Kansas Secretary of State Blocks Release of Voting Machine Tapes
PvtVoid writes: Wichita State University statistician Beth Clarkson has filed a lawsuit under Kansas' open records law to force the state to release paper tape records from voting machines, to be used as data in her research on statistical anomalies in voting patterns in the state. Clarkson, a certified quality engineer with a Ph.D. in statistics, has analyzed election returns in Kansas and elsewhere over several elections that indicate 'a statistically significant' pattern where the percentage of Republican votes increase the larger the size of the precinct. The pattern could be voter fraud or a demographic trend that has not been picked up by extensive polling. Secretary of State Kris Kobach argued that the records sought by Clarkson are not subject to the Kansas open records act, and that their disclosure is prohibited by Kansas statute.
The secretary is covering up a fraud.
If builders built buildings the way programmers wrote programs, then the first woodpecker would destroy civilization.
What possible reason could there be to not let anyone who wants to look at the audit trail of election votes?
What's the Matter with Kansas?: How Conservatives Won the Heart of America by Thomas Frank
...the definition of "something's fishy".
Authority without Accountability = Authoritative Abuse(s)
When are people going to demand an open and transparent government?
More important, who stands to gain (or be hurt) if this information was released?
Well, it better be "significant enough" to be the difference in a statewide election. If it's not, or if it's real, then all the research will have done is shown those republicans where they have over saturated some areas and it's time to redraw some lines. My guess, is that's the worst case scenario for the "researcher" and that if it is legit we'll never hear from the again.
secretary of the great state of Kansas and don't expect miracles out of nowhere.
now, carry on wayward son, there will be peace when you are done, lay your weary eyes to sleep and don't you cry no more.
I thought this was the court ruling.
If you've got nothing to hide...
I guess they can't swallow the same crap they expect us to take.
Who's funding Clarkson's lawsuits?
Harrison's Postulate - "For every action there is an equal and opposite criticism"
You should move to one of those utopian failed states.
Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
Wow...it's getting deep in here. By the way, corpses vote Democrat. Just check the ballots in Chicago.
> Microsoft created a web page where we could see if our vote was thrown away
https://info.kingcounty.gov/elections/ballottracker.aspx
It's very unreliable since they're attempting to use Windows as a server, but it's better than nothing. I entered about a dozen of my friend's names in 2008 after the Presidential election, and not a one was counted. Seattle threw away all of our votes. It sucks that the state forces to vote by mail then just throws away our votes.
And to Nick Howell that works at the state election commission, screw you for calling my boss and trying to get me fired from work. I called you on your fraud so you lashed back out at me.
> 'a statistically significant' pattern where the percentage of Republican votes increase the larger the size of the precinct.
The larger the precinct in geographical terms, the more spread out the population. The more spread out, the more rural, the more rural, the more Republicans per capita. Where's the problem here?
You mean the blue states that waste all their money on dem programs?
So, if the government stores information in an inconvenient format, that makes it exempt from freedom of information requests?
Pathetic.
You mean the red states that consistently receive more in federal funds than they contribute in tax dollars? Oh yeah those places....
It's a amazing how many folks have a "Government is hiding something" default setting here. Who, without reading the background material, conclude that the Kansas Secretary of State is stonewalling with the "it's not legal to release this information" argument.
I urge you to read both the above article AND the one it links to. You will discover that this researcher filed almost the EXACT same lawsuit years ago and LOST in court back in 2013. The courts agreed with the Secretary of State that the release of this information was illegal according to Kansas law.
All that's happening now is the researcher is trying to find a judge who might rule differently by filing another lawsuit. She is answer shopping and hoping to "get lucky" this time around. IMHO this is a waste of time and is clogging up the courts with worthless lawsuits.
"File to fit, pound to insert, paint to match" - Aircraft Maintenance 101
Yes, election fraud is far better than everyone knowing who everyone else voted for. Information should not be free, in this case at least.
And to Nick Howell... trying to get me fired
I think his real name is Andy Greeley. He returned my call about my ballot getting "lost" and made my daughter cry. He really shook her up. Of course, nothing ever happened to him, and my votes are still not getting counted.
She should try a real state. Hint: In real states, the republican majority voting regions are the boonies out in the forest / farm areas.
> the Republican rulers here throw away votes by the thousands.
