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


To: Peter Dierks who wrote (1571)4/24/2013 1:23:06 PM
From: FJB2 Recommendations  Respond to of 1729
 
Just in the last four years:




    Message 28856237



    To: Peter Dierks who wrote (1571)4/27/2013 12:46:23 PM
    From: FJB2 Recommendations  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1729
     
    A jury in South Bend, Indiana has found that fraud put President Obama and Hillary Clinton on the presidential primary ballot in Indiana in the 2008 election. Two Democratic political operatives were convicted Thursday night in the illegal scheme after only three hours of deliberations. They were found guilty on all counts.

    Former longtime St. Joseph County Democratic party Chairman Butch Morgan Jr. was found guilty of felony conspiracy counts to commit petition fraud and forgery, and former county Board of Elections worker Dustin Blythe was found guilty of felony forgery counts and falsely making a petition, after being accused of faking petitions that enabled Obama, then an Illinois Senator, to get on the presidential primary ballot for his first run for the White House.

    Morgan was accused of being the mastermind behind the plot.

    According to testimony from two former Board of Election officials who pled guilty, Morgan ordered Democratic officials and workers to fake the names and signatures that Obama and Clinton needed to qualify for the presidential race. Blythe, then a Board of Elections employee and Democratic Party volunteer, was accused of forging multiple pages of the Obama petitions.

    "I think this helped uphold the integrity of the electoral system," the prosecutor, Stan Levco told reporters.

    “Their verdict of guilt is not a verdict against Democrats, but for honest and fair elections,” he said.

    The scheme was hatched in January of 2008, according to affidavits from investigators who cite former Board of Registration worker Lucas Burkett, who told them he was in on the plan at first, but then became uneasy and quit. He waited three years before telling authorities about it, but if revelations about any forgeries were raised during the election, the petitions could have been challenged during the contest. A candidate who did not qualify with enough legitimate signatures at the time, could have been bounced from the ballot.

    The case raise questions about whether in 2008, then candidate Obama actually submitted enough legitimate signatures to have legally qualified for the primary ballot.

    “I think had they been challenged successfully, he probably would not have been on the ballot,” Levco told Fox News.

    Under state law, presidential candidates need to qualify for the primary ballots with 500 signatures from each of the state's nine congressional districts. Indiana election officials say that in St. Joseph County, which is the 2nd Congressional district, the Obama campaign qualified with 534 signatures; Clinton's camp had 704.

    Prosecutors say that in President Obama's case, nine of the petition pages were apparently forged. Each petition contains up to 10 names, making a possible total of 90 names, which, if faked, could have brought the Obama total below the legal limit required to qualify. Prosecutors say 13 Clinton petitions were apparently forged, meaning up to 130 possibly fake signatures. Even if 130 signatures had been challenged, it would have still left Mrs. Clinton with enough signatures to meet the 500 person threshold.

    Levco said a total of “100 to 200” signatures had been forged on Obama’s and Clinton’s petitions.

    An Indiana State Police investigator said in court papers that the agency examined the suspect Obama petitions and "selected names at random from each of the petition pages and contacted those people directly. We found at least one person (and often multiple people) from each page who confirmed that they had not signed" petitions "or given consent for their name and/or signature to appear."

    Numerous voters told Fox News that they never signed the petitions.

    "That's not my signature," Charity Rorie, a mother of four, told us when we showed her the Obama petition with her name and signature. She was stunned, saying that it "absolutely" was a fake.

    Charity told Fox News that her husband's entry was also a forgery, and that they have never been contacted by investigators or any authorities looking into the scandal.

    "It's scary, it's shocking. It definitely is illegal," she told us.

    Robert Hunter, Jr. told Fox news that his name was faked, too.

    "I did not sign for Barack Obama," he told us. As he examined the Obama petition in his hands, Hunter pointed out that "I always put 'Junior' after my name, every time...there's no 'Junior' there

    Even a former Democratic Governor of Indiana, Joe Kernan, told Fox News that his name was forged.

    “This is a bitter sweet moment for free and fair elections," observed Ryan Nees, the Indiana born Yale “University senior who first exposed the scheme in the independent political newsletter, Howey Politics Indiana and South Bend Tribune.

    Nees said the multiple guilty verdicts were "bitter, because a five-person conspiracy succeeded in illegally placing two presidential candidates on the ballot, but sweet because they were exposed, tried for their crimes, and convicted."

    Nees previously told Fox News that the fraud was clearly evident, "because page after page of signatures are all in the same handwriting," and that nobody raised any red flags "because election workers in charge of verifying their validity were the same people faking the signatures."

    Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2013/04/26/officials-found-guilty-in-obama-clinton-ballot-petition-fraud/#ixzz2RgLVVn8d

    The only thing funny about this is that it came to light. Democratic corruption knows no bounds.



    To: Peter Dierks who wrote (1571)5/11/2013 2:44:25 AM
    From: FJB1 Recommendation  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1729
     
    Guilty plea in illegal voting case?

    May 9, 2013
    news.cincinnati.com

    A former Hamilton County poll worker accused of illegal voting indicated Thursday she is negotiating with prosecutors to possibly plead guilty.

    “We’re doing that in good faith. Whether or not we resolve it is another thing,” Bill Gallagher, defense attorney for Melowese Richardson, said Thursday.

    Richardson, 58, of Madisonville, is charged with eight counts of illegal voting. She is accused of voting illegally in the elections of 2008, 2011 and 2012.


    Gallagher and Assistant Prosecutor Bill Anderson told Common Pleas Court Judge Robert Ruehlman they have talked about resolving the case with a guilty plea but Richardson wanted to talk to her pastor before she agreed.

    A poll worker in Hamilton County elections since 1998, Richardson is accused of improperly voting her absentee ballots and those of friends and relatives. Six of the eight charges are alleged to have happened in the 2012 election.

    The charges against Richardson carry a maximum prison sentence of 12 years. She is next in court May 28.

    She is one of six charged in Hamilton County with illegal voting.

    One, a 55-year-old nun, pleaded guilty in April. Sister Marguerite Kloos, of Delhi Township, admitted she voted via absentee ballot for another nun last fall, who died before she could vote. Kloos was placed in a diversion program that, if she gets in no more trouble and does as the court orders, could have her record erased and be eligible again to vote.

    Also charged with illegal voting are Russell Glassop, 76, of Symmes Township; Margaret I. Allen, 64, formerly of Loveland; Ernestine Strickland, 84, of Memphis and Andre Wilson, 49, of Winton Hills.