Kentucky Officials "Changed Votes At Voting Machines"
The indispensible jamie found a report out of Kentucky of exactly the kind of shenanigans that voting-transparency advocates have been warning about: a circuit court judge, a county clerk, and election officials are among eight people indicted for gaming elections in 2002, 2004, and 2006. As described in the indictment (PDF), the election officials divvied up money intended to buy votes and then changed votes on the county's (popular, unverifiable) ES&S touch-screen voting systems, affecting the outcome of elections at the local, state, and federal levels.
We never had it before electronic voting systems. And it is impossible to catch because there is no paper trail.
It's hard to believe that's how Micronians are made. Why don't we see it right now by having you both kiss one another?
Elected officials subverted the voice of the people for personal profit. Execute them. I am serious. There needs to be an example made, quickly and decisively.
Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
I suspect that in elections from 2000 to 2006, the standards of democracy in the US fell to below what we would consider acceptable in emerging democracies. Where there would be monitoring from outside observers.
Not to make this more political than it will be, but do we know what direction those stolen votes went? Do we know how much this influenced the national vote?
Another thing I did not find in TFA: how was this uncovered?
Ceci n'est pas une signature
Apparently the people told voters that hitting the "Vote" button would complete their vote, when it actually just brought up a confirmation screen. It was after the voter left that the people charged went and changed the votes, then completed the vote.
So, yeah, that's definite election fraud and those involved should go to jail for a nice long stretch. But the headline leads you to believe this was somehow a voting machine flaw, rather than a social engineering attack based around shitty UI design ("Vote" means vote, not, "Confirm my Choices").
Conviction for tampering with election results should be met with life inprisonment. The scope of things affected by gaming elections warrents nothing less.
Death would be better, but sometimes we get the wrong guy and at least with inprisonment we can let them out of jail and make sure they live well with a fat stack of cash for the rest of their life.
Wanna fight ? Bend over, stick your head up your ass, and fight for air.
So the last story has an update that was basically supplied by jamie (article was discussed last year), and this article is from jamie. So why is kdawson posting these if jamie is the one that seems to be doing the work?
This is why we need to bring back public hangings.
same old solution: vigilance.
illegitimii non ingravare
Were any of these guys named Chad?
Seriously. I would much prefer paper voting. Be it punch card or optical scan (used where I am). Of those two it seems optical scan is easier for people to deal with at least I have heard no major problems.
Think Deeply.
After hanging the traitors, they should find out who bought the votes and go up the chain.
Seriously. How is this not treason?
It IS treason, plain and simple. And for further proof of the pussification of America, look back 200 years and see how they would have handled this case back then.
The importance of honesty and integrity with our elected officials is not any less critical today than it was 200 years ago, so why should the punishment be?
I want everyone who sneered at me in 2000 and 2004, saying "changing those electronic machine votes would require a conspiracy so vast, with nobody ever leaking, that it's impossible, you're crazy, just get over it" to apologize now.
Not just to me, though I want that now. But also to the entire country, for standing in the way of fixing this basic corruption that destroys democracy that should be ancient history by now.
Apologize. Preferably door to door. But a reply here would start to count.
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make install -not war
From other articles, one of the defendents, Mr. Jones, is a Democrat, which makes me believe that all of them are. Interesting that the article didn't mention it.
Factually, the AC is correct: Those indicted were Democrats.
Beat them to within an inch of their lives, allow them to heal....
THEN BEAT THEM AGAIN!!!
And repeat for each *individual* vote that was altered.
It's great that they're cracking down on the voter fraud, but these Kentucky guys in Clay County must have been gigantic idiots to even mess with the results.
I just took a look at the elections results from Clay County for 2002, 2004 and 2006 and none of the elections are even close! The county is overwhelmingly Republican, and all of the elections were won by over 30% margins!
(except for a 2002 primary race between two Republicans)
If someone is going to try and pull off some election fraud, you would think they'd try it in a county that was at least CLOSE.
