011 SW 12th Avenue
Portland
Progressive Democrats of Washington and Washington Public Campaigns
Olympic View Community Church
425 NE 95th Street
Spokane
University of Montana, Department of Environmental Studies
and Montana League of Women Voters
Gallagher Business Building, Room 106
University of Montana, Missoula
University of Montana, Environmental Studies Program
University of Montana, Missoula
Students and faculty only
Northern Plains Resource Council
Green Building
Corner of South 27th Street and Third Avenue South
Billings
Unitarian Universalist Church
107 West Barcelona Road
Santa Fe
Albuquerque Center for Peace and Justice
202 Harvard SE
Albuquerque
Food Not Bombs, Taos Peace House and Infoshop
801 Paseo Del Pueblo Norte
Taos
Las Vegas Peace and Justice Center
Las Vegas, NM
Vote Rescue
Brave New Books
1904 Guadalupe St, Suite B (downstairs)
Austin, Texas
Yellow Springs Street Fair
Yellow Springs, Ohio
Tell the New York state judiciary to uphold our constitutional right to a transparent, secure, theft-deterring electoral system.
New York voters do not consent to voting on undetectably mutable, software-driven voting machines.
Click here to sign a PETITION
[53] to be presented to the New York Supreme Court. Please also indicate if you would also like to be listed as a plaintiff in this groundbreaking lawsuit invoking the New York State Constitution's safeguards for voter rights.
To learn more go to Re-Media's Election Transparency Coalition blog, http://re-mediaetc.blogspot.com/ [54]
Want to do more? Volunteer!
Click here
[55] to see what you can do to prevent our birthright from being stolen.
Click here for 12.15.07 Press Release [56] on Amicus Brief
Click Here to Download the Amicus Brief [57]
United States v. New York State Board of Elections
.
• Complaint:
This lawsuit, filed March 1, 2006, seeks declaratory and injunctive relief for the Defendants’ alleged failure to implement the voting system standards and statewide voter list provisions of HAVA. With respect to the voting system standards, the complaint supports its allegation by noting that the State Board failed to
(1) approve any voting systems,
(2) adopt any final rules or regulations related to voting systems, and
(3) obtain any voting systems that comply with the requirements of HAVA.
With respect to statewide voter list, the complaint notes that, among other things, the has failed to
(1) publish any rules or regulations governing the statewide voter list,
(2) take the necessary steps to contract for the development of a statewide voter database, and
(3) establish the necessary agreements with the Social Security Administration to match voter registration information.
• Status:
DOJ sought a preliminary injunction on March 6, which was granted by the court on 23, 2006. The court ordered the State Board of Elections to file a remedial HAVA implementation plan by April 10, 2006, and provided ten days to respond, later extended to eighteen days.
State filed its HAVA plan with court on April 10, and Plaintiffs’ responded on April 18th agreeing to the plan.
On June 2, the court ruled that the Board’s HAVA plan would bring the state, over time, into full compliance and set a series of deadlines for implementation and reporting. Currently before the court is a motion to intervene by a diverse coalition of civic organizations that is concerned about the adequacy of the state’s plan.
• Parties: This lawsuit was filed by the Voting Section of the Department of Justice against the New York State Board of Elections, its co-executive directors, and the State of York.
This declaration may be downloaded in PDF format at the link below [58]
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK
_______________________________________________
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Plaintiff DECLARATION OF NANCY TOBI
v
Case No. 06-CV-0263 (GLS)
NEW YORK STATE BOARD OF ELECTIONS;
PETER KOSINSKI and STANLEY L. ZALEN,
Co-Executive Directors of the New York State
Board of Elections, in their official capacities; and,
STATE OF NEW YORK,
Defendants
_______________________________________________
Pursuant to 28 U.S.C. sec 1746, NANCY TOBI, declares as follows:
My name is Nancy Tobi and I am filing this declaration on behalf of myself and the New Hampshire Fair Elections Committee, of which I serve as Chair. I am a founder of Democracy for New Hampshire (DFNH), the Chair of the New Hampshire Fair Elections Committee, and the Legislative Coordinator for Election Defense Alliance (a national organization). All of these organizations are nonpartisan, 100% grassroots organizations. Democracy for New Hampshire was founded in February, 2004, and its Fair Elections Committee was founded one year later, fulfilling the second part of the DFNH mission statement:
Democracy for New Hampshire is a nonpartisan big-tent organization that promotes grassroots community involvement in the democratic process in New Hampshire. DFNH works to protect the foundations of our democracy and the integrity of our political process and supports fiscally responsible, socially progressive candidates who speak honestly about policy choices.
The Fair Elections Committee statement of purpose is:
The New Hampshire Fair Elections Committee is dedicated to protecting, preserving, and enhancing those aspects of the NH election system that are unique, transparent, secure, and exemplar. The FEC aims for open and accessible election processes, while implementing processes to prevent, pursue and prosecute proven instances of election fraud.
Election Defense Alliance mission is:
The purpose of EDA is to help build and coordinate a comprehensive, cohesive national strategy for the election integrity movement, in order to regain public control of the voting process in the United States, and to insure that the process is honest, transparent, secure, verifiable, and worthy of the public trust. To accomplish this purpose, EDA will provide resources, strategic planning and coordination opportunities for a nationwide network of citizen electoral integrity groups and individuals already working at the national, state, and local levels. The urgent goal of these activities is to rapidly expand and multiply the effectiveness of the election integrity movement by connecting existing groups and encouraging the creation of new ones. EDA seeks to provide connection, coordination, and focus, to eliminate duplication of efforts, to create a clearinghouse for the sharing of materials and other resources, and to facilitate coordinated decision-making about strategic priorities and tactical approaches in the election integrity movement.
