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remember "the Election Center" R. Doug Lewis???

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cap Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jun-28-05 02:29 PM
Original message
remember "the Election Center" R. Doug Lewis???
the website is no longer up.

www.electioncenter.org is gone. Does anybody know what the deal is?
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Beaver Tail Donating Member (903 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jun-28-05 02:31 PM
Response to Original message
1. Error is 403 - not 404
Edited on Tue Jun-28-05 02:32 PM by Beaver Tail
404 - The server has not found anything matching the Request-URI. No indication is given of whether the condition is temporary or permanent. The 410 (Gone) status code SHOULD be used if the server knows, through some internally configurable mechanism, that an old resource is permanently unavailable and has no forwarding address. This status code is commonly used when the server does not wish to reveal exactly why the request has been refused, or when no other response is applicable.

403 - The server understood the request, but is refusing to fulfill it. Authorization will not help and the request SHOULD NOT be repeated. If the request method was not HEAD and the server wishes to make public why the request has not been fulfilled, it SHOULD describe the reason for the refusal in the entity. If the server does not wish to make this information available to the client, the status code 404 (Not Found) can be used instead.

Edit: The site is there... it is just not fufilling requests for some reason
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cap Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jun-28-05 02:33 PM
Response to Reply #1
3. I got a different message
Directory Listing Denied
This Virtual Directory does not allow contents to be listed.

So technically, the site is still there but is not allowing public access.... Strange.
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MuseRider Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jun-28-05 02:31 PM
Response to Original message
2. I want to know
if anyone was ever able to find out about him? Back in the day I researched him for someone who is no longer with us. He is not who he says he is. He supposedly was the head of the Democratic Party here in Kansas at one time but nobody had ever heard of him. I did a lot of looking around with no success.

I don't think anyone ever knows the deal about this guy. I don't think he is real. At least I know he is not who he says he is.
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cap Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jun-28-05 02:36 PM
Response to Reply #2
4. Interesting background of folks in the Election Center
http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php?title=Election_Center

One of the directors was ERNEST HAWKINS, Registrar of Voters, County of Sacramento, CA

He appeared with R. Doug Lewis at a Harvard event in 2000.

TUESDAY, DECEMBER 12, 2000
"CHADS, DIMPLES, AND BUTTERFLIES: Fixing the Mechanics of Voting"
A Panel Discussion With:

* ERNEST HAWKINS, Registrar of Voters, County of Sacramento, CA
* R. DOUG LEWIS, Executive Director, The Election Center
* TREVOR POTTER, former Chairman and Commissioner, Federal Election Commission (1991-1995)
* SHARON PRIEST, Secretary of State of Arkansas
* RICHARD SOUDRIETTE, President, International Foundation for Election Systems
* DONALD TIGHE, Director of Public Affairs and Government Relations, Youth-e-Vote.net
* DAVID KING (moderator), Professor, Kennedy School of Government

http://www.iop.harvard.edu/events_forum_archive_2000.html
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cap Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jun-28-05 02:54 PM
Response to Reply #4
5. Gary Bartlett
Gary Bartlett executive director of Elections for the state of North Carolina.

http://www.journalnow.com/servlet/Satellite?pagename=WSJ/MGArticle/WSJ_BasicArticle&c=MGArticle&cid=1031783472848
http://www.islamicaweb.com/archive/read/t-25509

N.C. Computer Loses More Than 4,500 Votes

JACKSONVILLE, N.C. - More than 4,500 votes have been lost in one North Carolina county because officials believed a computer that stored ballots electronically could hold more data than it did. Scattered other problems may change results in races around the state.

Local officials said UniLect Corp., the maker of the county's electronic voting system, told them that each storage unit could handle 10,500 votes, but the limit was actually 3,005 votes.

Expecting the greater capacity, the county used only one unit during the early voting period. "If we had known, we would have had the units to handle the votes," said Sue Verdon, secretary of the county election board.

Officials said 3,005 early votes were stored, but 4,530 were lost.