The King County Elections is horrifically crooked. You're not allowed to vote in person, and they simply don't count many of the mail ballots. I've voted in every mail in election, and my vote hasn't counted a single time. Sherril Huff, their director, is a die-hard Democrat and very politically active. She even ran for office as a Democrat. The person that appointed her is Ron Sims, the former County Executive, that is now Obama's Deputy Secretary of the Department of Housing and Urban Development, And, of course a Democrat that ran for office several times as a Democrat. When you have people so politically active in one party in control of your votes with no accountability, there is a problem.
Ah yes those Blue states where they ran out of everyone elses money to spend.
No, they tell you that In-Person Voter Fraud is close to nonexistent, the most uncommon variety, the hardest to perform, and the least rewarding.
They also tell you that In-Person Voter Fraud is the only form prevented by Voter ID laws.
And that in an effort to stop those tens of invalid in-person votes per year on a national scale, the trade off is disenfranchising hundreds of thousands of legitimate voters nationwide. Voters who are overwhelming tend to be poor/minority/democratic voters. There are still several other forms of fraud that are easier to perform, and much more affecting of the outcome of an election, which Voter ID does nothing about.
Do try to learn about the topic before speaking.
The guy who said the election was rigged won the presidency with the second-most votes.
Exactly. Don't listen to these leftist liberals who are so stupid. Its a proven fact that blue states take in far more tax (read: stolen) dollars than they give back. For every dollar stolen from a hard working red state resident through taxes, some hippy liberal ASSHOLE in a blue state is taking 50% for their wasteful and completely useless social programs.
Try to get the same information for Chicago and you will just disappear.
"It not the people who vote that matter....it's the people who count the votes that matter." in this case people that protect those that count.
Electronic voting... please it is pathetic. Out of all people members of Slashdot should know better.... If I'm tempted to cheat, those that are actually getting elected WILL cheat. Current system is pathetically unsafe and lucks ANY real security, my Xbox games have better protection than current voting system. Why?? Again:
"It not the people who vote that matter....it's the people who count the votes that matter."
Umm you do realize Republicans scream about voter fraud. It's their justification for voter ID. To answer your question: yes it would. You might want to read the article.
There was 235 MILLION registered voters in the 2012 election. Hundreds of thousands is a statistical fluke. A difference of a few degrees outside is also likely to affect turnout by 0.05%. New Hampshire typically schedules their elections on a Tuesday in March, sun or snow. Heck, a few years ago turnout was so low our vote on a town policy didn't reach quorum. A strong effort to boycott the election may also have helped. Yes, you read that right. (The difference between a "No" vote and a failed vote had something to do with how the measure could be re-introduced later.)
Check your claim that it "overwhelming tends to be poor/minority/democratic" voters, too: Much Ado About Nothing? An Empirical Assessment of the Georgia Voter Identification Statute
Voter ID laws don't suppress democrats, either. Well, not living ones, anyways.
I don't like encouraging the spread of ID requirements by the government either... you know, having to get permission from the federal government to TAKE A JOB comes to mind. But voting? Seriously? It's a state ID for a state purpose.
This is why scantrons are not the panacea to electronic voting machines. It's obvious that Clarkson is wanting to compare the tape counts with the results from tabulation servers which is what the state election board goes by to determine the outcome of elections. The tabulation servers are just as prone to hacking as any electronic voting machine, but there's no laws which call for auditing the system as a whole, i.e ballot->scannner->tape|stored memory->network->tabulating server. In fact, the Kansas law contains a Catch-22: An audit is usually only performed if there is evidence of significant irregularity with the votes. However, in order to discover a significant irregularity, a candidate must first provide a reason for an audit, but without the audit there's no evidence of irregularity. And usually the audit is an examination of the tape, rather than the recount of actually scanned ballots. So the weakness in the system comes from a lack of audit on the scantron to see if scanned ballots are accurately recorded on tape, and to see if the data that's transmitted from the scantron to a tabulating server matches the tape which matches the scanned ballots, and to see if the tabulation server data matches the scantron data which matches the tape which matches the scanned ballots.
