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		|  09-24-2012, 09:10 AM | #1 |  
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				 Voter fraud bullshit exposed! 
 
			
			
	Quote: 
	
		| nvestigator's Guide to Voter Fraud 
 Download the PDF
 In the aftermath of a close election, some are quick to blame voter  fraud for the results. Allegations of fraud, however, are often greatly  exaggerated – on closer examination, the claims amount to a great deal  of smoke without much fire. In an effort to focus the upcoming election  on the facts, we offer this guide to common flaws in claims of voter  fraud. We urge reporters, analysts, advocates, and scholars interested  in the election process to ask the following questions when confronting a  claim that voter fraud has occurred.
 Is the alleged problem explained by undue reliance on faulty lists or a flawed list-matching process? Claims of voter fraud are often premised on attempts to compare lists of  voters to lists of people ineligible to vote. However, the process of  matching information from list to list is full of pitfalls. The  following questions will reveal some of the more common ways in which  fraud claims based on matching may be bogus.
 Are the underlying lists accurate? Large databases are vulnerable to human error and other inaccuracies.  For example, the Social Security Administration’s “Master Death Index,”  often used to identify voters who are allegedly deceased, is known to  have an error rate of more than 3%.[1] Such errors are compounded over  time: the leading expert on list-matching for the U.S. Bureau of the  Census estimates that in a large California employment database, “[o]ver  a period of twenty years, the records [associated] with each individual  can expect to contain at least two errors where the [Social Security  Number] has been mis-keyed or transcribed improperly.”[2]
 Were the underlying lists compiled for a different purpose? Databases that were not compiled for election or identification purposes  may contain information that proves misleading in the voting context.  In St. Louis in 2000, based on city property records, voters were  alleged to have registered from vacant lots. But the property records  apparently classified a multi-parcel address as vacant even if only one  of the parcels was vacant; further investigation by local reporters  revealed that the supposedly vacant lots contained valid residences.[3]
 Were the underlying lists missing important information (e.g. date of birth)? Those searching for fraud often compare identifying information on lists  to allege that two entries represent the same person. In New Jersey in  2005, several thousand voters were alleged to have committed fraud based  on such a comparison. But records in one county – a county  disproportionately represented in the claims of fraudulent votes – were  missing birthdates entirely. Some voters were listed only with month and  year of birth. And others were listed with a birthdate of January 1,  1880 – which was most likely a system default for missing  information.[4] Given the missing information, it was unwarranted to  conclude that two individuals sharing the same name alone represented  the same person.
 Did the comparison process accept a partial match of any field? Comparing information accurately on two different lists requires  precision. In contrast, loose matching criteria produce what are known  as “false positives”: records that appear to correspond to the same  individual, but in fact do not. In Florida in 2000, in assembling a set  of voters to be purged, a vendor found “matches” in the first name if  the first four letters were the same on two different lists, and  “matches” in the last name if 80% of the letters were the same.[5] The  final set of voters to be purged, of course, contained the names of many  individuals whose records had been falsely matched.
 Did the match process take middle initials or suffixes (e.g. Jr., Sr., III) into account? The same Florida procedure described above also failed to account for  different suffixes and middle initials, so that Rev. Willie D. Whiting,  Jr., was confused with Willie J. Whiting.[6] Allegations in New Jersey  in 2005 showed the same problem: James A. Smith and James G. Smith were  presumed to be the same person, as were J. T. Kearns and J. T. Kearns,  Jr.[7] And in New Hampshire, 22 pairs of people who shared the same  first and last names were flagged for possible double-voting; in fact,  all of the flagged voters have different middle names.[8]