I have been involved in grassroots activism promoting election integrity since 2003. I serve as citizen representative on the New Hampshire HAVA State Plan Committee and Disability Task Force. In my home state of New Hampshire, I have worked with other citizens, legislators, and the NH Department of State to improve our election integrity including drafting and successfully lobbying for passage of legislation, implementing new procedures, and promoting, leading, and participating in numerous citizen educational forums and events. I have been invited to speak at national conferences, including Keene State College’s recent November 2007 Citizenship Forum, a Summer 2007 Election Integrity Forum in New York, DemocracyFest 2006 (California) and 2007 (New Hampshire), the WeCount2006 Conference (Ohio), and the 2005 Third Party Conference (New Hampshire), at which I was invited to speak about HAVA. I have been interviewed on radio shows in New Hampshire, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Texas, and Oregon. I was invited to speak on a panel about New Hampshire’s election systems on New Hampshire’s political television show “Political Chowder”. I organized an election integrity track at the 2007 DemocracyFest, which featured nationally known authors, activists, New Hampshire’s Secretary of State Bill Gardner, and representatives from the NH Departments of State and Justice. I organized an election integrity forum in December 2006 in New Hampshire, also featuring nationally known authors and our New Hampshire Secretary of State. I have met with election activists around the nation to discuss and dialog solutions to our national, state, and local election problems. I have organized and led nonpartisan working groups consisting of grassroots activists, election officials, and lobbyists, towards the improvement of proposed national election reform legislation. I have written numerous op-eds, essays, and booklets about the Help America Vote Act, democracy and elections, and New Hampshire election systems and methods for hand counting. Most recently, I have released the Hands-on Elections Handbook (2007), which includes hand count administration and reconciliation methodologies developed by the New Hampshire Department of State.
New York’s State Constitution of 1777 makes the observation that a vote cast on a tangible ballot preserves democracy better than one cast in the air:
“ VI. And whereas an opinion hath long prevailed among divers of the good people of this State that voting at elections by ballot would tend more to preserve the liberty and equal freedom of the people than voting viva voce…”
The New York Constitution has since been amended to allow lever machines. But in 1777, the framers of New York’s Constitution, engaged in a war against an oppressive unitary power, understood the need for checks and balances to ensure integrity of the mechanism of democracy: the vote. They further prescribed the ballots be placed in boxes, with a chain of custody overseen by sheriffs to the secretary of state, and the ballots canvassed by a joint committee of the legislature, until March 27, 1799, when the system of inspection and canvassing by local wards was introduced, ensuring more citizen oversight of the process.
Computerized
voting equipment began to be used in America's elections in the mid-1960s; it exploded in use after the 2000 election, due to the infusion of HAVA monies to states, which used these funds to purchase billions of dollars of computerized voting equipment.
With the advent of computerized voting, a new form of voting viva voce has made its way into the nation’s elections, with the lion’s share of America’s total ballots now being counted – and often cast – in the Ethernet. Adding to the non-tangible nature of this system, computerized elections brought the privatization of our elections as well. Eighty percent of the nation’s ballot and votes—the mechanism by which all other rights are secured—are now the private property and trade secrets of corporate computerized voting machine corporations.
These for profit corporations counting 80% of the nation’s ballots, use secret and proprietary vote counting technology. In other words, instead of publicly observable vote counting, as recommended in New York’s original Constitution, and still guaranteed in numerous other state constitutions, and as required by Section 8 of the federal Voting Rights Act, most of the nation’s votes are being counted in secret, outside of the public’s oversight. With DRE technology, this situation is exacerbated because both the casting and the tabulation of the vote are transformed into proprietary Ethernet data, owned by the corporation that manufactures and programs the DREs.
But even with optical scan technology, which uses voter marked paper ballots, the count itself is secret and proprietary, in direct violation of the Voting Rights Act, many state constitutions, and the very tenets of democracy itself. A democracy requires citizen oversight and checks and balances. With proprietary and privatized elections, this is lost. Citizens and even candidates are denied access to inspect and verify the public votes now transformed into privatized election data.
This lack of citizen oversight would be egregious in any voting system, including in a hand count voting system. It is particularly egregious in a computerized system, where the risks for tampering are magnified by the very nature of computer programming. With one line of code in the Ethernet viva voce election, the outcomes for entire elections can easily and invisibly be changed, especially when those computerized systems also control the final central tabulation, as is the case in most places in the country (New Hampshire uses optical scanners, but manually tabulates the central vote count).
News accounts in every national, state and local election since the proliferation of computerized voting are rampant with stories of election “glitches”. This benign and rather cute sounding word obscures the very real dangers of relying on computerized voting. Computer “glitches” are not programming hiccups. They are either programming errors, bugs, or deliberate fraud. Because of the tenuous nature of Ethernet viva voce elections, it is difficult to tell the difference. But regardless of whether or not a computerized election “glitch” is intentional, the ramifications are enormous. These “glitches” cause the wrong people to be seated in office, given power over the voters whom they don’t actually represent (because they were not actually elected). These “glitches” have prevented schools and fire departments from receiving the funding desired by voters. These “glitches” have changed the course of human events in incalculable ways. And despite the plethora of documented cases across the nation, we really have absolutely no idea how often these “glitches” occur or have occurred. This situation is not just antithetical to a system of democracy with checks and balances, it is unconstitutional.
The combination of computerized Ethernet viva voce elections and the loss of citizen oversight due to the privatized corporate control of elections is serving a death blow to our nation’s very system of democracy. This is not to be taken lightly. Further expansion into computerized and privatized elections should be avoided at all costs. Fortunately for our nation and our democracy, there is another way.
Despite the countless news stories of election outcomes called into question because of computerized voting equipment failure, or worse, suspicions of tampering and fraud, and despite the millions and billions of American taxpayer dollars have already been spent, and continue to be spent, on computerized voting equipment, we don’t hear a lot about major problems happening on the hand count election front.