It really doesn't surprise me about this. A lot of judges and officials really just don't "get it" IMHO for stuff like this. During this last presidential election, the lines were very long in some areas depending on where you went to vote (I waited until about 5:30 and didn't have to wait but about 30-40 minutes, so it wasn't too bad).
Now, I work in government, so the election committee was discussing turnout on the mass email the next day. One of the judges wrote, commenting about low long the lines were and how ridiculous it was, and actually suggested that perhaps just calling (by phone) a random subset of people and basing the whole election off the sample would be better than letting each and every person vote.
Sure, no possible way THAT could be abused . . .
"People who think they know everything are very annoying to those of us who do."-Mark Twain
"Hey! I only mean one of those votes for McCain!"
The Rapture is NOT an exit strategy.
"affecting the outcome of elections at the local, state, and federal levels. "
Source please? Not saying your wrong, I just missed that detail when I RTFA.
---"What did I say that sounded like 'Tell me about your day?'"---
But it is true that the Party of a Republican in the news tends to be mentioned in the summary, while the Party of a Democrat in the news tends to be quietly ignored in the summary.
This makes two times you have said this in this thread. Instead of asserting it for a third why not prove what you claim? Or is this just another Republican "the media is liberal and always against us" whine?
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The indispensable jamie found a report out of Kentucky of exactly the kind of shenanigans that voting-transparency advocates have been warning about
or what about these kinds of shenanigans!
"A circuit court judge, a county clerk, and an election official walk into a bar..."
Since the crimes were committed with a computer, why aren't there a whole heap of additional federal charges piled on? As we all know any crime with a computer element is much worse than murder. /sarcasm
There is a system, that provides verification *and* allows the voter to take the verification without being able to sell it. It's so simple anyone can understand it.
The vote is divided into two images, each with random pixels. They are printed on transparent media. When they are lined up, you can read the votes.
The person votes electronically. The vote is printed, it stays behind glass, in a clear chute. The voter verifies it then presses a button. Each of the two images drops down a separate chute. The voter chooses which one to take. From verification to division to storage, the entire handling of the verification media is visible behind glass. No monkey business possible.
If a verification must be done, the voter brings in their image and it's combined with the retained image. Any alteration on either shows up. They can only be read when re-combined, so the vote remains private.
Verification, papertrail, tamper-proof, secure, simple.
I really just don't understand the professional ethic that allows someone to build a sell a machine that sucks, when building a good machine is trivial.
In Canada, every polling station invites representatives of every political party to be present in the running of the polling station. And they all stand up for this responsibility. This means the parties themselves are responsible for policing each other. And it works, since the penalty for not policing each other is that the 'other guy' might get away with something.
As well, any individual that wants to come in and sit around the polling station all day is welcome to do so to observe the events.
In Canada it is generally accepted that the voting system works very very well. Unfortunately, the electoral system could be reformed and the parties leave something to be desired. But that seems to be pretty common and a trait shared with their southern neighbors.
There is a banner add at the top of this page when i view it, with the title "Blame Palin". It takes you to a page designed to lure people who wanted the republicans to win the election to complete a poll, gather their email adresses, and put them on some republican "Breaking news!" propagandistic spamlist.
This is a really crappy ad, for all reasons, and I just had to comment to complain.
I know we are not supposed to click ads unless they depict computer porn, but I think Palin is kinda hot in an odd and disturbing way, and I haven't gotten around to watching Nailin' Palin yet.
Go ahead and send them down here. We'd be more than happy to hang them for you since you yankees have become way too chickenshit over the past half-century to deal properly with your own criminals.
because in my cousin's good old hometown of Chicago a paper trail never stopped anyone. Hell electronic voting has been a travesty to some counties here in Georgia because voter fraud became difficult under the new system. Until they figured out that good old paper fraud was possible with absentee ballots.