 Did the match process take the “birthdate problem” into account? Even given an exact match, two entries with the same name and birthdate  may not represent the same individual. Statistics students are often  surprised to discover that in a group of 23 people, it is more likely  than not that two will share the same month and day of birth; in a group  of 150, two will probably share the same birthdate. In any group of  significant size, statistics tell us that there will be enough people  with the same name that two will be born on the same day.[9] Therefore,  it should not be surprising that Kathleen Sullivan was most likely  listed twice on the 2004 New Jersey voter rolls not because one woman  drove 161 miles to cast a second ballot, but because two women named  Kathleen Sullivan share the same birthdate.[10]
 Is the alleged problem explained by basic recordkeeping errors? Minor human error infects many election records: typos and misspellings  on voter registration lists, the wrong name marked on a pollbook. Though  these errors may not alter the result of any election, they could well  create the appearance of fraud where none exists.
 Is there any way to be sure that a data entry error didn’t lead to false information? Typographical errors happen. In Washington State in 2006, Marina  Petrienko tried to register to vote for the first time, but a county  official mis-typed the year of her birth, entering “1976” into the  database, instead of the year on her form: “1975.” First-time Illinois  voters Mike and Sung Kim “had been mistakenly registered with Kim as  their first names” in 2004.[11] And in Milwaukee, Victor Moy was listed  on the rolls as living at 8183 W. Thurston Avenue, but actually resides  at number 8153.[12] Because such typos may prevent registrations from  being externally validated by information in other sources, officials  and observers may believe that registrations are fraudulent when they  are, in reality, entirely legitimate.
 Is there any way to be sure that the correct name was marked in the pollbooks? Mistakes are made at the polls as well. In a jurisdiction of any  significant size, it is unfortunately easy to make an entry in the  pollbook next to the wrong voter’s name. For example, despite having  died in 1997, Alan J. Mandel was alleged to have voted in 2000; Alan J.  Mandell (two “l”s), who was very much alive and voting at the time,  explained that local election workers simply checked the wrong name off  of the list.[13] The same problem may occur when information from a  pollbook is entered incorrectly into a county’s computer system, as in  Milwaukee in 2004.[14] Or voters – legitimate voters – may make a  mistake: a 1994 investigation of fraud allegations in California, for  example, revealed that voters accidentally signed the poll books on the  wrong lines, next to the names of deceased voters.[15]
 Is there a legitimate explanation for the alleged facts? On occasion, those who claim voter fraud jump to conclusions not  justified by the data in front of them. Upon further investigation, the  facts often reveal that the alleged misconduct was actually entirely  legitimate.
 Did an individual actually live at an address zoned for business use? In most states, voters must register at a residential address; those  looking for fraud may flag addresses zoned for business use as an  indication of fraudulent activity. Broad zoning restrictions, however,  do not account for many less traditional – but legitimate – residences.  Barbara Taylor was among hundreds of Washington voters challenged in  2005 for this reason. While it is true that the address on her  registration was the address of a public storage facility, Taylor  explained that she is “a manager for the company and has lived in an  apartment on the site for 12 years.”[16]
 Did a person register twice but vote only once? Registering twice – or mistakenly leaving an old registration on the  rolls – is not meaningful evidence of voting twice. In 2004, for  example, federal prosecutors charged 23-year-old Wisconsinite Cynthia  Alicea with double-voting. Wisconsin allows residents to register on  Election Day, which Alicea did. Pollworkers found an error on the form,  and asked Alicea to fill out another, which she also did – but the first  form was never discarded. Although Alicea completed two registration  forms, she voted only once. Yet the two registration forms sufficed to  take Alicea to trial. She was promptly acquitted.[17]
 Did a person listed as deceased die after casting a vote? Voting from the grave offers salacious headlines, and investigators  often attempt to match death records to voter rolls in an attempt to  find fraud. Yet in addition to the problems with inaccurate matching  identified above, death records may only give the month or year of death  – concealing citizens who voted before dying, in quite ordinary  fashion. In Maryland in 1995, for example, an exhaustive investigation  revealed that of 89 alleged deceased voters, none were actually dead at  the time the ballot was cast. The federal agent in charge of the  investigation said that the nearest they came was when they “found one  person who had voted then died a week after the election.”[18]  Similarly, in New Hampshire, postcards were sent to the addresses of  citizens who voted in the 2004 general election; one card was returned  as undeliverable because the voter died after election day, but before  the postcard arrived at her home.[19]
