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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (94287)11/29/2000 3:42:17 PM
From: Broken_Clock  Respond to of 769667
 
Actual Hypocrasy of Democrats or Whatever happened to a "full, fair count"???

ELECTION 2000, Day 23
Palm Beach charges
watchdog $1,152 an
hour
Klayman: 'They've set up
roadblocks every step of
the way'

By Paul Sperry
© 2000 WorldNetDaily.com

Democratic elections officials
in Palm Beach County haven't
made it easy for a government
watchdog group to examine
presidential ballots for signs
of tampering. Nor have they
made it cheap.

After Judicial Watch lawyer
Larry Klayman wrapped up five
hours of ballot-checking
yesterday, he got an
eye-popping bill. The county is
charging him $1,152 an hour to
review the ballots, he told
WorldNetDaily.

Klayman will have to cough up
about $5,760 this morning
before he can continue his
audit, which he says has so far
uncovered "sloppy" handling of
ballots and "discrepancies."

Klayman says the "unreasonable"
charge, which he'll challenge
in court, is part of an effort
to block his probe into
allegations of fraud committed
by Al Gore supporters during
the manual recount.

"They've set up roadblocks
every step of the way," he
said. "First, they wouldn't
give us access, so we had to
sue them. Then they don't show
up until Monday. Then they
wouldn't let us count the votes
and look at the disputed
ballots. Now they say it's
going to cost us $1,152 an
hour."

He says officials originally
told him they would charge $500
an hour.

Judicial Watch, along with
voting-fraud experts from a
Washington-based accounting
firm, were able to inspect
roughly 1,000 disputed ballots
yesterday.

Palm Beach County Supervisor of
Elections Theresa LePore
resisted their efforts from the
start, Klayman says.

"She was very snippy and very
nasty," he said. "She tried to
tell us we had no right to
count votes."

Calls to LePore's office were
not returned.

Judicial Watch requested the
inspection under a Florida law
that allows public access to
ballots.

Klayman said auditors for
Johnson Lambert & Co. found
that officials had "put ballots
in the wrong piles."

"Bush ballots were found in
Gore piles," he said. "It was
very sloppy."

"They also had no methodology
for counting the disputed
ballots," Klayman said. "They
couldn't tell us how they
decided votes for Gore and
Bush."

Officials did not document how
they arrived at their
decisions.

"There's no way to trace it
back," he said.

Klayman also says several of
the paper ballots were
destroyed in the machine
counting process and were
"recreated" by officials or
volunteers.

In addition, he says he came
across a few ballots that had
chads scotch-taped to the back
of the cards. He plans to
photograph the more suspicious
ballots and post the photos on
Judicial Watch's website.

Klayman has also requested to
review ballots in neighboring
Broward County, another
Democratic stronghold which
agreed to conduct a hand
recount of punch-card ballots
at the urging of the Gore
campaign.

Observers have alleged that
ballot-tampering was more
rampant there.