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They're Stealing the Election [LA]-Did voter fraud swing last year's [1996] closest Senate race?
Reader's Digest | August 1997 | Trevor Armbrister

Posted on 11/26/2002 10:52:02 AM PST by Stand Watch Listen

Note: Links show how the facts of the case this article describes correspond to patterns uncovered in San Francisco's stadium election investigation.

Earlier this year in an office building in the New Orleans suburb of Metairie, witnesses were still talking about the 1996 election for the U.S. Senate in which Democrat Mary Landrieu defeated Republican Louis "Woody" Jenkins.

"This nice person drove up and asked whether I was registered," one woman said to the lawyers and investigators for Jenkins. "I told him I was but I didn't feel like going. He said, 'If I paid you, would you go?' I got up and dusted off my little pants and got in the car." The woman, who neither reads nor writes, said the man took her to three polling places, where she voted and signed an "X" each time.

On Election Day, said a 32-year-old mechanic, he drove a van, "picking up people to go down there to vote at least ten times or more." For his efforts, he received $700.

One woman, who said she voted three times, groused about how much she was paid. "I was supposed to get $75 and all they gave me was $25." She said they also gave her an "ol' stanky T-shirt" with Landrieu's picture on it.

These are among the numerous allegations that constitute the core of Jenkins's challenge to a very close election; Landrieu won by only 5788 votes out of more than 1.7 million cast. Even though Jenkins cried foul as soon as the election returns were in, his charges were not taken seriously at first. He was called "a sore loser" who need to "get on with his life."

Quietly, however, he and his volunteers began gathering evidence. In more than 8000 pages of affidavits and exhibits, they claimed to have identified 7454 phantom or illegal votes.

No one has alleged that Landrieu herself participated in or knew about any illegal activities that may have benefited her candidacy. But a chorus of voices has pronounced the Louisiana vote suspect at best. Says Neal Hogan, an attorney who conducted an on-scene probe for the Virginia-based Voting Integrity Project, "Probable cause exists to believe that large-scale violations of federal and state election law have occurred. The most serious include the purchasing of votes, multiple voting and the casting of fraudulent votes." (Note: This group is also studying the San Francisco stadium election.)

Throughout Election Day last November, exit polls showed Jenkins and Landrieu in a dead heat. But at 9:45 p.m.--almost two hours after the polls had closed--Jenkins campaign finance director Mark Seifert discovered that some 70 of New Orleans's 474 precincts had not yet reported their vote.

"We're dead," he told campaign workers in Baton Rouge. "They've held precincts back and they're voting them now. They're stealing the election."

Indeed, outside New Orleans Jenkins won by 95,000 votes. Within city limits, however, he was buried by 100,000. In certain New Orleans precincts the computer voting-machine tapes bore incorrect dates; in those precincts Jenkins lost to Landrieu by a margin of nine to one.

Under Louisiana law, voting machines are supposed to be locked after the polls have closed. Three days later the machines are to be opened in full view and their totals reviewed. But on the morning of November 8, when the candidates' staffs were allowed into the warehouse where the New Orleans machines were stored, they found them already open. Election officials claim the machines were not tampered with, but at the very least this was a clear violation of election law.

"Corruption in Louisiana Politics?" asked the Slidell, LA, Sentry-News in a 1995 headline. "Surely You Jest." In fact, the state has a long reputation for crooked politics. But in the 1996 election, the opportunities for fraud were especially high for several reasons:

Invisible voters. In 1994, as required by federal law, Louisiana enacted a "Motor Voter" statute allowing voters to sign up at auto-license bureaus, welfare agencies and other government offices. To protect ballot security, the statute required that if a voter who registered by mail had never cast a ballot in the parish (county) before, he or she must produce a photo ID at the polling place.