Paper trail, I want an national repository for all votes immediately.
* Winners compare their achievements to their goals, losers compare theirs to that of others.
Here's a link to real news, in case anyone though Bradley is a news source...
http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5gs2WHoM41pW8pDFh-0KIrDnOsqfwD971E2JG0
The Kai's Semi-Updated Website Thingy
I'm curious, how difficult would it be for the these electronic voting machines to require a fingerprint at the beginning of the process and require the user to use that same finger through the entire process?
Now, before everyone starts screaming about identification, I'm not talking about comparing the fingerprints to any external databases at all.
After the ballot is cast and completed, the fingerprint data is immediately wiped.
This way, if a voter was somehow convinced that they were done and to step away from the booth before their vote was completed, the computer would automatically detect fraud/tampering if another user came up to change the ballot by comparing the fingerprints.
I'm sure there are reasons not to do this (like processing overhead), but its just something that occurred to me that could enhance security besides having a GUI designer who knows where to use a "Next" button.
Yep, another example of Democrats cheating the system.
Funny how the article makes it look like "the phony, GOP-operative-created Baker/Carter National Election Reform Commission" was somehow involved. We mustn't let a scandal tarnish the image of the Party.
To be fair, if a Republican did this, I would advocate taking them for a long helicopter ride over the desert. Accidents happen, just usually not to the right people.
Go into neighborhood bar and pickup filled-in ballot
Go to poll
Put filled-in ballot in box
Return with empty ballot
Get free drinks
Repeat for next voter
A lot of Americans are conditioned to believe that technology is the appropriate solution to every problem. The truth is, optimal solutions are almost always a well thought out mix of people, processes and technology.
Take a look at how electronic voting machines are used in India - Indian electronic voting machines have been widely used in various elections at the state and national levels for several years now and they have been wildly successful.
http://www.slate.com/id/2107388/
Actually, I think the above article's claim that "The Indian machines are vulnerable to retail fraud (but, because of the basic design, are much less subject to wholesale fraud)" is incorrect.
The Indians solve potential for "retail fraud" by putting in strong polling and counting processes with automatic checks and balances. For example, the procedure for opening of polls at a polling station involves, each candidate's authorized representative voting in a mock-poll-and-count in the presence of the presiding officer. The machine is used for actual polling only once the representatives certify that the machine functions as expected.
http://eci.nic.in/faq/evm.asp
The Indians may not be using any fancy-schmancy touchscreens but they do have a solution which works. Kudos to them.
...and I notice that NOBODY is screaming for their heads. If this was a conservative candidate, then all bloody hell would have been cut loose, but since its a Democrat.. hey we can forgive them because they were just "thinking of the people"... *rolls eyes*
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Given one of our greatest rights as U.S. citizens is the right to vote, those who tamper with such a right should be charged with treason.
Each month Amazon sends me a stack of $25 gift certificates for the money I spend on my Amazon credit card. Each cert has a unique validation code. I enter the code online and get my $25 credit. Each election I get something in the mail that tells me I am registered to vote. How hard is it to generate the equivalent of an Amazon gift card, send it to me, have me log on, enter my code and vote. I can then go back at ANY time in the future, enter the same code if I choose and see my original votes. People who care can validate random voters to make sure the s/w was not jiggered in the back room (i.e., the official voter tallies show the code and the vote but no names). Problem solved. No more voting machines, paper trails, voting booths and so on. The entire voting software can be written for a few thousand dollars on rentacoder.com in Bangladesh in a week. And it's open source.
Democracy sure has been great while it lasted.
Nothing about this article supports you.
So, quit banging your own drum when you don't even know the tune being played.
I am so tired of you "Bush stole the election freaks". Any excuse to ignore the fact that the person whose views you supported was not accepted by the majority. So how does the 2008 election get a pass? Is it only because the person you wanted to win did so?
Really, I want to know, is it only a problem when you lose?