 Was a person convicted of a crime not convicted of a disqualifying felony? Reports of votes by persons with convictions have often fed claims of  fraud. Yet in the vast majority of states, most convictions do not  affect the defendant’s voting rights. Wallace McDonald, 64, was purged  from the Florida voter rolls in 2000 because of a conviction. Yet Mr.  McDonald’s crime was not a felony, for which Floridians forfeit voting  rights forever – but merely a misdemeanor, which should not affect  voting rights at all. Indeed, Mr. McDonald had been convicted only of  falling asleep on a bench.[20] Similarly, in Washington’s 2004  gubernatorial election, hundreds of citizens were alleged to have voted  illegally because of convictions that were actually juvenile  dispositions – which do not disqualify voters.[21]
 Did a person convicted of a disqualifying felony have her voting rights legally restored? Even in Florida, where persons with felony convictions lose their voting  rights permanently, not every person convicted of a felony is  ineligible to vote. Reverend Willie Dixon, 70, was purged from the  Florida voter rolls in 2000 because of a felony conviction – but  Reverend Dixon had been pardoned for his crime and his voting rights had  been restored.[22] In most other states, persons with convictions  automatically regain the franchise after release from either  incarceration, probation, or parole. Allegations of fraud that look to  convictions without accounting for the restoration of voting rights will  often miss the mark.
 Does the person alleging fraud propose a policy to solve the  problem, and is the proposed policy the best solution to the problem  alleged? Allegations of fraud may serve the interests of those who favor  particular changes to existing election law. Some of these proposals are  ostensibly justified by the need to protect against fraud, but are  actually poorly tailored to serve that purpose. Investigators should  carefully probe the fit between those fraud allegations that bear  scrutiny and any policies proposed to address voter fraud.
 Does the proposed policy require photo identification? Alleged fraud is most frequently used to justify proposals requiring  photo identification of voters, including the controversial new “Federal  Election Integrity Act of 2006” passed by the House of Representatives  in September.[23] In 2006 alone, a quick search of news archives showed  that at least 50 newspaper op-eds and editorials and at least 272 other  published articles attempted to make a connection between the need for  photo identification and the need to reduce voter fraud.
 Does the proposed policy actually solve the problem? Some of those who support photo identification requirements  indiscriminately cite examples of “fraud,” whether the cited anecdotes  can be remedied by photo identification or not. In Wisconsin in 2005,  for example, supporters of a restrictive identification requirement  pointed repeatedly to voting by allegedly ineligible persons with  convictions – even though requiring restrictive ID would not prevent  voting by persons who are rendered ineligible by a conviction.[24]
 Does it leave a substantial loophole (e.g. absentee ballots)? In 2005, the Georgia legislature passed a law requiring voters to show  photo identification at the polls. A 1996 county vote-buying scheme was  cited as justification, despite the fact that the 1996 scheme involved  absentee ballot fraud, which the new photo-identification law would do  nothing to prevent.[25] Indeed, by exempting absentee ballots entirely,  the Georgia photo-ID law left open the most commonly cited vehicle for  the occasional acts of voter fraud that have been proven.[26]
 Would the alleged problem be solved by proper implementation of existing federal law? Many of the more commonly proffered allegations of voter fraud involve  concerns that should be resolved by existing federal law, once new  statewide voter registration databases have been fully implemented. The  Help America Vote Act of 2002 (“HAVA”) imposes an identification  requirement on first-time voters who have registered by mail, as long as  their registration information has not been externally validated.[27]  It also requires states to purge voters confirmed as deceased from the  rolls, and to coordinate voter registration lists with computerized  sources regarding the voting rights status of persons who have been  convicted of felonies.[28] In addition to the other list maintenance  required by HAVA, these three simple requirements should eventually  eliminate any significant threat caused by the most commonly cited  sources of alleged voter fraud.
