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Land Shark Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jul-15-07 10:00 PM
Original message
Top SCANDALS in Elections (state and local); Nominations NEEDED please!

I'm writing a 2,500 word encyclopedia article on "Scandals, State and local Elections" and I'd like your input.

Treatment of each individual scandal will be brief to very brief, but which scandals in state and local elections do you think definitely merit mention in such an encyclopedia article?

Even posting something "obvious" if there is such a thing will help, since it can confirm a choice already made. In that sense, please feel free to "vote" with a post even if somebody has already mentioned it. Citations or links are useful but not required.

I need feedback by 4 pm Monday at the latest to have time to include it. Thanks.


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stillcool Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jul-15-07 10:02 PM
Response to Original message
1. I'll have to put my thinking cap on..
so many 'glitches' to choose from.
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Archae Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jul-15-07 10:04 PM
Response to Original message
2. Here's some dandy ones.
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Land Shark Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jul-15-07 11:10 PM
Response to Reply #2
4. thanks for the list nt
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CK_John Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jul-15-07 10:13 PM
Response to Original message
3. In todays NY Post,
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autorank Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jul-16-07 12:17 AM
Response to Original message
5. Hackett Loses a Squeaker - Ohio Special Congressional Election 2005

http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/HL0508/S00186.htm

The Veteran Of Fallujah Defeated By OH's Humidity
Tuesday, 23 August 2005, 10:54 pm
Michael Collins

DÉJÀ VU ALL OVER AGAIN?
DEMOCRAT HACKETT LOSES A SQUEAKER IN
OHIO’S 2nd CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT:
THE NEW VOTING RIGHTS STRUGGLE 2004-2005


The 2005 Hackett-Schmidt contest for Ohio’s 2nd Congressional District took place in the midst of ongoing concerns about the 2004 Presidential election. Ohio was ground zero for Election Day irregularities, controversies, and charges of election fraud.

The Hackett-Schmidt contest began as an unlikely battleground for the new voting rights struggle. President Bush appointed Congressman Robert Portman as U. S. Trade Representative. Portman resigned from Congress on April 29, opening his seat for a special election. It seemed like an automatic Republican victory.

Snip

Election Day.

Election Day was a tense event for both candidates and their supporters. Turnout reached 25%, considered respectable for a special election. There were some changes in voting locations in Clermont County and a reduction in precincts in Hamilton County, a populous Cincinnati suburb. There were few if any major incidents reported by those attempting to vote. There were reports of Jean Schmidt campaigning within the 100-foot perimeter candidates must recognize around the precincts. Until mid evening, this encroachment charge was the only event to remotely qualify as an election irregularity.

The humidity crisis.

Then it happened: the “humidity” crisis. For pure drama, it could not have occurred at a more dramatic point in the vote tabulation. Of Clermont County’s 191 precincts, 100 had been counted. Then the Board of Elections announced that excessive humidity had caused ballots to swell, making them difficult to count. As a result, there would be a delay in the count. At this point, the election was dead even statistically, at 50% for each candidate. The 91 precincts in Clermont represented about 12% of the remaining vote. When the crisis was resolved, the 50-50% tie changed into a 52% to 48% victory for Schmidt.

Snip

Graph: Hackett won 38 of 191 Clermont precincts but lost ALL of the 54 largest

Hackett’s percentage by precinct group size:

46.9% in precincts under 100 votes
43.5% in precincts of 100-200 votes
39.6% in precincts of 200-300 votes
34.6% in precincts of 300 + votes

Snip

The Clermont problems were just part of a larger set of strange occurrences in Southwestern Ohio in 2004. During vote counting at the Board of Elections, Warren County officials (Republicans and Democrats) told observers and media to leave the area. They announced later that this was necessary as a result of a Federal Homeland Security notice that Warren was subject to a terrorist threat. Feeling the extra people might get in the way of their response to the threat, officials asked them to leave. By the end of the night, there was no terrorist attack. There was, however, a substantial increase in Bush’s victory margin, from 29,176 in 2000 to 41,125 in 2004. FBI officials flatly denied issuing any special warning or terror alert to Warren County Board of Election officials.

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autorank Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jul-16-07 12:20 AM
Response to Original message
6. New Mexico Mess - Key Lawsuit in NM on Lousy Elections


http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/HL0511/S00067.htm

New Mexico Law Suit Delves Inside Voting Machines


Thursday, 3 November 2005, 12:30 pm
Article: Michael Collins

Election Errors Threaten Future Voting Rights in New Mexico

Major Law Suit Under Way to Open Up “Secret” Workings of Voting Machines

Special Report for “Scoop” Independent Media
First in a Serie

By Michael Collins
Nov. 2, 2005

Patricia Rosas Lopategui et al… “wishes to have her vote properly counted and weighted in any forthcoming elections.”