So it may be surprising to learn that a significant percentage of the nation’s voting jurisdictions still enjoy hand-counted paper ballot elections. The Election Assistance Commission’s 2004 election Day Survey reports the following data regarding national use of hand counting on election night.
Hand count elections are being held across the nation. Significant hand count states include the following:
Many opponents to hand counting cry “chaos will ensue!” But unlike computerized elections, which call for expensive programming, indeed create chaos at the polls with breakdowns, lack of sufficient machines (due their high costs), and which alienate many poll workers in their complexity, running a hand count paper ballot (HCPB) election can be the most orderly and respectable method for administering elections. Proper hand count elections simply require good management: you manage process, you manage people, you manage paper, and you manage numbers. Hire a good manager and a good accountant for every district, and your hand count elections will be orderly, secure, accurate, reliable, and dependable.
With the right methodology and management in place, election costs come down and the integrity of the election goes up. New Hampshire has identified two accepted and widely used methods for hand counting paper ballots. The sort and stack method is considered more effective and efficient than the read and mark method. With hand counting, as long as you have 2-4 people on a team you have built in double checks. You don't necessarily need to rely on post count audits because you are doing simultaneous verification then and there on election night.
Many local election officials are afraid to give up their machines because they fear they will not have enough help to hand count our elections. Or they fear even if they have enough people, they will be the “wrong” kind of people. But our communities are filled with the “right” kind of people. We just need to reach out to them. In fact, many of our communities have built-in recruitment centers. In every city and town, there are community organizations. Church groups, Rotary Clubs, Neighborhood Watch groups, TA’s, High School social action or community service groups, these are just a few that come to mind. With seventeen year olds eligible to be poll workers in most states, and community service often a high school requirement, this is a match made in heaven.
Usually, in New Hampshire, all it takes is 25 people to help count up to 3,600 ballots with roughly 15-20 contests in any given polling place to run a hand count election. This is an easy number to recruit, and in New Hampshire community members line up to volunteer for this honored tradition of being sworn in as ballot counters on Election Night.
In New Hampshire we have learned that it is possible to hand count large numbers of paper ballots, even complex ballots. One New Hampshire town counts up to 3600+ ballots on election night. This is an important data point because the national average number of ballots in any precinct is less than 1000. In other words, New Hampshire hand count towns can manage up to 3 or 4 times the national average of ballots processed in any given precinct. (In New York, election law restricts elections districts to no more than 1,150 voters.)
Because of our large legislature, New Hampshire also has some of the more complex ballots in the nation (many multi-member districts). For instance, a New Hampshire multimember House district might have up to 26 candidates running for 13 seats in a single district. This is an extreme circumstance resulting from the large legislature in New Hampshire, more than likely not reproduced anywhere else in the world. Many, if not most, of our districts are multimember races with 2,3, 4 or more seats per district in a single contest, with typically at least twice as many candidates (if both the major parties run a candidate Democrats and Republicans). In a district with four representatives, there will likely be at least eight candidates running in that race. So to count using sort and stack, you'd have to count this single race eight times plus the write-ins, overvotes, and undervotes. So you would count 11 stacks for this single race. This gets complicated, and is the reason many of our towns fall back to the read and mark method, which procedures can easily be found in the New Hampshire Secretary of State’s Election Procedure Manual, and which can also produce a secure and accurate hand count.
Using New Hampshire numbers and estimates derived from decades of experience, we are able to estimate what it would take to hand count the two federal races in the New York State 2008 General Election. The management and staffing estimates for hand count elections may be found in the NH Department of State training presentation available on the Democracy for New Hampshire website.
The NH Department of State estimates that it takes six seconds per contest to hand count ballots using the accurate and efficient sort and stack method. For the 2008 General Election in New York, with only two federal races, this translates to twelve seconds per ballot. At 100% turnout for any given district, this would mean 1,150 ballots counted at twelve seconds each, for a total time of 13,800 seconds, or 3.8 hours. A team of four people, which provides two counters and two observers, could complete such a count in less than two hours. Voter turnout is rarely 100%, so this number could be adjusted based on turnout estimates.
Additionally, another team of four people could simultaneously manage reconciliation activities, counting number of blank ballots at poll opening, number of ballots cast, number of votes cast, and number of voters checked in. This four person team would also allow for two accountants and two observers. All of these counting and reconciliation processes could easily be accomplished publicly in full citizen oversight, at one long table, and in much less than two hours upon closing of the polls.
As mentioned previously, New Hampshire does manual central tabulation, to ensure checks and balances of that part of the election process. At close of the count and reconciliation, local jurisdictions communicate their numbers to the Secretary of State's office for centralized tallying, where the reported results from each city and town are manually entered into a spreadsheet.
An important thing to note about hand count systems is they are self-authenticating. With proper management, you can hand count your ballots using teams of 2-4 people, meaning 2-4 sets of eyes on every count, every tally mark, every contest, every ballot. Using the sort and stack method, this means that 3-4 sets of eyes have the chance to see every mark on every ballot twice: once during the sorting process and once again during the counting process. The ballot markings, therefore, are seen 4-8 times under this system. This means that even a two-person team has an opportunity to review the ballot markings four times, making the sorting and counting members of the team simultaneous observers.
With this type of self-authenticating system, you do not need the complex and
expensive audit protocols proposed for computerized elections. In a well run hand count election, post election auditing is best implemented by making recounts accessible and financially feasible.
Because these hand count methodologies integrate reconciliation into the process of counting, the self-auditing mechanisms are quite advanced and ensure a high level of integrity for the system overall. In this way, the "auditing" occurs
during the first count itself, when it matters, because this, after all, is the count that declares the winner (as opposed to machine "audits" promoted in some national legislative proposals, and in various state laws, which are intended, albeit weakly, to identify problems with the system but not intended to affect outcomes).