He's part of the Republican's white-supremacist problem, and says a lot of crazy things.
http://www.kansascity.com/opinion/opn-columns-blogs/yael-t-abouhalkah/article12532439.html
http://www.motherjones.com/politics/2012/03/kris-kobach-anti-immigration-laws-sb-1070
He has the mind of a RWNJ blogger, so it's pretty terrible that he has power over normal people.
There's a Chicago-style Democrat political machine here. My wife worked for the Kitsap county elections for several years, and you don't get promoted unless you're very active in the Democratic Party. It is just across the Sound from Seattle, and things are even worse in King county.
I expect what they would find is the tape ran out. So to avoid embarrassment...
If anyone wanted to destroy the idea that we vote and elect officials in the US there is no better way to do it than to keep voting records secret. Maybe they can claim it as a national security issue due to the theory that if the public ever figured out what is really going on there would be massive riots across the entire nation. It takes a very dumb official to try and suppress this information.
If it's legally impossible to request a review of them, why bother with creating and storing the paper tapes in the first place?
Which leads, I guess, to the next question. If it's legally impossible to review an election, why bother holding them in the first place?
...indicate 'a statistically significant' pattern where the percentage of Republican votes increase the larger the size of the precinct The pattern could be voter fraud or a demographic trend that has not been picked up by extensive polling.
It could also be the effect of gerrymandering by Democrats to consolidate republicans into fewer districts and diluting votes in other districts so more district level elections can be favorably held.
Why keep the tapes if nobody can look at them?
Go ahead and validate the results of an election in a system that keeps the identity of each voter private while still revealing the contents of each ballot. The audit seeks to demonstrate that each ballot was unhampered, cast by a legitimate voter, and has been counted. Go ahead and show that anybody other than a straight-ticket voter will have any privacy in that approach.
> The HOA sent door to door
My Condo owners association did that too. They even stopped by a couple of weeks before the election to ask if they could have our ballots so they could fill them out. Stunningly, it is illegal here to put party affiliation or incumbency on the ballot, so since it's quite a bit of work to do research to find-out about the candidates, so almost a quarter of the residents did that. It's depressing living in Seattle where a quarter of the people will just give their ballots to someone else to fill-out.
And, screw King County Elections. I'm the sponsor of my college's young Republican club, and my vote hasn't counted since we moved to mail-in votes and according to our members that checked, none of them had their vote counted in the 2012 presidential election. There's just no accountability.
First, we zoned minorities out of white neighborhoods. Now we're also trying to keep them out of voting booths. Is this country becoming more racist?
Any sufficiently unpopular but cohesive argument is indistinguishable from trolling.
I thought that problem was fixed already? We're dealing with modern fraud today not decades old fraud. Or is your justification that because one side cheated that the other side is allowed to cheat to make up for it?
Sims is a convicted crook. It's ridiculous that the person he appointed head of elections still has her job. I go to church with him, and to say he is biased is an understatement. He was King count exec for 12 years. Off of the top of my head, I can remember six scandals that he was involved with.
She is asking for a copy of the tapes. That is very different than the tapes being reviewed.
> Ron Sims
I go to church with him and his family so I know him well. He was county exec for twelve years. He was never fired despite being involved with at least six (that I can remember off of the top of my head!) major scandals. The county wasted millions on legal fees defending him. He was rewarded for his illegal actions with a very high position in HUD. That is Chicago-style politics at its worst.
You couldn't be more wrong.
Both parties run out of money. One of them does it by not taxing enough, the other does it by spending too much.
2000 election was a big "fraud"..tons' of disenfranchisement with evil overlords controlling everything.
2004 big cover up and fraud again and machine conspiracy and disenfranchisement
lead up to 2008 election on slashdot, reddit, etc "everyone video things and be ready to have evidence of all the voter fraud, hacking , disenfranchisment, and so on that is going to happen!"
Election results come out....and magically the voting system was declared "A OK!" by very same idiots and the media in general.
Intellectual dishonesty....you're all dripping with it....
'There are multiple exemptions to what types of records are available under the Kansas Open Records Act.' ref.
I keep hearing this argument that voter ID requirements disenfranchise the poor and minorities. Why is that a given? Why can't poor people get the free ID or what possible connection do being a minority have to do with not having an ID? I don't get it. Poor and minorities use ID's all the time for buying alcohol, cashing checks and getting title loans...all of a sudden they can't find their ID on election day? But I'll agree with you - the greatest fraud will be found in the vote harvesting that is increasing with the expansion of early voting. The biggest threats to our voting as I see it are early voting, open primaries and touchscreen voting machines - more so than voting day fraud.