New Mexico rarely generates much national news. When it does, as in the Wen Ho Lee nuclear espionage investigation, it can be explosive.

Now a little-known lawsuit before New Mexico District Court Judge Eugenio S. Mathis has the potential to alter the face of American elections.

Lopategui et al versus the State of New Mexico is proceeding at a surprising pace, with the litigants currently in the “discovery” phase of the trial, the point at which lawyers are allowed to question key witnesses and dig for facts and opinions with wide latitude. The targets of discovery right now include Sequoia Elections, two of the big three voting machine companies; Rebecca Vigil-Giron, New Mexico Secretary of State; state and local election officials; and officials of the state’s voting systems support vendor.

Highly disturbing facts and allegations have already emerged in this well-run but under publicized case. For example, in one majority Hispanic precinct, the voting machines produced exactly zero votes for John Kerry. More issues will arise as the Plaintiffs’ legal team digs deeper into the highly irregular events of Election Day 2004. Remarkably, these events occurred at a much higher rate in predominantly Hispanic and Native American precincts.
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autorank Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jul-16-07 03:41 AM
Response to Original message
7. Fairfax County Virginia 2003

http://www.votetrustusa.org/newsletters/VTnews0228.htm
"Rep. Wolf (pictured at right), now in his 13th term, is an Appropriations subcommittee chairman. He represents the 10th district in northern Virginia, which includes parts Fairfax counties. Fairfax County witnessed a serious meltdown in the November, 2003 elections that led the Fairfax Republican Party Committee to conclude "no matter how advanced the technology, ballot integrity and voter confidence should never be compromised. Unfortunately, on November 4, 2003, the new Fairfax County Digital Voting Equipment raised questions about our most basic voting assumptions." The report, Operation Ballot Integrity, recommended that the state enact laws to require a voter-verified audit be incorporated into all state-certified voting systems and create a targeted comparison of voter verified paper ballots with vote totals recorded on the Direct Recording Equipment. The state legislature has thusfar failed to follow this recommendation.?

PDF Report, remember it's 2003!!!

http://www.fairfaxco-gop.org/download/ballot_integrity.pdf
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AtomicKitten Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jul-16-07 04:52 AM
Response to Original message
8. my personal favorite is the 2002 election wild overnight swings in polling
that turned the Senate over to the Republicans - spectacular fraud - and the Voter News Service being conveniently unable to explain much less substantiate the discrepancies. This was perhaps the first time the wingnuts floated the notion that exit polling as a harbinger of fraud only works in other countries. The frosting on the cake was the VNS being "unavailable" for the 2004 election. They learned you don't need to cover your tracks if you don't make them in the first place.
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trof Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jul-16-07 06:52 AM
Response to Original message
9. 2002 AL governor's race.
We went to bed thinking incumbent Don Siegelman (D) had won by a narrow margin over challenger Bob Riley (R).

Sometime during the night a few thousand votes 'swapped sides' in Baldwin County, where I live. Riley 'won'.
The county is 75-80% repug.
ALL elected officials are repug.

The judge of probate said it was a "computer glitch".
There has never been a satisfactory explanation.

Since a recount would have to go through the rabidly repug state AG, and probably ruled on by the 100% repug state supreme court, Siegelman figured it would be a waste of time to go through the motions and decided to come back and fight another day.

In the 2006 race he was under indictment on what now appear to be charges trumped up by two repug U.S. Attorneys and didn't even get the dem nomination. Karl Rove is evidently at the bottom of the move. He's the one who laid out the strategy to get us a 100% repug supreme court in the 90s.

There's a lot of info on the web.
You can start here:
http://www.locustfork.net/blog/
Scroll down to "Governor Don Siegelman Moved to Texas" and follow the threads.
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mod mom Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jul-16-07 06:58 AM
Response to Original message
10. When OH got around to testing: NEARLY HALF OF VOTING MACHINES FAIL
Edited on Mon Jul-16-07 06:58 AM by mod mom
Nearly half of voting machines tested fail

Montgomery officials tested the 5% of machines that drew complaints; 56 of those 125 machines failed.


By Lynn Hulsey
Staff Writer
Wednesday, March 21, 2007

DAYTON — After two days of tests, the results are in: About 2,500 people cast ballots in November on 56 malfunctioning electronic touch-screen voting machines in Montgomery County, said Steve Harsman, county board of elections director.

He said it is impossible to know how many people finalized their electronic ballots without realizing that the Diebold Elections Systems machines were inaccurately registering their votes. But people had three chances to review their votes before finalizing them, and all the machines accurately tallied the votes that were finalized by voters, Harsman said.



