Ohio election protection activists have won a landmark court
battle to preserve the ballots from 2004�s disputed presidential election, and
researchers studying those ballots continue to find new evidence that the
election was, indeed, stolen. Among other things, large numbers of consecutive
votes in different precincts for George W. Bush make it appear ever more likely
that the real winner in 2004 should have been John Kerry. Meanwhile,
indictments and prison terms are mounting among key players in that tainted
contest.
In King Lincoln Bronzeville Neighborhood Association et. al.
v. J. Kenneth Blackwell, three community groups and five individuals have won a
precedent-setting federal decision preserving the ballots from the 2004
election. By federal law those ballots could have been destroyed en masse
September 3, twenty-two months after the November 2, 2004 balloting. Republican
Secretary of State J. Kenneth Blackwell gave every indication that he would
order the records to be destroyed as soon as he could. Admissions have already
come from a few counties that illegally disposed of election-related materials
well before the federal deadline. By law, all such documents were to be
preserved, under lock and key, right up to the federal deadline.
While running the 2004 election, Blackwell served as the
very active co-chair of Ohio�s Bush-Cheney campaign. He is now the GOP nominee
for governor, but is trailing substantially in all major polls behind
Democratic Congressman Ted Strickland.
Blackwell was put on notice by Columbus Attorney Cliff
Arnebeck and others who filed the King Lincoln suit contending illegal
discrimination against black and young voters in 2004. The suit is based on
widespread allegations involving mal-distribution of voting machines, dubious
vote counts, race-based voter suppression and many other questionable
occurrences before, during and after the 2004 balloting. The suit asked Judge
Algernon Marbley of the federal district court in Columbus to order Blackwell
to force Ohio�s 88 county boards of elections (BOEs) to preserve ballots and
other election-related materials so the full extent of the allegations could be
proven.
Under intense public pressure, Blackwell claimed he lacked
the power to force the BOEs to do that. Marbley responded by both ordering
Blackwell to issue a blanket preservation edict, and by issuing a federal order
to all Ohio�s BOEs. The ballots are thus to be protected at least until after
the conclusion of the lawsuit, which could take years.
Ironically, the ballots from the disputed Florida 2000
presidential election have already been preserved in a state facility at
Tallahassee. In response to a petition drive spearheaded by historians and
other academics, Governor Jeb Bush and Secretary of State Glenda Hood have
gathered the ballots from Florida�s counties in a temperature controlled archive,
with access guaranteed to future generations of citizens and researchers. (Hood
succeeded Katherine Harris as Secretary of State. Like Blackwell, Harris
administered her state�s election while also serving as a Bush-Cheney campaign
co-chair. She is now the GOP�s Florida nominee for US Senate, and is also
trailing badly in her race.)
A petition drive to establish a permanent repository for
Ohio�s 2004 election materials is being coordinated through the
www.savetheballots.org web site. The campaign�s final outcome will probably
hinge on who wins the governorship and secretary of state�s office in November.
As of now, Ohio�s election records are stored in 88 county
warehouses that range widely in quality and security. Some of the materials are
vulnerable to rain and mold, and are sprawled haphazardly in cardboard boxes on
dusty floors. Federal law requires all such records be kept under double lock
and key, but many clearly are not. In at least one case, unmonitored
maintenance workers have routine access to areas where ballots are stored.
County BOEs have been inconsistent in granting access. But
thus far, independent researchers such as Dr. Richard Hayes Philips and Dr. Ron
Baiman have looked at about 50,000 ballots under the auspices of the Columbus
Institute for Contemporary Journalism. Some 5.6 million votes were cast in
2004, but at least 800,000 were cast electronically, with no paper trail.
Bush�s official margin was 118,775.