Lastly, the feasibility of running hand count elections is proven in the State of New Hampshire and elsewhere in the nation. Specifically, five or so well managed self-auditing teams of 2-4 people can count roughly 1000 ballots with 15-20 contests in less than 2 hours. For New York districts, with no more than 1,150 voters, this is eminently do-able.
All told, with final reconciliation of registration checklists, number of ballots in and out, etc. the whole process is complete in less than 3 hours on election night. In terms of cost, the fact is that many New Hampshire counters are community volunteers (all sworn in to office on election night). It is considered an honor to be a vote counter. But even when paying its counters, New Hampshire has found the local hand count method - using teams of three - costs 7 cents per contest on a ballot, meaning $1.05/ballot for a typical 15 contest general election ballot. The State of NH, which conducts 10-30 manual recounts every
election cycle, estimates cost for hand counting at around 7 cents per race on the ballot. This assumes 3-person teams, each person getting paid $10/hr.
What this means is that it doesn't matter how large is the population of a state or county. What New York needs to consider is how many ballots are processed in any given district, and whether or not there is the political and community will and the infrastructural integrity to conduct hand count, observable, self-authenticating, elections.
In New Hampshire, we have more than 200 years of experience successfully administering hand count paper ballot elections. 45% of New Hampshire’s polling places still count our ballots by hand. The New Hampshire Department of State has generously shared their expertise in this methodology, and it is included in the Hands-on Elections Handbook, released in the summer of 2007. This Handbook, and accompanying PowerPoint presentations given by the NH Departments of State and Justice may be freely downloaded at the website: www. DemocracyForNewHampshire.com and used to train election workers in the proper methods for hand counting paper ballots. This fully HAVA-compliant method for running elections is very manageable if the right conditions and methods are implemented.
To prepare for a hand count election, consider the following elements in your planning process:
Today, Americans around the nation are lining up to restore our democracy. Organizations like the NH Fair Elections Committee will assist in sending volunteers to New York to help hand count New York’s elections should the Court
order same.
I declare under penalty of perjury that the foregoing is true and correct.
/s/
___________________________________
Executed on December 11, 2007 NANCY TOBI
Original source: http://blog.wired.com/27bstroke6/2008/07/ny-50-percent-o.html [59]
By Kim Zetter |July 14, 2008
New York state is in the process of replacing its lever voting machines with new voting equipment, but the state revealed recently that it has found problems with 50 percent of the roughly 1,500 ImageCast optical-scan machines (shown in the video above) that Sequoia Voting Systems has delivered to the state so far -- machines that are slated to be used by dozens of counties in the state's September 9 primary and November 4 presidential election.
Douglas Kellner, co-chair of the New York State Board of Elections, expressed frustration with the vendor, saying it appeared that Sequoia was using the state's acceptance testing process to find problems with its machines in lieu of a sound quality-control process.
"There's no way the vendor could be adequately reviewing the machines and having so many problems," he told Threat Level. "What it tells us is that the vendor just throws this stuff over the transom and does not do any alpha- or beta-testing of their own before they apply for certification testing. Then they expect that we'll identify technical glitches and then they'll correct those glitches. But correction of those glitches is an extraordinarily time-consuming process. And its very disappointing that this equipment is not ready for prime time."
One main problem with the machines has been the printers. The ImageCast machines are special optical-scan machines that include an LCD screen, a printer and a ballot-marking device that allows disabled voters to use them. Disabled voters view the ballot on screen or hear it read to them through headphones, then make their selection using special attachments (a device with buttons or a sipping straw), after which the machine prints out a paper ballot that gets read by the optical scanner component.
The printer, Kellner noted, is a core component of the machine. But they malfunction "if you don't feed the paper exactly right or if the buttons aren't pushed just right," he said. They also have trouble handling write-in candidates. If a voter's writing exceeds a certain width, Kellner said the printer shuts down without indicating why it's shutting down.
"These are serious glitches that should have been picked up in the vendor's own quality-control process," he said.
But Sequoia isn't the only problem, according to counties who have reported receiving problematic machines from the state Board of Elections after the board was supposed to have tested and certified the machines. The Board of Elections is examining all of the new machines before sending them out to counties.
In Nassau County alone, the largest voting district outside of New York City, officials found problems with 85 percent of the 240 ImageCast machines it received so far -- problems that the county characterized in a letter as "substantial operational flaws that render them unusable or that require major repairs."
The problems include printers jamming, broken monitors and wheels, machines that wouldn't boot up, and misaligned printer covers that prevented the covers from closing completely, creating security concerns.
The county rejected 48 machines right at delivery, due to physical damage. Another 58 machines exhibited problems during testing, according to William Biamonte, the Democratic elections commissioner for Nassau County. [New York counties have two election directors -- one each from the Democratic and Republican parties -- to avoid charges of unfair elections.] Some of the latter machines, he said, shook dramatically when they were running and workers either had to shut them down or the machines shut themselves down from the vibration. Other machines had dead batteries or batteries that wouldn't hold a two-hour charge, as they were required to do.
Another 112 machines produced a "printer failure" error message. Biamonte says this was the result of a change Sequoia made to its firmware. He said that when he received his first batch of machines about a month ago, the machines had "horrific paper jams." To fix the problem, Sequoia loaded new firmware on the systems to speed up the printer, but in doing so disabled the USB port on machines, resulting in the "printer failure" error messages.
Biamonte, who blames the Board of Elections in part for not noticing the problems before forwarding the machines to counties, said a state worker told him he should instruct election workers to just ignore the error message.