* Winners compare their achievements to their goals, losers compare theirs to that of others.
So I'm browsing Slashdot while eating my lunch and see this entry. Government corruption in Kentucky, hmmm... Nah, it couldn't be....
I click on the link to the story. Yup! Clay county. Manchester. I should've known.
Election fraud is a small part of the shenanigans that go on in this place. They still make moonshine there, but it's a side-business for done for fun. The big cash crop (literally) is marijuana. There is a lot of pot back up in the hollers and local law enforcement has been involved with kick-backs from the pot farmers. I'm guessing that the feds have been wanting to get these guys for a while, and decided it would be easiest to nail them on election fraud.
If you have a conspiracy large enough to include the election workers, couldn't they just open the box and change the papers?
Plus, the voter doesn't know how the system works. He doesn't even know if he's supposed to get a receipt. If the machine did print out a receipt, this attack would never even get to that point, because the whole attack revolved around getting the user to hit the "vote" button and convince him that he was done.
New movie out about Obama called "Obama Deception", by Alex Jones, if you have not already seen it.
http://www.obamadeception.net/
~ awaiting spiritual enlightenment ~
To all of you suckers that laughed at me suggesting this, *FUCK YOU*
...should be a treasonous offense, with the appropriate punishment. In fact, being a hard core Constitutionalist and civic minded, and noting the perpetual problems of governmental thievery and skull duggery that never seems to go away, I think any governmental employee, elected, just normally employed or subcontracted, or appointed to some office, who is found to have committed deliberate malfeasance in their duties should be charged with treason, anything from snagging the red stapler on up, all of it, top to bottom.
Sort out this corrupt government thing a little bit better than what we have now in other words, zero tolerance for being any sort of crook on the public payroll. Elections are a biggee though, right up there, charge 'em with treason, set an example.
How about we bump up the punishment for election fraud just a smidge - to vivisection.
This is why we need a national voter ID bill, to prevent election fraud! Oh wait...
welcome our sneering, anonymous and cowardly, apologetic overlords. You're easily pleased aren't you? We're all very, very sorry. Really. :(
That article perfectly supports me. Its proven facts debunk the spin that insider election fraud conspiracies are impossible to keep secret long enough to get away with stealing the election. These crooks did, and there's no getting back the 2000, 2002 and 2004 results they stole. But throughout that time, people (like you) insisted that such conspiracies would have to have leaked. They didn't, and such talk helped them get away with it.
The 2008 election was won by Obama and most others by large margins. There is no evidence that election fraud (or disenfranchisement) was either widespread or had any effects on any results in 2008 - quite unlike 2000 and 2004, especially (but not exclusively) in Florida and Ohio. But yes, throughout this decade I have argued for better election security, especially paper trails. I was met by people insisting I was fighting an imaginary problem.
So I want to know what you said in 2000-2006 about protecting elections from election fraud conspiracies. And if you weren't either silent or speaking up to fix the broken system, I want your apology. Now.
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make install -not war
"Treason" is very narrowly defined. I think it's okay that way. But if we don't change the definition of "treason", we need to add a new crime on the same level of capital murder that's specifically for this kind of fraud. It's clearly conspiracy of the very worst sort.
Obviously this was someone pretending to be a crazed right-winger. Most likely it's one of those insidious liberals just posing as a frothing and stupid conservative for the purpose of making conservatives look idiotic. You know how those insidious liberals are.
I just have a hard time believing that ANY vote counts. That politicians would allow us unwashed to decide who gets in and who doesn't. The Canadian system isn't much better, but it does seem a wee bit harder to fake and fraud.
The OECD monitored the US federal elections in 2004, not sure about 2008. Either way they can't be everywhere.
Not that I think it matters any more since in my opinon the US was dead history by early 2009; you've collectively fallen too far and the rest of the free world is trying not to get dragged down into obscurity with you.
I'm going to say that cheating federal elections would be a good argument for treason, as the tag suggests.