That seemed reasonable. Even though many of those affected would be poor and black, the legislature's Black Caucus supported the measure. But in Washington, the Clinton Administration said no. Assistant Attorney General Deval L. Patrick decreed that the provision violated the Voting Rights Act of 1965--because blacks were not as likely as whites to have driver's licenses or other picture IDs.

Ten months later investigative reporter Sunny Brown of the Lake Charles, LA, American Press, sent 25 bogus voter applications, complete with fake names, addresses and dates of birth, to Louisiana vote registrars. Twenty of the fictitious residents--including one signed "X"--received voter registration cards.

Brown's expose should have been a warning to election officials. As one parish's assistant D.A. told her, "There is no reason people who don't exist should be registered to vote." But under the Clinton Administration's decree, officials at the November 1996 polls would not be allowed to request a photo ID to uncover fake voters.

After the election, Jenkins's investigators discovered that the addresses of 3169 recently registered voters in New Orleans's public-housing projects were now considered by the city to be vacant apartments. Of those "residents," 1380 had voted in the election.

Gambling money. Since its introduction in Louisiana in 1991, gambling has become a multibillion-dollar industry, and it spends huge amounts of money increasing its political clout. Warns Charles Lewis of the Washington-based Center for Public Integrity, nationwide, "gambling is out of control as an interest group."

Last fall, Louisiana's gambling businesses poured between $10 million and $12 million into pro-gambling proposals on the same ballot as the Landrieu-Jenkins race. Louisiana law prohibits gambling interests from contributing to candidates, but as Election Day neared, say Jenkins supporters, pro-casino forces tied their fortunes to New Orleans's Democratic machine.

The bankrupt Harrah's Jazz casino, for example, borrowed $1 million from its parent company,Harrah's Entertainment, Inc., of Memphis, Tenn., and hired hundreds of election workers. Jenkins backers say they interviewed some of these workers who claimed to have handed out literature that endorsed Senate candidate Landrieu. Harrah's denies that anyone handed out literature mentioning any candidate while working for the casino.

In New Orleans,campaign finance records reveal, precinct poll commissioner-in-charge Mary Deloch received $800 from Bally's Casino in September for "canvassing/ballot." Bally's and Deloch say that the money was for her community organization to hand out leaflets in support of the gambling issues before the election. In all, at least five poll commissioners were paid to work for gambling firms during the campaign. According to state filings, Yvonne Atkins, for instance, earned $120 from Harrah's for being a "supervisor" on Election Day while simultaneously being paid by the state. It is illegal for a poll commissioner to be paid for other work on Election Day. Harrah's says they were unaware that Atkins was a poll commissioner. Atkins refused to comment to Reader's Digest.

The gambling industry also helped turn out the vote. In Baton Rouge, the Belle of Baton Rouge, a riverboat casino, sent a bus to the Jefferson Manor Nursing Home at the facility's request. There it picked up, among others, a woman in her 70s and drove her to a polling place. The woman's brother was astonished. "I didn't know she was capable of voting," he told Reader's Digest. "She's retarded." Most patients at the facility, a nursing supervisor concedes, suffer from dementia.

Machine politics. New Orleans's powerful political machine--Louisiana Independent Federation of Electors or LIFE--funded an army of get-out-the-vote troops in New Orleans. According to participants and witnesses, LIFE-Landrieu supporters used vans to haul voters from one precinct to the next. "They'd give them different names," one driver told Jenkins's investigators. "Each person voted about seven times."

Founded in 1967 by current mayor Marc Morial's father, LIFE flouts state and federal regulations with which other political groups must comply, claiming it is a "civil rights" group, not a political one. It has failed to file campaign finance reports to the Louisiana Board of Ethics or the Federal Election Commission. Yet, exults LIFE adviser, Bob Tucker, "I don't think there's a better-organized Election Day effort anywhere in the country."

