From that article you post:
“On Monday, the board accepted birth certificate verification and adjourned the meeting.”
There is also this article:
http://cjonline.com/news/state/2012-09-17/kansas-board-drops-obama-ballot-complaint
“Secretary of State Kris Kobach, chairman of the three-person State Objections Board weighing the ballot complaint, said he was satisfied with documentation received since last week affirming Obama’s birth in Hawaii.”
It makes it sound like they may have received another verification from Hawaii.
And it sounds like it may be another worthless one just like MDEC received.
It also sounds like the presumption of regularity on whatever verification they received is blown to heck already based on the request not being written as required. lol. We’ll see.
But if requests can be done over the phone and not written, then a verification truly IS a signed, blank check - where the person who requested the verification could later claim that they requested ANYTHING, and there would be no way to know what was really requested unless the phone conversation was taped. And even at that, there’s no way of knowing that the HDOH personnel heard or understood what was requested either. With nothing written down, there’s no way to know what was requested, to compare what was requested with what was actually verified.
I spoke with someone at Kobach’s office and it was clarified that though the jurisdiction of the Objection Board is over now, the jurisdiction of Kobach himself is not over and it is still up to him to decide whether he will accept a known-perjurious Certification of Nomination to be effective in accomplishing election fraud. The guy I spoke with agreed that it wasn’t that Kobach COULD NOT keep Obama off the ballot, but that Kobach is saying he WILL NOT. He said that a court challenge would be the next step if anybody wanted to continue with the issue. I said that if the courts were used the next step would be election fraud charges against Mr. Kobach. He said that would be an option. A very nice man in a cordial but intense exchange.