On Tuesday, county election officials completed testing of 125 machines identified in voter complaints collected by Advocates for Basic Legal Equality, which called for the investigation. Some 2,530 voting machines were used in the county on Election Day.

Harsman said several malfunctioning machines were clustered at certain precincts, indicating they may have been damaged during delivery by a trucking company that hauls the machines to the polls.

-snip

http://www.daytondailynews.com/n/content/oh/story/news/local/2007/03/21/ddn032107elex.html
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mod mom Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jul-16-07 07:18 AM
Response to Original message
11. RNC use of vote "caging" as a method of suppressing Af Am votes:
What would suggest that vote caging is a big deal. Is it?

Vote caging is an illegal trick to suppress minority voters (who tend to vote Democrat) by getting them knocked off the voter rolls if they fail to answer registered mail sent to homes they aren't living at (because they are, say, at college or at war). The Republican National Committee reportedly stopped the practice following a consent decree in a 1986 case. Google the term and you'll quickly arrive at the Wizard of Oz of caging, Greg Palast, investigative reporter and author of the wickedly funny Armed Madhouse: From Baghdad to New Orleans—Sordid Secrets and Strange Tales of a White House Gone Wild. Palast started reporting allegations of Republican vote caging for the BBC's Newsnight in 2004. He's been almost alone on the story since then. Palast contends, both in Armed Madhouse and widely through the liberal blogosphere, that vote caging, an illegal voter-suppression scheme, happened in Florida in 2004 this way:

The Bush-Cheney operatives sent hundreds of thousands of letters marked "Do not forward" to voters' homes. Letters returned ("caged") were used as evidence to block these voters' right to cast a ballot on grounds they were registered at phony addresses. Who were the evil fakers? Homeless men, students on vacation and—you got to love this—American soldiers. Oh yeah: most of them are Black voters.
Why weren't these African-American voters home when the Republican letters arrived? The homeless men were on park benches, the students were on vacation—and the soldiers were overseas.

Palast supplies evidence linking Tim Griffin, then-research director for the RNC, to this caging plot; specifically, a series of confidential e-mails to Republican Party muckety-mucks with the suggestive heading "RE: caging." The e-mails were accidentally sent to a George Bush parody site. They also contained suggestively named spreadsheets, headed "caging" as well. The names on the lists are what Palast's researchers deemed to be homeless men and soldiers deployed in Iraq. Here are the e-mails.

-snip
http://www.slate.com/id/2167284

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mod mom Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jul-16-07 07:21 AM
Response to Original message
12. DoJ infiltration by "loyalists" & the false use of "Voter Fraud"
DOJ's actions are particularly difficult to defend, given the mounting evidence that claims of voting fraud have been greatly exaggerated by some on the right. As Professor Lori Minnite writes in a recent report entitled The Politics of Voting Fraud: "The claim that voter fraud threatens the integrity of American elections is itself a fraud." Professor Minnite's argument finds further support in the meager results of the DOJ's aggressive anti-fraud campaign, and the report of Tova Wang and Job Serebrov -- originally prepared for, but not released by, the EAC -- finding "widespread but not unanimous agreement that there is little polling place fraud."

The fact that air is quickly escaping from the voter-fraud balloon is confirmed by the abrupt disappearance of the American Center for Voting Rights. Formerly led by Mark P. "Thor" Hearne, who had served as National Elections Counsel to Bush-Cheney 2004, ACVR issued a lengthy and misleading report in 2005. As described here, this report sought to create the impression that fraud was rampant, especially in communities of color, based mostly on unconfirmed and specious media reports. But as Rick Hasen has recently observed, ACVR has now vanished as quickly as it appeared after the 2004 election.

There is also increasing evidence that the means most commonly suggested to target alleged voter fraud -- restrictive identification requirements -- are likely to have a disparate impact on certain classes of likely Democratic voters, especially racial minorities. That evidence includes this report from M.V. Hood and Charles Bullock, finding that African Americans, Latinos, and the elderly are less likely to have DMV-issued photo ID in Georgia. It also includes this one from the Brennan Center, finding that minorities, elderly people, and the poor are disproportionately represented among the more than 21 million U.S. citizens who lack government-issued ID.