Yes, treason.
Forget about 'the death penalty' and its elusive deterrent effect.
I promise that if we start publicly shooting motherfuckers, nobody is going to mess with these machines.
Or we'll get them all in a few rounds, and the rest will understand.
Anybody want to guess which one?
If boss hog was a R it would have been in ALL the headlines.
John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
Social security takes from the poor and gives to the rich.
The median person paying in lives on much less then the median person receiving. Old folks have done well on average. Schools mostly suck. Many kids work for shit wages.
If it were a sound retirement system that would be OK. It is a Ponzi scheme.
If an insurance company tried to pull it off they would slap the cuffs on all the trustees.
I'm waiting for the day they means test the benefits and lift the income cap. Granting that will undermine Social Securities political support (I'm counting on that). Once it is an explicit welfare program it will get the support it deserves. Damn need none.
John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
Since some commie rated you troll:
"Since the article doesn't mention it, the people indicted were DEMOCRATS. Quite the conundrum, eh, SlashKos? On one hand, vote fraud is bad, but since it's your guys (Democrats) doing it is almost makes it ok, right?"
I'd go on a Vegan diet but the delivery time from Vega is too long. --brownkitty
The very top of the highest tip.
Every election that used unverified machines without an audit trail was gamed. Every single one. Corrupt officials wanted the machines created that way and bought the systems that they could change votes to their whim or for cash.
We haven't lived in a representative democracy since about 1996 when these machines began to be rolled out.
Any time that you can verify after you leave the polling place which way your vote was recorded ... so can someone else. And that can lead to very serious consequences. Loss of job, family, the stakes are endless.
"Informative" sometimes just doesn't get it; you need something like "Horrific Truth" for such as this.
Orwell: "In a Time of Universal Deceit, telling the Truth is a Revolutionary Act"
Why no citations with your charge of Democratic complicity? There were 8 indicted, and I am aware of the party affiliation for four of those, and their party affiliation count runs an even 2-2 split between Republican/Democrat.
Charles Wayne Jones was the Democratic Election Commissioner, and William E. Stivers was the democrat judge for Manchester Precinct, and is current Clay County Democratic Chairman.
Freddy W. Thompson is a Republican and Clay County Court Clerk; Paul E. Bishop was the Manchester precinct Republican Judge.
Now let's discuss two other indicted individuals, and why their party affiliation is irrelevant to this analysis.
William and Debra Morris are owners of a Clay County sanitation company that has contracts with local governments. They are not politicians, and were motivated to commit election fraud as a means to extort business contracts from officials they helped elect through their criminal activities.
I score the partisan affiliation of the indicted as 2 Dem - 2 Rep - 2 irrelevant - 2 unknown. Where's the evidence of a predominant Democratic participation in this?
Additionally, something your attempt at deciphering party affiliation through simple internet searches did not expose is that there was a prior 2007 indictment handed down in Clay county, KY., for election fraud, and several of those indicted were Republicans: former county Clerk Jennings White; former Clay County judge-executive James Garrison; former sheriff Edd Jordan; and former state representative Barbara White Colter. The 2007 indictment also involved these four officials making a deal with an arrested drug dealer to assist them with their vote buying scheme.
This racketeering had nothing to do with party politics, your paranoid fantasy notwithstanding. This was a criminal conspiracy, that involved more than just conning the local rubes into believing they had finalized their votes, then changing the votes to a preset slate of approved candidates. It also involved shaking down certain candidates for money, used for purchasing some votes in the county, as well as fattening the wallets of co-conspirators.
The party affiliation of Clay County voters is predominately Republican. Maybe you should be asking yourself, why these upright Republicans were willing to have their votes so cheaply purchased by scummy Boss Hogg Politicians.
A few Links
It would seem that things in Kansas are devolving. We go from inspiring other countries to improve election transparency and credibility in other countries to this.
-Eric