"How is that acceptable?" Biamonte asked. "Say you buy a brand new car and it works good but the oil gauge isn't working. They tell you, Just drive it anyway. These are brand new machines. $12,000 each. We cannot in confidence send (them) out to a polling place knowing they have this printer error. How do we know if we really do have a printer failure?"
Nassau County, which has nearly 900,000 registered voters, is slated to receive 450 machines total, but has refused delivery on the remaining machines and has asked a federal court to order Sequoia to repair the machines. It also requested a review of the state Board of Elections' acceptance and testing procedures. That review was completed Thursday by a quality-control firm hired by the Board of Elections. The firm's report found that the Board of Elections' procedures for accepting and testing the machines were adequate, but acknowledged that some problems may have occurred due to a lack of communication between state election officials and county officials. [Read more info about this report after the jump.]
Biamonte, who respects Kellner and thinks he feels as frustrated by Sequoia as he does, nonetheless called the report "ridiculous" and "disingenuous," saying that cracked screens and jammed printers weren't the result of communication problems.
The ImageCast machines are not actually made by Sequoia but by a Canadian subcontractor named Dominion, which is based in Toronto, and a sub-subcontractor named Jaco Electronics, based in New York. A press release on Sequoia's site noted that Jaco won the contract to produce 4,500 optical-scan machines for Sequoia/Dominion only in April of this year and needed to add 40 to 50 people to its workforce to fulfill the contract. Nassau County began receiving its machines from the state in June, which suggests that the machines may have been rushed through production too quickly.
A Sequoia spokeswoman would say only that the company is working with state officials "to identify and resolve any voting equipment concerns they may have."
The Sequoia ImageCast machines were designed exclusively for New York and are not currently being used in any other state. The machines have not yet been federally certified, though Kellner says Sequoia assured the state last January that federal testing and certification would be completed on the system by April or May, before the state began its own testing and certification of the equipment.
New York doesn't have a choice about using the machines this year. The state was sued by the Department of Justice for failing to meet a federal deadline for having accessible voting machines in place. The Help America Vote Act passed in 2002 requires every voting precinct to provide at least one accessible voting machine for disabled voters by 2006. New York is just now getting the machines in place.
Because the ImageCast machines are still undergoing certification testing by the state, only the ballot marking device -- and not the scanning portion of the machine -- will be used in New York this year. The counties will continue to use lever machines for non-disabled voters until 2009. The printed paper ballots produced by the ballot-marking portion of the machine will be read by hand, rather than scanned.
One interesting tidbit turned up in the quality-control report that examined the state board of elections acceptance and testing process. The report reveals that a voting machine vendor is the first to examine the machines when they arrive to the state's voting machine warehouse from the manufacturer. The vendor representative is supposed to examine the machines for missing or damaged parts.
Once the vendor representative has signed off on the equipment, it goes to temporary workers that the state has hired to test the machines. Biamonte says the temp workers are college students, who work under the supervision of board of election employees.
After the testing is completed, a tamper-evident seal is placed on the machines and they're passed back to the vendor representative who is responsible for shipping off the machines to counties.
This creates chain-of-custody concerns that Biamonte says are exacerbated by the fact that when he received his machines in Nassau County, a number of the tamper-evident seals on them were cracked.
"How do we know this wasn't tampered with?" he said.
Only New York's lever voting system or its previous hand-count system satisfy the constitutional requirement that we be able to see how our votes are counted. Fight to preserve New York's constitutionally compliant lever voting system. Sign this petition in support of the litigation to declare invisible vote counting unconstitutional.
Click Here to View Signatures [61]
New York VOTERS (Voters for Open, Transparent, Electoral Reliability and Security)
Campaign to Save our Secure Electoral System
WHEN, IN THE COURSE OF HUMAN EVENTS, it becomes necessary for freedom-loving people to stand up to their governments when their governments act in opposition to their constitutional rights and in a manner corrosive to their sovereignty, a decent Respect to the Opinions of the Nation requires that they should declare the Causes which impel them to take this position.
WE HOLD THESE TRUTHS TO BE SELF-EVIDENT, that all People are created equal, that they are born with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness. — That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among People, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed,— That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it.
OUR GOVERNMENTS HAVE TURNED AGAINST THE PEOPLE, in enacting or approving of laws which deprive the People of our constitutionally protected right to vote. The right to vote is the primary right by which all other rights are protected. To deprive a person of this right is to reduce one to slavery, for slavery consists in being subject to the will of another.
NEW YORK’S CONSTITUTION has been interpreted by the highest court in the State as recognizing that essential to the express right to vote and the express right not to be disenfranchised are essential implicit constitutional rights, including the right to a transparent process so that the People can know their votes were accurately counted cast. The right to an open, transparent electoral process, which enables its citizens to be able to evaluate the performance of their government in safeguarding its elections, is further protected by First Amendment rights, also guaranteed by New York’s state constitution.
TRANSPARENCY ALLOWS CITIZENS TO SEE OPENLY into the activities of their government, rather than permitting these processes to be cloaked in secrecy. The protection of the ballot box and tallying of vote totals must be conducted as openly as possible, so that citizens are confident that the results are accurate and that the government elected reflects the consent of the governed.
NEW YORK’S LEGISLATURE ABROGATED OUR FUNDAMENTAL RIGHT to know that are votes are being counted as cast by authorizing the use of concealed, non-transparent, software-driven vote counting systems to be implemented in the State of New York. This unconstitutional usurpation of power is supported by the Executive of the State of New York and the Attorney General.
NOTWITHSTANDING THE OVERWHELMING EVIDENCE from dozens of computer scientists proving that software-driven voting systems are vulnerable to undetectable tampering and are incapable of providing trustworthy, secure or reliable election results, the State of New York is forcing the People to replace our secure lever voting machine system with un-securable, vulnerable-to-tampering, software-driven machines.