So far, even the limited inspection of ballots has yielded
astonishing results. Three precincts in two counties have shown consecutive
runs of Bush votes that qualify as �virtual statistical impossibilities.�
- In
Delaware County, Precinct Genoa I, researcher Stuart Wright viewed and
recounted 3 separate bundles of ballots. In the second bundle, there were
274 consecutive ballots for Bush. In the third bundle there were 359
consecutive ballots for Bush. Genoa I was not one of the four precincts
recounted as part of a required official recount, conducted on December 15,
2004.
- In
Delaware County, BOE officials told Phillips that after the votes were
cast on Election Day, ballots were unloaded by a team of teenage
volunteers including the Boy Scouts who carried them into the BOE building
where they were then given to a "mentally retarded man" who
scraped the chads off the punch card ballots. Dr. Phillips estimates that
the "mentally retarded man" would have had to scrape four or
five ballots per second on election night in order to comply with the
posting of the results at 12:40am for the nearly 80,000 ballots cast
there.
- In
Delaware County, Ross Township precinct, Philips has discovered that the
BOE certified that 70 percent of the ballots cast for C. Ellen Connally, an
African-American woman from Cleveland running for the Ohio Supreme Court,
were also counted for Bush. The implausibility of this outcome in a white,
Republican suburb is underscored by the fact that Connally trailed both
Bush and Kerry very substantially throughout the rest of the state. Some
60 percent of the Township�s ballots opposing a constitutional amendment banning
gay marriage (which passed substantially) also were punched for Bush, an
extremely implausible outcome widely branded as the �Gays for Bush�
anomaly.
- In
Butler County, Phillips found that in Monroe City precinct 4CA, Bush
received 52 consecutive votes near the start of voting, and then another
run of 212 consecutive votes.
- Also
in Butler Country, in Ross Township Precinct 4JB, Philips found that Bush
was awarded 547 votes to Kerry�s 141 votes. In separate sequences, Bush
received 41, 29 and 25 straight votes. Neither 4CA nor 4JB were involved
in the recount.
- In
Clermont County, which contributed significantly to Bush�s margin of
victory, researcher Dr. Ronald Baiman discovered a suspicious use of
replacement ballots, that are meant to be issued only if a regular ballot
is somehow spoiled by a voter. In a random draw of one ballot from each of
the 192 precincts, against huge odds, Baiman found a replacement ballot.
Baiman asked that the next ballot from the precinct be drawn and it, too,
was a replacement ballot. Continuing pulling ballots from that same
precinct, Baiman witnessed 36 straight replacement ballots in a row, a
virtual statistical impossibility. Dr. Philips recorded only five spoiled
ballots in this same precinct, raising the question of where the other 31
replacement ballots came from.
- Also
in Clermont County, Phillips found an opti-scan ballot with a white
sticker over the Kerry-Edwards spot which would prevent the counter from
recording a Kerry vote. During the December 2004 recount in Clermont
County, witnesses swore out official affidavits that they saw several
ballots with stickers over the Kerry-Edwards spot. The county prosecutor
claimed there were �less than one hundred� of these, but was unable to
explain why any stickers were there at all.
- In
Miami County on Monday, June 19, 2006, Director Steve Quillan handed
co-author Bob Fitrakis a print-out of what he called "freely amended
results." Director Quillan said "You guys were right" regarding
the voter turnout in Concord South West Precinct, which had been listed as
98.55 percent in the certified election results in 2004. Quillan also disavowed
the alleged 94.3 percent voter turnout certified election results in Concord
South. The Free Press has questioned those results, which would have meant
that 679 out of 689 people successfully voted in Concord South West. Using
a computer databank of voter history, Quillan now admits that the voter
turnout was just 82.1 percent in Concord South West and 79.5 percent in Concord,
discrepancies of more than 15 percent.
- In
Miami County, BOE Director Quillan also says Boy Scouts who volunteered to
help on Election Day mistakenly took Concord South West ballots to the
Concord East precinct. Baiman found that the pollbooks and absentee ballots
in Miami County �have little to no relationship to the voters who voted in
the county.� He also discovered that �At least 8 percent of precincts in Miami
County have at least a 5 percent discrepancy between the number of voters who
voted and the official certified number of votes.� He also noted that
there were two precincts that were off by more than 100 votes.