-snip
http://moritzlaw.osu.edu/blogs/tokaji/
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mod mom Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jul-16-07 07:28 AM
Response to Original message
13. Rampant Problems w Lucas Co OH & Tom Noe's wife Chair of BOE:
The fact that Tom Noe's wife Bernadette Noe was Chair of the Lucas County BOE, (Lucas County is a Democratic stronghold) a county that incurred so many issues that OH SOS was forced to issue this report on the county after the '04 election:


OH SOS Investigation of the Lucas County BOE after 2004 Election

includes the fact that REPUBLICAN VOLUNTEERS were allowed UNSUPERVISED ACCESS to UNSECURED BALLOTS prior to the election, as well as this list:

*failure to maintain ballot security
*Inability to implement and maintain a trackable system for voter ballot reconciliation .
*failure to prepare and develop a plan for the processing of the voluminous amount of voter registration forms received.
*issuance and acceptance of incorrect absentee ballot forms.
*manipulation of the process involving the 3% recount.
*disjointed implementation of the Directive regarding the removal of Nader and Camejo from the ballot .
*failure to properly issue hospital ballots in accordance with statutory requirements.
*failure to maintain the security of poll books during the official canvass
*failure to examine campaign finance reports in a timely manner.
*failure to guard and protect public documents ....etc.


-One-half of the ballots printed and used in the 2004 general election in Lucas county were stored in an open space on the fhird floor of the county warehouse with no security measures in place.
SOURCE: SOS Investigation on Lucas County BOE page 4



-Live ballots were delivered to polling locations a week in advance of the election. Although the ballots were retrieved, one board employee who was assigned to the warehouse informed the SOS staff that he did not believe all the ballots were successfully retrieved.
SOURCE; SOS Investigation, page 5



-Lucas County BOE failed to record or retrieve ballot stub numbers of absentee voters’ ballots as required by statute OH Revised Code 3505.23. It was reported by an elector that her mother had received not one, but three absentee voter ballots. there was no way to determine if similar incidents occurred and if so how many.
SOURCE: SOS Investigation, page 7




-October 4, 2004 was filing deadline for new voter registrations. At that point there were approximately 20,000 unprocessed voter registration applications with less than a month before the election. One mail tray containing 4,500-7,000 (estimates vary) unprocessed “Project Voter” registrations were discovered on or about October 18,2004.
SOURCE: SOS Investigation pg 10

***Of interest here is information obtained from the SOS website entitled ElectionsVoter/results 2003 and 2004 which show the # of registered voters number change from ‘03-’04 was 11,947 in Lucas County: reg voters 2003 in Lucas=288,190 ; registered voter in 2004=300,137. (CAN YOU SAY PURGES!)



-In late September or early October an employee of the Ohio Republican Party contacted Sam Thurber (*involved with politician wife Maggie Thurber in Noe scandal.) wanting to inspect and have copies made of all recently returned voter registrations, Ohio Republican Party offered to furnish volunteers to assist with copying postcards. No one at the Lucas County BOE can confirm that anyone was assigned to supervise Republican volunteers. On their second day of copying, a BOE employee, Jennifer Bernath, Democratic Booth Official) saw republican party volunteers peeling off the yellow return stickers applied by the post office. (Violation of RC 149.43 (B) (I) , and agruably a violation of 149.351.
SOURCE: SOS Investigation, pgs 18-19



-The Swanton 3 poll book turned up missing and has never been recovered.
SOURCE: SOS Investigation pg 16


http://www.solarbus.org/election/docs/lucas.pdf
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mod mom Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jul-16-07 09:31 AM
Response to Reply #13
17. Note that the Coingate Scandal (Tom Noe) was suppressed by GOP Operative now Pollster:
Fritz Wenzel (of T.Blade + Coingate fame) Now Working for Zogby


Weird...He allegedly suppresses Coingate story prior to the '04 Election in Ohio and is now working for Zogby. What's up with this?


Saving Ohio

Did a reporter with GOP ties suppress a story that could have cost Bush the White House?

By Bill Frogameni

Pages 1 2


October 6, 2005 | In April 2005, the Blade newspaper of Toledo, Ohio, began publishing a remarkable series of articles about a well-connected Republican donor, Tom Noe, chair of the Bush-Cheney 2004 campaign for Lucas County, which encompasses Toledo. The Blade, which had won a Pulitzer Prize for reporting in 2004, discovered that Noe, a Toledo coin dealer, was investing $50 million for the state through the novel practice of coin speculation: buying and selling rare coins to turn a profit. Noe, the Blade revealed, could not account for $10 million to $13 million in the fund.

The paper also divulged that Noe had been placed under federal investigation for allegedly laundering money -- perhaps state money -- to the Bush campaign. The Blade's initial reports on Noe started a chain reaction of related scandals for Ohio's dominant Republicans. Recently, Gov. Bob Taft pleaded no contest to accepting several gifts from influence peddlers -- including Noe -- without reporting them, as law requires. Noe is currently the subject of 13 investigations.

