Yes, that's exactly what happened.
Each voter received two ballot cards — Florida had a large number of constitutional amendments proposed, and it required two ballots to cover all of the races and amendments.
The first two pages of the "Statement of Votes Cast" report are somewhat misleading when they show "cards cast" as exceeding 100%, and do not indicate blatant fraud. You should divide "cards cast" by two to get the number of voters participating.
That being different in Florida would explain that. They really need to explain that on their Election site. Doubling of cards doesn’t really equal turnout number on summary. quite misleading. I’ll have to try to open the spreadsheet again to see if Rosanne Barr got more votes than Romney.
Wondering why I didn’t see that same reporting from some other Counties? I didn’t read in Broward the numbers reported like that, with double cards counted. I didn’t look at all Florida but I would hope that they would be similar in reporting?
I’m pinging Mesta to your comment.
See post # 51 for a possible explanation.
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/2957810/posts?page=60#60
Ping to #51
Out of 175,554 registered voters, 247,713 vote cards were cast in St. Lucie County, Florida on Tuesday.
Out of the 247,713 cards cast, somehow election machines counted 123,591 total votes.
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-chat/2957838/posts
Question: If each voter turned in 2 cards, and 2 cards equals 1 vote, then where are 531 votes? 123,591 times 2 is 247,182, but 247,713 cards were cast. If a voter chooses the blank fill in space, would not that vote be counted and added to the tally? So what happened to 531 votes?