Well before last November's election, according to a sworn affidavit by a former assistant city attorney, Morial's office posted a list over 200 employees at City Hall, specifying where each was to report for campaign work--including the Clinton-Gore and Landrieu headquarters as well as a LIFE location. The attorney says he and other law-department employees were warned by City Attorney Avis Russell that there would be "consequences" for those who didn't appear. Russell denies the charge.

The mounting indications of wrongdoing were sufficient to cause the U.S. Senate Rules Committee to authorize an investigation last April into the allegations of vote-buying and multiple voting.

The committee is asking two questions: Did Landrieu supporters steal more votes than her 5788-ballot margin of victory? Or, alternatively, was fraud so pervasive that the election result is tainted? If either is the case, there could be a new election in Louisiana.

Free and fair elections constitute the bedrock of democracy. The possibility that a U.S. Senate seat might have been stolen is deeply disturbing. Dismissing such an outrage as just "politics as usual" would be the biggest injustice of all.

This was published in the August 1997 Reader's Digest. Links supplied by http://www.brasscheck.com/stadium/ which is a "Investigation into Allegations of Organized Fraud in the June 1997 Stadium Bond Election in San Francisco"



TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: Louisiana
KEYWORDS: ballys; bobtucker; casino; charleslewis; clinton; corruption; electioneering; fraud; gambling; harrahs; howtostealanelection; jeffersonmanor; landrieu; life; louisiana; marcmorial; markseifert; marydeloch; marylandrieu; metairie; motorvoter; nealhogan; neworleans; nursinghome; pledge; repository; sunnybrown; votefraud; voterfraud; votingintegrity; woodyjenkins; yvonneatkins; zaq

1 posted on 11/26/2002 10:52:02 AM PST by Stand Watch Listen
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To: Stand Watch Listen
Without massive voter fraud all across America the RATS would lose far more elections than one can imagine. Voter fraud is the lifeblood of the RAT party.
2 posted on 11/26/2002 10:58:22 AM PST by Phantom Lord
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To: *Vote Fraud
bump
3 posted on 11/26/2002 11:19:05 AM PST by Libertarianize the GOP
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Comment #4 Removed by Moderator

To: BillinDenver
Were these people ever prosecuted? If not, why not?

Just where do we begin. Vote fraud has been in elections throughout history. Only now it's more flagrant. Where were the authorities in the 2000 elections when Univ of Wisconsin students admitted voting a few times for a pack of cigarettes? When Philly voters were paid to vote for preregistered 'voters'?

What about all the irregularities in 2002 South Dakota's Western precincts? The Florida Palm Beach, Brownard, Miami-Dade counties?

I'm disappointed that the Rpeublicans don't challenge these irregularities, that they don't stand up to the Democrat 'best defense is a good offense' way of spinning the media/public.


5 posted on 11/26/2002 11:48:22 AM PST by Stand Watch Listen
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To: Stand Watch Listen
The answer to beating voter fraud is to have the race not even be close.
You can only steal a close election.
6 posted on 11/26/2002 1:16:27 PM PST by Wil H
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To: Stand Watch Listen
Where were the authorities in the 2000 elections when Univ of Wisconsin students admitted voting a few times for a pack of cigarettes?

The "authority" was the Attorney General, a RAT named Jim Doyle, in concert with his cohort the District Attorney, a RAT named E. Michael McCann. Doyle is now the new Governor-elect of Wisconsin.

7 posted on 11/26/2002 1:18:09 PM PST by afraidfortherepublic
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Comment #8 Removed by Moderator

To: BillinDenver
Unless he can get verifiable proof that any fraud occurred (matching signatures,e.g.) this story is worthless.

I can't comment on the specifics of this article, but the 1996 Landrieu-Jenkins election underwent a lengthy fraud investigation by the Senate Rules Committee. The Committee did cite several instances of voter fraud, but ultimately allowed the final results to stand (Landrieu won by less than 6000 votes).

9 posted on 11/26/2002 1:28:24 PM PST by BlackRazor
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Comment #10 Removed by Moderator

To: BillinDenver
Were there any actual prosecutions resulting from the fraud?