In November 2004, Lucas County was among the most hotly contested areas in the most hotly contested state. Kerry won the county by 45,000 votes, but George W. Bush went on to win Ohio by less than 120,000 votes, which swung the election for him.


But Bush's reelection may have been made possible by a Blade reporter with close ties to the Republican Party who reportedly knew about Noe's potential campaign violations in early 2004 but suppressed the story.

According to several knowledgeable sources, the Blade's chief political columnist, Fritz Wenzel, was told of Noe's potential campaign violations as early as January 2004. But according to Blade editors, Wenzel never gave the paper the all-important tip in early 2004.



-SNIP
http://dir.salon.com/story/news/feature/2005/10/06/ohio/index.html



Zogby International spokesman Fritz Wenzel said that was the case in July when Syracuse Post-Standard reporter Glenn Coin wrote a story about Vice President Cheney’s visit to Utica for a fundraiser for Meier. Wenzel was quoted extensively in the article.

http://www.zogby.com/soundbites/ReadClips.dbm?ID=13587



However, as it turns out, both Wenzel and his son had personal relationships with the Noes, who even attended the son's wedding.

In fact, in March 2004, a couple of months after Wenzel got the tip, his son was elected to the Lucas County Republican Central Committee, and from April 15, 2005, to the end of May 2005, Wenzel's son was on the payroll of the Ohio Republican Party.

http://www.counterpunch.org/pringle06092006.html
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Land Shark Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jul-16-07 08:31 AM
Response to Original message
14. The "Coingate" scandal in Ohio, could have affected 2004 if disclosed then
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mod mom Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jul-16-07 09:44 AM
Response to Reply #14
18. Read this letter from Conyers/Kaptur to Gonzo re Noe/COINGATE:
Edited on Mon Jul-16-07 09:51 AM by mod mom
PLEASE NOTE (FROM THE LETTER):

*From documents that have been made public, we know that the U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of Ohio, Gregory White, who is leading the federal investigation, had prior knowledge of the losses before the 2004 presidential election, as did the Governor of Ohio and other officials.16 At the same time, no investigation was initiated on these matters until spring of this year.

*In addition, on October 1, 2004, one month before the election, the Bush administration appointed Mr. Noe as Chair of the U.S. Mint's Citizens Coinage Advisory Committee.12 Federal legislation was passed for the specific purpose of allowing Mr. Noe's appointment.13 That legislation moved through the U.S. House Committee on Financial Services, before which Mr. Noe had testified14 and to whose Members Mr. Noe had contributed financially.

SO TOM NOE'S WIFE BERNADETTE IS CHAIR OF LUCAS CO BOE, WHERE NUMEROUS SERIOUS PROBLEMS OCCURRED. IT IS KNOWN BEFORE THE ELECTION AND STILL SPECIAL LEGISLATION IS PASSED TO GIVEN TOM NOE A REWARD ("CHAIR"). THESE FOLKS NEED TO BE SUBPOENAED! BTW, I BELIEVE THIS TIES INTO THE USA SCANDAL.

Conyers-Kaptur seek special counsel for Noe probe
by John Conyers, Jr. and Marcy Kaptur
August 4, 2005

The Honorable Alberto Gonzales
Attorney General of the United States
U.S. Department of Justice
950 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW
Washington, DC 20530


Dear Mr. Attorney General:

We write to request that the U.S. Department of Justice immediately appoint an outside special counsel to assume the Department's investigation into alleged illegal contributions by Mr. Thomas Noe to federal and state political campaigns. In light of recent disclosures that Governor Taft's office, which is a subject of the investigation, made a direct political appeal to Karl Rove for Gregory White, the U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of Ohio to receive his job, there is little doubt that this is a textbook case for the appointment of a special counsel.

We understand and appreciate that it is not unusual for local and state politicians to use their influence to obtain presidential appointments for their friends and political allies; however, it is unusual, and indeed inappropriate and violative of your regulations, for prosecutors who obtain such appointments to review the conduct of those same individuals and their friends. Regardless of the actual or perceived sincerity or motives of any particular prosecutor, to ask an individual who owes his job to certain politicians to pursue legal actions against those same politicians places the prosecutor in an untenable situation. Whatever actions he or she takes will inevitably be subject to questions of favoritism and bias, calling the entire prosecution into question. This is why the special counsel regulations were promulgated to begin with.