- In
Miami County, both the chair and the director of the BOE admitted that the
recount matched the official vote count only because they didn't use the
certified results, but simply counted the ballots in the precinct and ran
them through the tabulator. This is a valid tabulator test, but not a
legally valid recount, since there's no benchmark.
- Also
in Miami County, Diane L. Miley, the BOE�s former Deputy Director said the
Director allowed �Republican friends� and �high school students to take
ballots out to the polls on Election Day.� Miley also says ten or more
Republicans were allowed into the BOE on the evening of Election Day, when
votes were being counted, which she says made her �incredibly
uncomfortable.� But in going public with her assertions, Miley says she
was "abandoned by the Dems . . . when I stood up [to the Republicans]
at the Board of Elections."
- In
Warren County, punch card ballots were also shifted from precinct to
precinct, which again, due to ballot rotations, could have reversed the
intent of thousands of voters. Warren County was also key to the Bush
margin of victory. Its BOE declared an unexplained Homeland Security alert
when the polls closed, and the county�s ballots were diverted to an
unauthorized warehouse, amidst a media blackout. Bush emerged from the
county with a very large margin over John Kerry. Warren County also used a
chad scraping crew.
Dubious outcomes and marginal behavior by Republican
election officials has set off a trickle of legal prosecutions that may become
a tidal wave if the preserved ballots continue to tell such tales, and if the
assertions in the King Lincoln suit are proven out. Three Cleveland-area poll workers
have already been indicated for their actions in the 2004 election, all of
which were perpetrated in ways that benefited the Bush vote count.
Meanwhile, the architect of the national imposition of
electronic voting machines is on his way to jail. Ohio Congressman Bob Ney, who
authored the federal Help America Vote Act, pleaded guilty to federal
corruption charges on September 15. Ney�s HAVA legislation has been central to
foisting electronic voting machines on much of the nation. Central to Ney�s conviction
has been a flow of �contributions� from the manufacturers of those machines,
which have yielded millions in profits for companies with deep Republican
roots.
Ney will join Tom Noe, northern Ohio�s �Mr. Republican,� a
major GOP contributor and close cohort of Blackwell, Bush and Ohio Governor
Robert Taft. Noe served as chair of the Lucas County (Toledo) Board of
Elections for many years. His wife held the post in 2004, and ultimately
resigned in disgrace. The entire Lucas County BOE was later fired by Blackwell.
Independent researchers have shown at least 7,000 Toledo citizens were stripped
from the voter rolls, and have substantiated widespread allegations of vote
theft and fraud. Noe has been convicted of federal election funding violations
and of mishandling millions of dollars in funds from the Ohio Bureau of Workers
Compensation.
As researchers dive deeper into the vast body of ballots,
huge legal battles loom over what they may and may not tell us about the true
outcome of the 2004 presidential election. But the tip of the iceberg indicates
very serious problems, with a wide range of dubious vote counts and illegal
recounts all favoring George W. Bush. Diebold opti-scan machines alone are
known to have cost Kerry at least 7,000 votes.
Thus far only a fraction of Ohio�s 88 counties have received
even passing scrutiny. But the early indicators are that Ohio 2004, which
decided the presidency, may ultimately prove out to have been the dirtiest and
most obviously stolen election in all U.S. history.
Bob
Fitrakis is of counsel, and Harvey Wasserman is a plaintiff, in the King
Lincoln lawsuit. They are co-authors, with Steve Rosenfeld, of "What
Happened in Ohio: A documentary record of theft and fraud" just published
by The New Press. The Columbus Institute for Contemporary Journalism is the
501(c)(3) nonprofit organization that publishes the Free Press.