NOTWITHSTANDING THE DEVASTATING EVIDENCE accumulated from the experiences of the nation wherein every state installed these theft-inviting machines sold by the small cartel of irresponsible vendors selling their secret, proprietarily programmed, shoddy, defective machines to run our public democratic elections, New York is proceeding with its plan to abandon its reliable, transparent lever voting system and replace it with the same shoddy, dysfunctional equipment that has been shown to be so vulnerable to massive, outcome-determinative miscounts and theft of our elections.
WHEREAS THE EXISTING LEVER VOTING SYSTEM PROTECTED our constitutional franchise from dilution by fraud by preventing known opportunities for tampering, New York’s newly enacted laws unconstitutionally force New York Voters to cast their votes on unreliable, undetectably mutable, secretly programmed software-driven machines, thereby disenfranchising New York Voters by exposing the election results to unseen tampering and known opportunities for tampering.
WHEREAS THE EXISTING LEVER VOTING SYSTEM PROTECTED our constitutional franchise by providing an observable, open means by which the public could observe and know the lever voting machine securely and accurately counted our votes, New York’s newly enacted laws unconstitutionally prevent the People from observing how the software-drive machines unreliably and unsafely count our votes, concealing the very transparency required by New York Voters so that we may evaluate our government’s obligation to securely and fairly count all our votes.
WHEREAS THE EXISTING LEVER VOTING SYSTEM PROTECTED our constitutional franchise by providing the People with reliable evidence of how the votes were counted on election night as well as evidence of fraud, mutable software-driven voting systems deprive the People of the reliable physical evidence we are constitutionally entitled to in order to hold our government accountable and to be able to vindicate our right in a court of law.
WHEREAS THE EXISTING LEVER VOTING SYSTEM PROTECTED our constitutional franchise by detecting, deterring and revealing fraud, the software-driven system being forced on the Voters of New York, destroys and conceals evidence of fraud, thus providing no deterrence against dilution of the franchise by fraud and further depriving the People of the evidence required to prove whether their consent was reflected in the election outcome.
WHEREAS THE EXISTING LEVER VOTING SYSTEM PROTECTED our constitutional franchise by providing New York Voters with a secure, verified, accurate count on election night, before exposure to post-election influences could corrupt the count, the new legislative scheme deprives us of the completed count delivered under the watchfulness of public scrutiny, instead permitting the election-night count to be the product of knowingly unreliable mutable software, which is then checked by a partial hand-count only after the election is over, after the winner has been announced and after the protection against tampering provided by the ongoing public surveillance of the poll site is over -- after which post-election ballots may also be the product of tampering.
WE, THE VOTERS OF NEW YORK, DO NOT CONSENT:
WE, THE VOTERS OF NEW YORK, have implored our government to uphold its responsibility to protect our constitutional franchise in every manner available to us. We have provided the aforesaid evidence to State of New York, through the State Board of Elections and our elected representatives, the Executive’s office and the Attorney General’s office, but have been rebuffed and ignored.
WE, THEREFORE, THE VOTERS OF NEW YORK, APPEAL TO THE JUDICIARY, the only remaining branch of government that has not ignored our pleas, to protect and secure our lawful rights, in the Name, and by Authority of the VOTERS of New York, as reflected herein, to declare New York’s Legislature’s and the State Board of Elections’ laws and regulations – as they require us to surrender our constitutionally guaranteed right to vote and our constitutionally guaranteed right not to be disenfranchised and our constitutionally guaranteed right to a knowable and transparent electoral process – abhorrent to our constitution and to our rights as a self-governing people.
The Citizens and Voters of New York
Each aspect of the work we'll need done in this Save New York Levers Project matches an area of specialization in the EDA Working Groups [65]. Everything you do and learn on this project will be applicable to other, similar projects. That's why we encourage you to join a Working Group that matches your interests, so you can team up with others interested in the same skills and subjects. Learn and work together to build up EI movement's capacity to carry out effective campaigns.
How to Join a Working Group:
1. First, establish an EDA Web Account: Join [66]
2. Then, register for a Working Group: Register [67]
• Newshounds - Comb the press for articles on New York's election technology, then post comments and contact the reporters.
EDA Working Groups: Communications [68] and Media and Publicity [69]
• Bloggers - Reach hundreds of New York readers with your commentaries on the case and critiques of mainstream coverage.
EDA Working Group: Communications [70], Writing section
• Fundraisers - We only need a half a million dollars to pursue this; totally doable.
EDA Working Group: Fundraising [71]
• Board of Election Monitors - Obtain weekly feedback on how the ballot marking devices are fairing, personnel and training issues, costs, etc. Our county election commissioners need support.
EDA Working Group: Legislation [72]
• Local Liaisons - Contact local political committees (Dems, Repubs, Greens, Libertarians) and civic organizations (advocacy groups, churches, clubs, unions). Voting matters to everyone!
EDA Working Group: Organizational Liaison [73]
• Teachers/Professors - This is the ultimate civics lesson, defending voting rights guaranteed in the New York constitution. Bring your students to witness.
EDA Working Group: Public Education [74]
• Court Gallery - Attend court hearings so the judge and newsmedia can see the public's commitment to election transparency.
EDA Working Group: Legal [75]
• Pro Bono Attorneys - This is a trailblazing lawsuit and we'll need devoted legal talent to prevail.
EDA Working Group: Legal [76]
• Videographers - Document this story as New York sets precedent for the nation, reaffirming the right to vote as the civil right that protects all others.