At the outset, we should note that Mr. Noe, who chaired the 2004 Bush-Cheney Campaign for northwest Ohio and managed the State of Ohio's Bureau of Workers Compensation Fund, appears to have been involved in the diversion of millions of dollars from the Fund to unsecured investments in coins and other collectibles.1 Over $12 million in coins purportedly owned by the State of Ohio, and perhaps other collectibles, are missing, including two coins valued at $300,000.2 Further, the State of Ohio now has claimed losses of $215 million dollars as a result of unsecured hedge fund transactions involving MDL Enterprises of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.3 It appears very likely that political contributions to both federal and state officeholders and candidates were channeled from these state funds.4 Mr. Noe himself was a Bush Pioneer who raise over $100,000 for the Bush campaign.5 Many political officials have recognized the impropriety of these contributions and thus have returned them, including Ohio Governor Bob Taft and California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger.6

As you are no doubt aware, under the Department's regulations, you are required to appoint a special counsel when (1) a "criminal investigation of a person or matter is warranted," (2) the investigation "by a United States Attorney's Office or litigating Division of the Department of Justice would present a conflict of interest for the Department," and (3) "it would be in the public interest to appoint an outside Special Counsel to assume responsibility for the matter."7 There is little doubt that all three factors are met in the Noe case.

In this situation, a criminal investigation is clearly warranted and, as a matter of fact, the Department has initiated one. A grand jury has been seated in the Northern District of Ohio and has been deposing dozens of individuals who may have been involved in these illegal activities. Moreover, the Federal Bureau of Investigation has been seizing computers, files, and assets of some of the individuals involved.

Second, there are myriad conflicts of interest for Department prosecutors to continue the investigation on their own. To begin with, the United States Attorneys investigating the case, those for the Northern and Southern Districts for Ohio, both of whom were appointed by President Bush, would be in the untenable position of investigating a leading official of the 2004 Bush-Cheney campaign. We now know that Mr. White has very close connections with the Governor's office and the White House. In fact, recently released records show that Mr. White sought Governor Taft's help in obtaining the U.S. Attorney position.8 The Governor's Chief of Staff, Brian Hicks, apparently communicated with Karl Rove, then a counselor to the President, about Mr. White's interest in the post.9 In an e-mail to Mr. Hicks, Mr. White wrote, "'I believe that my record speaks for itself, and I doubt there are too many county chairs for the Bush campaign that worked harder.'"10 This is the same Brian Hicks who was convicted along with his executive assistant, Cherie Carroll for accepting gifts from Mr. Noe in violation of state law (both are now lobbyists).11 In assessing this prong of the regulations, the test for appointment of a special counsel does not rest on the prosecutor in question's perceived reputation or the characterization of his reputation by others, regardless of their political stripe; it is based on whether the conflict of interest exists at all, which is clearly the case in the present instance.

In addition, on October 1, 2004, one month before the election, the Bush administration appointed Mr. Noe as Chair of the U.S. Mint's Citizens Coinage Advisory Committee.12 Federal legislation was passed for the specific purpose of allowing Mr. Noe's appointment.13 That legislation moved through the U.S. House Committee on Financial Services, before which Mr. Noe had testified14 and to whose Members Mr. Noe had contributed financially. Mr. Noe resigned the U.S. Mint position on May 26, 2005,15 after the circumstances of the appointment were publicized in the media.

Finally, the appointment of a special counsel for this matter would undoubtedly serve the public interest. The allegations of improper conduct reach to the highest-possible levels of federal and state government and pertain to a serious corruption of our democratic system of government. The appointment of a special counsel would demonstrate to the American public the Department's understanding of the importance of and need for impartiality in this case. Also, an investigation by a single special counsel would not be subject to any jurisdictional issues that may be present under the current scenario of two prosecutors. There is little question that high-ranking political officials nationally and at the state level were knowledgeable and involved in these activities. Many questions must be addressed involving the link between alleged illegal campaign contributions, diversion of State funds, their relation to 2005 elections, as well as the federal appointment of Mr. Noe to a federal advisory committee.

As a matter of fact, the numerous delays in the investigation have already raised the specter of political favoritism. From documents that have been made public, we know that the U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of Ohio, Gregory White, who is leading the federal investigation, had prior knowledge of the losses before the 2004 presidential election, as did the Governor of Ohio and other officials.16 At the same time, no investigation was initiated on these matters until spring of this year.17

The fact pattern present in this case, particularly with the new disclosure that the lead federal prosecutor may well have gotten his job as a result of a political appeal by Governor Taft's office to Karl Rove, make it abundantly clear that a special counsel is necessitated. We urge you to make such a designation immediately to help restore public trust in this very important investigation.

We look forward to promptly hearing whether you will appoint a special counsel and, if not, the reason for your decision. Please reply through the House Judiciary Committee Minority Office, 2142 Rayburn House Office Building, Washington, DC 20515 (tel 202-225-6504; fax: 202-225-4423).