County election officials were meeting with State Board of Elections Executive Director Gary Bartlett on Thursday and did not immediately return a telephone call seeking comment.
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cap Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jun-28-05 02:58 PM
Response to Reply #4
6. Donetta Davidson Republican -Colorado
In Colorado, Secretary of State Donetta Davidson faces embarrassment over her leadership in the Elections Center, a nominally nonpartisan state office that has accepted donations from e-voting companies at the same time it touted their machinery. She also backed the scheme, shot down in state court, to allow partisan redrawing of congressional districts in 2003.

http://www.inthesetimes.com/site/main/article/973/

Also, she was involved in Hava Fraud:
http://www.dkosopedia.com/index.php/HAVA_Fraud

more on davidson and fraud
http://www.thedenverchannel.com/news/3806226/detail.html
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cap Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jun-28-05 03:13 PM
Response to Reply #4
7. Thomas Wilkey New York State Executive Director of Board of Elections
As the qualification testing process evolved and tested systems were used in the field, NASED’s Voting Systems Committee identified standards and testing issues that needed to be resolved. In February of 1997, Christopher Thomas, then President of NASED, and Thomas Wilkey, Chairman of NASED’s Voting Systems Committee, briefed Commissioners on the need for continuing FEC involvement to address standards and testing issues raised by the independent test authorities, as well as to keep the national standards up-to-date.
http://www.uselections.com/voting/history.htm

Wilkey under fire for clandestine testing of voting machines.
On its Web site, the association says the three testing outfits "have neither the staff nor the time to explain the process to the public, the news media or jurisdictions." It directs inquiries to a Houston-based nonprofit organization, the Election Center, that assists election officials. The center's executive director, Doug Lewis, did not return telephone messages seeking comment.

The election directors' voting systems board chairman, former New York State elections director Thomas Wilkey, said the testers' secrecy stems from the FEC's refusal to take the lead in choosing them and the government's unwillingness to pay for it.

He said that left election officials no choice but to find technology companies willing to pay.

"When we first started this program it took us over a year to find a company that was interested, then along came Wyle, then CIBER and then SysTest," Wilkey said of he standards developed over five years and adopted in 1990.

"Companies that do testing in this country have not flocked to the prospect of testing voting machines," said U.S. Election Assistance Commission chairman DeForest Soaries Jr., now the top federal overseer of voting technology.

A 2002 law, the Help America Vote Act, created the four-member, bipartisan headed by Soaries to oversee a change to easier and more secure voting.

Soaries said there should be more testers but the three firms are "doing a fine job with what they have to work with."

Wilkey, meanwhile, predicted "big changes" in the testing process after the November election.

But critics led by Stanford University computer science professor David Dill say it's an outrage that the world's most powerful democracy doesn't already have an election system so transparent its citizens know it can be trusted.

"Suppose you had a situation where ballots were handed to a private company that counted them behind a closed door and burned the results," said Dill, founder of VerifiedVoting.org. "Nobody but an idiot would accept a system like that. We've got something that is almost as bad with electronic voting."


Wilkey is an executive director of the US Election Assistance Commission.

Former state Board of Elections Executive Director Thomas Wilkey, a Democrat, may not pass muster with Pataki to head New York's Help America Vote Act task force, but he is highly regarded at the federal level.

Wilkey, of Rensselaer, retired from his state post in 2003 -- not long after Pataki passed him over as task force head in favor of the board's Deputy Executive Director Peter Kosinski, who is a Republican. He has been chosen to serve as executive director of the U.S. Election Assistance Commission.

The EAC is an independent, bipartisan commission created under HAVA to administer federal money to states to help them modernize their elections systems, adopt voting system guidelines and implement election administration improvements.

Wilkey's four-year term as the EAC's executive director begins June 20.
http://timesunion.com/AspStories/story.asp?storyID=363115&category=CAPCONF&BCCode=&newsdate=6/22/2005
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cap Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jun-28-05 03:29 PM
Response to Original message
8. Bev says this about R. Doug Lewis

Information about Mr. Lewis's background is hard to come by, but we recently located an impressive resume for Mr. Lewis that says that he was an Assistant to the President at the White House (I have not been able to verify this position, but if his resume is correct my guess would be Lyndon Johnson or Nixon, both of whom had ties with with John Connally).

The resume says that R. Doug Lewis managed campaigns for the presidency and has more than 15 years of business experience in fields such as management consulting for the petrochemical, refining, and chemical processing industry. It also says that he managed campaigns for Congress, U.S. Senate, governor, and served as Executive Director of the Democratic party in Kansas and Texas, worked as Regional Political Director in the DNC, and managed the political affairs for former Texas Governor John Connally. His resume says he established the Joint Elections Officials Liaison committee (JEOLC), the National Association of State Election Directors (NASED), the National Association of County Recorders, elections officials, and Clerks (NACRC), the International Association of Clerks, Recorders, Election Officials, and Treasurers (IACREOT), and the International Institute of Municipal Clerks (IIMC), the National Postal Task Force, the National Task Force on Voting Accessibility, and the National Elections Reform Task Force.]

Can anyone confirm this?
http://www.blackboxvoting.com/modules.php?name=News&file=print&sid=3
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