LOL. Point out one false statement in the piece please.
A birth announcement was printed in the newspaper for crying out loud.
Don't know about false statements, but something is a little fishy:
Takahashi also confirmed Adams' time frame at the office from spring until the month of August.
"We hire temporary workers, because we're seasonal," he said.
So it sounds like Adams was a temporary worker.
However, when WND asked Takahashi if the elections office could check on birth records, he said, "We don't have access to that kind of records. [There's] no access to birth records."
Adams responded, "They may say, 'We don't have access to that.' The regular workers don't, the ones processing ballots; but the people in administration do. I was the one overseeing the work of the people doing the balloting."
But he was in administration and had access to a lot of data bases, not like those temporary workers.
You'd want to know how many "senior election clerks" there really were, and whether it really was an administrative post with access to all kinds of information, or just a way of giving a little status to a low-level supervisor of ordinary clerks who had a little more seniority and responsibility but no real authority or power.
From what I can tell, a senior election clerk might have contact with people who could find out such information, but his or her own job description doesn't involve access to confidential databases in other departments.