No lawsuit needed!
235 million registered voters, barely over half of which voted.
Still an anomoly? At the presidential level, possibly. Though 74,000 votes separated Obama from Romney over 29 electors in Florida, for example.
But you don't even have to drop to the state legislature to see small numbers matter. In 2014, Martha McSally beat Ron Barber in Arizona for the US House of Representatives by 219 votes. That's a pretty slim margin for a district with 640,000 residents.
So, yes...it actually does matter.
Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
Because DMV offices are only open during business hours and not on weekends in poorer areas.
These rats who consider themselves morally and intellectually superior will always argue.
Fact is: India has billions of people, many poor, all have an ID to vote.
Tell them suck on the fat end of a dog turd.
In regards to her previous lawsuit which was ruled on in a district court and a point I haven't yet heard mentioned, in Kansas (unsure of other states), District Court Judges are in elected positions. This means an elected official ruled in favor of the government on a matter that regarded election fraud. To me this represents a gross conflict between the citizens and their representatives. This situation needs more attention than it seems to be getting. I would say the feds need to step in but that would just be a joke I think since this problem is probably systemic.
Because by definition, they can not legally drive to the DMV to get the free ID, and many DMVs are not easily accessible by bus or whatever. Finally as the other responder indicated, the DMVs have worse business hours than even banks that the working poor cannot abide.
Because DMV offices are only open during business hours and not on weekends in poorer areas.
That's a stretch... its also not true in my state where voter ID laws have been derided with the same fact-less "poor, minority, democrat" nonsense. There are weekend hours and extend evening hours during the week. These same "poor" seem to have no trouble using the SS office hours to get their "paycheck".
It is not possible to verify votes from an electronic / black box voting machine, even if it has an internal paper roll. There is no guarantee that what shows up on the paper roll is how the voters actually voted. The only method that can be verified is a real paper ballot system which is tried and true and simple.
actually, yes, I would like senators to only be elected by landowners. That was, historically, the intent -- to prevent tyranny of the majority from raiding the federal coffers. Direct election of senators has defeated that purpose and consequently, more than 65% of US residents receiver some sort of government money in their households, not counting subsidized student loans.
In what state does one have to go into and office to get an SS check? Direct Deposited or mailed these days.
Oh, well, if that's the case in your small corner of the country, great. Around here, most DMVs don't have that. And how long are the extended hours for your DMV? Long enough for someone with only access to public transportation to get from their job to the DMV? What if they need to pick up their kids first?
My Condo owners association did that too.
The company I work for in Seattle does that. They were pissed when I gave it to them already filled-out in black ink.
Except that the tapes contain no personally identifiable information, so that claim is bullshit.
upon the advice of my lawyer, i have no sig at this time
The actual vote tallies are readily available by precinct. So there are three possibilities
The votes were added or posted incorrectly into the into totals.
The machines were biased or counted incorrectly.
Projecting actual votes from polling data or historical results is inaccurate.
Which of these three do you think is most likely?
The poor and elderly often don't have drivers license and the only place you can get these "free" ID's is often hundreds of miles away and only open during business hours. If I took your car away and told you the only way you could vote was to take a day off work, spend 4 hours and $6 on a bus each direction while giving up a days pay while living paycheck to paycheck would you do it?
What if you didn't have a car, were elderly, of ill health and living on social security and having to skip a meals several times a month to survive?
I simply can't believe you are this ignorant of what it's like to be the working poor. Either you are a child or just an ass.
@GoChickenFat, Your characterization of what poor people use ids for is bigoted, racist and misinformed. Your questions SHOW your ignorance of the history of voter suppression in parts of this country that's been going on since Reconstruction. The government issued photo id requirement is a descendant of the voter's "literacy test" and the poll tax. It goes along with closing polling places and places where you can register to vote in "unfriendly" i.e. poor or minority areas.
To get a title loan, you have to have a car that you own. There are lots of people who don't own cars OR have access to one. There are lots of older people who depend on their family or neighbors to bring them groceries and medicine or the bus to get anywhere. My grandmother died at age 98. For the last 15 years of her life she didn't have a driver's license or *any other* id that would pass muster with most of these new laws. She was sharp as a tack until the last month or two before her death. Her life (like many older seniors) was spent dealing with doctors, medicines and just the ordinary chores of living, which get much harder when you get really old.