Sincerely,
John Conyers, Jr.
Marcy Kaptur


http://www.freepress.org/departments/display/19/2005/1400


NOTE I DON'T WANT TO MIS REPRESENT THE FACTS THE USA WAS MADE AWARE ON OCT 13 2004

http://journals.democraticunderground.com/mod%20mom/6
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mod mom Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jul-16-07 10:05 AM
Response to Reply #18
19. USA NW OH Knew Oct 13 '04 but look what he didn't do:
Edited on Mon Jul-16-07 10:08 AM by mod mom
From May, 2003, to May, 2005, as a member of the Citizens Coinage Advisory Committee, Mr. Noe made frequent trips to Washington. He visited the Mint for meetings and built relationships with federal officials and lawmakers.

-snip
The Treasury Department’s inspector general began its probe of Mr. Noe after The Blade first reported in April, 2005, on problems with the $50 million rare-coin funds he managed for the state, e-mails show.

At the time of the initial reports in The Blade, Mr. Noe — appointed by Republican governors to serve on the Ohio Board of Regents and the Ohio Turnpike Commission — was gaining stature in Washington. And the state of Ohio was on the verge of giving him an additional $25 million to invest in rare coins — a plan that was reversed after stories about the coin funds appeared in the newspaper.


http://www.toledoblade.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060402/NEWS24/60402016

USA WHITE KNEW OCT 13TH, BUT HE WAS ALLOWED TO REMAIN IN HIGH PROFILE BOARDS AND WAS ABOUT TO GET AN ADDITIONAL $25 MILLION TO INVEST WHEN THE TOLEDO BLADE BROKE THE STORY IN APRIL OF 2005.

DID YOU READ THAT? APRIL 2005-6 MONTHS AFTER BEING MADE AWARE OF THE PROBLEMS.

WAS THIS A PAYOFF? Inquisitive folks would love to know! SUBPOENA THEM!

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goodhue Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jul-16-07 08:57 AM
Response to Original message
15. 1990 MN gubenatorial -- repuke candidate Grunseth drops out due to scandal
Infidelity and swimming nude in pool with minors
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MaineDem Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jul-16-07 09:10 AM
Response to Original message
16. NH phone jamming in 2002
Sununu vs. Shaheen.

I think it was '02.
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nashville_brook Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jul-16-07 10:47 AM
Response to Original message
20. Katharine Harris election 2000 voter purge -- 174,000 targeted, 90,000+ eliminated
http://archive.salon.com/politics/feature/2000/12/04/voter_file/print.html


Dec. 4, 2000 | If Vice President Al Gore is wondering where his Florida votes went, rather than sift through a pile of chad, he might want to look at a "scrub list" of 173,000 names targeted to be knocked off the Florida voter registry by a division of the office of Florida Secretary of State Katherine Harris. A close examination suggests thousands of voters may have lost their right to vote based on a flaw-ridden list that included purported "felons" provided by a private firm with tight Republican ties.

Early in the year, the company, ChoicePoint, gave Florida officials a list with the names of 8,000 ex-felons to "scrub" from their list of voters. But it turns out none on the list were guilty of felonies, only misdemeanors. The company acknowledged the error, and blamed it on the original source of the list -- the state of Texas.

Florida officials moved to put those falsely accused by Texas back on voter rolls before the election. Nevertheless, the large number of errors uncovered in individual counties suggests that thousands of eligible voters may have been turned away at the polls.

Florida is the only state that pays a private company that promises to "cleanse" voter rolls.The state signed in 1998 a $4 million contract with DBT Online, since merged into ChoicePoint, of Atlanta. The creation of the scrub list, called the central voter file, was mandated by a 1998 state voter fraud law, which followed a tumultuous year that saw Miami's mayor removed after voter fraud in the election, with dead people discovered to have cast ballots. The voter fraud law required all 67 counties to purge voter registries of duplicate registrations, deceased voters and felons, many of whom, but not all, are barred from voting in Florida.

