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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: THE WATSONYOUTH who wrote (683253)11/5/2012 8:23:05 PM
From: joseffy  Respond to of 1575738
 
Non-citizens registered to vote in Lawrence, but officials shrug

Nov 05, 2012


(FOX 25 / MyFoxBoston.com) – When police arrested Joel Santiago-Vazquez last year, they found a stash of powder and crack cocaine hidden in a false bottom of a Pringles potato chip can.

Police also found, according to their report, that federal immigration authorities had "no record of (his) entering the country". A detainer was issued, and Santiago-Vazquez became one more illegal immigrant caught in the crosshairs of the federal government.

But FOX Undercover found out something else about Santiago-Vazquez. He's been registered to vote from his home address in Lawrence since 2010.

Our investigation shows he's not the only registered voter in Lawrence who is not a citizen. By cross-checking Lawrence voter records with criminal records that included records indicating lack of citizenship, we found three others:

* Bruno Paulino is a legal resident detained by immigration authorities earlier this year, has been a registered Lawrence voter since 2009;

* Jose Jimenez, a legal resident who faces "potential deportation to the Dominican Republic", according to federal court records, has been a registered Republican in Lawrence since 2010;

* and Marcos Acosta, picked up during a recent immigration sweep, has been a registered voter in Lawrence since 2008.

Acosta's attorney, Jeffrey Rubin, said, "He's not aware that he did and he has no recollection of ever registering or agreeing to register."

Rubin's client and the three others could be facing big problems for registering, even though none of the four voted, according to the Secretary of State's spokesman. The US Citizenship and Immigration Services website notes, "Registering to vote or voting in a federal election is a crime if you are not a U.S. citizen."

Finding out who is and isn't a US citizen is difficult to do without access to confidential immigration databases. FOX Undercover found the four after checking just a few dozen names of criminal defendants facing deportation against voter databases, making it highly likely that many more non-citizens are among the nearly 36,000-thousand registered voters in Lawrence.

Lawrence mayor Willie Lantigua wouldn't return our phone calls, so FOX Undercover investigative reporter Mike Beaudet caught up with him outside City Hall.

"Wanted to talk to you about the voter list in the city," Beaudet said, but Lantigua just said "Hello" and continued walking to his truck.

"We found some problems there are people who are registered - you're not going to talk to us sir. Aren't you the mayor of the city? Sir why can't you just answer some questions?" Beaudet said as Lantigua got in his truck and drove away.

Lawrence activist Wayne Hayes said he's not surprised at FOX Undercover's findings.

"I believe 15 to 20 percent of the voters in Lawrence are non-citizen registered voters," Hayes said. "The voter list is definitely corrupt...it needs one major, full investigation."

An investigation is just what Hayes and others asked for after witnessing suspected fraud during the 2009 mayoral election. Hayes was backing candidate David Abdoo, who was running against Lantigua.

"A gentleman was seen by one of the poll workers for Abdoo's campaign walk in and vote at one table, leave, come back, switch his jacket and put on a cap and went to the other table and voted there under two different names," Hayes told FOX Undercover.

After Lantigua won, Hayes scoured the 2009 voter list and found more problems, including people registered at commercial properties including a warehouse at 1 Broadway, a barbershop and what is now a sandwich shop at 241 Broadway and a former nightclub at 381 Essex St.

One Lawrence senior, Gloria Maheu, was shocked when she checked in to vote and found a woman she had never heard of registered at her address.

"How did I know who she was? I had never seen her and they told me, 'Why don't you stay here until she comes and votes.' I said, 'I'm not staying here all day and night!'" Maheu told FOX Undercover.

That stranger was actually registered twice at Maheu's address, according to the 2009 voter list, with the same name, the same date of registration and the birth dates exactly four months apart.

The voters registered at commercial addresses that FOX Undercover confirmed have since been removed from the voter rolls. And the woman registered at Maheu's address is also no longer registered there, though Maheu said it took two years of complaining until the city's former mayor finally took action.

But Hayes and others made other complaints to authorities, including Secretary of State William Galvin, the state's chief election official.

"What kind of reaction did you get from the authorities when you went to them with these allegations of voter fraud?" Beaudet asked Hayes.

"It varied from, 'Not my job' to no response at all," Hayes replied.

Secretary Galvin's spokesman said the secretary was too busy to talk about FOX Undercover's findings but did say that the problem rested with the Massachusetts Registry of Motor Vehicles. That's where the four non-citizens we found registered to vote through the Motor-Voter Law.

An RMV spokesperson says several of those voters shouldn't have been processed because they provided incomplete information on their enrollment forms.