Vote harvesting? Early voting? Open primaries? NO. All of these have to do with people voting WHO HAVE A LEGAL RIGHT TO VOTE. You sound like someone who is onboard with the idea of denying the vote to people who disagree with you or that you feel superior to.
Manipulation of voting machines is different. Less visible, easier and more effective since it doesn't happen one vote at a time.
A risk management manager at a bank once told me that the only people who try to rob banks by personally going into a branch are the stupid ones. The same goes for someone trying to commit voter fraud by casting a single ballot. The big frauds are happening via unrepresentative redistricting and voting machine manipulation.
I'm sorry - your rebuttal is full of straw man conjecture - "hundred's of miles?" come on. I'm middle aged and very aware of being working poor myself. I think it's amazing that its too burdensome to get and ID but on election day all of a sudden the burden is removed. I live in the country and my voting precinct is as far away as the DMV - a 20mile round trip and no bus or taxi is ever going to come out here to give me a ride - certainly not for $6 - so does that make me already disenfranchised? I just don't get the defense here. Why is it so bad to prove who you are when participating in something as important as voting? To be honest, I really don't want people voting that can't take the time to fully participate in the process and that has nothing to do with race, income or party.
And to answer your question - yes, I made voting important enough to forgo other useless activities like playing the lottery, buying drinks at the bar, and not wasting money on cigarettes - all while living paycheck to paycheck and borrowing to get by. it's called priorities. I'm sorry I'm not sympathetic to people with misaligned priorities trying to vote without an ID. That doesn't make me ignorant or an ass.
There you go again. You must live in a cartoon.
Voter fraud is a Democrat trick and always has been. That's why they're always against voter ID and perpetuate the lie that it "harms" poor and minority voters. Can't collect welfare or even pick up prescription drugs without ID, not to mention by booze or smokes.
That depends on the state. Southeastern Virginia has a large poor, black population and a reasonably efficient bureaucracy. The DMV is open 8:00 AM to noon on Saturdays.
It is the counter that counts. I think it might be time to examine this issue in other states as well.
I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
Honestly as a European I can't believe how poor the American voting system seems to be. Massive amounts of fraud, a total lack of transparency, inadequate poorly designed technology plus the complete lack of security on the technology reminds me of nothing more than a banana republic.
You might as well as ask some Zanu PF election monitors to come over from Zimbabwe to oversee your next elections.
Why can't poor people get the free ID or what possible connection do being a minority have to do with not having an ID?
"Free" IDs require a non-free application process.
And minorty has to do with it because poll taxes, like required ID, were started in the late 1800s explicitly to keep ex slaves from voting. You do realize that most ex slaves were minorities, right? And the minorities are still disproportionately poor, so anything targeting the poor is inherently racist.
Learn to love Alaska
Poor and minorities use ID's all the time for buying alcohol, cashing checks and getting title loans...all of a sudden they can't find their ID on election day?
Yeah, but what about the poor that don't have an ID? Sure, they can't buy alcohol (really, when was the last time you were carded?), cash checks (many places don't require ID for that, you claim to have been working poor, but apparently were never poor-poor, and look down on those who are), or get title loans on the cars they don't own, and can't vote. If you can't afford the poll tax, we don't want you voting, anyway.
Learn to love Alaska
Poor is a state of mind. Your arguments are no more in depth than any other I've heard. Its all conjecture. You're free to continue peddling your "victimology" as I'm done with this useless thread.
When the law is explicitly stated as being a barrier to voting, how is it "victimology" to point out that it's a barrier to vote?
Learn to love Alaska
I'm going to cut the secretary some slack here. Yes, there's possibility for coverup of malfeasance/systematic voting machine hacking. However, there's also the possibility of releasing all names and the way they voted.
Ultimately, I think that voting machines are by and large not up to the task security-wise. There has to be some way of verifying the records so that we know the machines aren't being subverted, without releasing identities of voters linked to which way they voted.
In Alabama, they're currently planning to close all but four DMV offices in the entire state. We're not talking about a 20 mile round trip.