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nashville_brook Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jul-16-07 10:55 AM
Response to Original message
21. 2006 Sarasota, FL undervote scandal -- 18,000 undervotes; ES&S says vote is "trade secret"
http://www.heraldtribune.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20061220/COLUMNIST13/612200305

http://www.gainesville.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20061220/LOCAL/61220007/-1/news

Election Systems & Software Inc., which manufactured the electronic voting machines used in Sarasota, refused to disclose the computer codes it uses to operate its equipment. Jennings has argued that a review of the software and hardware used in the iVotronic machines will let her prove that a machine malfunction caused the large undervote, allowing her to seek a new election against Buchanan. Mark Herron, a lawyer for Jennings, said voters had a right to review the voting machine codes, which ES&S considers a trade secret, to ensure that the election was properly conducted.
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nashville_brook Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jul-16-07 11:01 AM
Response to Original message
22. Clint Curtis whistleblows Yang Enterprises and Tom Feeney -- vote-rigging via computer code
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clint_Curtis

Curtis specifically alleged that:

At the behest of Rep. Tom Feeney, in September 2000, he was asked to write a program for a touchscreen voting machine that would make it possible to change the results of an election undetectably. This technology, Curtis explained, could also be used in any electronic tabulation machine or scanner. Curtis assumed initially that this effort was aimed at detecting Democratic fraud, but later learned that it was intended to benefit the Republican Party.

West Palm Beach was named as an intended target, but used punched card ballots in the 2000 elections. Indeed, West Palm Beach was famous for the "hanging chad" recounts of that election.

Curtis explained that the software could be used in any electronic tabulation machine or scanner. He spoke about this to the Conyers Voting Forum, after Conyers left the forum and turned over the dais on December 13, 2004<1>.
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nashville_brook Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jul-16-07 11:06 AM
Response to Original message
23. Unprecedented Supreme Court interference in states' rights -- Bush v. Gore
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mod mom Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jul-16-07 02:51 PM
Response to Original message
24. 18181 (Dems won but machines delivered wins to Republicans)
The Theft of Your Vote Is Just a Chip Away
By Thom Hartmann, AlterNet. Posted July 30, 2003.

Are computerized voting machines a wide-open back door to massive voting fraud? A growing number of Americans are saying our votes are too sacred to reside only on computer chips.

Are computerized voting machines a wide-open back door to massive voting fraud? The discussion has moved from the Internet to CNN, to UK newspapers, and the pages of The New York Times. People are cautiously beginning to connect the dots, and the picture that seems to be emerging is troubling.

"A defective computer chip in the county's optical scanner misread ballots Tuesday night and incorrectly tallied a landslide victory for Republicans," announced the Associated Press in a story on Nov. 7, just a few days after the 2002 election. The story added, "Democrats actually won by wide margins."

Republicans would have carried the day had not poll workers become suspicious when the computerized vote-reading machines said the Republican candidate was trouncing his incumbent Democratic opponent in the race for County Commissioner. The poll workers were close enough to the electorate -- they were part of the electorate -- to know their county overwhelmingly favored the Democratic incumbent.

A quick hand recount of the optical-scan ballots showed that the Democrat had indeed won, even though the computerized ballot-scanning machine kept giving the race to the Republican. The poll workers brought the discrepancy to the attention of the County Clerk, who notified the voting machine company.

"A new computer chip was flown to Snyder from Dallas," County Clerk Lindsey told the Associated Press. With the new chip installed, the computer then verified that the Democrat had won the election. In another Texas anomaly, Republican state Senator Jeff Wentworth won his race with exactly 18,181 votes, Republican Carter Casteel won her state House seat with exactly 18,181 votes, and conservative Judge Danny Scheel won his seat with exactly 18,181 votes -- all in Comal County. Apparently, however, no poll workers in Comal County thought to ask for a new chip.

-snip

http://www.alternet.org/story/16474
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AtomicKitten Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jul-16-07 04:22 PM
Response to Reply #24
25. 18,181 - the magical Texas anomaly
Texas anomaly, Republican state Senator Jeff Wentworth won his race with exactly 18,181 votes, Republican Carter Casteel won her state House seat with exactly 18,181 votes, and conservative Judge Danny Scheel won his seat with exactly 18,181 votes -- all in Comal County
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Patsy Stone Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jul-16-07 09:37 PM
Response to Original message
26. Some of the ones listed are winners
But I have to throw in my local favorite, Xavier Suarez:

5,000 Absentee Ballots Are Seized in Miami Fraud Inquiry
http://select.nytimes.com/search/restricted/article?res=F70A15F7355D0C718DDDA80994DF494D81
Published: November 12, 1997

"State officials have seized more than 5,000 absentee ballots as part of an investigation into possible fraud and vote-buying in last week's mayoral election.

"Mayor Joe Carollo received 49.6 percent of the vote, while former Mayor Xavier L. Suarez received 46.8 percent. Since neither received more than half of the vote, a runoff will be held on Thursday.

"The investigation followed a tip last month that an individual affiliated with the Suarez campaign was buying absentee ballots, though that person has not been charged, investigators said.

"But then Manuel Amador, who said he was a campaign volunteer for Mr. Suarez, was charged with three counts of vote fraud last week after an undercover agent said Mr. Amador had agreed to buy three absentee ballots bearing the names of dead voters."
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