Posted on 07/02/2004 9:14:59 AM PDT by jmstein7
If you are a computer-savvy FReeper, please read this and STOP graveyard voting before it can happen.
Another favorite Democrat vote fraud trick is "graveyard voting," i.e. finding the names of voters who have died, but still have their names on the voter rolls, and sending people to cast their vote.
This can be prevented by getting these invalid names purged from the rolls, and you can do it if you have Google (easy) or Lexis-Nexis (even EASIER)!
Most state/localities have their voter registries and death registries online in electronic databases. Here is how you can use them to prevent vote fraud BEFORE Democrats get a chance to commit it!
If you have Lexis-Nexis:
Voter registries and death records are available in the "Pubic Records" area of the "Research System." The best approach is to do your local area... search the death records, and then see if anyone who has died is still listed in the voter registry. This is pretty simple to do. If you want to narrow the search, start weeding out the deceased Democrats first!
Another approach is to search out males over 74 and females over 76 on the voter registries in your local area, and then search the death records to see if you can find matches.
For Google:
The idea is essentially the same. Search out states/localities that have voter registries and death records online. For example, I know that most local boards in North Carolia have such information available.
What to do if you find dead, registered voters:
Call up your state or local board of elections and have your list of deceased, registered voters handy. Tell them that you want to challenge the registrations you've listed, as the voters are no longer alive. Most Boards will handle such challenges over the phone. Some Boards will require you to come down with your list and information
If every FReeper (there are around 100,000 of us) makes some small effort to help purge these invalid registrations, we can, together, make a significant impact on election day. Democrats can't cast votes for people who have been purged from the voter rolls -- or, at lease, it is more difficult to do so.
Thank you!
I will research what you need for Arizona.
ARIZONA REVISED STATUTES
TITLE 16. ELECTIONS AND ELECTORS
CHAPTER 1. QUALIFICATION AND REGISTRATION OF ELECTORS
ARTICLE 5. REGISTRATION ROLLS
§ 16-165. Causes for cancellation
A. The county recorder shall cancel a registration:
1. At the request of the person registered.
2. When the county recorder knows of the death of the person registered.
3. If the person has been adjudicated an incapacitated person as defined in section 14-5101.
4. When the person registered has been convicted of a felony, and the judgment of conviction has not been reversed or set aside. The county recorder shall cancel the registration on receipt of notice of a felony conviction from the court or from the secretary of state or when reported by the elector on a signed juror questionnaire that is completed pursuant to section 21-314.
D. Each month the department of health services shall transmit to the appropriate county recorder without charge a record of the death of every resident of his county sixteen years of age and older reported to the department within the preceding month. This record shall include only the name of the decedent, his date of birth, his social security number, if available, his usual legal residence at the time of his death and, if available, the decedent's father's name or his mother's maiden name. The record shall be used by the county recorder for the sole purpose of removing the names of deceased persons from the register. Public access to the records is prohibited. Use of information from the records for purposes other than those required by this section is prohibited. The recorder shall promptly cancel the name of each deceased person from the register.
As you see, if you alert the county recorder to the death of someone who is still on the voter rolls, the county recorder is BOUND by § 16-165(A)(2) to cancel the registration. They do not have a choice -- the county recorder SHALL cancel it.
Also interesting is § 16-165(D)... ask them if they've been following the law.
Many VT town clerks will burn the records to a disk/diskette for you for little or no cost
My Grandpappy voted Republican until the day he died. Be a shame if he started voting DemonRat now.
bttt
bump!
bump for later
Hmmmmmm. I was planning a trip to the Registrar here in Brevard, NC, to pick up a sample ballot. I'll ask them about purging their voter rolls.
I think this would be more difficult & time consuming than you have made it seem.
What we should have been doing (since 2000) is sending the names of people from the obituarys *every day* to be removed from the voting rolls. We wouldn't have to search any farther than the daily paper.
Yesterday I noted that 22 black people, 8 white people & 3 hispanics had died in Houston. I wonder how many of them will vote this Nov?
BUMP for later!!!
BTTT.
