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November 7, 2007 at 21:03:13

Headlined on 11/7/07:
Election Fraud 2004 - The Case Heats Up

by Michael Collins     Page 2 of 4 page(s)

www.opednews.com

 
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But the last sentence takes the prize. The county didn't get "formal notice" before "preparing the certificate of destruction." The county was sent a fax from plaintiff's attorney Arnebeck's office eight days before the destruction certificate. It contained the federal court order and a clear explanation. Wasn't this formal enough?

Montgomery County did a lot of shredding and it was deliberate.

Along with the rest of Ohio, Cuyahoga County (Cleveland) was under court order to retain all 1.1 million records from the 2004 presidential election. Newly appointed acting elections director Jane Platten walked into a mess left by her predecessors.

Platten complied within just days of the April 9, 2007 request for ballots and other records. It was hard to tell if the April 17 shipment contained only the 700,000 voted ballots or if it included Cuyahoga's 1.1 million ballots of all types (voted, unvoted, provisional, and soiled).

Then the county sent a second shipment after a revealing discovery.


This is a detail from the May 1, 2007 form that accompanied the second shipment of ballots from Cuyahoga County. It reported that the vital unvoted ballot evidence was "found hidden" in a warehouse (line 4). (Page 58)

On May 1st, Platten sent 400,000 additional unvoted ballots to the state capitol following the instructions in the federal court order. These ballots are critical evidence to determine if unvoted ballots were marked and substituted for voted ballots. These "ballots had been found hidden in Cuyahoga's Canal Street warehouse," she wrote. She goes on, "It was thought that they were delivered on April 17th." Why was hidden crossed out? Why was it there in the first place?

Were the ballots "hidden" evidence that Ms. Platten "found" because she had to look? If so, why hadn't her predecessor's secured this notable amount of evidence?

In the past, the county stalled those requesting the legal right to review unvoted ballots. Patten's predecessor, Michael Vu, "resigned" in controversy during February, 2007. Bob Bennett chairman of the county board of elections was asked to resign by the new Secretary of State a few weeks later. In 2004, he was both chairman of the elections board and head of state Republican Party. Bennett is a named defendant in the suit charging election fraud. Maybe one or both of them can explain why these ballots were hidden.

They'll Get Away with It Right?

Wrong, at least not if the law is enforced. The destruction of evidence, while not currently pursued at the state level, has a remedy in the federal court system. It's called contempt of court. In addition, the federal district judge, Algenon Marbley, can refer the case to a federal prosecutor.

But there's no reason to give up on the most significant election fraud trial in modern history: King Lincoln Bronzeville Neighborhood Association (KLBNA) v. Blackwell et al. Among others, the suit charges the following individuals with election fraud and voter suppression in the following capacities during the 2004 election: Kenneth Blackwell, Secretary of State and Ohio Bush campaign chairman; Bob Bennett, both a senior state Republican party official and also chairman of the Cuyahoga County board of elections; and a technician from Election Systems and Software (ES&S).

The case was filed on behalf of Ohio citizens by trial attorney for plaintiffs Clifford O. Arnebeck and Henry W. Eckhart, with Robert J. Fitrakis of counsel. The original and amended complaints were filed in federal district court, on August 31 and October 9, 2006 respectively. It continues in U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Ohio (Case 2:06-cv-00745-ALM-TPK).

These are highly significant election fraud and voter suppression charges. We're dealing with the election fraud and voter suppression that enabled the theft of the 2004 United States presidential election.

Specifically, the defendants:

 1  |  2  |  3  |  4

 

http://electionfraudnews.com

Michael Collins is a writer who focuses on clean elections and voting rights. See this summary of his articles plus Election 2004: The Urban Legend and groundbreaking research and commentary in "" His web site, Election Fraud News & The Money Party, offers a collection of resources and commentary on critical issues facing the country.

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4 comments

Editor of Common Sense Political Thought, mostly Republican (but not always), mostly conservative (but again, not always), always interesting.
Dana PicoEditor of Common Sense Political Thought, mostly Republican (but not always), mostly conservative (but again, not always), always interesting.

So, if you can prove that Republicans . . .

.  .  . "stole" the Ohio vote in 2004, do you think that'll make John Kerry president?  :)

by Dana Pico (7 articles, 0 quicklinks, 4 diaries, 164 comments) on Thursday, November 8, 2007 at 2:17:49 PM
 


Editor of Common Sense Political Thought, mostly Republican (but not always), mostly conservative (but again, not always), always interesting.
Dana PicoEditor of Common Sense Political Thought, mostly Republican (but not always), mostly conservative (but again, not always), always interesting.

It's called "wishful thinking."

I know that you don't want to hear this, but George Bush won both the 2000 and 2004 elections, fair and square.  2000 was tremendously close, but it was still a win; 2004 was not close.

But even if you were right, it wouldn't matter, because the real presidential election is in the Electoral College -- and George Bush won both of those.  It isn't up for debate, and it isn't up for legal action, it simply is.

Next November the democrats will have another shot at it, and they might win this time.  In the meantime, prepare for what you know is true, that George Bush will leave office, peacefully and legally, at noon on January 20, 2009. 

 

 

by Dana Pico (7 articles, 0 quicklinks, 4 diaries, 164 comments) on Thursday, November 8, 2007 at 7:59:57 PM
 


Mail carrier who drives the rest of my colleagues nuts with my politics.
ScottMail carrier who drives the rest of my colleagues nuts with my politics.

Rock and roll, Dana

I especially like your last point, that President Bush will serve out his term and then peacefully leave office in January 2009. That will continue to embarass the conspiracy crowd, who are now claiming there won't be another election. (I heard those same theories regarding Bill Clinton last decade). Whether the next president is Hilary or Rudy or Stephen Colbert, I hope somebody has by then compiled a list of people who have spouted this theory between now and then. I will then know who to direct my laughter towards.

by Scott (0 articles, 0 quicklinks, 0 diaries, 578 comments) on Thursday, November 8, 2007 at 8:58:41 PM
 

 

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