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Politics : Election Fraud Reports -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Peter Dierks who wrote (1557)2/21/2013 11:59:12 AM
From: FJB2 Recommendations  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1729
 
BUSTED: Team Obama Directly Implicated
in Major NC Voter-Registration Fraud




After we learn of a morally-crippled poll worker named 'Melowese' voting for Obama at least six times in Ohio, now a report comes out that has the Obama regime itself workingdirectly with like-minded scum at the North Carolina Board of Elections (BoE) to illegally register 11,000+ people. They also paid a company per registration to scrape-up voters, a blatant, in-your-face violation of federal law...

The Examiner:

North Carolina's Civitas Institute has revealed that the NC State Board of Elections and the Obama campaign conspired to register at least 11,000 people via the internet in violation of state law.

This has been confirmed through records requests filed with all of North Carolina's 100 counties. The counting is not yet complete.

North Carolina does not allow online voting, but according to Civitas, SBE staff authorized an Obama campaign website, Gottaregister.com, to use a web-based registration program.

The SBE's chief lawyer responded to the charge with a plainly disingenuous 1984-newspeak answer: Wright repeatedly denied that the SBE allowed online voter registration, insisting that it was “web-based voter registration” instead, as if there could be a “web-based” process that wasn’t online.

The technology from Allpoint Voter Services uses remote-control pens to transmit “signatures” over the Internet, according to techpresident.com. After entering voter information in an online form, the citizen “signs” it with a stylus or a finger. The Allpoint technology records the signature and then transmits it to one of two autopens – one in California, the other in Nevada. One of the pens transcribes the signature on to a paper voter registration form...

To say this is not “online” registration but “web-based” is like saying a certain vehicle
is not a car, it’s an automobile.

The point of having a “wet signature” – one in ink – is to provide a universally accepted way proving that a prospective voter is affirming in person all the facts on the form. To have an auto pen inserted at one point in this long computerized process is a far different thing...

Why all this voter fraud in North Carolina? No voter-ID law, for one: add those 11,000 live specimens (illegally registered) to the 30,000 dead voters found registered in this very same
North Carolina, and it's a wonder Romney carried the state.

But just 'cuz Obama didn't win there doesn't mean it's OK to let it slide again- it's not: this crap needs to be fought tooth-and-nail by our side, from now-on into 2014/16. And if ossified Gee Oh Pee fossils like Boehner and McConnell won't do it, something -with $ behind it- needs to happen at the grass-roots level, and quick...

More at The Examiner



To: Peter Dierks who wrote (1557)4/9/2013 2:58:42 PM
From: FJB1 Recommendation  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1729
 
Woman gets jail in voter fraud case


Judge Wiley delivers lecture about democracy

Posted: Tuesday, April 9, 2013 6:00 am

By DEBRA HAIGHT - HP Correspondent | 1 comment

NILES - A Berrien Springs woman who is not a U.S. citizen was given jail time for signing a voter registration form and voting in the 2008 presidential election.

Dilsa Maria Saddler, 46, got a tongue lashing from sentencing Judge Dennis Wiley in Berrien County Trial Court Monday. She also heard the assistant prosecutor on her case speculate that Saddler was the victim of an overzealous voter registration drive by the campaign of then-U.S. Sen. Barack Obama in 2008.

Wiley sentenced Saddler to 10 days in jail and 100 hours of community service.

Wiley gave a lecture during sentencing.


"When people zealously or otherwise go through voter registration efforts to register people to vote who can't vote, (it's) offensive," Wiley said. "That's not the way this country was founded. Every person has one vote, from the president to the most lowly of citizens. I think what struck a chord with me was that we have people out to undermine that."

Wiley said the case is an argument for requiring photo identification for voting.

"When I hear the hue and cry about denying people the right to vote by requiring an ID, I think about how people have to have papers to get on a plane, but it seems like people can sign a piece of paper and show up to vote," he said. "It shows the vulnerability of the system."


Saddler was convicted of conspiracy to commit election fraud for the 2008 election violations. She must pay $750 in fines and court costs.

Defense lawyer Anne Buckleitner described her client as a hard-working, devoted mother of two children who is a licensed nurse and working to become a U.S. citizen. She said Saddler completed a voter registration form in 2008 and wasn't sure about what she had signed until recently.

She voted in 2008 and was never asked to provide any proof of citizenship at the time, Buckleitner said.

Assistant Prosecutor Kelly Travis said she didn't think Saddler was politically motivated to vote.

"She signed the voter registration form without reading it, and she may have to pay dearly" in her quest to become a citizen, Travis said.

Wiley said he could understand how Saddler might sign a registration form, but then she voted on Election Day. He said that voting has placed her efforts to become a citizen in jeopardy.

In an interview last week, Oronoko Township Clerk Suzanne Renton said the illegal vote was uncovered in a check of records after Saddler applied for citizenship last year.