We have some pretty active Democrats in my area. I think this is an excellent idea to get the deceased off of the voter lists.
Thanks for the "how to do".
Glad I could help!
I had to go get a replacement driver's license here in No. VA when I discovered mine was missing.
It horrified me that at the counter, this dork asked me if I wanted to be registered to vote. That means that he asked all the Middle Easterners, Asians and Mexicans in that room the same question?
I DID NOT know that voter registration was being done at the DMV.
Gov. Warner (D) has struck another blow for Republicans in the state of Virginia.
I am appalled. This will make me verify the polling records, however it has to be done in Fairfax County, and as much of the state of Virginia as time will allow. I do NOT want Virginia to wind up being a (D) state when there are so many Republicans here. I still question how Warner won the election for Govenor.
Thanks for the info. I am definitely going to look into how to do this, first in Fairfax County, and then the entire state, county by county if necessary.
You've never heard of the Clinton Administration's "Motor-Voter" initiative to get illegal immigrants, et.al., signed up as DemocRATS?
Amazing.
Bumping this thread - BTTT
bump for later
Bumping
They're a heck of a lot more fun than public records.
http://www.cleveland.com/newsflash/politics/index.ssf?/base/politics-4/1088692229157610.xml
Ohio targeted in voter registration drive
Democrats are getting substantial help in their get-out-the-vote efforts from groups like ACT, which is called a 527 group, named after the section of the tax code that governs political committees.
Earlier this month, The Associated Press reported that ACT hired convicted felons to conduct door-to-door registration drives. The group later pledged that it would weed out any employees convicted of violent or serious offenses.
THE ONION ON THE OHIO ACLU WEBSITE ?
http://www.acluohio.org/inthenews/index.php?p=252
American people ruled unfit to govern
It's Friday so here's a lighthearted non-news piece. This is a joke so please don't take it seriously.
{Sure ACLU your not serious }
Tips for Finding Dead Voters
http://www.nicar.org/conferences/cleveland-9510/handouts/hand9.html
Test a sample of registered voters using the Census and personal contact. Compare the number of eligible voters (people older than 17 years) from the 1990 Census with the number of registered voters. Areas with high percentages of eligible voters who are registered merit further examination. Pull poll sheets and call some households with several registered voters. If you find many of the registered voters have actually moved or died, your registration system has problems worth investigating.
Learn how the system is supposed to work. Most elections boards have a system of some sort or another, but rarely does anyone take a close look at how that system actually works or even whether the election board actually purges the voter rolls as often as they say they do. One way to check is to talk with precinct captains and political opponents who poll the precincts. They know what is going on, and can be of great help.
Get paper and electronic copies of the voter lists, and the most recent election. This usually takes no more than a telephone call or visit, since the election board is so used to giving this information to political parties and politicians. Make sure you have key identifying information, like birthdate, address and zip code. Try for social security numbers. For the election data, get the names, addresses, jurisdictions and polling place of everyone who voted. That will allow you to later check to see if the dead voted, and find witnesses to the ghost voting.
Get death certificates, or at least a reliable list of the dead. If your state allows you to get a database of death certificates, you ought to do so, and update it annually. It is good for this and many other stories. But if the state keeps death certificates private, get the SSA master death file from NICAR. Also check into other sources, such as the county coroner, obituary listings, hospital records, nursing homes, even cemeteries.
Modify the databases of voters and dead people so they best match. It can be helpful to break names up into first, last and middle initial; and to break up dates so that they are comparable in all databases. If the number of records is too large for your pc, try breaking it into alphabetical order, or blocks in alpha order, such as A to D.
Create a hierarchy of confidence levels of matches between voters and the dead. If you have matching social security numbers, that merits the highest level of confidence, though wrong data can still occur. On others create the hierarchy based on the number of variables that actually match -- first name, middle initial, last name, date of birth, address, zip code. Then work your way down.
Be sure to try to talk to or visit the dead voters. People are declared dead before their time is up all too often. It is very important to call or visit every address where a suspected dead voter resides. We found a dead voter on our own block was actually the deceased's granddaughter who was named for her grandmother.
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