EDA Working Group: Communications [77], Audio-Visual section
By Andrea Kelly, Arizona Daily Star, May 24, 2008 TUCSON, AZ-- A Pima County Superior Court judge has ordered county officials to release a series of elections database records requested by the Democratic Party more than a year ago. The judge's ruling also requires release of databases for all future elections. After the December trial, in which the Pima County Democratic Party and the county argued as to whether the records were public and, if so, whether their release posed a security risk, Judge Michael Miller ordered the release of databases for the primary and general elections in 2006. That was only part of the party's request for electronic database records. In January, the Pima County Board of Supervisors decided to also release the database records for the May 2006 Regional Transportation election. Following that decision, the party asked for a new trial to consider the release of the rest of the records it requested, which included all of the Diebold GEMS and Microsoft database election files. It is those which the judge has released in his latest order. The county Democratic Party says the decision sets a national precedent for open government and election integrity. "Ultimately if you're going to have electronic voting and electronic election records, you need to have electronic oversight. People from across the country interested in election integrity issues have contacted the party about this case, Rabago said. The Pima County Board of Supervisors will likely discuss the ruling with attorneys at its next meeting June 3, said Daniel Jurkowitz, deputy Pima County attorney. The previous release included about 300 computer database files, and fulfillment of the full order will bring that number to about 1,100, Jurkowitz said. In court, the county said releasing the records could put the county elections department at risk of a security breach. But the Democratic Party argued that there was no specific risk, and that allowing more people to see the records reduced the possibility of fraud. Richard Elías, chairman of the Pima County Board of Supervisors, said the ruling reflects the desires of the public. "I think the people spoke through the Democratic Party, and the judge heard that and made a good decision," said Elías, a Democrat. "This is a good victory for all of us who want to see elections run more carefully." He said the county elections process has changed dramatically in the last few years and has led to more security, and he hopes that continues. Miller's ruling requires the release of data on future elections to occur when the election is officially canvassed. This is important because state law limits election-results challenges to the five days following the official canvas. Republican Supervisor Ray Carroll said the Democratic Party's victory extends to any concerned citizen. He said he would have released the records in the first place, and The judge has not yet ruled on a request that the county pay the Democratic Party's legal fees, which run into the hundreds of thousands of dollars. He took the issue under advisement after a hearing earlier this month. by Associated Press March 18th, 2008 @ 5:17am County attorneys will ask Judge Michael Miller Tuesday morning to prohibit the Democrat's attorney Bill Risner from deposing additional witnesses to buttress local Democrat's contentions that the county is overstating concerns that release of electronic databases [78] from past elections would pose a risk to the security of future elections. . . . [ AP story continues below video ]. They suggest security [81] flaws and potential hacking involving the same Diebold-GEMS elections system used in the county that was also used in numerous jurisdictions nationwide. The Pima County Board of Supervisors in January expanded on Miller's order to release databases from the 2006 primary and general elections to also include the electronic records of the May 16 Regional Transportation Authority election held that year. Risner has since asked the judge to amend that ruling and compel the county to release all the electronic election databases in its possession or to allow a new trial over the issue. The judge is to rule on Risner's request for an amended decision or new trial at an April 21 court session. Risner said he wants depositions taken against new witnesses before that hearing. In his ruling in December 2007, Miller cited security concerns raised by county attorneys as part of his reason for not releasing all the county's electronic elections databases. The lawsuit seeking those databases was filed by the Pima County Democratic Party to gain access to county elections records to check for signs of tampering with the county's Diebold-GEMS vote system, or through software used to tabulate ballots cast in those elections. Information from: Tucson Citizen, http://www.tucsoncitizen.com [82]
© 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. By Jim March and John R Brakey The election integrity community is about to get something unique: access to the raw "electronic debris" from the three major elections of 2006. The files in question are created by the Diebold central tabulator system and were used to control how the elections operated and take in the data on votes. What's unique is that for each of the three elections, we're going to get ALL such files, not just the "final result" file. Each election contains up to 40 or more files. They can be viewed as "time slices" of the progress of the election: the initial setup, the intake of the mail-in vote day by day, the election-day processing and the post-election provisionals and final canvass. We can finally do a real audit. Better yet: we can design an automated software tool that does comparisons and tracks trends over time, reporting on such issues as timestamps, "Did the parts that aren't supposed to change get hacked?", "Do the multiple copies of vote totals in each file always match?" and much, much more. Any "funny business" in there could reveal itself in any number of ways. To take just one example: The candidate IDs aren't supposed to be tampered with once the vote intake begins. Were they? Do the internal timestamps within the files show any changes once the election began? We've never had the ability to analyze this stuff, until now. Once the tool is built, it will report changes that seem "wrong" once loaded with the file set for any election. Human eyeballs will have to follow up to determine if there was a real issue, but the key is that in AZ election challenges must follow within five days of the canvass. This is a win for every party, every candidate, and every voter nationally. Once the tool is built and the need for analysis becomes obvious, access to these records in other states and soon, other voting system vendors, will turn into a standard method of ciitizen election oversight nationwide. And anyone with a penchant for cheating will have to worry that "we the people" will be watching. [84] Download the Judge Miller Advisement Ruling here [86] The following text and video dispatches are from John Brakey, co-founder of AUDIT-AZ and the EDA Co-coordinator for Investigations, introducing a groundbreaking investigation and lawsuit to compel release of the public election data (VOTES) stored inside the Diebold electronic voting system for Pima County, Arizona. http://www.electiondefensealliance.org/pima_election_integrity_trial_vid... [87] http://www.electiondefensealliance.org/pima_county_appeals_decision [88] News article from front page of the Tucson Citizen, 12/6/07: GARRY DUFFY and BLAKE MORLOCK Potentially important evidence is missing in the Pima County Democrats' lawsuit against the county Elections Division regarding how votes were handled in a 2006 election. No one seems to know what happened to a computer tape record of the May 16, 2006 Regional Transportation Authority election. The tape was sent to the the Arizona Secretary of State's Office after the election last year and reportedly was returned to the county. MORE: http://www.tucsoncitizen.com/daily/local/70793.php by blogger Michael Bryan: http://www.bradblog.com/?p=5399#more-5399 Voting Counts by Dave Devine 11/29/2007 "At a trial beginning Tuesday, Dec. 4, attorney Bill Risner is expected to paint an extremely unflattering portrait of internal security within Pima County's Elections Division. http://www.tucsonweekly.com/gbase/Currents/Content?oid=oid%3A103686 [90] Voting GEMS by Mari Herreras 11/29/2007 http://www.tucsonweekly.com/gbase/Currents/Content?oid=oid%3A103687 [91] The Pima County Election Integrity Blues by Michael Bryan of BlogForArizona.com 11/15/2007 http://arizona.typepad.com:80/blog/2007/11/pima-county-ele.html [92] Click here [93] for radio interview with John Brakey and Jim March describing their investigation and court case (60 minutes, recorded on the weekly Election Defense Radio program, 11/30/07. Podcast Archive: http://www.electiondefensealliance.org/election_defense_radio [94] ____________________ ALSO SEE: Advisement Ruling Ordering Disclosure of 2006 Election Data: Forensic Report on GEMS Unsuitability: Report to Pima County Supervisors Recommending Election Security Overhaul: How the 2004 Election was Stolen on Optical Scanners: John Brakey and the "Hack and Stack" Exclusive Advance Preview: David Griscom: Election Fraud in Arizona, A Microcosm of National Election Theft [99] The right of We THE PEOPLE to access a computer database is pivotal to the upcoming three-day trial, December 4-6, Pima County Democratic Party vs. the Board of Supervisors. Our elections must rest on verification, NOT blind trust.Pima County is Ordered to Release Data on Elections
The ruling comes after months of court hearings and decisions.