 Does the proposed policy create more problems than it solves? Legitimate cases of fraud that could be addressed by a photo  identification requirement are proven to occur approximately as often as  Americans are struck and killed by lightning.[29] Given the frequency  of the problem, proposed solutions may be more harmful than helpful.  Restrictive photo identification requirements, for example, will likely  have an impact that far exceeds the negligible rate of voter fraud. Up  to 10% of the voting-age population does not have state-issued photo  identification.[30]This rate is disproportionately higher among  minorities, low-income populations, youth, and the elderly. A recent  Wisconsin study, for example, found that 78% of black men aged 18-24 had  no valid driver’s license.[31]
 Endnotes
 [1] Preventing Identity Theft by Terrorists: Joint Hearing on SSNs  and Identity Theft Before the Subcomm. on Oversight and Investigations  of the H. Comm. on Financial Services, and the Subcomm. on Social  Security of the H. Comm. on Ways and Means, 107th Cong. (2001)  (statement of Marc Rotenberg, Executive Director, Electronic Privacy  Information Center), available at  http://financialservices.house.gov/m...f/110801mr.pdf.
 [2] WILLIAM E. WINKLER, QUALITY OF VERY LARGE DATABASES (Bureau of the  Census Stat. Res. Div., Statistical Research Report Series No.  RR2001/04, 2001).
 [3] LORI MINNITE & DAVID CALLAHAN, DEMOS, SECURING THE VOTE: AN  ANALYSIS OF ELECTION FRAUD 49 & n.88 (2003),  http://www.demos.org/pubs/EDR_-_Securing_the_Vote.pdf.
 [4] Brennan Center for Justice at NYU School of Law & Michael  McDonald, Preliminary Analysis of the September 15, 2005 Report  Submitted to the New Jersey Attorney General by the New Jersey  Republican Party 6-7 (2005) [hereinafter New Jersey Fraud Analysis],  http://www.brennancenter.org/program...20response.pdf.
 [5] Greg Palast, The Wrong Way to Fix the Vote, WASH. POST, June 10, 2001, at B1.
 [6] Id.
 [7] New Jersey Fraud Analysis, supra note 4, at 2.
 [8] Memorandum from Bud Fitch, Deputy Att’y Gen., N.H. Dep’t of Justice,  to Robert Boyce, Chairman, N.H. Sen. Internal Affairs Comm., et al.  (Apr. 6, 2006),  http://www.nh.gov/nhdoj/publications...ful_voting.pdf.
 [9] Michael P. McDonald & Justin Levitt, Seeing Double Voting 11  (Aug. 30, 2006) (unpublished manuscript, presented at the 2006 American  Political Science Association Conference).
 [10] Id.
 [11] Burt Constable, 1st-time Voters Join Immigrant Turnout, CHI. DAILY HERALD, Nov. 5, 2004, at 1.
 [12] See e.g., Greg. J. Borowski, GOP Fails to Get 5,619 Names Removed  From Voting Lists, MILWAUKEE J. SENTINEL, Oct. 29, 2004, at A1.
 [13] Greg Palast, The Wrong Way to Fix the Vote, WASH. POST, June 10,  2001, at B1; see also Marcia Myers, Election Theft Ruled Out, BALT. SUN,  Aug. 24, 1995, at 1A.
 [14] Greg J. Borowski, Nothing Points to Fraud in 9 Double Voting Cases, MILWAUKEE J. SENTINEL, Aug. 22, 2005.
 [15] Lou Cannon, Editorial, Huffington’s Claims of a Stolen Election  Preposterous, SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER, Jan. 23, 1995, at A7.
 [16] Gregory Roberts, GOP Challenges Rights of Hundreds of Voters, SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER, Nov. 5, 2005, at A1.
 [17] Gregory Stanford, Editorial, Election Fraud Witch Hunt Disillusions  Young Voter, MILWAUKEE J. SENTINEL, Jan. 8, 2006, at J4.
 [18] Marcia Myers, Election Theft Ruled Out, BALT. SUN, Aug. 24, 1995, at 1A.
 [19] Memorandum from Bud Fitch, supra note 8.
 [20] Greg Palast, Ex-con Game: How Florida’s “Felon” Voter-Purge was Itself Felonious, HARPER’S MAG., Mar. 1, 2002, at 48.
 [21] David Postman, GOP’s Felon List May Be Way Off, SEATTLE TIMES, Mar. 17, 2005.
 [22] Id.
 [23] See, e.g., 152 CONG. REC. H6768 (daily ed. Sept. 20, 2006)  (statement of Rep. Norwood); see also H6772 (statement of Rep. Burton);  H6775 (statement of Rep. Royce); H6776 (statement of Rep. Ehlers).
 [24] Gregory Stanford, Editorial, Voting Irregularities: State GOP  Should Apologize, MILWAUKEE J. SENTINEL, Aug. 24, 2005, at A14.
 [25] Jay Bookman, Editorial, Rationale for Voter ID Law Fraudulent, ATLANTA J.-CONST., Oct. 20, 2005, at 17A.
 [26] Brennan Center for Justice at NYU School of Law & Spencer  Overton, Response to the Report of the 2005 Commission on Federal  Election Reform 8 (2005) [hereinafter Carter-Baker Dissent],  http://www.brennancenter.org/program...l%20report.pdf.
 [27] See 42 U.S.C. § 15483(b).
 [28] See 42 U.S.C. § 15483(a)(2), (4).
 [29] Carter-Baker Dissent, supra note 26, at 10.
 [30] Id. at 3.
 [31] John Pawasarat, The Driver License Status of the Voting Age  Population in Wisconsin 1, 11 (2005),  http://www.uwm.edu/Dept/ETI/barriers/DriversLicense.pdf.
 Last Updated October 2006
 
