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Politics : Al Gore vs George Bush: the moderate's perspective -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Hawkmoon who wrote (7078)11/21/2000 6:28:59 PM
From: KLP  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 10042
 
FINALLY..."Military allegedly denied voting rights" Class Action Suit to be filed! Maybe now all citizens of this country can find out what really happened...and who/what caused them not to be sent....and how many weren't sent....this is beyond partisan....

Tuesday, 21 November 2000 11:47 (ET)

Military allegedly denied voting rights

SAN ANTONIO, Nov. 21 (UPI) -- A Texas lawyer said Tuesday he planned
to
file a lawsuit directly with the U.S. Supreme Court alleging hundreds
in the
military were denied their right to vote Nov. 7 because of widespread
voter
fraud.

San Antonio attorney Phillip E. Jones said he would carry the lawsuit
to
Washington to file it directly with the nation's highest court
"because
it's
so important." The U.S. Supreme Court will accept such cases if time
is
a
factor and the government is a defendant, he said.

"There have been large groups of military personnel who either didn't
get
their ballots when they ordered them in a timely fashion, or had their
ballot intercepted and altered," he said.

Jones said his class action lawsuit would be filed by Wednesday on
behalf
of 350 named plaintiffs, including members of all branches of the
service
stationed in the United States and abroad. But he said there is a
"good

possibility" that tens of thousands of people are affected, including
"a
large percentage claiming legal residence in the state of Florida,
which
could paint a whole new picture for this election."

Many in the military stationed abroad or at bases in the United
States

list Florida or Texas as their state of legal residence because
neither
has
a state income tax.

"We will ask the court, if they're going to hold up the votes in
Florida
anyway, that these people be allowed to have their registered voter
cards
sent to them by air mail, fill 'em out, and airmail them back, and
they
can
include those in the final count," Jones said.

Jones, whose law office represents exclusively military members and
their
families, obtained a law degree after a career in the U.S. Army
Medical

Corps. He said he has been "overwhelmed" by the number of complaints
he
has
received from military personnel since the election.

"A chaplain at Fort Lee, Va., called me and told me about a squad of
privates who were in basic training, and their commander and first
sergeant
told them there 'wasn't time' to cast their vote this year," he said.
"There
are allegations that entire units were deployed to Bosnia the day
before the
election, when it was too late to obtain an absentee ballot. I'm
retired
military and in my entire military career, I was never deployed the
day

before Election Day."

Jones, who stressed he was not affiliated with either political party
or
candidate, blamed some of the problem on what he calls "mal-intent."

"In my opinion, based on what people have said, and the allegations
that
have been made, and the substantial quantity of allegations, it
certainly
raises an eyebrow in the most reluctant observer."

He called the allegations of voter fraud "the most widespread there
has
ever been."

"One documented case in Florida, one gentleman requested his ballot
in
May
and again in August, and didn't get it, looked into it and found that
someone had intercepted his ballot, signed his name, and sent it in.
We
have
no idea if this was an isolated event, or if there are more incidents
like
this.

"If there is a prioritization of the right to vote, shouldn't that
prioritization start with people who lay their lives down for that
right to
vote? If they applied for their ballots, and through no fault of their
own,
were not provided these ballots, that's an outrage."

Jones said if all of the military people who were denied their right
to
vote have their ballots counted because of this lawsuit, there is "no
doubt"
it would substantially affect the outcome of the presidential
election.

In an unusual request, the lawsuit asks that if the Supreme Court
denies
the plaintiffs their vote in this year's election they should be
exempt
from
paying federal income taxes for the next presidential term, or four
years.
It would award punitive damages to military personnel "who have been
taxed
without representation," Jones said.

--
Copyright 2000 by United Press International.
All rights reserved.
--