"Given how difficult it was for us to even track down who is a citizen who is not a citizen, do you think there are even more people out there?" Beaudet asked Jessica Vaughan with the Center for Immigration Studies, which advocates for tougher enforcement of immigration laws.

"There must be," replied Vaughan. "Other states that have made an effort to vet their voter registration lists have found thousands of people on their voter lists and thousands of people who have voted in recent elections who are not citizens."

Those non-citizens were found in Colorado and Florida after secretaries of state there sued to force federal immigration authorities to check their states' voter rolls.

"Is Massachusetts making any effort to vet its list?" Beaudet asked her.

"No," Vaughan replied. "I haven't seen any effort on the part of officials in this state. In fact they seem to be more in denial that it could be a problem here."

Read more: myfoxboston.com



To: THE WATSONYOUTH who wrote (683253)11/5/2012 8:30:01 PM
From: joseffy  Respond to of 1575738
 
Obama scorched as 'delusional' on final day 'This is worthy of men in the white coats'

by Joe Kovacs
wnd.com


On the final full day of campaigning in the 2012 race for the White House, President Obama is being blasted for a speech he gave in Madison, Wis., a speech his opposition calls “delusional.”

“We tried our ideas. They worked. The economy grew. We created jobs. Deficits went down,” Obama said Monday.

“We tried their ideas. They didn’t work. The economy didn’t grow, not as many jobs, and the deficit went up. But here’s the thing. Governor Romney’s a very talented salesman, and in this campaign he’s tried as hard as he can to repackage the same old bad ideas and make ‘em out to be new ideas and try to convince you that he’s all about change.”

“This is just delusional,” opined radio giant Rush Limbaugh, reacting to Obama’s suggestion that deficits have gone down in this administration. “This is our president, folks, entirely totally completely delusional. He’s not there. The elevator is not going to the top floor today. … This is worthy of men in the white coats. … I wonder if he knows what he’s saying. It’s on the prompter. … I wonder if he believes what he’s saying.”

Obama himself stressed during his Madison speech that he doesn’t utter anything he doesn’t intend to say.

“You know that I say what I mean and I mean what I say,” the president noted.

“Deficits went down?” Limbaugh continued. “You know, not even his supporters believe this. His supporters know the truth. It’s just that they think Obama’s about fairness. Obama’s about taking away from everybody and giving to them, but they know that the deficit’s going up, they know the national debt’s going up. They just don’t care. But Obama is coming out, I don’t know how else to describe this. Which Obama idea has worked? Stimulus? Obamacare? Green energy? Arab Spring? Name one. What Obama idea has worked? What deficit, any deficit, has come down?

“The national debt has had almost $6 trillion added to it. That’s done by way of a deficit every year that is over a trillion dollars. We never had trillion-dollar annual deficits until Obama. One of Bush’s last deficits was a mere $257 billion. This deeply concerns me. I know politicians lie, and I know they want to put a good spin on everything. But this, folks, I’m tongue-tied. This is not just political lying. This isn’t trying to pull wool over people’s face. Nobody in this country thinks right now the economy’s working. That’s not why Obama’s supporters support him. It’s not because his ideas are working. They support him, A, because he’s a Democrat; B, because he’s a liberal; C, because they hate conservatives; D, because they hate Republicans; E, because they think everybody else owes them the something. But they don’t they don’t support Obama because they think his stuff is working.”



To: THE WATSONYOUTH who wrote (683253)11/5/2012 8:33:21 PM
From: joseffy  Respond to of 1575738
 
Fraud? More ballots for Romney show Obama 'You want to vote for who you want to vote for'

wnd.com
by Joe Kovacs

Are voting machines not properly recording the intended votes of American citizens this election cycle?

With early voting underway already, more examples are being found across the nation of problems at polling places.

The latest comes from Marion County in the battleground state of Ohio, where Joan Stevens tried to vote for Mitt Romney Monday on an electronic touch screen, but Barack Obama’s name kept lighting up.

According to the Marion Star, it took her three tries for her choice to be accurately recorded.

“You want to vote for who you want to vote for, and when you can’t it’s irritating,” Stevens said.

Stevens says she alerted Jackie Smith, a Board of Elections member, who reportedly told her the machine had been having problems all day.

Stevens also reported her concern to Sophia Rogers, the director of the Board of Elections for Marion County.

The Star says Rogers indicated the machine had worked fine when she and others tried using it, and suggested the problem may have been improper use, such as not hitting the button directly or tapping with more than one finger.

“I know how to do the voting,” Stevens said, affirming she was aware of how to use the device.

Rogers contacted the machine’s vendor to inspect the device.

“Because of her issue, we had that machine recalibrated,” Rogers said. “I am certain the equipment works properly.”

Meanwhile, this is not the only case of voting-machine problems.