 
 
 
 |  
	Quote: 
	
		| Case Studies by Issue 
 Photo ID
 
 Much of the hue and cry about voter  fraud is accompanied by calls for restrictive ID requirements, like laws  requiring voters to show particular photo ID documents at the polls.   Some of this may be a sincere, if mistaken, belief in the need for  restrictive ID measures.  But this clip from a May 17, 2007, Houston Chronicle article suggests another rationale:
 
 Among Republicans it is an 'article of religious faith  that voter fraud is causing us to lose elections,' [Royal] Masset[,  former political director of the Republican Party of Texas,] said. He  doesn't agree with that, but does believe that requiring photo IDs could  cause enough of a dropoff in legitimate Democratic voting to add 3  percent to the Republican vote.We have analyzed more than 250 claims of fraud submitted by those supporting the respondents in the Supreme Court's photo ID case, Crawford v. Marion County Election Board.  We find absolutely no proven cases of fraudulent votes that could be prevented by the restrictive ID law being challenged. 
 Other case studies collected here by issue and by state also analyze the limited degree to which restrictive ID requirements could possibly remedy the fraud alleged in each instance.
 We also collect commentary discussing the purported link between voter fraud and calls for restrictive ID requirements.
 
 
 |  
(make sure you read it all before you comment Marshall.      )
http://www.truthaboutfraud.org/case_studies_by_issue/
http://www.truthaboutfraud.org/ |  
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		|  09-24-2012, 10:26 AM | #2 |  
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				Join Date: Apr 7, 2010 Location: Texas 
					Posts: 5,249
				      | 
 