It's as simple as that," said Vince Rabago, chairman of the Pima County Democratic Party.
has voted for releasing the records.
or akelly@azstarnet.com
Pima Election Lawsuit Update March 18, 2008
EDA Invesitgations Co-coordinator John Brakey writes:
"Mainstream media in Tucson get it! They see the seriousness of the problem in the fight for election transparency, just not in Pima County but nationwide! This story is hitting the AP wire.
Today's Top Breaking News Headlines for Phoenix and the Nation
County, Democrats Spar Over Witness Testimony in Election Lawsuit
TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) --Pima County attorneys are asking a judge to bar additional testimony in a lawsuit by the Pima County Democratic Party.
The party wants access to all county electronic voting records going back to the late 1990s.
Must See Video: "Will Your Vote Count?" by Tucson Citizen reporter Daniel Buckley [79]
Click here to open video: Will your vote count? [80]
This video link opens to the Tucson Citizen website. It is WORTH it to go there to view this hands-on demonstration of insider election rigging techniques.
At a 3/11/08 Tucson Citizen editorial board meeting, EDA investigators John Brakey and Jim March show reporters how computerized votes are tabulated and demonstrate several ways the vote count can be tampered with, and how easy it is to do. Voting machines across the country can be just as easily rigged as these machines used in Pima County.
NOTE: The video opens with screenshots of not much happening. Stay with it-- soon the scenes switch to Brakey and March doing a walk-through of GEMS database hacking. In the intro section, Attorney Bill Risner explains the difference between external security measures --sealing the voting machines off from outside attack--and internal security risks, which are all about insider access to the machines. This is the heart of the Pima election lawsuit and the investigation that brought these insider attacks to court.
[AP story continues]
In their year-old lawsuit against the Pima County Board of Supervisors, Democrats have maintained that much more is potentially at stake in the lawsuit than local political parties access to local electronic election records.
In December 2007, the judge ruled the county must turn over some of the databases sought by the Democrats, but not all.
Check here for latest local updates on this story [83]
The Diebold Records In Pima County: Understanding The Settlement
An automated, open-source software tool usable by anyone can be used to chew through the volume of data needed and where necessary, trigger challenges by ANY candidate or party within the legal limits for filing.Jan. 8 Action: Tell Pima Supervisors, Full Disclosure
Judge Orders Release of 2006 Primary and General Election Databases
Read detailed courtroom coverage here [85]
Trial Video
See filmed coverage of the three-day trial here:12/28 Trial Update from John Brakey: County Appeals Disclosure Order
12/7 Update from John Brakey:
Tape may confirm whether results were altered
Tucson Citizen
-----------------------------------2nd Day Trial Update
Below are links to two news articles published 11/29/07 by the Tucson Weekly, a more detailed analysis by Arizona blogger Michael Bryan, court documents including a forensic report on the GEMS election database, and an illustrated video interview with attorney Bill Risner, lead counsel for the Pima County Democratic Party and citizen investigators who are suing Pima County for release of the voting database records. The trial--originally scheduled for December 4 through 6--has now gone into overtime. See Calendar Event listing. [89]
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Democrats' accusations of security breaches by the Pima County Elections Division go to trial next week.
Risner--representing the local Democratic Party--hopes to secure outside oversight of vote-counting procedures, and is asking Judge Michael Miller to order the county to provide copies of its election databases to all major political parties."
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A lawsuit regarding election procedures has raised tensions at Pima County headquarters:
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A very well-written, comprehensive review of the case
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http://www.electiondefensealliance.org/files/Pima_Court_Ruling.pdf [95]
http://www.electiondefensealliance.org/files/iBeta_Election_Forensic_Rep... [96]
"The GEMS software exhibits fundamental security flaws that make definitive validation of data impossible . . ."
http://www.electiondefensealliance.org/files/Pima_Election_Security_Repo... [97]
http://electiondefensealliance.org/2004_AZ_manual_hack [98]
Chapter from forthcoming book, "Loser Take All" edited by Mark Crispin Miller
EDA Investigator John Brakey on the significance of this case coming to trial on Dec. 4 in Pima County:
Until now, no one has been aski