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2004 US Presidential Election
November 10, 2004
Irregularities | 11/10 Irregularities roundup
For a categorized listing containing thousands of possible fraud and other voting problems, see this. The Electronic Frontier Foundation’s category on eVoting is here. Their roundup on possible fraud or errors is here. Here’s another roundup of voting reports. This page discusses the exit polls and says: “A statistical analysis of exit polling conducted for RAW STORY by a former MIT mathematics professor has found the odds of Bush making an average gain of 4.15 percent among all 16 states included in the media’s 4 p.m. exit polling is 1 in 50,000, or .002 percent.” David Corn offers the overview “A Stolen Election?”. From Nov. 3, PC World’s “More E-Voting Problems Reported” describes several reported problems. And, from My experience as an Election Judge in Baltimore County on November 2, 2004
…I did, however, observe a vulnerability that I do not think would exist with non-DRE voting. It turned out that the new judge, Terry, was the security manager for the church where our election was held. He carried a large keyring to all the doors in the building. He was also in the same political party as chief judge Marie and her husband. One of the reasons why we have election judges from both major parties at each station at the polling center is to provide checks and balances. The night before the election, there was an imbalance. Two judges from the same party had set up the machines alone, and that night, someone from the same party had access to the room where the machines were left unguarded. Why is that a problem? The Diebold Accuvote TS machines were shown to be highly vulnerable to tampering. With physical access to the machines, for example, one could change a few bytes in the ballot definition file and votes for the two major Presidential candidates would be swapped. In that case, none of the procedures we had in place could detect that votes were tallied for the wrong candidates… From “12,000 votes uncounted in Gaston”:
GASTONIA - About 12,000 votes cast in Gaston County have not yet been counted, elections director Sandra Page said Tuesday. See also this collection of links and this one and for less serious coverage of this issue go here. Posted by Lonewacko at November 10, 2004 03:31 AM | TrackBack Comments
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