Not that I'm aware of, despite the Senate Committee's findings that "large scale violations of federal and state election law have occurred".

There were 68 individuals indicted in Louisiana for vote-buying in local races that year, but none for the Senate race, as far as I know.

11 posted on 11/26/2002 2:28:38 PM PST by BlackRazor
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To: Phantom Lord
Without massive voter fraud all across America the RATS would lose far more elections than one can imagine. Voter fraud is the lifeblood of the RAT party.

Yes, and unfortunately it has gotten to the point where many people are jaded about it. Everybody expects the scumbag Democrats to commit voter fraud. It is taken for granted at this point that a Republican needs an extra 5%, on average, to overcome scumbag fraud. The rats have determined that having union thugs chasing down "absentee" ballots from prisons, nursing homes, homeless shelters, and cemeteries is simply not enough, even after they send vans up and down every filthy city block picking up every loose body they can find. As a result, they have gotten more creative in their efforts to steal elections, and more brazen.

I'm still shaking my head about that scumbag out in South Dakota, Tim Johnson, pulling out the Senate race at the last minute with a flurry of votes from an Indian Reservation!

You would think that a Republican Administration, in charge of the Justice Department, would finally put some people in real prison.

12 posted on 11/26/2002 2:44:16 PM PST by Lancey Howard
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To: Stand Watch Listen
Sounds a LOT like South Dakota. Why the heck aren't the Republicans DOING something in SD to stop this kind of thing? I would also think a couple (or more) well-publicized arrests prior to the LA election would "chill" the hubris of the Democrat vote-fraud machine (AND put Johnson's "victory" in doubt!).

Unbelievable. I'm sure the committee that investigated this issue in 1997 was Dem-controlled, just like the one that gave a mere rebuke to Torricelli. Different standard for them than for us. Disgusting.
13 posted on 11/26/2002 5:02:50 PM PST by alwaysconservative
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To: alwaysconservative
Vote buying in Louisiana is a common and accepted practice. Claude "Buddy" Leach, an announced candidate for governor in 2003, was caught buying votes in Vernon Parish in the 1980's and is no worse off for it politically. He is married into one of the wealthiest families in the state and can spend millions on the race if needed.
14 posted on 11/26/2002 5:31:54 PM PST by Comus
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To: Stand Watch Listen
I'm disappointed that the Rpeublicans don't challenge these irregularities,

They're starting to. Here in MD, where voter fraud has been common, a GOP gov. was elected for the first time in 36 years. One of the things that contributed to his win was GOP poll watchers on election day.
At the GOP gov. convention, the politicos were looking at his campaign as a model for how the GOP could win in previously Dem strongholds. I think the pollwatchers were an important component.
It wouldn't surprise me to hear that the LA election will also have GOP poll watchers.

15 posted on 11/26/2002 7:06:02 PM PST by speekinout
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To: Stand Watch Listen
Q ERTY7 BUMP!
clinton-clinton-McAuliffe-DNC SYSTEMATICALLY CORRUPTING ALL ASPECTS OF ELECTORAL PROCESS
 
 
WHILE UNDERMINING HOMELAND SECURITY
 
WE MUST STOP IT NOW!

 

 

 

 

16 posted on 11/28/2002 3:19:02 AM PST by Mia T
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To: backhoe

BUMP!


17 posted on 09/06/2005 1:22:02 AM PDT by Lancey Howard
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To: Lancey Howard

Thanks- I just saw this... I remember reading the RD article when it came out... also, Bob Dornan losing his seat, via vote fraud, to that Sanchez woman, and how those ever-wimpy Republicans wouldn't stand up and challenge the results.


18 posted on 09/06/2005 1:40:57 AM PDT by backhoe (Just an old Keyboard Cowboy, ridin' the trakball into the Dawn of Information...)
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