Just last week, there were similar cases documented at several polling places in North Carolina, in Guilford County, Jamestown and Pleasant Garden.

Sher Coromalis says she cast her ballot for Romney, but the machine defaulted to President Obama each time.

“I was so upset that this could happen,” Coromalis told WGHP-TV. “I should have just mailed it in.”

Marie Haydock, who also voted at the Bur-Mil Park polling location, had the same problem.

“The frustration is, every vote counts,” said Haydock.

Faurest Stum voted at the Pleasant Garden Town Hall location, and says her vote was for Romney, but the machine cast the vote for Obama.

“I thought this might be a one-time glitch in the machine. I had no idea that it might be happening somewhere else. This is when I called in and said this needs to stop,” she told WGHP.

George Gilbert, director of the Guilford County Board of Elections, indicated the machines had to be recalibrated.

“If you have calibration issues, it’s not systematically one way or another. It can go either way – and it has,” said Gilbert.

He says the voting machines are checked daily, and the problem is not unusual, as they popped up during the 2008 presidential election as well.

Voters who complained were able to get their vote corrected.

“To all those people that haven’t voted yet, encourage them to review their ballot before they cast their vote,” said Gilbert.

WGHP notes Guilford County switched to touchscreen voting in 1994, and the electronic machines were purchased in 2006 from Electronic Systems Software.

The problems are apparently not just limited to presidential voting.

“We here in Southern Maryland (solid GOP territory) are experiencing similar dirty tricks with respect to polling machines,” says WND reader Gary Knight. “During early voting, several Republican voters in Calvert County cast their ballots for the Republican candidate for Congress, but when the ballot was summarized prior to locking it in, the incumbent Democrat’s name came up.”

Touchscreen voting problems were an issue in the 2010 midterm election, as Democratic Sen. Harry Reid’s name had already been checked in advance for some voters.

Joyce Ferrara of Boulder City, Nev., who wanted to vote for Republican Sharron Angle, told KVVU-TV that she could understand if such an aberration happened just for her, but her husband and several others at a polling place also experienced the malfunction.

“Something’s not right,” Ferrara said. “One person that’s a fluke. Two, that’s strange. But several within a five-minute period of time, that’s wrong.”

The True the Vote website has created a National Election Integrity Hotline, saying, “If you see something at the polls that just doesn’t seem right, let us know.”

Its phone number is 855-444-6100 and email address is freeandfair@truethevote.org.

The voting-machine glitches are just one of numerous concerns about potential voter fraud issues this cycle.

One issue is foreign involvement in the election process.

WND has reported that SCYTL, an international firm headquartered in Spain, has been contracted by a handful of states to provide secure online ballot delivery for overseas military and civilian voters for the presidential election. The states are New York, Arkansas, Alabama, West Virginia, Alaska, Mississippi, plus the federal territory of Puerto Rico.

There is also a staggering decline in absentee vote requests.

Florida had 37,953 requested ballots as of last month as opposed to 86,926 in 2008 – a difference of 48,973. North Carolina only has 1,859 requests listed compared to 13,508 in 2008.

A report released in February by the Pew Center on the States said America’s voter registration rolls are in disarray.

The report found one in eight active registrations is invalid or inaccurate, and one out of every four people eligible to vote, some 51 million voters, are not even registered.

The New York Times noted: “The report found that there are about 1.8 million dead people listed as active voters. Some 2.8 million people have active registrations in more than one state. And 12 million registrations have errors serious enough to make it unlikely that mailings based on them will reach voters.”

“These problems waste taxpayer dollars, undermine voter confidence and fuel partisan disputes over the integrity of our elections,” David Becker, director of election initiatives at the center, told the Times.



To: THE WATSONYOUTH who wrote (683253)11/5/2012 8:46:24 PM
From: joseffy  Respond to of 1575738
 
FRAUD: Convicted Felon Arrested After Trying to Vote for Obama

Pundit Press ^ | 11/5/12






To: THE WATSONYOUTH who wrote (683253)11/5/2012 9:50:56 PM
From: FJB  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1575738
 
Exclusive: Romney UP one point in Ohio and TIED in Pennsylvania and Wisconsin, according to his campaign's internal polling

  • Romney is also three points up in New Hampshire
  • Figures differ from virtually all public polling
  • But Romney trailing in Nevada, according to campaign pollster Neil Newhouse
  • If the internal polls, which the Obama campaign scoffs at, are correct then Romney will almost certainly become the 45th President of the United States


Read more: dailymail.co.uk



To: THE WATSONYOUTH who wrote (683253)11/5/2012 10:13:24 PM
From: FJB  Respond to of 1575738
 
I came up with 355 Romney to 183 Obama. Guess that make me an optimist!

foxnews.com