			
			It's one of two ideas that the repukes have had this century.....voter suppression and cut taxes.
 Shit, the honest ones even admit it....google "republicans admit voter suppression"....
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		|  09-24-2012, 10:36 AM | #3 |  
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				Join Date: Sep 20, 2012 Location: There 
					Posts: 761
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	Quote: 
	
		| 
					Originally Posted by wimpage  It's one of two ideas that the repukes have had this century.....voter suppression and cut taxes.
 Shit, the honest ones even admit it....google "republicans admit voter suppression"....
 |  
It's true! Not only are Republicans working hard at voter suppression, I know for a fact that they are committing voter fraud. They are planning to steal this election! There is no other way to explain why Romney will win given all the polling data we see showing Obama is comfortably up in the polls.           |  
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		|  09-24-2012, 10:40 AM | #4 |  
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				Join Date: Aug 4, 2012 Location: Harlem 
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				      | 
 
			
			
	Quote: 
	
		| 
					Originally Posted by ChoomCzar  It's true! Not only are Republicans working hard at voter suppression, I know for a fact that they are committing voter fraud. They are planning to steal this election! There is no other way to explain why Romney will win given all the polling data we see showing Obama is comfortably up in the polls |  
\
 
Romney's going to lose Marshall.  And you will be crying voter fraud when he does.  
 
I'll put money on it.
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		|  09-24-2012, 10:47 AM | #5 |  
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				Join Date: Apr 7, 2010 Location: Texas 
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			Don't feed the troll bud....just encourages him.
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		|  09-24-2012, 10:47 AM | #6 |  
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				      | 
 
			
			Republicans have found a way to disenfranchise 10 million Latinos so there still in the running...
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		|  09-24-2012, 11:17 AM | #7 |  
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				 Next time hire an investigator that can hear and see! 
 
			
			Al Franken May Have Won His Senate Seat Through Voter Fraud
It looks increasingly likely that at least one member of the United  States Senate may owe his seat in the world’s greatest deliberative body  not to his charisma or the persuasiveness of his message but to voter  fraud. 
           As the Wall Street Journal's John Fund  reports, Minnesota Democrat Al  Franken’s   narrow, 312-vote victory in 2008 over incumbent Sen. Norm  Coleman may  have come as the result of people being allowed to vote who,  under  existing law, shouldn’t have been.
http://www.usnews.com/opinion/blogs/...gh-Voter-Fraud
York: When 1,099 felons vote in race won by 312 ballots 
In the '08 campaign, Republican Sen. Norm  Coleman was running for re-election against Democrat Al Franken. It was  impossibly close; on the morning after the election, after 2.9 million  people had voted, Coleman led Franken by 725 votes. Franken and his Democratic allies dispatched  an army of lawyers to challenge the results. After the first canvass,  Coleman's lead was down to 206 votes. That was followed by months of  wrangling and litigation. In the end, Franken was declared the winner by  312 votes. He was sworn into office in July 2009, eight months after  the election. 
 During the controversy a conservative group  called Minnesota Majority began to look into claims of voter fraud.  Comparing criminal records with voting rolls, the group identified 1,099  felons -- all ineligible to vote -- who had voted in the  Franken-Coleman race. 
 Minnesota Majority took the information to  prosecutors across the state, many of whom showed no interest in  pursuing it. But Minnesota law requires authorities to investigate such  leads. And so far, Fund and von Spakovsky report, 177 people have been  convicted -- not just accused, but convicted -- of voting fraudulently  in the Senate race.  Another 66 are awaiting trial.
http://washingtonexaminer.com/york-w...rticle/2504163
Felons Voting Illegally May Have Put Franken Over the Top in Minnesota, Study Find The six-month election recount that turned former "Saturday Night Live" comedian Al Franken into a U.S. senator may have been decided by convicted felons who voted illegally in Minnesota's Twin Cities. 
  
