| Can Obama Win and Lose Ohio at the Same Time? |
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| Ohio News | |||
| Written by John Michael Spinelli | |||
| Friday, 19 September 2008 17:58 | |||
Experts' Affidavits Filed on Ohio 2004 Lawsuit Say Republican Cyber Operatives Could Heist 2008 Election in Replay of 2004 SurpriseOhioNewsBureau UPDATED
Al Gore received hundreds of thousands more votes than George W. Bush did in 2000 nationwide, but didn't become president, even though a recount of votes after the election in Florida showed that he also won more votes there, too. Some say John Kerry won more votes in Ohio in 2004, but due to dozens of Election Day irregularities, some maybe orchestrated while others were just vulnerabilities in Ohio's system of voting, lost the state by 118,601 votes. So the question of whether Barack Obama, who currently trails John McCain in Ohio but who leads him in recent polls nationwide by four percentage points (49-45, Gallup) can both win and loose Ohio. If three Ohio attorneys get the signal to re-energize their now moribund lawsuit, we all might learn somethings that we need to know but that also might scare us straight, and show us that the wacky election conspirators the news media has marginalized were not as wacky as first thought. The stay, which was lifted by the court of Judge Algernon Marbley last Friday after Ohio Secretary of State Jennifer Brunner, who had previously issued motions to keep it in place least it interfer with plans for the upcoming presidential election, agreed to let plaintiff attorney's pursue more discovery by moving forward with the issusing of subpeonas to Connell and, maybe, to others like Karl Rove, President Bush's political adviser and master Republican strategist, who the attorneys and those helping them think a path of breadcrumbs will lead to. The attorneys say Connell can blow the whistle on how democracy was compromised in Ohio and other states, like Florida, where he was given the keys to the castle of cyber systems. 2008 Elections Courting Trouble, Experts, Media SayThe filing that has the potential to open up a major can of nasty worms about whether Ohio's (or any state's) elections are really free, fair, open and honest, came on the same day the Washington Post ran an article titled "High Turnout, New Procedures May Mean an Election Day Mess." The Post article painted a picture of what problems lie ahead for American voters and the systems they use, as record-high registrations set the stage for "long lines, equipment failures and confusion over polling procedures that could cost thousands the chance to cast a ballot. The crush of voters will strain a system already in the midst of transformation, with jurisdictions introducing new machines and rules to avoid the catastrophe of the deadlocked 2000 election and the lingering controversy over the 2004 outcome. Even within the past few months, cities and counties have revamped their processes: Nine million voters, including many in the battleground states of Ohio, Florida and Colorado, will use equipment that has changed since March.But the widespread changes meant to reassure the public have also increased the potential for trouble. [Washington Post] The article includes a reference to Ohio, reminding readers that some voters, as happened in Franklin County, home of the state capital, waited in line more than five hours. The county in question, it said, has "added poll workers, increased the number of voting machines by 50 percent and commissioned a study on where the machines should go." Other Ohio jurisdictions are requiring more training of poll workers. In an effort to alleviate voting machines being tampered with while they were taken home by board of elections officials the night before an election as a cost saving measure, an accepted operational practice not given a second thought as to how it compromises the chain of custody, Ohio Secretary of State Jennifer Brunner, elected in 2006, issued a directive to ban the so-called "sleepovers" of the touch-screen machines she, and a $2 million dollar study she commissioned says are not trustworthy. Ohio Voters Confident in Vote Systems, Critics Are WaryOne local view on whether Ohio voters have confidence in their voting system was seen in The Columbus Dispatch, which editorialized that election officials should take heart that "the vast majority of Ohioans believe elections are fair and that presidential ballots will be counted correctly on Nov. 4." The editorial used results of a recent Ohio Poll, conducted by the Institute for Public Policy Research at the University of Cincinnati, to makes its declaration that "Ohio's bipartisan administration of elections is structured so that the system doesn't favor either Republicans or Democrats" and that "Post-mortems on Ohio's 2004 vote determined that bipartisan errors in planning resulted in too-few voting machines, causing long lines at many polling locations." What most Ohioans really know about their election system, how it's constructed, how it works, and how partisan, malicious interlopers of the variety Karl Rove has at his disposal could insert themselves in the system without anyone knowing it, puts their beliefs on the safety and security of voting sytems on ice. Filings Ask for Lawsuit Stay to be Lifted, Allowing Subpeonas to be Issued, Depositions to be TakenThe attorneys hope to finally find the evidence that will fly with most Ohioans, as well as the state's mainstream newspapers, who choose to put their head in the sand on this topic rather than call for the kind of investigation that would either confirm or debunk the theories of election fraud they stubbornly refuse to acknowledge. The decision of Federal District Court Judge Algernon Marbley in response to the request to lift the court stay can help shed light, or maybe produce some fire, that will show how bad Ohio got burnt in the past, is key to preventing another 2004 election fiasco this year. Spoonamore affidavit asserts that the election computer setup used by Ken Blackwell in 2004 provided the means and opportunity for the manipulation of the election results. " The vote tabulation and reporting system, as modified at the direction of Mr. Blackwell, allowed the introduction of a single computer in the middle of the pathway. This computer located at a company principally managing IT Systems for GOP campaign and political operations (Computer C) received all information from each county computer (Computer A) BEFORE it was sent onward to Computer B. This centralized collection of all incoming statewide tabulations would make it extremely easy for a single operator, or a preprogrammed single "force balancing computer" to change the results in any way desired by the team controlling Computer C. In this case GOP partisan operatives. Again, if this out of state system had ANY digital access to the Secretary of State's system it would be cause for immediate investigation by any of my banking clients. [Velvet Revolution]
The Hayes affidavit asserts that after reviewing hundreds of thousands of documents, ballots and other election records, "it is my conclusion that there is so much evidence of ballot alteration, ballot substitution, ballot box stuffing, ballot destruction, vote switching, tabulator rigging, and old fashioned voter suppression, that the results of the 2004 presidential election, would have been reversed" had there been a real investigation. [Velvet Revolution] The Three Amigos of Ohio election law (Arnebeck, Fitrakis and Eckart) told Judge Marbley that lifting the stay now would "likely produce information that the public should have before voting in the next election. It would provide a clear signal that the rule of law will apply, and there will be accountability for criminal conduct." A major objection raised before to lifting the stay was about resources being drained from various agencies. Arnebeck, Fitrakis and Eckart countered that they could "accomplish without a significant drain on the resources of either the Ohio Secretary of State or Ohio Attorney General's office." Local Views, Background ArchivesOne of the Three Amigos, Bob Fitrakis, a professor of political science at Columbus State University and editor of the Columbus FreePress, wrote a round-up article about the 10 things that can go wrong with the 2008 election. Fitrakis, has run as a candidate for congress and governor. Discuss this article on the community! About the author
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