Sir Real - Fatally Flawed

HAND COUNT SET FOR 2006 RTA VOTE
March 31, 2009

(Tucson, AZ) -- A hand count will be conducted next week of ballots from an election three years ago for the Pima County Regional Transportation Authority. The count is not an election challenge, but rather a part of a criminal investigation by Arizona Attorney General Terry Goddard. The count is expected to be completed by the end of the day on April 10th. It will be observed by representatives of the Democratic, Republican and Libertarian parties.
(Arizona Daily Star)

www.fatallyflawedthemovie.com

After discovering evidence of election fraud in Pima County, Arizona, the Democratic Party had to sue the election facilitators of that county to examine critical public election data. The lawsuit resulted in the largest release of election data in U.S. history.

from the Tucson Weekly:

from March 26, 2009 (www.blackboxvoting.org)

Posted on Thursday, March 26, 2009

As part of a criminal probe into possible election tampering in a 2006 transportation ballot issue, a hand recount of ballots will be performed. Unfortunately, limits have been set on public observation such that no notes, video, or evidence of the accuracy of the count can be collected by any observer. Bear in mind that even before we get to the count, the chain of custody for the ballots in this case is not necessarily intact.

The Arizona Attorney General has taken the position that the hand count need not follow election law since it is part of a criminal probe; however, obstructing observer ability to authenticate the count does not support the larger concept of the right to self-government. In a nutshell, there must be a way for the public to see, authenticate and have evidence that the ballot counting is correct.

No one is saying the A.G. should turn observation into a free-for-all, but prohibiting observers from even taking notes, in addition to blocking photographs and video, ultimately blocks freedom of information rights.

Tucson Citizen - March 25, 2009, by Garry Duffy

http://www.tucsoncitizen.com/daily/local/112902.php

RTA ballots from 2006 to be recounted

The attorney general's criminal investigation will include:

• Asking local political parties to submit three names each by March 30 for candidates to observe the ballot recount.

The Attorney General's Office will select one to represent each party.

• The ballots are in the custody of the Maricopa County Elections Division.

Officials of Maricopa Elections will conduct the recount "in a secured facility under the supervisors of police officers employed by this office."

• No cameras, cell phones, writing instruments or audio or video recorders will be allowed in the recount area.

• The hand recount will begin April 6 and continue for about five days.

• The public will be able to watch the recount via live streaming video.

A hand recount of the 2006 Regional Transportation Authority election ballots will begin April 6, according to a letter the Arizona Attorney General's Office sent to the Pima County political party officials Monday.

The recount is part of a criminal probe by the AG into complaints that vote results may have been manipulated.

The attorney general's office last month seized the ballots from the Pima County Treasurer's Office, where officials have been seeking court direction on whether the ballots should be destroyed.

"Our examination of the RTA ballots will include a hand count of the ballots," wrote Donald E. Conrad, criminal division chief counsel at the attorney general's office. The examination is expected to take five days, he wrote.

Voters in 2006, approved a 20-year regional transportation plan and a half-cent sales tax to help fund it. The plan was approved 60 percent to 40 percent and the sales tax increase 58 percent to 42 percent. About 120,000 votes were cast in the election out of about 462,000 registered voters.

County voters in the previous 15 years had shot down four major transportation plans and funding mechanisms.

At the center of the controversy is the county's use of electronic vote and ballot tabulating equipment and whether final vote results could have been manipulated to change the election outcome.

"I must emphasize that this is a criminal investigation, not an election process controlled by the applicable Arizona laws," Conrad wrote. "Attendance and procedures undertaken at this examination will be strictly monitored and overseen by the office of the Attorney General,"Conrad added.

The Pima County Democratic Party in 2007 filed a lawsuit to obtain from the county electronic records of votes and ballot tabulating processes for every election dating back to the late 1990s.

Their concerns were fueled by an increasing number of complaints across the nation that computerized election vote systems and software were vulnerable to hacking in a number of ways, including insider tampering, faulty or deliberately misprogrammed memory cards, software malfunctions, and data alteration after polls close.

Pima Count Superior Court Judge Michael Miller in December 2007 ordered the county to surrender a portion of the electronic vote records, but not those from the May 2006 special election.

The judge's ruling marked the first time a government in the United States had been ordered to surrender electronic vote records.

The Pima County Board of Supervisors later ordered the RTA and all other electronic vote records released to the Democrats.

Critics of the county's election system and procedures had maintained that Diebold-GEMS vote devices and software can be tampered with to alter election results and suggested such was the case in the RTA election.

Local elections integrity activists in AuditAZ have said that they have uncovered irregularities in the election vote records they have studied.

They have objected to the attorney general seizing the ballots and removing them to the Maricopa County Elections Division, maintaining that the move of the ballots out of lockdown in Pima County broke the ballots' chain of custody and subjected the ballots to physical tampering.

"Our biggest concern is the possibility of ballot substitution," Jim March, an AuditAZ member who has been among the most critical of county elections equipment and practices.

March said the number of recount observers from Pima County political parties - one each - is not sufficient to adequately monitor the recount.

AuditAZ members also investigated electronic vote security this year at the Maricopa County Elections Department and issued a report critical of that agency.

"They can exclude the most hard-core critics of their department," Marsh complained.

Pima County and RTA officials also support the investigation, as do the Pima County Democratic, Libertarian, and Republican parties.

Brad Nelson, Pima County Elections Division director, said Wednesday that he had not been informed of the April 6 recount start date and was uncertain whether elections division or county administration officials would participate.

"We've heard nothing from them," Nelson said.

Tucson 13 Coverage of Rigged Transportation Election

Brad Friedman and Bill Risner (country election integrity)

Pima County Election Integrity Battle

Pima County Election Integrity Trial News Coverage

www.AuditAZ.blogspot.com

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http://auditaz.blogspot.com/

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The issues involving the apparent lack of integrity of the electoral process in Pima County and Arizona and the almost three-year-old challenge to release of the RTA election ballots for a hand count remain headline news to this day. While Arizona Attorney General Terry Goddard has indicated that the recount process is not over, questions remain over the whereabouts of the ballots and the procedure to be used to count them.

In addition to the screening, principal investigators of the election will be on hand to provide insight on the current issues related to the controversy.

Recently, members of the local Democratic Party's Election Integrity Committee offered individual opinions on the matter.

“The Democratic Party [and all other political parties] has a statutory right and a critical role in our state system to track and see what’s going on with our elections,” said Attorney Bill Risner, who is involved with the legal investigation into the validity of the May 2006 Regional Transportation Authority Election.

"Elections and election processes should not be secret, and when they are it's a strong sign of either outright fraud or an agency fearful of having its own incompetence exposed,” insisted Jim March, board member of Blackboxvoting.org and local election investigator. “True security always lies in openness.”

Michael Duniho, former election inspector in Maryland and computer analyst concluded, "It seems clear that our system of 'one-man, one-vote' only works if a large number of people monitor the election, to be sure it is honest."

From the words of those who controlled the election and others who have investigated the election, Fatally Flawed makes the case that:

1. Acts of omission and commission occurred before, during and after the May 2006 election by entrusted officials, constituting the charges of election fraud.

2. To date, government officials at the local and state levels have acted to thwart the resolution of these accusations of a rigged election.

3. Only a prompt, fair, and transparent hand counting of the May 2005 ballots will remove the cloud over the creation of the RTA.

For further information, call 520-622-6419

For a list of future Monday Night events, check www.voicesofopposition.com

Labels: dfa Tucson, election fraud, election integrity, RTA, RTA Tucson, stolen election