  That's the finding of an 18-month study conducted by Minnesota Majority, a conservative watchdog group, which found that at least 341 convicted felons in largely Democratic Minneapolis-St. Paul voted illegally in the 2008 Senate race between Franken, a Democrat, and his Republican opponent, then-incumbent Sen. Norm Coleman.
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2010...a-study-finds/
Sen. Al Franken Voter Fraud Revelations Call For Ways To Reduce It
      Al Franken, Senator from Minnesota (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
  
    The latest revelations that illegal votes may have given Sen. Al Franken (D-Minn.) his 312-vote margin of victory in his 2008 Senate race—out of the nearly 3 million votes cast—gives one pause. The fact that 243 people have already been convicted or are awaiting trial on voter fraud underscores a persistent concern that, despite their small share of the vote, ineligible ballots can actually swing results.
  
http://www.forbes.com/sites/billfrez...-to-reduce-it/
MINNESOTA VOTE FRAUD: 2,812 Dead Voters
  A review of Minnesota’s statewide database of registered voters revealed at least 2,812 deceased individuals voted in last November’s general election, according to a new report by the “traditional values” advocacy group Minnesota Majority.
  
http://www.redstate.com/jrichardson/...2-dead-voters/ |  
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		|  09-24-2012, 11:20 AM | #8 |  
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			Not!   
	http://www.alternet.org/gop-voter-fr...ken-us-senatorQuote: 
	
		| There is no basis in fact, whatsoever, in these inaccuracies propagated  by the Minnesota Majority here, none,” Hennepin County Attorney Mike  Freeman said Wednesday. “After the most closely scrutinized election in  Minnesota history in 2008, there were zero cases of fraud. Even the  Republicans lawyers acknowledged that there was no systematic effort to  defraud the election, none.” 
 “In Hennepin County, 650,000 people voted,” he continued. “The Minnesota  Majority presented us with 1,500 cases that they felt there were  problems with voting. Our own election bureau gave us 100. At the end of  the day, we charged 38 cases. And all but one of them are felons voting  who were still under the penalty [of not legally applying to regain  individual voting rights]. There was no fraud.”
 
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		|  09-24-2012, 11:35 AM | #9 |  
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	Keep your god-damned head in the sand, marks-rocks-with-pee, "The fact that 243 people have already been convicted  or are awaiting trial on voter fraud underscores a persistent concern  that, despite their small share of the vote, ineligible ballots can  actually swing results."
  
http://www.forbes.com/sites/billfrez...-to-reduce-it/Quote: 
	
		| 
					Originally Posted by markroxny   |  |  
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		|  09-24-2012, 11:42 AM | #10 |  
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	Quote: 
	
		| 
					Originally Posted by I B Hankering  Keep your god-damned head in the sand, marks-rocks-with-pee, "The fact that 243 people have already been convicted  or are awaiting trial on voter fraud underscores a persistent concern  that, despite their small share of the vote, ineligible ballots can  actually swing results."
  
http://www.forbes.com/sites/billfrez...-to-reduce-it/ |  
How many CONVICTED THO??? and how many just on trial???? HMMMM???
 
IB Hankering to be a cowardly idiot.
 
243 is the number of times you type the word Odumbo and Kool-Aid in a single day.  Because you just say the same stupid shit over and over and over and over.
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		|  09-24-2012, 11:59 AM | #11 |  
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					Posts: 31,214
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	Well, son-of-a-bitch!?! Now your lame-ass wants to equivocate over the number convicted and the number on trial !?!  THIS -- after you just ignorantly started this thread and made repeated posts claiming voter fraud NEVER happens!?!   You need to get your fucking story straight, marks-rocks-with-pee.Quote: 
	
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					Originally Posted by markroxny  How many CONVICTED THO??? and how many just on trial???? HMMMM???
 IB Hankering to be a cowardly idiot.
 
 243 is the number of times you type the word Odumbo and Kool-Aid in a single day.  Because you just say the same stupid shit over and over and over and over.
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 Are you going to continue to argue voter fraud never happens, or are you now going to argue that no one was ever convicted of voter fraud? BTW, if you argue either way,  you are going to further validate that you are a Dim-witted moron, marks-rocks-with-pee, because -- and here you've demonstrated that your cognitive skills are obviously impaired or undeveloped -- a number for those convicted was already posted @ #7: "177 people have been  convicted -- not just accused, but convicted -- of voting fraudulently  in the Senate race. Another 66 are awaiting trial."
http://washingtonexaminer.com/york-w...rticle/2504163
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		|  09-24-2012, 12:04 PM | #12 |  
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				Join Date: Aug 4, 2012 Location: Harlem 
					Posts: 1,614
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			For every article you post i can post counter. 
	http://crooksandliars.com/karoli-new-right-wing-meme-felons-elected-fQuote: 
	
		| Right-wingers are in a tizzy over excerpts from a new book by two  of the GOP’s leading voter-fraud hucksters alleging that Minnesota’s  Democratic Senator Al Franken would not have won a statewide recount in  2009 were it not for ex-felons voting illegally.They are jumping to the false conclusion that illegal felon voting in  November 2008 not only tipped a recount in which Franken won by 312  votes—out of 2.4 million cast between the two men—but that tougher state  voter ID laws would have changed the result. Both claims are wrong.
 
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		|  09-24-2012, 12:12 PM | #13 |  
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				Join Date: Jan 3, 2010 Location: South of Chicago 
					Posts: 31,214
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	Hey lame-ass, marks-rocks-with-pee, your assertion was that voter fraud NEVER occurs.  To disprove that assertion required only one example of one incident -- not 177 documented convictions, moron.  You've already had your ass handed to you, marks-rocks-with-pee.Quote: 
	
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					Originally Posted by markroxny   |  
 But then there are the 66 pending trials for voter fraud, the documented 1,099 felons who voted, and the 2,812 dead voters on the role.  Nothing your lame-ass posts can change those facts.  Voter fraud happens!
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		|  09-24-2012, 12:14 PM | #14 |  
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				Join Date: Aug 4, 2012 Location: Harlem 
					Posts: 1,614
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			I will never have my ass handed to me by a cowardly dumbass like you.   YOU CAN'T EVEN FUCKING READ IDIOT. I NEVER SAID IT NEVER OCCURS. 
READ AGAIN DUMBASS 
http://www.truthaboutfraud.org/ 
But I am impressed that you stopped posting Kool Aid and Odbumbo since I pointed it out I-B-Hankering the Cowardly Idiot.
 
Romney is going to lose.  Quote me on that.  When he does, YOU will use this bullshit issue of voter fraud to make yourself feel better about it.  I guaran fuking tea-pot it.
 
See you in Nov coward.
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		|  09-24-2012, 12:28 PM | #15 |  
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				Join Date: Jan 3, 2010 Location: South of Chicago 
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	Marks-rocks-with-pee, you're the ignorant-ass that started this ignorant thread with the ignorant assertion that voter fraud NEVER occurs!  Are you still arguing -- in the face of over whelming evidence to the contrary -- that voter fraud NEVER occurs?  You ARE a fucking moron, and voter fraud happens!Quote: 
	
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					Originally Posted by markroxny  I will never have my ass handed to me by a cowardly dumbass like you.   YOU CAN'T EVEN FUCKING READ IDIOT. I NEVER SAID IT NEVER OCCURS. 
READ AGAIN DUMBASS 
http://www.truthaboutfraud.org/ 
But I am impressed that you stopped posting Kool Aid and Odbumbo since I pointed it out I-B-Hankering the Cowardly Idiot.
 
Romney is going to lose.  Quote me on that.  When he does, YOU will use this bullshit issue of voter fraud to make yourself feel better about it.  I guaran fuking tea-pot it.
 
See you in Nov coward. |  
 Regarding Novemeber 6: you can't see a god-damned thing, marks-rocks-with-pee.  You are blitzed on Odumbo Kool Aid, and you're incapable of dealing with minor autonomic functions let alone higher, cognitive functions such as thinking and recognition.
 
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